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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13636 ***
+
+LIPPINCOTT'S MAGAZINE
+
+OF
+
+_POPULAR LITERATURE AND SCIENCE_.
+
+
+
+
+FEBRUARY, 1873.
+
+Vol. XI., No. 23.
+
+
+
+
+TABLE OF CONTENTS
+
+
+SEARCHING FOR THE QUININE-PLANT IN PERU.
+ Concluding Paper.
+
+A GLANCE AT THE SITE AND ANTIQUITIES OF ATHENS By J.L.T. PHILLIPS.
+
+COMMONPLACE By CONSTANCE FENIMORE WOOLSON.
+
+PROBATIONER LEONHARD; OR, THREE NIGHTS IN THE HAPPY VALLEY
+ By CAROLINE CHESEBRO.
+
+ Chapter IV.--The Test--With Mental Reservations.
+
+ Chapter V.--Sister Benigna.
+
+ Chapter VI.--The Men Of Spenersberg.
+
+ Chapter VII.--The Book.
+
+ Chapter VIII.--Conference Meeting.
+
+ Chapter IX.--Will The Architect Have Employment?
+
+COUNTRY-HOUSE LIFE IN ENGLAND By REGINALD WYNFORD.
+
+THE FOREST OF ARDEN By ITA ANIOL PROKOP.
+
+JACK, THE REGULAR By THOMAS DUNN ENGLISH.
+
+OBSERVATIONS AND ADVENTURES IN SUBMARINE DIVING By WILL WALLACE HARNEY.
+
+CONFIDENTIAL.
+
+GLIMPSES OF JOHN CHINAMAN By PRENTICE MULFORD.
+
+A WINTER REVERIE By MILLIE W. CARPENTER.
+
+"PASSPORTS, GENTLEMEN!" By A.H.
+
+OUR MONTHLY GOSSIP.
+
+ The Cornwallis Family.
+
+ Novelties In Ethnology.
+
+ The Steam-whistle.
+
+ Siamese News.
+
+ Madison As A Temperance Man.
+
+NOTES.
+
+LITERATURE OF THE DAY.
+
+Books Received.
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+The Cones of Patabamba.
+
+"Pepe Garcia, Who Marched Ahead, Announced the Print Of A South
+ American Tiger."
+
+"Napoleon-like, They Washed Their Dirty Linen in The Family"
+
+"Aragon and his Men Fell Upon the Deserters Without Mercy."
+
+"They Greeted These Indian Relics As Crusoe Did The Footprints of the
+ Savages."
+
+"Another Savage Had Found a Pair of Linen Pantaloons."
+
+View of the Acropolis and The Columns Of The Temple Of Jupiter Olympus.
+
+Theatre of Dionysus (Bacchus).
+
+Victory Untying Her Sandals.
+
+Temple of Victory.
+
+The Parthenon.
+
+Bas Relief of the Gods (Frieze Of The Parthenon).
+
+Porch of the Caryatides.
+
+Monument of Lysicrates.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SEARCHING FOR THE QUININE-PLANT IN PERU.
+
+CONCLUDING PAPER.
+
+
+Early on a brilliant morning, with baggage repacked, and the lessening
+amount of provisions more firmly strapped on the shoulders of the
+Indians, the explorers left their pleasant site on the banks of the
+Maniri. The repose allowed to the bulk of the party during the absence
+of their Bolivian companions had been wholesome and refreshing. The
+success of the bark-hunters in their search for cinchonas had cheered
+all hearts, and the luxurious supper of dried mutton and chuno
+arranged for them on their return gave a reminiscence of splendor to
+the thatched hut on the banks of the stream. This edifice, the last of
+civilized construction they expected to see, had the effect of a home
+in the wilderness. The bivouac there had been enjoyed with a sentiment
+of tranquil carelessness. Little did the travelers think that savage
+eyes had been peeping through the forest upon their fancied security,
+and that the wild people of the valleys who were to work them all
+kinds of mischief were upon their track from this station forth.
+
+The enormous fire kindled for breakfast mingled with the stain of
+sunrise to cast a glow upon their departure. Across the vale of the
+Cconi, as though a pair of sturdy porters had arisen to celebrate
+their leavetaking, the cones of Patabamba caught the first rays of
+the sun and held them aloft like hospitable torches. These huge forms,
+soldered together at the waist like Chang and Eng, and clothed with
+shaggy woods up to the top, had been the guardian watchers over their
+days in the ajoupa at Maniri. The sun just rising empurpled their
+double cones, while the base and the surrounding landscape were washed
+with the neutral tints of twilight.
+
+After passing the narrow affluent after which the camping-ground of
+Maniri was named, the party pursued the course of the Cconi through
+a more level tract of country. The stones and precipices became more
+rare, but in revenge the sandy banks soon began to reflect a heat that
+was hardly bearable. As the implacable sun neared its zenith the party
+walked with bent heads and blinded eyes, now dashing through great
+plains of bamboos, now following the hatchets of the peons through
+thickets of heated shrubbery.
+
+Whenever the country became more wooded in its character, the
+bark-hunters, whose quest obliged them to stray in short flights
+around the wings of the column, redoubled their mazes. The careless
+air of these Bolivian retrievers, their voluntary doublings through
+the most difficult jungles, and their easy way of walking over
+everything with their noses in the air, proved well their indifference
+to the obstacles which were almost insurmountable to the rest.
+
+[Illustration: THE CONES OF PATABAMBA.]
+
+Nothing could be more singular and interesting than to see them
+consulting one by one the indications scattered around them, and
+deciding on their probabilities or promises. Where the height and
+thickness of the foliage prevented them from seeing the sky, or
+even the shade of the surrounding green, they walked bent toward the
+ground, stirring up the rubbish, and choosing among the dead foliage
+certain leaves, of which they carefully examined the two sides and the
+stem. When by accident they found themselves near enough to speak to
+each other--a rare chance, for each peon undertook a separate line of
+search--they asked their friends, showing the leaves they had found,
+whether their discoveries appertained to the neighboring trees or
+whether the wind had brought the pieces from a distance. This kind
+of investigation, pursued by men who had prowled through forests
+all their lives, might seem slightly puerile if the reader does
+not understand that it is often difficult, or even impossible, to
+recognize the growing tree by its bark, covered as it is from base
+to branches with parasitic vegetation of every sort. In those forests
+whatever has a stout stem is used without scruple by the bignonias and
+air-plants, which race over the trunk, plant their root-claws in the
+cracks, leap over the whole tree at a single jet, or strangle it with
+multiplied knots, all the while adorning it with a superb mantle of
+leaves and blossoms. This is a difficulty which the most experienced
+_cascarilleros_ are not able to overcome. As an instance, the history
+is cited of a _practico_ or speculator who led an exploration for
+these trees in the valley of Apolobamba. After having caused to be
+felled, barked, measured, dried and trimmed all the cinchonas of one
+of those natural thickets called _manchas_--an operation which had
+occupied four months--he was about to abandon the spot and pursue
+the exploration elsewhere, when accident led him to discover, in
+the enormous trunk buried in creepers against which he had built his
+cabin, a _Cinchona nitida_, the forefather of all the trees he had
+stripped.
+
+In this kind of search the caravan pursued the borders of the
+river, sometimes on this side and sometimes on that, now passing the
+two-headed mountain Camanti, now sighting the tufted peak of Basiri,
+now crossing the torrent called the Garote. In the latter, where
+the dam and hydraulic works of an old Spanish gold-hunter were still
+visible in a state of ruin, the sacred golden thirst of Colonel Perez
+once more attacked him. Two or three pins' heads of the insane metal
+were actually unearthed by the colonel and displayed in a pie-dish;
+but the business of the party was one which made even the finding of
+gold insignificant, and they pursued their way.
+
+The flanks of these mountains, however, were really of importance to
+the botanical motive of the expedition. Along the side of the Camanti,
+where the yellow Garote leaked downward in a rocky ravine, the
+Bolivians were again successful. They brought to Marcoy specimens of
+half a dozen cinchonas, for him to sketch, analyze and decorate with
+Latin names. The colors of two or three of these barks promised
+well, but the pearl of the collection was a specimen of the genuine
+_Calisaya_, with its silver-gray envelope and leaf ribbed with
+carmine. This proud discovery was a boon for science and for commerce.
+It threw a new light upon the geographical locality of the most
+precious species of cinchona. It was incontestably the plant, and
+the Bolivians appeared amazed rather than pleased to have discovered
+outside of their own country a kind of bark proper only to Bolivia,
+and hardly known to overpass the northern extremity of the valley of
+Apolobamba. This discovery would rehabilitate, in the European market,
+the quinine-plants of Lower Peru, heretofore considered as inferior to
+those of Upper Peru and Bolivia. The latter country has for some time
+secured the most favorable reputation for its barks--a reputation
+ably sustained by the efforts of the company De la Paz, to whom the
+government has long granted a monopoly. This reputation is based on
+the abundance in that country of two species, the _Cinchona calisaya_
+and _Boliviana,_ the best known and most valued in the market. But
+for two valuable cinchonas possessed by Bolivia, Peru can show twenty,
+many of them excellent in quality, and awaiting only the enterprise of
+the government and the natural exhaustion of the forests to the south.
+
+This magnificent bit of luck, the finding of the calisaya, awakened
+in the susceptible bosom of Mr. Marcoy an ardent desire to explore
+for himself the site of its discovery. But Eusebio, the chief of the
+cascarilleros, assuming a mysterious and warning expression, informed
+the traveler that the place was quite inaccessible for a white man,
+and that he had risked his own neck a score of times in descending the
+ravine which separated the route from the hillside where the fortunate
+plants were growing. He promised, however, to point out the locality
+from afar, and to show, by a certain changeable gloss proper to the
+leaf, the precise stratum of the calisaya amongst the belts of the
+forest. This promise he forgot to execute more particularly, but it
+appeared that the locality would never be excessively hard to find,
+marked as it was by Nature with the gigantic finger-post of Mount
+Camanti. Placing, then, in security these precious specimens among
+their baggage, the explorers continued their advance along the valley.
+
+The footing was level and easy. Rocks and precipices were left behind,
+and were displaced by a soft, slippery sort of sand, where from space
+to space were planted, like so many oases in a desert, clumps of giant
+reeds. By a strange but natural caprice these beds of rustling verdure
+were cut in an infinity of well-defined geometric forms. Seen from an
+eminence and at a distance, this arrangement gave a singular effect.
+In the midst of these native garden-beds were cut distinct and narrow
+alleys, where the drifting sands were packed like artificial paths.
+It is unnecessary to add that the soft footways, notwithstanding
+their advertisement of verdure and shade, proved to be of African
+temperature.
+
+The last hours of daylight surprised the travelers among the
+labyrinths of these strange gardens. A suitable spot was chosen for
+the halt. As the porters were preparing to throw down their packs,
+Pepe Garcia, who marched ahead, announced the print of a South
+American tiger. The first care of the Indians, on hearing this news,
+was to send forth a horrible cry and to throng around the marks. The
+footprints disappeared at the thickest part of the jungle. After
+an examination of the traces, which resembled a large trefoil, they
+precipitated themselves on the interpreter-in-chief, representing
+how impossible it was to camp out in the neighborhood of the dreaded
+animal. But Pepe Garcia, accustomed as he was by profession to try his
+strength with the ferocious bear and the wily boar, was not the man to
+be afraid of a tiger, even of a genuine tiger from Bengal. To prove
+to the porters how slight was the estimation he placed on the supposed
+enemy, and also to drill them in the case of similar rencounters, he
+pushed the whole troop pellmell into the thickest part of the reeds,
+with the surly order to cut down the canes for sheds. Drawing his own
+knife, he slashed right and left among the stems, which the Indians,
+trembling with fear, were obliged to make into sheaves on the spot and
+transport to the beach selected for the bivouac. Double rows of these
+_arundos_, driven into the sand, formed the partitions of the cabins,
+for which their interwoven leaves made an appropriate thatch. The
+green halls with matted vaults were picturesque enough; each peon,
+seeing how easily they were constructed, chose to have a house for
+himself; and the Tiger's Beach quickly presented the appearance of a
+camp disposed in a long straight line, of which the timorous Indians
+occupied the extremity nearest the river.
+
+No "tiger" appeared to justify the apprehensions of the porters; but
+what was lacking to their fears from beasts with four feet was made
+up to them by beasts with wings. The night closed in dry and serene.
+Since leaving Maniri, whether because of the broadening of the valley,
+the rarity of the water-courses or the decreasing altitude of the
+hills, the adventurers had been little troubled with fogs at night.
+The fauna of the region, too, had offered nothing of an alarming
+complexion, except the footprints of the tiger in question: an
+occasional tapir or peccary from the woods, and otters and fish from
+the streams, had attracted the shots of the party, but merely as
+welcome additions to their game-bags, not as food for their fears.
+To-night, however, the veritable bugbear of the tropical forest paid
+them a visit, and left a real souvenir of his presence. As the Indian
+servants stretched themselves out in slumber under the bright stars
+and in the partial shelter of their ajoupas, a bat of the vampire
+species, attracted by the emanations of their bodies, came sailing
+over them, and emboldened by the silence reigning everywhere, selected
+a victim for attack. Hovering over the fellow's exposed foot, he bit
+the great toe, and fanning his prey in the traditional yet inevitable
+manner by the natural movement of his wings, he gorged himself with
+blood without disturbing the mozo. The latter, on awakening in the
+morning, observed a slight swelling in the perforated part, and on
+examination discovered a round hole large enough to admit a pea.
+Without rising, the man summoned his companions, who formed a group
+around him for the purpose of furnishing a certain natural remedy in
+the shape of a secretion which each one drew out of his ears. With
+this the patient made himself a plaster for his wound, and appeared to
+think but little of it. Questioned as to his sensations by the white
+travelers, who found themselves a good deal more disturbed with the
+idea of the vampire than they had been by any indications of tigers or
+wild-boars, the fellow explained that he had felt no sensation, unless
+it might have been an agreeable coolness of his sand-baked feet.
+The incident seemed so disagreeable and so likely of recurrence
+that Colonel Perez ever afterward slept with his feet rolled up in a
+variety of fantastic draperies, while Mr. Marcoy for several nights
+retained his boots.
+
+[Illustration: "PEPE GARCIA, WHO MARCHED AHEAD, ANNOUNCED THE PRINT OF
+A SOUTH AMERICAN TIGER."--P. 132.]
+
+The path along the river-sands would have been voluntarily followed by
+all the more irresponsible portion of the party, notwithstanding the
+blinding heats, on account of its smoother footing. The cascarilleros,
+however, objected that its tufts of canes and passifloras offered no
+promise for their researches. A compromise was effected. The porters,
+under the command of Juan of Aragon, were allowed to follow the shore,
+and were armed with a supply of fish-hooks to induce them to add from
+time to time to the alarmingly diminished supply of provisions. The
+grandees of the party followed the Bolivians, whose specialty entitled
+them to control practically the direction of the route, and plunged
+into the woods to botanize, to explore and to search for game.
+A system of conversation by means of shouts and pistol-shots was
+established between the two divisions. The next night proved the
+wisdom of this bifurcation. The united booty of earth, air and water,
+under the form of a squirrel, a pair of toucans and a variety of fish,
+afforded a meal which the porters described as _comida opipara_ or
+a sumptuous festival. Lulled and comforted by the sensation which a
+contented stomach wafts toward the brain, the explorers, after
+washing their hands and rinsing their mouths at the riverside, betook
+themselves to a cheerful repose _sub jove_, the locality offering no
+reeds of the articulated species with which to construct a shelter.
+
+The party, then, betook themselves to slumber with unusual
+contentment, repeating the splendid supper in their dreams, with the
+addition of every famous wine that Oporto and Rheims could dispense,
+when they were awakened by a sudden and terrible storm. A waterspout
+stooped over the forest and sucked up a mass of crackling branches.
+The camp-fire hissed and went out in a fume of smoke. A continuity of
+thunder, far off at first, but approaching nearer and nearer, kept up
+a constant and increasing fusillade, to whose reports was soon added
+the voice of the Cconi, lashed in its bed and bellowing like the sea.
+The surprising tumult went on in a _crescendo_. The hardly-interrupted
+charges of the lightning gave to the eye a strange vision of flying
+woods and soaring branches. Startled, trembling and sitting bolt
+upright, the adventurers asked if their last hour were come. The rain
+undertook to answer in spinning down upon their heads drops that were
+like bullets, and which for some time were taken for hail. Fearing to
+be maimed or blinded as they sat, the party crowded together, placing
+themselves back to back; and, unable to lay their heads under their
+wings like the birds, sheltered them upon their knees under the
+protection of their crossed arms. The fearful deluge of heated shot
+lasted until morning. Then, as if in laughter, the sun came radiantly
+out, the landscape readjusted its disheveled beauties, and the ground,
+covered with boughs distributed by the whirlwind, greedily drank in
+the waters from heaven. Soon there remained nothing of the memorable
+tempest but the diamonds falling in measured cadence from the
+refreshed and stiffened leaves.
+
+Up to sunrise the unfortunates rested stoically silent, their knees in
+their mouths, and receiving the visitation like a group of statuary.
+The rain ceasing with the same promptitude with which it had risen,
+they raised their heads and looked each other in the face, like the
+enemies over the fire in Byron's _Dream_. Each countenance was blue,
+and decorated with long flat locks of adhesive hair. The teeth of the
+whole party were chattering like a concert of castanets. The sun, like
+a practical joker, laughed ironically at the general picture.
+
+The first hours of morning were consecrated to a general examination
+of the stores, especially the precious specimens of cinchona. Bundles
+were restrapped, the damp provisions laid out in the sun, and the
+clothing of the party, even to the most intimate garment, was taken
+down to the river to be refreshed and furbished up. A common disaster
+had created a common cause amongst the whole troop, and with one
+accord everybody--peons, mozos, interpreters, bark-strippers and
+gentlemen--set in motion a grand cleaning-up day. Napoleon-like, they
+washed their dirty linen in the family. Whoever had seen the strangers
+coming and going from the beach to the woods, clothed in most
+abbreviated fashion, and seeming as familiar to the uniform as if they
+had always worn it under the charitable mantle of the woods, would
+have taken them for a savage tribe in the midst of its encampment. It
+is probable they were so seen.
+
+Thanks to the intense heat of the sun-shine, the garments and baggage
+of the expedition were quickly dried. The first were donned, the last
+was loaded on the porters, and the line of march was taken up. Up to
+noon the road lay along the blazing sands under a sun of fire. All the
+members of the party felt fresh and hardy after the involuntary bath,
+except one of the Indians, who was affected with a kind of ophthalmia.
+This attack, which Mr. Marcoy attributed partly to the glare, partly
+to the wet, and partly to a singular hobby peculiar to the individual
+of sleeping with his eyes wide open, was of no long duration. The pain
+which he complained of disappeared with a few hours of exercise and
+with the determination he showed in staring straight at the god of
+day, who, as if in memory of the worship formerly extended toward him
+in the country, deigned to serve as oculist for the sufferer. A little
+before sunset halt was made for the night-camp in the centre of a
+beach protected by clumps of reeds in three quarters of the wind. The
+Indian porters, despatched for fish and firewood, returned suddenly
+with a frightened mien to say that they had fallen into the midst of
+a camp of savages. The white men quickly rejoined them at the spot
+indicated, where they found a single hut in ruins, made of reeds which
+appeared to have been cut for the construction some fortnight before,
+and strewn with fire-brands, banana skins and the tail of a large
+fish. Pepe Garcia, consulted on these indications, explained that it
+was in reality the camping-place of some of the savage Siriniris, but
+that the narrowness of the hut seemed to indicate that not more than
+two of the Indians, probably a man and woman, had resided there during
+a short fishing-excursion.
+
+This discovery cast a shade over the countenances of the porters.
+After having collected the provisions necessary for a slender supper,
+they drew apart, and, while cooking was going on, began to converse
+with each other in a low voice. No notice was taken of their behavior,
+however, though it would have required little imagination to guess
+the subject of their parliament. The tired eyes of the explorers were
+already closed, while their ears, more alert, could hear the confused
+murmur proceeding from the Indians' quarter, where the disposition
+seemed to be to prolong the watch indefinitely.
+
+[Illustration: "NAPOLEON-LIKE, THEY WASHED THEIR DIRTY LINEN IN THE
+FAMILY"--P. 135.]
+
+The dark hours filed past, and jocund day, according to Shakespeare
+and Romeo, stood tiptoe on the mountain-tops of Camanti and Basiri,
+when the travelers were awakened by a fierce and terrible cry. Lifting
+their heads in astonishment, they perceived the faithful Pepe Garcia,
+his face disfigured with rage, and his fist shaking vigorously in the
+direction of the Indians, who sat lowering and sullen in their places.
+Aragon and the cascarilleros, collected around the chief interpreter,
+far from trying to calm his anger, appeared to feed it by their
+suggestions. An explanation of the scene was demanded. Eight of the
+bearers, it appeared, had deserted, leaving to their comrades the
+pleasure of watching over the packages of cinchona, but assuming for
+their part the charge of a good fraction of the provisions, which
+they had disappeared with for the relief of their fellow-porters.
+This copious bleeding of the larder drew from Colonel Perez a terrible
+oath, and occasioned a more vivid sentiment in the entrails of Marcoy
+than the defection of the men. If the evil was grand, the remedy was
+correspondingly difficult. Indolent or mercurial at pleasure, the
+Indians had doubtless threaded the woods with winged feet, and were
+now far away. Mr. Marcoy proposed therefore to continue the march
+without them, but to set down a heavy account of bastinadoes to their
+credit when they should turn up again at Marcapata. This proposition,
+as it erred on the side of mercy, was unanimously rejected, and a
+scouting-party was ordered in pursuit, consisting of the bark-hunters
+and Juan of Aragon, to whom for the occasion Pepe Garcia confided his
+remarkable fowling-piece.
+
+[Illustration: "ARAGON AND HIS MEN FELL UPON THE DESERTERS WITHOUT
+MERCY."--P. 138.]
+
+In the afternoon the extemporized police reappeared. The fugitives had
+been found tranquilly sitting on the banks of the river, distending
+their abdomens with the stolen preserves and chocolate. Aragon and his
+men fell upon the deserters without mercy. The former, battering away
+at them with the stock of his gun, and the latter, exercising upon
+their shoulders whatever they possessed in the way of lassoes,
+axe-handles and sabre-blades, maintained the argument effectually for
+some time in this way, and did not descend to questions until muscular
+fatigue caused them to desist. The catechism subsequently put to the
+porters elicited the reply, from the spokesman of the recusants,
+that they were tired of being afraid of the wild Indians; that they
+objected to marching into the dens of tigers; that, perceiving their
+rations diminished from day to day, they had imagined the time not far
+distant when the same would be withdrawn altogether. It was curious,
+as it seemed to Marcoy when the argument was rehearsed to him
+presently, that the fellows made no complaint of being footsore,
+overcharged with burdens or conducted into paths too difficult for
+them. A lurking admiration for the vigor with which, after all, they
+played their crushing part of beasts of burden, procured them immunity
+from further punishment after their return. Their bivouacs were simply
+watched on the succeeding nights by Bolivian sentinels.
+
+After a few minutes allowed the strayed sheep to rub their bruises,
+the march was continued. The afternoon afforded a succession of the
+same sandy riverbanks, dressed with reeds, false maize, calceolarias
+and purple passion-flowers, and yielding for sole booty a brace of
+wild black ducks, and an opossum holding in her pouch five saucy and
+scolding little ones. The natural civet employed as a cosmetic by this
+animal forbade the notion of using it for food, and it was thrown with
+its family into the river, after being deprived of its glossy skin.
+
+As evening approached, and as all eyes were exploring the banks for a
+suitable camping-ground, a spacious and even beach was fixed upon as
+offering all the requisite conveniences. It was agreed to halt there.
+Attaining the locality, however, they were amazed to find all the
+traces of a previous occupation. Several sheds, formed of bamboo
+hurdles set up against the ground with sticks, like traps, were
+grouped together. Under each was a hearth, a simple excavation,
+two feet across and a few inches deep, and filled with ashes. A few
+arrows, feathers and rude pieces of pottery were scattered around.
+They greeted these Indian relics as Crusoe did the footprints of the
+savages. Nor was it more reassuring to observe, among other callers
+like themselves who had left their visiting-cards at the doors since
+the departure of the proprietors, the sign-manual of jaguars and
+tapirs, whose footprints were plainly visible on the gravel.
+
+A close examination was made of every detail pertaining to the huts
+and their accessories, and the interpreters were asked if it would be
+prudent to encamp in a spot thus leased in advance. Pepe Garcia and
+Aragon were of opinion that it would be better to pass the night
+there, assuring their employers that there would be no danger in
+sleeping among the teraphim of the savages, provided that nothing was
+touched or displaced. Their motion was promptly adopted, to the great
+discomfiture of the porters, who were poised on one foot ready for
+flight. A salute of five shots was fired, with a vague intention
+of giving any listeners the highest possible opinion of the white
+explorers as a military power. An enormous fire was kindled, sentinels
+were posted, and the party turned in, taking care, however, during the
+whole night to close but one eye at a time.
+
+[Illustration: "THEY GREETED THESE INDIAN RELICS AS CRUSOE DID THE
+FOOTPRINTS OF THE SAVAGES."--P. 138.]
+
+Day commenced to blush, when all ears were assaulted by a concerted
+howl, proceeding from behind a bed of canes on the other side of the
+river. "_Alerta! los Chunchos!_" cried the sentinel. The three words
+produced a startling effect: the porters sprang up like frightened
+deer; Mr. Marcoy grasped a sheaf of pencils and a box of water-colors
+with a warlike air, and the colonel's lips were crisped into a
+singular smile, indicative of lively emotions. Hardly were the
+travelers clothed and armed when the reeds parted with a rattling
+noise, and three nude Indians, sepia-colored and crowned with tufts of
+hair like horses' tails, leaped out like jacks-in-the-box. At sight of
+the party standing to receive them they redoubled their clamor, then,
+flourishing their arms and legs and turning continually round, they
+gradually revolved into the presence of the explorers. They selected
+as chiefs and sachems of the party such as bore weapons, being the
+colonel, Marcoy and the two interpreters. These they clasped in a
+warm, fulsome embrace: they were smeared from head to foot with rocoa
+(crude arnotta), and their passage through the river having dissolved
+this pigment, they printed themselves off, in this act of amity, upon
+the persons and clothing of their hosts. While the white men, with a
+very bad grace, were cleaning off these tokens of natural affection,
+the new-comers went on to present their civilities all around. Two of
+the porters they recognized at once, with their eagle eyesight, from
+having relieved them of their shirts while the latter were working
+out some penalty at the governor's farm of Sausipata, and proceeded to
+claim a warm acquaintance on that basis; but the bearers, with equally
+lively memories of the affront, responded simply with a frown and the
+epithet of _Sua-sua_--double thief.
+
+Pepe Garcia undertook a colloquy, and Aragon, not to be behindhand,
+flashed a few words across the conversation, right and left as it
+were, his expressions appearing to be in a different tongue from those
+used by the chief interpreter, and both utterly without perceptible
+resemblance to the rolling consonants and gutturals of the savages.
+Marcoy imbibed a strong impression that the only terms understood in
+common were the words of Spanish with which the palaver was thickly
+interlarded. This was the first time the interpreters were put on
+their mettle in a strictly professional sense, and the test was not
+altogether triumphant. However, by a careful raising of the voice
+in all difficult passages, and a wild, expressive pantomime, an
+understanding was arrived at.
+
+The visitors belonged to the tribe of Siriniris, inhabiting the space
+comprised between the valleys of Ocongate and Ollachea, and extending
+eastwardly as far as the twelfth degree. They lived at peace with
+their neighbors, the Huat-chipayris and the Pukiris. For several days
+the reports of the Christian guns (_tasa-tasa_) had advertised them
+of the presence of white men in the valley, and, curious to judge of
+their numbers, they had approached. They had formed a cunning escort
+to the party, always faithful but never seen, since the encampment
+at Maniri: every camping-ground since that particular bivouac they
+faithfully described. They were, of course, in particular and direful
+need of _sirutas_ and _bambas_ (knives and hatchets), but their fears
+of the _tasa-tasa_, or guns, was still stronger than their desires,
+and their courage had not, until they saw the strangers domiciled as
+guests in their own habitations, attained the firmness and consistency
+necessary for a personal approach. The three dancing ambassadors were
+ministers plenipotentiary on the part of their tribe, located in a
+bamboo metropolis five miles off.
+
+The white men could not well avoid laying down their _tasa-tasa_ and
+disbursing _sirutas_ and _bambas_. The savages, after this triumph
+of diplomacy, suddenly turned, and, thrusting their fingers in their
+mouths, emitted a shrill note, which had the effect of enchanting the
+forest of rushes across the river, and causing it to give birth to a
+whole ballet of naked coryphei. Nine men, seven women and three dogs
+composed the spectacle, of which the masculine part, the human and
+the canine, proceeded to swim the stream and fraternize with the
+strangers. The women rested on the bank like river-nymphs: their
+costume was somewhat less prudish than that of the men, the coat of
+rocoa being confined to their faces, which were further decorated with
+joints of reed thrust through the nose and ears. A glance of curiosity
+darted across the water by the colonel was surprised in its flight by
+the ambassadors, who addressed a hasty word or two to their ladies:
+the latter, with one quick and cat-like gesture, whipped off each a
+branch of the nearest foliage, and were dressed in a single instant.
+
+To reward all these vociferous mendicants with the invaluable cutlery
+was hardly prudent. Seeing the hesitation of their visitors, the
+savages adopted other tactics. Hurling themselves across the river,
+they quickly reappeared, armed with all the temptations they could
+think of to induce the strangers to barter. The scene of these savages
+coming to market was a picturesque one. Entering the water, provided
+with their objects of exchange, which they held high above their
+heads, and swimming with the right arm only, they began to cut the
+river diagonally. The lifting of the waves and the dash of spray
+almost concealed the file of dusky heads. Nothing could be plainly
+seen but the left arms, standing out of the water as stiff and
+inflexible as so many bars of bronze, relieved against the silvery
+brightness of the water. These advancing arms were adorned with the
+material of traffic--bird-skins of variegated colors, bows and arrows,
+and live tamed parrots standing upon perches of bamboo. The white
+spectators could not but admire the native vigor, elegance and
+promptitude of their motions as they rose from the water like Tritons,
+and, throwing their treasures down in a heap, bounded forward to give
+their visitors the conventional signals of friendship. A rapid
+bargain was concluded, in which the sylvan booty of the wild men (not
+forgetting the prudent exaction of their weapons) was entirely made
+over to the custody of the explorers in exchange for a few Birmingham
+knives worth fourpence each.
+
+However curious and amicable might be their new relations with the
+savages, the party were desirous to put an end to them as soon as
+possible. Pepe Garcia announced that the pale chiefs, wishing to
+resume their march, were about to separate from them. This decision
+appeared to be unpleasant or distressful in their estimation, and
+they tried to reverse it by all sorts of arguments. No answer being
+volunteered, they shouted to their women to await them, and betook
+themselves to walking with the party. One of the three ambassadors, a
+graceful rogue of twenty-five, marked all over with rocoa and lote,
+so as to earn for himself the nickname of "the Panther," gamboled
+and caracoled in front of the procession as if to give it an
+entertainment. His two comrades had garroted with their arms the neck
+of the chief interpreter: another held Juan of Aragon by the skirt of
+his blouse, and regulated his steps by those of the youth. This accord
+of barbarism and civilization had in it something decidedly graceful,
+and rather pathetic: if ever the language natural to man was found,
+the medium in circulation before our sickly machinery of speech came
+to be invented, it was in this concert of persuasive action and tender
+cooing notes. The main body of the Siriniris marched pellmell along
+with the porters, whom this vicinage made exceedingly uncomfortable,
+and who were perspiring in great drops.
+
+At the commencement of a wood the whites embraced the occasion to take
+formal leave of their new acquaintances. As they endeavored to turn
+their backs upon them they were at once surrounded by the whole band,
+crying and gesticulating, and opposing their departure with a sort of
+determined playfulness.
+
+At the same time a word often repeated, the word _Huatinmio_, began to
+enter largely into their conversation, and piqued the curiosity of
+the historiographer. Marcoy begged the interpreter to procure him the
+explanation of this perpetual shibboleth. Half by signs, half in the
+polyglot jargon which he had been employing with the Siriniris, Garcia
+managed to understand that the word in question was the name of their
+village, situated at a small distance and in a direction which they
+indicated. In this retreat, they said, no inhabitants remained but
+women, children and old men, the rest of the braves being absent on
+a chase. They proposed a visit to their capital, where the strangers,
+they said, honored and cherished by the tribe, might pass many
+enviable days.
+
+The proposed excursion, which would cause a loss of considerable time
+and a deflection from the intended route, was declined in courteous
+terms by Marcoy through the interpretation of Pepe Garcia. Among
+civilized folk this urbane refusal would have sufficed, but the
+savages, taking such a reply as a challenge to verbal warfare,
+returned to the charge with increased tenacity. It were hard to say
+what natural logic they put in practice or what sylvan persuasions
+they wrought by, but their peculiar mode of stroking the white men's
+backs with their hands, and the softer and still softer inflections
+which they introduced into their voices, would have melted hearts of
+marble. In brief, the civilized portion adopted the more weakly part
+and allowed themselves to be led by the savage portion.
+
+The colonel and Pepe Garcia were still more easily persuaded than Mr.
+Marcoy, and only awaited his adhesion. When it was finally announced
+the Siriniris renewed their gambols and uttered shouts of delight.
+They then took the head of the excursion. A singularity in their
+guides, which quickly attracted the notice of the explorers, was the
+perfect indifference with which they took either the clearings or the
+thickets in their path. Where the strangers were afraid of tearing
+their garments, these unprotected savages had no care whatever for
+their skins. It is true that their ingenuity in gliding through the
+labyrinth resembled magic. However the forest might bristle with
+undergrowth, they never thought of breaking down obstacles or of
+cutting them, as the equally practiced Bolivians did, with a knife.
+They contented themselves with putting aside with one hand the tufts
+of foliage as if they had been curtains or draperies, and that with an
+easy decision of gesture and an elegance of attitude which are hardly
+found outside of certain natural tribes.
+
+The city of Huatinmio proved to be a group of seven large sheds
+perched among plaintains and bananas, divided into stalls, and
+affording shelter for a hundred individuals. The most sordid
+destitution--if ignorance of comfort can be called
+destitution--reigned everywhere around. The women were especially
+hideous, and on receipt of presents of small bells and large needles
+became additionally disagreeable in their antics of gratitude. The
+bells were quickly inserted in their ears, and soon the whole village
+was in tintinnabulation.
+
+A night was passed in the hospitality of these barbarians, who vacated
+their largest cabin for their guests. A repast was served, consisting
+of stewed monkey: no salt was used in the cookery, but on the other
+hand a dose of pimento was thrown in, which brought tears to the eyes
+of the strangers and made them run to the water-jar as if to save
+their lives. The evening was spent in a general conversation with the
+Siriniris, who were completely mystified by the form and properties of
+a candle which Mr. Marcoy drew from his baggage and ignited. The wild
+men passed it from hand to hand, examining it, and singeing themselves
+in turn. Still another marvel was the sheet of paper on which the
+artist essayed a portrait of one of his hosts. The finished sketch
+did not appear to attract them at all, or to raise in their minds
+the faintest association with the human form, but the texture and
+whiteness of the sheet excited their lively admiration, and they
+passed it from one to another with many exclamations of wonder.
+Meantime, a number of questions were suggested and proposed through
+the interpreter.
+
+The formality of marriage among the Siriniris was found to be quite
+unknown; the most rudimentary idea of divine worship could not be
+discovered; the treatment of the aged was shown to be contemptuous
+and neglectful in the extreme; and the lines of demarcation with the
+beasts seemed to be but feebly traced. Finally, Mr. Marcoy begged the
+interpreter to propound the delicate inquiry whether, among the viands
+with which they nourished or had formerly nourished themselves, human
+flesh had found a place. Garcia hesitated, and at first declined
+to push the interrogation, but after some persuasion consented. The
+Siriniris were not in the least shocked at the question, and answered
+that the flesh of man, especially in infancy, was a delicious food,
+far better than the monkey, the tapir or the peccary; that their
+nation, in the days of its power, frequently used it at the great
+feasts; but that the difficulty of procuring such a rarity had
+increased until they were now forced to strike it from their bill of
+fare.
+
+The night passed without disturbance, and the next day's parting was
+accompanied by reiterated requests for a repetition of the visit. The
+Panther, who since their arrival had oppressed the travelers with a
+multitude of officious attentions, escorted them into the woods, and
+there took leave of them with a gesture of his hand, relieving their
+eyes of his slippery, snake-like robe of spots. A knife from their
+stores, slung round his neck like a locket, smote his breast at each
+step as he danced backward, and a couple of large fish-hooks glanced
+in his ears.
+
+With a feeling of relief and satisfied curiosity the exploring party
+left behind them the traces of these children of Nature, and returned
+toward the river. The cascarilleros, all for their business,
+had regretted the waste of time, and now betook themselves to an
+examination of the woods with all their energy. After several hours
+of march their efforts were crowned with success. Eusebio presently
+rejoined his employers, showing leaves and berries of the _Cinchona
+scrobiculata_ and _pubescens_: the peons, on their side, had
+discovered isolated specimens of the _Calisaya_, which, joined with
+those found on Mount Camanti, indicated an extended belt of that
+precious species. This was not the best. A veritable treasure which
+they had unearthed, worth all the others put together, was a line of
+those violet cinchonas which the native exporters call _Cascarilla
+morada_, and the botanists _Cinchona Boliviana_. The trees of this
+kind were grouped in threes and fours, and extended for half a mile.
+This repeated proof that the most valuable of all the cinchonas,
+together with nearly every one of the others, were to be discovered
+in a small radius along the valley of the Cconi, filled the explorers
+with triumph, and demonstrated beyond a doubt the sagacity of Don
+Santo Domingo in organizing the expedition.
+
+The purpose and intention of the journey was now abundantly fulfilled.
+Had the travelers rested satisfied with the liberal indications they
+had found, and consented to place themselves between the haunts of
+the savages and the abodes of civilization, with a tendency and
+determination toward the latter, they might have returned with safety
+as with glory. The estimate made by Eusebio, however, of the trend or
+direction of the calisaya groves, induced him to forsake the bed of
+the Cconi, and strike south-eastwardly, so as to cross the Ollachea
+and the Ayapata.
+
+"But the mountains are disappearing," hazarded Mr. Marcoy. "Will not
+the cinchonas disappear with them?"
+
+"Oh," answered the majordomo, like a pedagogue to a confident
+school-boy, "the señor knows better how to put ink or color on a sheet
+of paper than how to judge of these things. The plain, the _campo
+llano_, is far enough to the east. Before we should see the
+disappearance of the mountains, we should have to cross as many hills
+and ravines as we have left behind us."
+
+"What do you think of doing, then?" naturally demanded Marcoy, who had
+long since begun to feel that the expedition had but one chief, and
+that was the sepia-colored cascarillero from Bolivia,
+
+"Everything and nothing," answered Eusebio.
+
+These enigmas always carry the day. The apparatus of march was
+once more set in motion toward the adjacent water-sheds. After a
+considerable journey--rewarded, it must be said, with a succession of
+cinchona discoveries--they halted near a clearing in the forest, where
+large heaps of stones and pebbles, arranged in semicircles, attracted
+their attention. The cascarilleros explained this appearance as due
+to former arrangements for gold-washing in an old river-bed, the San
+Gavan or the Ayapata, that had now changed its locality.
+
+While examining the unusual appearance an abominable clamor burst from
+the woods around, and a band of Siriniris appeared, led by a lusty
+ruffian crowned with oriole feathers, whom the travelers recognized as
+having been among their previous acquaintances.
+
+The encounter was very disagreeable, but the strangers determined to
+make the best of it. The manner of this band of Indians was somewhat
+different from that of the others. They brought nothing for barter,
+and had an indescribably coarse and hardy style of behavior.
+
+The travelers determined to buy a little information, if nothing
+better, with their knives and fish-hooks. Garcia was accordingly
+instructed to demand the meaning of the heaps and causeways of stones.
+The savages laughed at first, but finally informed the visitors that
+the constructions which puzzled them so had been made by people of
+their own race many years ago, for the purpose of gathering gold from
+the river which used to run along there, but which now flowed seven
+miles off.
+
+This information was dear to the historic instinct of Marcoy. He
+spoke, by his usual proxy, to the Indian of the oriole, commanding him
+not to begin every explanation by laughing, as he had been doing, but
+to answer intelligently, promising a reward of several knives. The
+savage exchanged a rapid glance with his fellows, and then he and they
+stood up as stiff and mute as the trees. Marcoy then asked him if he
+had never heard his father or his grandfather speak of the great city
+of San Gavan, built hereabouts formerly by the Spanish chevaliers, and
+which the Caranga and Suchimani Indians from the Inambari River had
+destroyed by fire.
+
+The evident recognition of this legend by the savages, and their
+rapid exchange among themselves of the words _sacapa huayris Ipaños_,
+induced Marcoy to ask if they could guide them to the site of the
+former city. They answered that a day's march would be sufficient, and
+pointed with their arms in the direction of north-north-west.
+
+The temptation to see the place whose golden renown, after having made
+the tour of the American continent, had reached Spain and the world at
+large, was too strong to be resisted. Colonel Perez, besides the magic
+attraction which the mention of gold had for him, felt his national
+pride touched by the idea of a place where his compatriots had added
+such magnificence to the Spanish name, and gained so many ingots of
+gold by paddling in the streams. The cascarilleros were delighted to
+extend their journey, in hopes of yet larger discoveries. As for the
+porters, since the manifestations of the savages they clung to the
+party with as much anxiety as they had ever shown to escape from it.
+
+In 1767 the city of San Gavan, remaining intact amid the ruin of all
+its neighbors, was the sole disburser of the riches of the Caravaya
+Valley. The gold-dust, collected throughout the whole territory on a
+government monopoly, was brought thither upon the backs of Indians,
+melted into ingots, and distributed to Lima and the world at large.
+On the night of the 15th and 16th of December in that year the
+wealthy city was fired by the Carangas and the Suchimanis, and all the
+inhabitants slain with arrows or clubs. The first lords of the soil
+had resumed their rights.
+
+When the news of the event was brought to Lima, the viceroy of
+the period, Antonio Amat, swore on a piece of the true cross to
+exterminate every Indian in Peru. It is to the persuasions of his
+favorite, Mariquita Gallegas, that the preservation of the native
+tribes from a bloody extirpation is due. This woman, _La Perichola_,
+whose caricatured likeness we see in the most agreeable of Offenbach's
+operas, and whose deeds of mercy and edifying end in a convent entitle
+her to some charitable consideration, persuaded her royal lover to
+operate on the natives with missionaries and teachers rather than with
+fire and sword. Antonio Amat yielded, and the Indians have survived.
+
+[Illustration: "ANOTHER SAVAGE HAD FOUND A PAIR OF LINEN
+PANTALOONS."--P. 146.]
+
+Let no traveler go to South America and cross the Andes with the idea
+of unearthing a Nineveh or a Babylon on the site of San Gavan. The
+emissaries of Don Santo Domingo were quickly standing, among the
+grinning and amused Indians, on the locality of the Golden Depot of
+San Gavan. But Nature had thoroughly reclaimed her own, and the place,
+indicated again and again by the savages with absolute unanimity,
+showed nothing but mounds of fern and moss under canopies of forest
+trees.
+
+A day's rest and a sketch or two were consecrated by Marcoy to this
+historic spot, the grave of a civilization. It had been well if he
+had restrained his feelings of romance, and betaken himself with his
+companions to the homeward track.
+
+As the explorers were breakfasting in the morning on a squirrel and
+a couple of birds shot among the vanished streets of San Gavan, a
+disagreeable incident supervened. The wild Indians had disappeared
+over-night. But now, seemingly born instantaneously from the trees, a
+throng of Siriniris burst upon the scene, rushing up to the travelers,
+straining them repeatedly in a rude embrace, then leaving them, then
+assaulting them again, and accompanying every contact with the eternal
+cry, _Siruta inta menea_--"Give me a knife." Each member of the troop
+had now six savages at his heels, and they were not those of the day
+before, but a new and rougher band. The chiefs of the party rushed
+together and brandished their muskets. This forced the savages
+to retire, but gave to the rencounter that hostile air which, in
+consideration of the disparity of numbers, ought at all hazards to
+have been avoided. The wild men quickly formed a circle around the
+artillery. The latter, fearing for their porters and the precious
+baggage, leaped through this circle and joined their servants, making
+believe to cock their fire-arms. Upon this the Indians, half afraid of
+the guns, vanished into the woods, first picking up whatever clothing
+and utensils they could lay their hands on. In an instant they were
+showing these trophies to their rightful owners from a safe distance,
+laughing as if they would split their sides. One of the naked rascals
+had seized a flannel undershirt of the colonel's, which was drying
+on a branch. His efforts to introduce his great feet into the
+sleeves were excruciating. Another savage had found a pair of linen
+pantaloons, which he was endeavoring to put on like a coat, appearing
+much embarrassed with the posterior portion, which completely masked
+his face. Aragon had seen a young reprobate of his own age make off
+with a pair of socks of his property. Detecting the rogue half hidden
+by a tree, the mozo made a sortie, seized the Indian, and by a
+violent shake brought the property out of his mouth, where it had been
+concealed as in a natural pocket.
+
+The travelers immediately threw themselves into marching order and
+took up their line of route. The savages followed. At the first
+obstacle, a mass of matted trees, they easily rejoined the party of
+whites.
+
+Then, for the first time, the idea of their power seemed to strike
+them, and they precipitated themselves upon the porters, who took to
+flight, rolling from under their packs like animals of burden. In a
+moment every article of baggage, every knife and weapon, was seized,
+and the red-skins, singing and howling, were making off through the
+woods. Among them was now seen the Siriniri with orioles' feathers,
+who must have guided them to their prey.
+
+The expedition was pillaged, and pillaged as a joke. The thieves were
+heard laughing as they scampered off like deer through the woods.
+
+It was hard to realize at once the gravity of the misfortune. No one
+was hurt, no one was insulted. But provisions, clothing, articles of
+exchange and weapons were all gone, except such arms and ammunition as
+the travelers carried on their persons. A collection of cinchonas was
+in possession of one of the Bolivians, though it represented but
+a fraction of the species discovered. The besiegers, however, had
+disappeared, and a westerly march was taken up. Good time was made
+that day, and a heavy night's sleep was the consequence. With the
+morning light came the well-remembered and hateful cry, and the little
+army found itself surrounded by a throng of merry naked demons, among
+whom were some who had not profited by the distribution of the spoils.
+At the magic word _siruta_ all these new-comers rushed in a mass upon
+the white men. Marcoy managed to slip his fine ivory-handled machete
+within his trowser leg, but every other cutting tool disappeared as if
+by magic from the possession of the explorers. The shooting-utensils
+the savages, believing them haunted, would not touch. Then, half
+irritated at the exhaustion of the booty, the amiable children of
+Nature burst out into open derision. The artists of the tribe, filling
+their palms with rocoa, and moistening the same with saliva, went up
+to their late patrons and began to decorate their faces. The latter,
+judging patience their best policy, sat in silence while the delicate
+fancy of the savages expended itself in arabesques and flourishes.
+Perez and Aragon had their eyes surrounded with red spectacles. The
+face of Marcoy, covered with a heavy beard, only allowed room for
+a "W" on the forehead, and Pepe Garcia was quit for a set of
+interfacings like a checkerboard. Having thus signed their marks upon
+their visitors, the aborigines retired, catching up here and there
+a stray ball of cord or a strip of beef, saluting with the hand, and
+vanishing into the woods with the repeated compliment, _Eminiki_--"I
+am off."
+
+The victims rested motionless for fifteen minutes: then pellmell,
+through the thickest of the brush and down the steepest of the hill,
+blotted out under gigantic ferns and covered by umbrageous vines,
+stealing along water-courses and skirting the sides of the mountains,
+they rushed precipitately westward.
+
+Two months after the priest of Marcapata had dismissed with his
+benediction the party of confident and enthusiastic explorers, he
+received again his strayed flock, but this time in rags, armed with
+ammunitionless guns and one poor knife, wasted by hunger, baked by the
+sun, and tattooed like Polynesians by the briers and insects. The
+good man could not repress a tear. "Ah, my son," said he as he clasped
+Marcoy's hand, "see what it costs to go hunting the cascarilla in the
+land of the infidels!"
+
+The explorations started by Don Juan Sanz de Santo Domingo came to
+profitable result, but not to his advantage. Three weeks after the
+pioneers arrived again in Cuzco, Don Juan started another expedition,
+on a much larger scale, to accomplish the working of the cinchona
+valleys, under charge of the same Bolivians, who could make like a bee
+for every tree they had discovered. A detachment of soldiers was
+to protect the party, and the working force was more than double.
+Finally, the night before the intended start, the Bolivian
+cascarilleros, with their examinador, disappeared together. It is
+probable that Don Juan's scheme, nursed, according to custom, with too
+much publicity, had attracted the attention of the merchants of Cuzco,
+who had found it profitable to buy off the bark-searchers for their
+own interest.
+
+The crash of this immense enterprise was too much for Don Juan.
+Threatened with creditors, Jews, _escribanos_ and the police, he
+retired to a silver-mine he was opening in the province of Abancay.
+This mine, in successful operation, he depended on for satisfying his
+creditors. He found it choked up, destroyed with a blast of powder by
+some enemy. Unable to bear the disappointment, Don Juan blew out his
+brains in the office belonging to his mine. A month afterward, Don
+Eugenic Mendoza y Jara, the bishop of Cuzco, sent a couple of Indians
+for the body, with instructions to throw it into a ditch: the men
+attached a rope to the feet and dragged it to a ravine, where dogs and
+vultures disposed of the unhallowed remains.
+
+
+
+
+A GLANCE AT THE SITE AND ANTIQUITIES OF ATHENS.
+
+
+The day is a happy one to the student-traveler from the Western World
+in which he first looks upon the lovely plain of Athens. Rounding the
+point where Hymettus thrusts his huge length into the sea, the long,
+featureless mountain-wall of Southern Attica suddenly breaks down, and
+gives place to a broad expanse of fertile, and well-cultivated soil,
+sloping gently back with ever-narrowing bounds until it reaches the
+foot-hills of lofty Pentelicus. The wooded heights of Parnes enclose
+it on the north, while bald Hymettus rears an impassable barrier along
+the south. In front of the gently recurved shore stretch the smooth
+waters of the Gulf of Salamis, while beyond rises range upon range of
+lofty mountain-peaks with strikingly varied outline, terminating on
+the one hand in the towering cone of Egina, and on the other in
+the pyramidal, fir-clad summit of Cithaeron. Upon the plain, at the
+distance of three or four miles from the sea, are several small rocky
+hills of picturesque appearance, isolated and seemingly independent,
+but really parts of a low range parallel to Hymettus. Upon one of the
+most considerable of these, whose precipitous sides make it a natural
+fortress, stood the Acropolis, and upon the group of lesser heights
+around and in the valleys between clustered the dwellings of ancient
+Athens.
+
+[Illustration: VIEW OF THE ACROPOLIS AND THE COLUMNS OF THE TEMPLE OF
+JUPITER OLYMPUS.]
+
+It was a fitting site for the capital of a people keenly sensitive to
+beauty, and destined to become the leaders of the world in matters
+of taste, especially in the important department of the Fine Arts.
+Nowhere are there more charming contrasts of mountain, sea and
+plain--nowhere a more perfect harmony of picturesque effect. The sea
+is not a dreary waste of waters without bounds, but a smiling gulf
+mirroring its mountain-walls and winding about embosomed isles, yet
+ever broadening as it recedes, and suggesting the mighty flood beyond
+from which it springs. The plain is not an illimitable expanse over
+which the weary eye ranges in vain in quest of some resting-place, but
+is so small as to be embraced in its whole contour in a single view,
+while its separate features--the broad, dense belt of olives which
+marks the bed of its principal stream, the ancient Cephissus, the
+vineyards, the grain-fields and the sunny hillside pastures--are made
+to produce their full impression. The mountains are not near enough to
+be obtrusive, much less oppressive; neither are they so distant as to
+be indistinct or to seem insignificant. Seen through the clear air,
+their naked summits are so sharply defined and so individual in
+appearance as to seem almost like sculptured forms chiseled out of the
+hard rock.
+
+The city which rose upon this favored spot was worthy of its
+surroundings. The home of a free and enterprising race endowed with
+rare gifts of intellect and sensibility, and ever on the alert for
+improvement, it became the nurse of letters and of arts, while the
+luxury begotten of prosperity awakened a taste for adornment, and
+the wealth acquired by an extended commerce furnished the means of
+gratifying it. The age of Pericles was the period of the highest
+national development. At that time were reared the celebrated
+structures in honor of the virgin-goddess who was the patron of
+Athens--the Parthenon, the Propylaea, the Erechtheum--which crowned
+the Acropolis, and were the glory of the city as they were the
+masterpieces of Grecian architecture. During the preceding half
+century many works of utility and of splendor had been constructed,
+and the city now became renowned not only in Greece, but throughout
+the ancient world, for the magnificence of its public buildings.
+Thucydides, writing about this time, says that should Athens be
+destroyed, posterity would infer from its ruins that the city had
+been twice as populous as it actually was. Demosthenes speaks of
+the strangers who came to visit its attractions. But the changes of
+twenty-three centuries have passed upon this splendor--a sad story
+of violence and neglect--and the queenly city has long been in the
+condition of ruin imagined by Thucydides. Still, the spell of her
+influence is not broken, and the charm which once drew so many
+visitors to her shrines still acts powerfully on the hearts of
+scholars in all lands, who, having looked up to her poets, orators
+and philosophers as teachers and loved them as friends, long to visit
+their haunts, to stand where they stood, to behold the scenes which
+they were wont to view, and to gaze upon what may remain of the great
+works of art upon which their admiration was bestowed.
+
+So the student-pilgrim from the Western World with native ardor
+strains his sight to catch the first glimpse of the Athenian plain and
+city. He is fresh from his studies, and familiar with what books teach
+of the geography of Greece and the topography of Athens. He needs
+not to be informed which mountain-range is Parnes, and which
+Pentelicus--which island is Salamis, and which Egina. Yet much of what
+he sees is a revelation to him. The mountains are higher, more varied
+and more beautiful than he had supposed, Lycabettus and the Acropolis
+more imposing, Pentelicus farther away, and the plain larger, the gulf
+narrower, and Egina nearer and more mountainous, than he had fancied.
+He is astonished at the smallness of the harbor at Peiraeus, having
+insensibly formed his conception of its size from the notices of the
+mighty fleets which sailed from it in the palmy days when Athens was
+mistress of the seas. He is not prepared to see the southern shore
+of Salamis so near to the Peiraeus, though it explains the close
+connection between that island and Athens, and throws some light upon
+the great naval defeat of the Persians. In short, while every object
+is recognized as it presents itself, yet a more correct conception is
+formed of its relative position and aspect from a single glance of the
+eye than had been acquired from books during years of study.
+
+Arrived at the city, his experience is the same. He needs no guide to
+conduct him to its antiquities, nor cicerone to explain in bad
+French or worse English their names and history. Still, unexpected
+appearances present themselves not unfrequently. Hastening toward the
+Acropolis, he will first inspect the remains of the great theatre of
+Dionysus, so familiar to him as the place where, in the presence
+of all the people and many strangers, were acted the plays of his
+favorite poets, Eschylus and Sophocles, and where they won many
+prizes. Hurrying over the eastern brow of the hill, he comes suddenly
+upon the spot, enters at the summit, as many an Athenian did in the
+olden time, and is smitten with amazement at the first glance, and led
+to question whether this be indeed the site of the ancient theatre. He
+finds, it is true, the topmost seats cut in the solid rock, row above
+row, stripped now of their marble lining and weather-worn, but yet the
+genuine ancient seats of the upper tier. These he expected to find.
+But whence are those fresh seats which fill the lower part of the
+hollow, arranged as neatly as if intended for immediate use? and
+whence the massive stage beyond? He bethinks himself that he has
+heard of recent excavations under the patronage of the government, and
+closer inspection shows that these are actually the lower seats of the
+theatre in the time of the emperor Hadrian, whose favorite residence
+was Athens, and who did so much to embellish the city. The front seats
+consist of massive stone chairs, each inscribed with the name of its
+occupant, generally the priestess of some one of the numerous gods
+worshiped by that people so given to idolatry. In the centre of the
+second row is an elevated throne inscribed with the name of Hadrian.
+The stage is seen to be the ancient Greek stage enlarged to the
+Roman size to suit the demands of a later style of theatrical
+representation.
+
+[Illustration: THEATRE OF DIONYSUS (BACCHUS).]
+
+After looking in vain for the seat occupied by the priestess of the
+Unknown God, our traveler passes on and enters with a beating heart
+the charmed precincts of the Acropolis itself. The Propylaea, which he
+has been accustomed to regard too exclusively as a mere entrance-gate
+to the glories beyond, impresses him with its size and grandeur, and
+the little temple of Victory by its side with its elegance.[A] But
+the steepness of the ascent perplexes him. It seems impracticable for
+horses, yet he knows by unexceptionable testimony that the Athenian
+youth prided themselves upon driving their matched steeds in the great
+Panathenaic procession which once every four years wound up the hill,
+bearing the sacred peplus to the temple of the goddess. A closer
+examination reveals the transverse creases of the pavement designed
+to give a footing to the beasts, as well as the marks of the
+chariot-wheels. Nevertheless, the ascent (and much more the descent)
+must have been a perilous undertaking, unless the teams were better
+broken than the various accounts of chariot-races furnished by the
+poets would indicate. Entering beneath the great gate, a little
+distance forward to the left may readily be found the site of the
+colossal bronze statue of the warrior-goddess in complete armor,
+formed by Phidias out of the spoils taken at Marathon. The square
+base, partly sunk in the uneven rock, is as perfect as if just put in
+readiness to receive the pedestal of that famous work. A road bending
+to the right and slightly hollowed out of the rock leads to the
+Parthenon. The outer platform which sustains this celebrated temple
+is partly cut from the rock of the hill and partly built up of common
+limestone. The inner one of three courses, as well as the whole
+superstructure, is formed of Pentelic marble of a compact crystalline
+structure and of dazzling whiteness. Long exposure has not availed to
+destroy its lustre, but only to soften its tone. The visitor, planting
+himself at the western front, is in a position to gain some adequate
+idea of the perfection of the noble building. The interior and central
+parts suffered the principal injury from the explosion of the Turkish
+powder magazine in 1687. The western front remains nearly entire.
+It has been despoiled, indeed, of its movable ornaments. The statues
+which filled the pediment are gone, with the exception of a fragment
+or two. The sculptured slabs have been removed from the spaces between
+the triglyphs, and the gilded shields which hung beneath have been
+taken down. Of the magnificent frieze, representing the procession
+of the great quadrennial festival, only the portion surrounding the
+western vestibule is still in place.[B]
+
+[Footnote A: The latter contains, among other relics of a balustrade
+which protected and adorned the platform of the temple, the
+exquisitely graceful torso of Victory untying her sandals, of which
+casts are to be seen in most of the museums of Europe.]
+
+[Footnote B: Among the figures of this bas-relief, twelve are
+recognized by their lofty stature and sitting posture as those of
+divinities. One group is represented in the engraving.]
+
+[Illustration: VICTORY UNTYING HER SANDALS.]
+
+[Illustration: TEMPLE OF VICTORY]
+
+[Illustration: THE PARTHENON.]
+
+Still, as these were strictly decorations, and wholly subordinate to
+the organic parts of the structure, their presence, while it would
+doubtless greatly enhance the effect of the whole, is not felt to be
+essential to its completeness. The whole Doric columns still bear
+the massive entablature sheltered by the covering roof. The simple
+greatness of the conception, the just proportion of the several parts,
+together with the elaborate finishing of the whole work, invest it
+with a charm such as the works of man seldom possess--the pure and
+lasting pleasure which flows from apparent perfection Entering the
+principal apartment of the building, traces are seen of the stucco and
+pictures with which the walls were covered when it was fitted up as
+a Christian church in the Byzantine period. Near the centre of the
+marble pavement is a rectangular space laid with dark stone from the
+Peirseus or from Eleusis. It marks the probable site of the colossal
+precious statue of the goddess in gold and ivory--one of the most
+celebrated works of Phidias. The smaller apartment beyond, accessible
+only from the opposite front of the temple, was used by the state as
+a place of deposit and safekeeping for bullion and other valuables in
+the care of the state treasurer.
+
+[Illustration: BAS RELIEF OF THE GODS (FRIEZE OF THE PARTHENON).]
+
+Having examined the great temple, and tested the curvature of
+its seemingly horizontal lines by sighting along the unencumbered
+platform, and having stopped at several points of the grand portico
+to admire the fine views of the city and surrounding country, the
+traveler picks his way northward, across a thick layer of fragments
+of columns, statues and blocks of marble, toward the low-placed,
+irregular but elegant Erechtheum, the temple of the most ancient
+worship and statue of the patron-goddess of the city. This building
+sits close by the northern as the Parthenon does by the southern wall
+of the enclosure. It has suffered equally with the other from the
+ravages of time, and its ruins, though less grand, are more beautiful.
+Most of the graceful Ionic columns are still standing, but large
+portions of the roof and entablature have fallen. Fragments of
+decorated cornice strew the ground, some of them of considerable
+length, and afford a near view of that delicate ornamentation and
+exquisite finish so rare outside the limits of Greece. The elevated
+porch of the Caryatides, lately restored by the substitution of a
+new figure in place of the missing statue now in the British Museum,
+attracts attention as a unique specimen of Greek art, and also as
+showing how far a skillful treatment will overcome the inherent
+difficulties of a subject. The row of fair maidens looking out toward
+the Parthenon do not seem much oppressed by the burden which rests
+upon them, while their graceful forms lend a pleasing variety to the
+scene. Passing out by the northern wing of the Propylaea, a survey is
+had of the numerous fragments of sculpture discovered among the ruins
+upon the hill, and temporarily placed in the ancient Pinacotheca.
+The eye rests upon sweet infant faces and upon rugged manly ones.
+Sometimes a single feature only remains, which, touched by the finger
+of genius, awakens admiration. A naked arm severed from the trunk, of
+feminine cast, but with muscles tightly strained and hand clenched as
+in agony, will arrest attention and dwell in the memory.
+
+North-west of the Acropolis, across a narrow chasm, lies the low,
+rocky height of the Areopagus, accessible at the southeast angle by
+a narrow flight of sixteen rudely-cut steps, which lead to a small
+rectangular excavation on the summit, which faces the Acropolis, and
+is surrounded upon three sides by a double tier of benches hewn out
+of the rock. Here undoubtedly the most venerable court of justice at
+Athens had its seat and tried its cases in the open air. Here too,
+without doubt, stood the great apostle when, with bold spirit and
+weighty words, he declared unto the men of Athens that God of whom
+they confessed their ignorance; who was not to be represented by gold
+or silver or stone graven by art and man's device; who dwelt not in
+temples made with hands, and needed not to be worshiped with men's
+hands. In no other place can one feel so sure that he comes upon the
+very footsteps of the apostle, and on no other spot can one better
+appreciate his high gifts as an orator or the noble devotion of his
+whole soul to the work of the Master. How poor in comparison with
+his life-work appear the performances of the greatest of the Athenian
+thinkers or doers!
+
+A little more than a quarter of a mile west of the Acropolis is
+another rocky hill--the Pnyx--celebrated as the place where the
+assembly of all the citizens met to transact the business of the
+state. A large semicircular area was formed, partly by excavation,
+partly by building up from beneath, the bounds of which can be
+distinctly traced. Considerable remains of the terrace-wall at the
+foot of the slope exist--huge stones twelve or fourteen feet in length
+by eight or ten in breadth. The chord of the semicircle is near the
+top of the hill, formed by the perpendicular face of the excavated
+rock, and is about four hundred feet in length by twenty in depth.
+Projecting from it at the centre, and hewn out of the same rock, is
+the bema or stone platform from which the great orators from the time
+of Themistocles and Aristides, and perhaps of Solon, down to the
+age of Demosthenes and the Attic Ten, addressed the mass of their
+fellow-citizens. It is a massive cubic block, with a linear edge of
+eleven feet, standing upon a graduated base of nearly equal height,
+and is mounted on either side by a flight of nine stone steps.
+From its connection with the most celebrated efforts of some of
+the greatest orators our race has yet seen, it is one of the most
+interesting relics in the world, and its solid structure will cause it
+to endure as long as the world itself shall stand, unless, as there is
+some reason to apprehend will be the case, it is knocked to pieces and
+carried off in the carpet-bags of travelers. No traces of the Agora,
+which occupied the shallow valley between the Pnyx and the Acropolis,
+remain. It was the heart of the city, and was adorned with numerous
+public buildings, porticoes, temples and statues. It was often
+thronged with citizens gathered for purposes of trade, discussion, or
+to hear and tell some new thing.
+
+[Illustration: PORCH OF THE CARYATIDES.]
+
+Half a mile or more to the south-east, on the banks of the Ilissus,
+stood a magnificent structure dedicated to Olympian Zeus--one of
+the four largest temples of Greece, ranking with that of Demeter at
+Eleusis and that of Diana at Ephesus. Its foundations remain, and
+sixteen of the huge Corinthian columns belonging to its majestic
+triple colonnade. One of these is fallen. Breaking up into the
+numerous disks of which it was composed--six and a half feet in
+diameter by two or more in thickness--and stretching out to a length
+of over sixty feet, it gives an impressive conception of the size of
+these columns, said to be the largest standing in Europe. The level
+area of the temple is now used as a training-ground for soldiers.
+Close by, and almost in the bed of the stream, which is dry the larger
+part of the year, issues from beneath a ledge of rock the copious
+fountain of sweet waters known to the ancients as Calirrhoe. It
+furnished the only good drinking-water of the city, and was used in
+all the sacrifices to the gods. A little way above, on the opposite
+bank of the Ilissus, is the site of the Panathenaic stadium, whose
+shape is perfectly preserved in the smooth grass-grown hollow with
+semicircular extremity which here lies at right angles to the stream,
+between parallel ridges partly artificial.
+
+Northward from the Acropolis, on a slight elevation, is the
+best-preserved and one of the most ancient structures of Athens--the
+temple of Theseus, built under the administration of Cimon by the
+generation preceding Pericles and the Parthenon. It is of the Doric
+order, and shaped like the Parthenon, but considerably inferior to
+it in size as well as in execution. It has been roofed with wood in
+modern times, and was long used as a church, but is now a place of
+deposit for the numerous statues and sculptured stones of various
+kinds--mostly sepulchral monuments--which have been recently
+discovered in and about the city. They are for the most part
+unimportant as works of art, though many are interesting from their
+antiquity or historic associations. Among these is the stone which
+once crowned the burial-mound on the plain of Marathon. It bears a
+single figure, said to represent the messenger who brought the tidings
+of victory to his countrymen.
+
+Near the Theseium was the double gate (Dipylum) in the ancient wall
+of the city whence issued the Sacred Way leading to Eleusis, and
+bordered, like the Appian Way at Rome, with tombs, many of them
+cenotaphs of persons who died in the public service and were deemed
+worthy of a monument in the public burying-ground. Within a few years
+an excavation has been made through an artificial mound of ashes,
+pottery and other refuse emptied out of the city, and a section of a
+few rods of this celebrated road has been laid bare. The sepulchral
+monuments are ranged on one side rather thickly, and crowd somewhat
+closely upon the narrow pavement. They are, for the most part, simple,
+thick slabs of white marble, with a triangular or pediment-shaped top,
+beneath which is sculptured in low relief the closing scene of the
+person commemorated, followed by a short inscription. The work is done
+in an artistic style worthy of the publicity its location gave it. On
+one of these slabs you recognize the familiar full-length figure of
+Demosthenes, standing with two companions and clasping in a parting
+grasp the hand of a woman, who is reclining upon her deathbed. The
+inscription is, _Collyrion, wife of Agathon_. On another stone of
+larger size is a more imposing piece of sculpture. A horseman fully
+armed is thrusting his spear into the body of his fallen foe--a
+hoplite. The inscription relates that the unhappy foot-soldier fell at
+Corinth _by reason of those five words of his_!--a record intelligible
+enough, doubtless, to his contemporaries, but sufficiently obscure and
+provocative of curiosity to later generations.
+
+There are other noted structures at Athens, such as the Choragic
+Monument of Lysicrates--the highest type of the Corinthian order of
+architecture, as the Erechtheum is of the Ionic and the Parthenon of
+the Doric--but want of space forbids any further description of them.
+Let the American traveler visit Athens with the expectation of finding
+a city occupying the most charming of sites, and containing by far
+the most interesting and important monuments of antiquity, in their
+original position, to be found in the whole world.
+
+J.L.T. PHILLIPS.
+
+[Illustration: MONUMENT OF LYSICRATES.]
+
+
+
+
+COMMONPLACE.
+
+
+ My little girl is commonplace, you say?
+ Well, well, I grant it, as you use the phrase
+ Concede the whole; although there was a day
+ When I too questioned words, and from a maze
+ Of hairsplit meanings, cut with close-drawn line,
+ Sought to draw out a language superfine,
+ Above the common, scarify with words and scintillate with pen;
+ But that time's over--now I am content to stand with other men.
+
+ It's the best place, fair youth. I see your smile--
+ The scornful smile of that ambitious age
+ That thinks it all things knows, and all the while
+ It nothing knows. And yet those smiles presage
+ Some future fame, because your aim is high;
+ As when one tries to shoot into the sky,
+ If his rash arrow at the moon he aims, a bolder flight we see,
+ Though vain, than if with level poise it safely reached the nearest tree.
+
+ A common proverb that! Does it disjoint
+ Your graceful terms? One more you'll understand:
+ Cut down a pencil to too fine a point,
+ Lo, it breaks off, all useless, in your hand!
+ The child is fitted for her present sphere:
+ Let her live out her life, without the fear
+ That comes when souls, daring the heights of dread infinity, are tost,
+ Now up, now down, by the great winds, their little home for ever lost.
+
+ My little girl seems to you commonplace
+ Because she loves the daisies, common flowers;
+ Because she finds in common pictures grace,
+ And nothing knows of classic music's powers:
+ She reads her romance, but the mystic's creed
+ Is something far beyond her simple need.
+ She goes to church, but the mixed doubts and theories that thinkers find
+ In all religious truth can never enter her undoubting mind.
+
+ A daisy's earth's own blossom--better far
+ Than city gardener's costly hybrid prize:
+ When you're found worthy of a higher star,
+ 'Twill then be time earth's daisies to despise;
+ But not till then. And if the child can sing
+ Sweet songs like "Robin Gray," why should I fling
+ A cloud over her music's joy, and set for her the heavy task
+ Of learning what Bach knew, or finding sense under mad Chopin's mask?
+
+ Then as to pictures: if her taste prefers
+ That common picture of the "Huguenots,"
+ Where the girl's heart--a tender heart like hers--
+ Strives to defeat earth's greatest powers' great plots
+ With her poor little kerchief, shall I change
+ The print for Turner's riddles wild and strange?
+ Or take her stories--simple tales which her few leisure hours beguile--
+ And give her Browning's _Sordello_, a Herbert Spencer, a Carlyle?
+
+ Her creed, too, in your eyes is commonplace,
+ Because she does not doubt the Bible's truth
+ Because she does not doubt the saving grace
+ Of fervent prayer, but from her rosy youth,
+ So full of life, to gray old age's time,
+ Prays on with faith half ignorant, half sublime.
+ Yes, commonplace! But if I spoil this common faith, when all is done
+ Can deist, pantheist or atheist invent a better one?
+
+ Climb to the highest mountain's highest verge,
+ Step off: you've lost the petty height you had;
+ Up to the highest point poor reason urge,
+ Step off: the sense is gone, the mind is mad.
+ "Thus far, and yet no farther, shalt thou go,"
+ Was said of old, and I have found it so:
+ This planet's ours, 'tis all we have; here we belong, and those are wise
+ Who make the best of it, nor vainly try above its plane to rise.
+
+ Nay, nay: I know already your reply;
+ I have been through the whole long years ago;
+ I have soared up as far as soul can fly,
+ I have dug down as far as mind can go;
+ But always found, at certain depth or height,
+ The bar that separates the infinite
+ From finite powers, against whose strength immutable we beat in vain,
+ Or circle round only to find ourselves at starting-point again.
+
+ If you must for yourself find out this truth,
+ I bid you go, proud heart, with blessings free:
+ 'Tis the old fruitless quest of ardent youth,
+ And soon or late you will come back to me.
+ You'll learn there's naught so common as the breath
+ Of life, unless it be the calm of death:
+ You'll learn that with the Lord Omnipotent there's nothing commonplace,
+ And with such souls as that poor child's, humbled, abashed, you'll
+ hide your face.
+
+CONSTANCE FENIMORE WOOLSON.
+
+
+
+
+PROBATIONER LEONHARD;
+
+OR, THREE NIGHTS IN THE HAPPY VALLEY.
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE TEST--WITH MENTAL RESERVATIONS.
+
+
+Elise went out to gather willow-twigs, as her mother had said when her
+father asked for her.
+
+A little later in the afternoon, Mr. Albert Spener walked swiftly down
+the street toward the house occupied by the Rev. Mr. Wenck. While
+he was yet at a distance Elise saw him approaching, and possibly she
+thought, "He has seen me and comes to meet me;" and many a pleasant
+stroll on many an afternoon would have justified the thought.
+
+But it was not until he had, as it were, stumbled upon Elise that he
+noticed her. He carried in his hand a letter, and when suddenly he
+stopped upon the sidewalk and looked at her, the changeful aspects of
+his face were marvelous to behold.
+
+"Where are you going?" he asked.
+
+"I was going home," she answered, not a little surprised by the abrupt
+and authoritative manner of his address.
+
+"I want to talk with you," said he. "Is it to-day that I am to begin
+to leave off loving you, Elise?"
+
+"That you are--What do you say, Albert?" she asked.
+
+"Have you not seen Brother Wenck's letter to your father, Elise?"
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"The lot--the lot--" he repeated, but his voice refused to help him
+tell the tale.
+
+"Albert, may I see the letter?" Father and Mother Loretz might have
+rejoiced in their daughter could they have seen and heard her in those
+trying moments. Her gentleness and her serene dignity said for her
+that she would not be over-thrown by the storm which had burst upon
+her in a moment, unlocked for as tempest and whirlwind out of a clear
+sky.
+
+Spener thrust into her hands the letter addressed to him that morning
+by the minister. It contained an announcement of the decision rendered
+by the lot, couched in terms more brief, perhaps, than those which
+conveyed the same intelligence to the father of Elise.
+
+She gave it back to him without a word.
+
+"If Brother Wenck is going to stand by it," said he, "there'll be no
+room for him in this place. I was just going to his house to tell him
+so. Will you go with me? I should like to have a witness. I'll make
+short work of it."
+
+"No," said Elise, shrinking back amazed from her companion. "I will
+not go with you to insult that good man."
+
+"You will go with me--_not_ to his house, then! Come, Elise, we must
+talk about this. You must help me untie this knot. I cannot imagine
+how I ever permitted things to take their chance. I have never heard
+of a sillier superstition than I seem to have encouraged. Talk about
+faith! Let a man act up to light and take the consequences. I can see
+clear enough now. _You_ never looked for this to happen, Elise?"
+
+She shook her head. Indeed, she never had--no, not for a moment.
+
+"To think I should have permitted it to go on!"
+
+"But you did let it go on--and I--consented. Do not let me forget
+that," she exclaimed. "I will go home, Albert."
+
+"Ha, Elise! I wish I could feel more confidence in your teachers when
+you get there."
+
+"I need no one to tell me what my duty is just here," she answered.
+
+"Have you ever loved me, child? _Child_! I am talking to a rock. You
+do not yield to this?" He waved the letter aloft, and as if he would
+dash it from him. Elise looked at him, and did not speak. "Sister
+Benigna will of course feel called upon to bless the Lord," said he.
+"But Wenck shall find a way out of this difficulty. Then we will have
+done with them both, my own."
+
+"Am I to have no voice in this matter?" she asked. "What if I say--"
+
+Spener grasped her hand so suddenly that, as if in her surprise she
+had forgotten what she was about to say, Elise added, "Sister Benigna
+is my best friend. She knows nothing about the lot."
+
+"Does not?"
+
+"I told you, Albert, that it was to be so. And--you do not mean to
+threaten Mr. Wenck?"
+
+"I mean to have him find a way out of this difficulty. He ought to
+have said to your father that this lot business belongs to a period
+gone by. He did hint at it. I supposed, of course, that he would see
+the thing came out right, since he let it go on."
+
+"Did you then believe it was only a play or a trick?" exclaimed Elise
+indignantly.
+
+"Not quite, but I did not suppose that we were a company who would
+stand by an adverse decision. You know, if you are the Elise I have
+loved so long, that I must love you always--that I am not going to
+give you up. Your father was bent on the test, but look at him and
+tell me if he expected this turn. He is twenty years older than he
+was yesterday. Folks used to resort to the lot in deciding about
+marriages, and it was all well enough if they didn't care how it
+turned out, or hadn't faith to believe in their own ability to choose.
+A pretty way of doing business, though! Suppose I had tried it on this
+place! I have always asked for God's blessing, and tried to act so
+that I need not blush when I asked it; but a man must know his own
+mind, he must act with decision. I say again, I don't like your
+teachers, Elise. Between Sister Benigna and Mr. Wenck, now, what would
+be my chances if I could submit to such a pair?"
+
+"You and I have no quarrel," said Elise gently. "I suppose that you
+acted in good faith. You know how much I care--how humiliated I shall
+feel if you attack in any way a man so good as Mr. Wenck. You do not
+understand Sister Benigna."
+
+It was well that she had these to speak of, and that she need not
+confine herself to the main thought before them, for Albert could do
+anything he attempted. Had not her father always said, "Let Spener
+alone for getting what he wants: he'll have it, but he's above-board
+and honest;" and what hopes, heaven-cleaving, had spread wing the
+instant her eyes met his!
+
+"It is easy to say that I do not understand," said he. "One has only
+to assume that another is so excellent and virtuous a character as to
+be beyond your comprehension, and then your mouth is stopped."
+
+"Ah, how bitter you are!" exclaimed Elise. Her voice was full of pain.
+
+Spener silently reproached himself, and said, with a tenderness that
+was irresistible, "You don't know what temptations beset a man in
+business and everywhere, Elise. It would be easier far to lie down
+and die, I have thought sometimes, than to stand up and meet the enemy
+like a man. You will never convince me that my duty is to let you go,
+to give you up. I can think of nothing so wicked."
+
+These words, which had a joyful sound to which she could not seal her
+ears, made Elise stop suddenly, afraid of Albert, afraid of herself.
+"I think," she said after a moment, "we had best not walk together
+any longer. There is nothing we can say that will satisfy ourselves or
+ought to satisfy each other."
+
+"Do you mean that you accept this decision?" said he.
+
+"I promised, Albert. So did you."
+
+"We will not talk about it. But we can at least walk together, Elise.
+You need not speak. What you confessed just now is true--you cannot
+say anything to the purpose."
+
+So they walked on together. Silently, past all Spenersberg's
+dwelling-places they walked, till they came to the cemetery, and
+ascending the hill they strolled about that pleasant place among the
+graves, and thought, perhaps, How blessed are the dead! and oh to be
+lying there in a dreamless sleep beneath the blooming wild roses, and
+where dirges were sounding through the cedars day and night! Elise
+might have thought thus, but not her companion. He was the last man
+to wish to pass from the scene of his successes merely because a great
+failure threatened him. Looking upon the slight young figure beside
+him and her grave sweet face, a wrathful contempt was aroused within
+him that he should have allowed himself to be placed in a situation so
+absurd. As they walked down the hill again, he startled his companion
+by a merry outbreak. "Tell me you are not mine!" he said: "there never
+was a joke like it!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+SISTER BENIGNA.
+
+
+On her return home Elise found Sister Benigna seated at the piano,
+attuning herself, as she said, after her work among the restive
+children of her school.
+
+When she looked upon her friend and recalled the bitter words Albert
+had spoken against her, Elise felt their injustice. It was true, as
+she had told him, he did not understand Sister Benigna.
+
+Sitting down beside the window, Elise began to busy herself over the
+dainty basket she was elaborately decorating. After a few moments
+Sister Benigna left the piano and stood looking at Elise and her work.
+She had something to say, but how should she say it? how approach the
+heart which had wrapped itself up in sorrow and surrounded itself with
+the guards of silence?
+
+Presently Elise looked at her, but not until she had so long resisted
+the inclination to do so that there was something like violence in the
+effort. When her eyes met the gaze of Sister Benigna the warm blood
+rushed to her cheeks, and she looked quickly down again. Did Sister
+Benigna know yet about the letter Mr. Wenck had written?
+
+A sad smile appeared on Benigna's face. She shook her head. If she did
+not know what had happened, she no doubt understood that some kind of
+trouble had entered the house.
+
+Drawing a roll of needlework from her pocket, she quietly occupied
+herself with it until Elise, unable to endure the silence longer,
+said, "Oh, Sister Benigna, is it not time we did something about the
+Sisters' House? I have been reading about one: I forget where it is.
+What a beautiful Home you and I could make for poor people, and sick
+girls not able to work, and old women! We ought to have such a Home in
+Spenersberg. I have been thinking all day it is what we must have, and
+it is time we set about it."
+
+"I do not agree with you," was the quiet answer. "There is no real
+need for it here, and perhaps there never will be. Work that is so
+unnecessary might better be avoided. In Spenersberg it is better that
+the poor and the old and the sick should be cared for in their homes,
+by their own households: there is no want here."
+
+"Will you read what I have been reading?" said Elise, hesitating, not
+willing yet to give up the project which looked so full of promise.
+
+"I know all about Sisters' Houses, and they are excellent
+institutions, but if you will go from house to house here you will
+find that you would probably keep house by yourself a long time if you
+opened such an establishment. No, no: you have your work all prepared
+for you, and I certainly have mine. There is a good deal to be done
+yet for the festival. Tomorrow, after five, come to the school-room and
+we will practice a while. And we might do something here to-night. The
+children surprise me: I seem to be surrounded by a little company of
+angels while they sing."
+
+"Oh, Sister Benigna," exclaimed Elise throwing down her work in
+despair, "I don't in the least care about the festival. I should be
+glad to know it was all given up. I cannot sing at it. I think I have
+lost my voice: I do, indeed. I tried it this afternoon, and I croaked
+worse than anything you ever heard."
+
+"Croaked? We must see to that," said Sister Benigna; but, though her
+voice was so cheerful, she closed her eyes as she spoke, and passed
+her hands over them, and in spite of herself a look of pain was for an
+instant visible on her always pale face. She rose quickly and walked
+across the room, and crossed it twice before she came again to the
+window.
+
+"You don't understand me to-day," said Elise impetuously; "and I don't
+want you to." But Elise would not have spoken at all had she looked at
+Sister Benigna.
+
+A silence of many seconds, which seemed much longer to Elise,
+followed her words. She did not dare to go on. What was Sister Benigna
+thinking? Would she never speak? Had she nothing to say? Elise was
+about to rise also, because to sit still in that silence or to break
+it by words had become equally impossible, when Sister Benigna,
+approaching gently, laid her hand upon her and said, "Wait one moment:
+I have something to tell you, Elise."
+
+And so Elise sat down. She could not summon the strength to go with
+that voice in her ear and the touch of that hand arresting her.
+
+"I once had a friend as young as you are, of whom you often remind
+me," said Benigna. "She had a lover, and their faith led them to
+seek a knowledge of the Lord's will concerning their marriage. It
+was inquired for them, and it was found against the union. You often
+remind me of her, I said, but your fortunes are not at all like hers."
+
+"Sister Benigna, why do you tell me this?" asked Elise quickly, in a
+voice hardly audible. She was afraid to listen. She recalled Albert's
+words. She did not know if she might trust the friendly voice that
+spoke.
+
+"Because I have always thought that some time it would be well for you
+to hear it; but if you do not wish to hear it, I will go no farther."
+
+Elise looked at Benigna--not trust her! "Please go on," she said.
+
+"I knew the poor child very well. She had grown up in an unhappy
+home, and had never known what it was to have comfort and peace in the
+house, or even plenty to eat and to wear. She was expected to go out
+and earn her living as soon as she had learned the use of her hands
+and feet. Poor child! she felt her fortune was a hard one, but God
+always cared for her. In one way and another she in time picked up
+enough knowledge of music to teach beginners. The first real friend
+she had was the friend who became so dear to her that--I need not try
+to find words to tell you how dear he was.
+
+"She was soon skilled enough to be able to take more intelligent and
+advanced pupils, and in the church-music she had the leading parts.
+By and by the music was put into her hands for festivals and the
+great days, Christmas and Easter, as it has been put into mine here in
+Spenersberg. One day _he_ said to her, 'It seems to us the best thing
+in life to be near each other. Would it might be God's will that we
+should never part!' She responded to that prayer from the depths of
+her heart, and a great gulf seemed to open before her, for she thought
+what would her life be worth if they were destined to part? Then he
+said, 'Let us inquire the will of our Lord;' and she said, 'Let it
+be so;' and they had faith that would enable them to abide by the
+decision. The lot pronounced against them. I do not believe that it
+had entered the heart of either of them to understand how necessary
+they had become to each other, and when they saw that all was over it
+was a sad awaking. For a little while it was with both as if they had
+madly thrown a birthright away; for, though they had faith, they were
+not yet perfect in it. Not soon did either see that this life had
+a blessing for them every day--new every morning, fresh every
+evening--and that from everlasting to everlasting are the mercies of
+God. But at last he said, 'I am afraid, my darling'" (Elise started at
+this word of endearment. It was like a revelation to think that there
+had been lovers in the world before her time), "'it will go harder
+with me than with you. I cannot stay here and go on with my work. I
+must go among new people, and begin again.' And so he went away, and
+at last, when by the grace of God they met again--surely, surely by no
+seeking of their own--they were no less true friends because they had
+for their lifetime been led into separate paths. Their faith saved
+them."
+
+Low though the voice was in which these last words were spoken, there
+was a strength and inspiration in them which Elise felt. She looked
+at Sister Benigna with steady, wondering eyes. Such a story from her
+lips, and told so, and told now! And her countenance! what divine
+beauty glowed in it! The moment had a vision that could never be
+forgotten.
+
+Elise did not speak, but neither, having heard this tale, did she now
+rise to depart. She folded her hands and bowed her head upon them, and
+so they sat silent until the first chords of the "Pastoral Symphony"
+drew the souls of both away up into a realm which is entered only by
+the pure in heart.
+
+About this time it was that Leonhard Marten, while passing, heard that
+recitative of a soprano voice which so amazed him. Dropping quickly
+into the shade of the trees opposite Loretz's house, he listened to
+the announcement, "There were shepherds abiding in the field, keeping
+watch over their flocks by night," and there remained until he saw two
+men advancing toward the house, one of them evidently approaching his
+home.
+
+Through the sleepless night Elise's thoughts were constantly going
+over the simple incidents of the story Sister Benigna had told her.
+But they had not by morning yielded all the consolations which the
+teller of the tale perceived among their possibilities, for the
+reason, perhaps, that Elise's sympathies had been more powerfully
+excited by the tale than her faith. It was not upon the final result
+of the severance effected by the lot that her mind rested dismayed:
+her heart was full of pain, thinking of that poor girl's early life,
+and that at last, when all the recollection of it was put far from her
+by the joy which shone upon her as the sun out of darkness, she
+must look forward and by its light behold a future so dreary. "How
+fearful!" she moaned once; and her closed eyes did not see the face
+that turned toward her full of pain, full of love.
+
+Of all doubts that could afflict the soul of Sister Benigna, none
+more distracting than this was conceivable: Had she proved the best
+instructor to this child of her spirit? Had she even been _capable_ of
+teaching her truest truth? Was it the truth or herself to which Elise
+was always deferring? Was obedience a duty when not impelled and
+sanctified by faith? In what did the prime virtue of resignation
+consist? Would not obedience without faith be merely a debasing
+superstitious submission to the will of the believing? Her reflections
+were not suggested by a shrewd guess. She knew that the lot had been
+resorted to, and that the letters had been written to Elise and Albert
+which acquainted them with the result; and the peace of her prayerful
+soul was rent by the thought that a joyless surrender of human will
+to a higher was, perhaps, no better than the poor helpless slave's
+extorted sacrifice. The happiness of the household seemed to Benigna
+in her keeping. If they had gone lightly seeking the oracle of God,
+as they would have sought a fortune-teller, was not the Most High
+dishonored? She could not say this to Elise, but could she say it to
+Albert Spener? Ought she not to say it to him? There was no other to
+whom it could be said. Had the coming day any duty so imperative as
+this? She arose to perform it, but Spener, as we know, had gone away
+the day before.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+THE MEN OF SPENERSBERG.
+
+
+This Spenersberg, about which Leonhard was not a little eager to know
+more when he shut the door of the apartment into which his host had
+ushered him--for he must remain all night--what was it?
+
+A colony, or a brotherhood, or a community, six years old. Such a fact
+does not lie ready for observation every day--such a place does not
+lie in the hand of a man at his bidding. What, then, was its history?
+We need not wait to find out until morning, when Leonhard will proceed
+to discover. He is satisfied when he lies down upon the bed, which
+awaited him, it seems, as he came hither on the way-train--quite
+satisfied that Spener of Spenersberg must be a man worth seeing.
+Breathing beings possessed of ideas and homes here must have been
+handled with power by a master mind to have brought about this
+community, if so it is to be called, in six short years, thinks
+Leonhard. He recalls his own past six years, and turns uneasily on his
+bed, and finds no rest until he reminds himself of the criticism
+he has been enabled to pass on Miss Elise's rendering of "He is a
+righteous Saviour," and the suggestion he made concerning the pitch
+of "Ye shall find rest for your souls." The recollection acts upon him
+somewhat as the advancing wave acts on the sand-line made by the wave
+preceding. When he made the first suggestion, Sister Benigna stood
+for a moment looking at him, surprised by his remark; but, less than a
+second taken up with a thought of him, she had passed instantly on to
+say, "Try it so, Elise: 'He is a righteous Saviour.' We will make it
+a slower movement. Ah! how impressive! how beautiful! It is the
+composer's very thought! Again--slow: it is perfect!"
+
+Was this kind of praise worth the taking? a source of praise worth
+the seeking? Leonhard had said ungrateful things about his
+prize-credentials to Miss Marion Ayres, and I do believe that these
+very prizes, awarded for his various drawings, were never so valued
+by him as the look with which priestly Benigna seemed to admit him at
+least so far as into the fellowship of the Gentiles' Court.
+
+He would have fallen asleep just here with a pleasant thought but for
+the recollection of Wilberforce's letter, which startled him hardly
+less than the apparition of his friend in the moonlight streaming
+through his half-curtained window would have done. Is it always so
+pleasant a thought that for ever and ever a man shall bear his own
+company?
+
+But this Spenersberg? Seven years ago, on the day when he came of age,
+Albert Spener, then a young clerk in a fancy-goods store, went to look
+at the estate which his grandfather had bequeathed to him the year
+preceding. Not ten years ago the old man made his will and gave the
+property, on which he had not quite starved, to his only grandson, and
+here was this worthless gorge which stretched between the fields more
+productive than many a famous gold-mine.
+
+The youth had seen at once that if he should deal with the land as
+his predecessors had done, he would be able to draw no more from the
+stingy acres than they. He had shown the bent of his mind and the
+nature of his talent by the promptness with which he put things remote
+together, and by the directness with which he reached his conclusions.
+
+He had left his town-lodgings, having obtained of his employer leave
+of absence for one week, and within twenty-four hours had come to
+his conclusion and returned to his post. Of that estate which he had
+inherited but a portion, and a very small portion, offered to the
+cultivator the least encouragement. The land had long ago been
+stripped of its forest trees, and, thus defrauded of its natural
+fertilizers, lay now, after successive seasons of drain and waste, as
+barren as a desert, with the exception of that narrow strip between
+the hills which apparently bent low that inland might look upon river.
+
+Along the banks of the stream, which flowed, a current of considerable
+depth and swiftness, toward its outlet, the river, willows were
+growing. Albert's employer was an importer to a small extent,
+and fancy willow-ware formed a very considerable share of his
+importations. The conclusion he had reached while surveying his land
+was an answer to the question he had asked himself: Why should
+not this land be made to bring forth the kind of willow used by
+basket-weavers, and why should not basket-weavers be induced to gather
+into a community of some sort, and so importers be beaten in the
+market by domestic productions? The aim thus clearly defined Spener
+had accomplished. His Moravians furnished him with a willow-ware
+which was always quoted at a high figure, and the patriotic pride
+the manufacturer felt in the enterprise was abundantly rewarded: no
+foreign mark was ever found on his home-made goods.
+
+But _his_ Moravians: where did these people come from, and how came
+they to be known as his?
+
+The question brings us to Frederick Loretz. In those days he was a
+porter in the establishment where Spener was a clerk. He had filled
+this situation only one month, however, when he was attacked with a
+fever which was scourging the neighborhood, and taken to the hospital.
+Albert followed him thither with kindly words and care, for the poor
+fellow was a stranger in the town, and he had already told Spener his
+dismal story. Afar from wife and child, among strangers and a pauper,
+his doom, he believed, was to die. How he bemoaned his wasted life
+then, and the husks which he had eaten!
+
+In his delirium Loretz would have put an end to his life. Spener
+talked him out of this horror of himself, and showed him that there
+was always opportunity, while life lasted, for wanderers to seek again
+the fold they had strayed from; for when the delirium passed the man's
+conscience remained, and he confessed that he had lived away from
+the brethren of his faith, and was an outcast. Oh, if he could but
+be transported to Herrnhut and set down there a well man in that
+sanctuary of Moravianism, how devoutly would he return to the faith
+and practice of his fathers!
+
+When Spener returned from his trip of investigation he hastened
+immediately to the hospital, sought out poor half-dead Loretz, laid
+his hand on his shoulder, and said, "Come, get up: I want you." And
+he explained his project: "I will build a house for you, send for
+your wife and child, put you all together, and start you in life. I
+am going into the basket business, and I want you to look after
+my willows. After they are pretty well grown you shall get in some
+families--Simon-Pure Moravians, you know--and we will have a village
+of our own. D'ye hear me?"
+
+The poor fellow did hear: he struggled up in his bed, threw his arms
+around Spener's neck, tried to kiss him, and fainted.
+
+"This is a good beginning," said Spener to himself as he laid the
+senseless head upon the pillow and felt for the beating heart. The
+beating heart was there. In a few moments Loretz was looking, with
+eyes that shone with loving gratitude and wondering admiration, on the
+young man who had saved his life.
+
+"I have no money," said this youth in further explanation of his
+project--for he wanted his companion to understand his circumstances
+from the outset--"but I shall borrow five thousand dollars. I can pay
+the interest on that sum out of my salary. Perhaps I shall sell a few
+lots on the river, if I can turn attention to the region. It will all
+come out right, anyhow. Now, how soon can you be ready? I will write
+to your wife to-day if you say so, and tell her to come on with the
+little girl."
+
+"Wait a week," said Loretz in a whisper; and all that night and the
+following day his chances for this world and the next seemed about
+equal.
+
+But after that he rallied, and his recovery was certain. It was slow,
+however, hastened though it was by the hope and expectation which
+had opened to him when he had reached the lowest depth of despair and
+covered himself with the ashes of repentance.
+
+The letter for the wife and little girl was written, and money sent to
+bring them from the place where Loretz had left them when he set
+out in search of occupation, to find employment as a porter, and the
+fever, and Albert Spener.
+
+During the first year of co-working Loretz devoted himself to the
+culture of the willow, and then, as time passed on and hands were
+needed, he brought one family after another to the place--Moravians
+all--until now there were at least five hundred inhabitants in
+Spenersberg, a large factory and a church, whereof Spener himself was
+a member "in good and regular standing."
+
+Seven years of incessant labor, directed by a wise foresight, which
+looked almost like inspiration and miracle, had resulted in all this
+real prosperity. Loretz never stopped wondering at it, and yet he
+could have told you every step of the process. All that had been
+_done_ he had had a hand in, but the devising brain was Spener's;
+and no wonder that, in spite of his familiarity with the details,
+the sum-total of the activities put forth in that valley should have
+seemed to Loretz marvelous, magical.
+
+He had many things to rejoice over besides his own prosperity. His
+daughter was in all respects a perfect being, to his thinking. For six
+years now she had been under the instruction of Sister Benigna,
+not only in music, but in all things that Sister Benigna, a
+well-instructed woman, could teach. She sang, as Leonhard Marten would
+have told you, "divinely," she was beautiful to look upon, and Albert
+Spener desired to marry her.
+
+Surely the Lord had blessed him, and remembered no more those years
+of wanderings when, alienated from the brethren, he sought out his
+own ways and came close upon destruction. What should he return to the
+beneficent Giver for all these benefits?
+
+Poor Loretz! In his prosperity he thought that he should never be
+moved, but he would not basely use that conviction and forget the
+source of all his satisfaction. He remembered that it was when he
+repented of his misdeeds that Spener came to him and drew him from the
+pit. He could never look upon Albert as other than a divine agent;
+and when Spener joined himself to the Moravians, led partly by his
+admiration of them, partly by religious impulse, and partly because
+of his conviction that to be wholly successful he and his people must
+form a unit, his joy was complete.
+
+The proposal for Elise's hand had an effect upon her father which any
+one who knew him well might have looked for and directed. The pride of
+his life was satisfied. He remembered that he and his Anna, in seeking
+to know the will of the Lord in respect to their marriage, had been
+answered favorably by the lot. He desired the signal demonstration of
+heavenly will in regard to the nuptials proposed. Not a shadow of
+a doubt visited his mind as to the result, and the influence of his
+faith upon Spener was such that he acquiesced in the measure, though
+not without remonstrance and misgiving and mental reservation.
+
+To find his way up into the region of faith, and quiet himself there
+when the result of the seeking was known, was almost impossible for
+Loretz. He could fear the Judge who had decreed, but could he trust in
+Him? He began to grope back among his follies of the past, seeking a
+crime he had not repented, as the cause of this domestic calamity. But
+ah! to reap such a harvest as this for any youthful folly! Poor soul!
+little he knew of vengeance and retribution. He was at his wit's end,
+incapable alike of advancing, retreating or of peaceful surrender.
+
+It was pleasant to him to think, in the night-watches, of the young
+man who occupied the room next to his. He did not see--at least had
+not yet seen--in Leonhard a messenger sent to the house, as did his
+wife; but the presence of the young stranger spoke favorable things in
+his behalf; and then, as there was really nothing to be _done_ about
+this decision, anything that gave a diversion to sombre thoughts was
+welcome. Sister Benigna had spoken very kindly to Leonhard in the
+evening, and he had pointed out a place in one of Elise's solos where
+by taking a higher key in a single passage a marvelous effect could be
+produced. That showed knowledge; and he said that he had taught music.
+Perhaps he would like to remain until after the congregation festival
+had taken place.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE BOOK.
+
+
+In the morning the master of the house rapped on Leonhard's door and
+said: "When you come down I have something to show you." The voice
+of Mr. Loretz had almost its accustomed cheerfulness of tone, and he
+ended his remark with a brief "Ha! ha!" peculiar to him, which not
+only expressed his own good-humor, but also invited good-humored
+response.
+
+Leonhard answered cheerily, and in a few moments he had descended the
+steep uncovered stair to the music-room.
+
+"Now for the book," Loretz called out as Leonhard entered.
+
+How handsome our young friend looked as he stood there shaking hands
+with the elderly man, whose broad, florid face now actually shone with
+hospitable feeling!
+
+"Is father going to claim you as one of us, Mr. Marten?" asked the
+wife of Loretz, who answered her husband's call by coming into the
+room and bringing with her a large volume wrapped in chamois skin.
+
+"What shall I be, then?" asked Leonhard. "A wiser and a better man, I
+do not doubt."
+
+"What! you do not know?" the good woman stayed to say. "Has nobody
+told you where you are, my young friend?"
+
+"I never before found myself in a place I should like to stay in
+always; so what does the rest signify?" answered Leonhard. "What's in
+a name?"
+
+"Not much perhaps, yet something," said Loretz. "We are all Moravians
+here. I was going to look in this book here for the names of your
+ancestors. I thought perhaps you knew about Spenersberg."
+
+"I am as new to it all as Christopher Columbus was to the West India
+islands. If you find the names of my kinsmen down in your book, sir,
+it--it will be a marvelous, happy sight for me," said Leonhard.
+
+"I'll try my hand at it," said Loretz. "Ha! ha!" and he opened the
+volume, which was bound in black leather, the leaves yellowed with
+years. "This book," he continued, "is one hundred and fifty years
+old. You will find recorded in it the names of all my grandfather's
+friends, and all my father's. See, it is our way. There are all the
+dates. Where they lived, see, and where they died. It is all down.
+A man cannot feel himself cut off from his kind as long as he has a
+volume like that in his library. I have added a few names of my own
+friends, and their birthdays. Here, you see, is Sister Benigna's,
+written with her own hand. A most remarkable woman, sir. True as
+steel--always the same. But"--he paused a moment and looked at
+Leonhard with his head inclined to one side, and an expression of
+perplexity upon his face--"there's something out of the way here in
+this country. I have not more than one name down to a dozen in my
+father's record, and twenty in my grandfather's. We do not make
+friends, and we do not keep them, as they did in old time. We don't
+trust each other as men ought to. Half the time we find ourselves
+wondering whether the folks we're dealing with are _honest_. Now think
+of that!"
+
+"Are men any worse than they were in the old time?" asked Leonhard,
+evidently not entering into the conversation with the keenest
+enjoyment.
+
+"I do not know how it is," said Loretz with a sigh, continuing to turn
+the leaves of the book as he spoke.
+
+"Perhaps we have less imagination, and don't look at every new-comer
+as a friend until we have tried him," suggested Leonhard. "We decide
+that everybody shall be tested before we accept him. And isn't it the
+best way? Better than to be disappointed, when we have set our heart
+on a man--or a woman."
+
+"I do not know--I cannot account for it," said Mr. Loretz. Then with a
+sudden start he laid his right hand on the page before him, and with a
+great pleased smile in his deep-set, small blue eyes he said: "Here is
+your name. I felt sure I should find it: I felt certain it was down.
+See here, on my grandfather's page--_Leonhard Marten, Herrnhut_, 1770.
+How do you like that?"
+
+"I like it well," said Leonhard, bending over the book and examining
+the close-fisted autograph set down strongly in unfading ink. Had he
+found an ancestor at last? What could have amazed him as much?
+
+"What have you found?" asked Mrs. Loretz, who had heard these remarks
+in the next room, where she was actively making preparations for the
+breakfast, which already sent forth its odorous invitations.
+
+"We have found the name," answered her husband. "Come and see. I have
+read it, I dare say, a hundred times: that was what made me feel that
+an old friend had come."
+
+"That means," said the good woman, hastening in at her husband's call,
+and reading the name with a pleased smile--"that means that you belong
+to us. I thought you did. I am glad."
+
+Were these folk so intent on securing a convert that in these various
+ways they made the young stranger feel that he was not among strangers
+in this unknown Spenersberg? Nothing was farther from their thought:
+they only gave to their kindly feeling hearty utterance, and perhaps
+spoke with a little extra emphasis because the constraint they
+secretly felt in consequence of their household trouble made them
+unanimous in the effort to put it out of sight--not out of this
+stranger's sight, but out of their own.
+
+"Perhaps you will stop with us a while, and maybe write your name on
+my page before you go," said Loretz, afraid that his wife had gone a
+little too far.
+
+"Without a single test?" Leonhard answered. "Haven't we just agreed
+that we wise men don't take each other on trust, as they did in our
+grandfathers' day?"
+
+"A man living in Herrnhut in 1770 would not have for a descendant a--a
+man I could not trust," said Loretz, closing the book and placing it
+in its chamois covering again. "Breakfast, mother, did you say?"
+
+"Have you wanted ink?" asked Sister Benigna, entering at that instant.
+"Are we writing in the sacred birthday book?"
+
+"Not yet," said Leonhard hastily, the color rising to his face in a
+way to suggest forked lightning somewhere beyond sight.
+
+"You have wanted ink, and are too kind to let me know," she said. "I
+emptied the bottle copying music for the children yesterday."
+
+"The ink was put to a better use then than I could have found for it
+this morning," said Leonhard.
+
+And Mrs. Loretz, who looked into the room just then, said to herself,
+as her eyes fell on him, "Poor soul! he is in trouble."
+
+In fact, this thought was in Leonhard's mind as he went into breakfast
+with the family: "A deuced good friend I have proved--to Wilberforce!
+Isn't there anybody here clear-eyed enough to see that it would be
+like forgery to write my name down in a book of friendship?"
+
+The morning meal was enlivened by much more than the usual amount of
+talk. Leonhard was curious to know about Herrnhut, that old home
+of Moravianism, and the interest which he manifested in the history
+Loretz was so eager to communicate made him in turn an object of
+almost affectionate attention. That he had no facts of private
+biography to communicate in turn did net attract notice, because,
+however many such facts he might have ready to produce, by the time
+Loretz had done talking it was necessary that the day's work should
+begin.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+CONFERENCE MEETING.
+
+
+The school-room was a large apartment in the basement of the factory
+which had been used as a drying-room until it became necessary to
+find for the increasing numbers of the little flock more spacious
+accommodations. The basement was entered by a door at the end of the
+building opposite that by which the operatives entered the factory,
+and the hours were so timed that the children went and came without
+disturbance to themselves or others. The path that led to the basement
+door was neatly bordered with flowering plants and bushes, and
+sunlight was always to be found there, if anywhere in the valley, from
+eight o'clock till two.
+
+Leonhard walked to the factory with Sister Benigna, to whose conduct
+Loretz had consigned him when called away by the tower bell.
+
+At the door of the basement Mr. Wenck was standing with a printed copy
+of Handel's sacred oratorio of _The Messiah_ in his hand. Evidently he
+was waiting for Sister Benigna.
+
+But when she had said to Leonhard, "Pass on to the other end of the
+building and you will find the entrance, and Mr. Spener's office in
+the corner as you enter," and Leonhard had thanked her, and bowed and
+passed on, and she turned to Mr. Wenck, it was very little indeed that
+he said or had to say about the music which he held in his hand.
+
+"I have no doubt that all the preparation necessary for to-morrow
+evening is being made," he said. "You may need this book. But I
+did not come to talk about it. Sister Benigna," he continued in a
+different tone, and a voice not quite under his control, "is it not
+unreasonable to have passed a sleepless night thinking of Albert and
+Elise?"
+
+"Very unreasonable." But he had not charged her, as she supposed, with
+that folly, as his next words showed.
+
+"It is, and yet I have done it--only because all this might have been
+so easily avoided."
+
+"And yet it was unavoidable," said she, looking toward the school-room
+door as one who had no time to waste in idle talk.
+
+"Not that I question the wisdom of the resort if all were of one
+mind," said Mr. Wenck, who had the dreary all-day before him, and was
+not in the least pressed for time. "But I can see that even on the
+part of Brother Loretz the act was not a genuine act of faith."
+
+Startled by the expression the minister was giving to her secret
+thoughts, Benigna exclaimed, "And yet what can be done?"
+
+"Nothing," he answered. "If Loretz should yield to Spener, and if I
+should--do you not see he has had everything his own way here?--he
+would feel that nothing could stand in opposition to him. If he were a
+different man! And they are both so young!"
+
+"I know that Elise has a conscience that will hold her fast to duty,"
+said Benigna, but she did not speak hopefully: she spoke deliberately,
+however, thinking that these words _conscience_ and _duty_ might
+arrest the minister's attention, and that he would perhaps, by some
+means, throw light upon questions which were constantly becoming more
+perplexing to her. Was conscience an unfailing guide? Was one person's
+duty to be pronounced upon by another without scruple, and defined
+with unfaltering exactness? But the words had not arrested the
+minister's attention.
+
+"If they could only see that there is nothing to be done!" said he.
+"Oh, they will, Benigna! Had they only the faith, Benigna!"
+
+"Yet how vain their sacrifice, for they have it not!" said she. And
+as if she would not prolong an interview which must be full of pain,
+because no light could proceed from any words that would be given them
+to speak, Sister Benigna turned abruptly toward the basement door when
+she had said this, and entered it without bestowing a parting glance
+even on the minister.
+
+He walked away after an instant's hesitation: indeed there was nothing
+further to be said, and she did well to go.
+
+Going homeward by a path which led along the hillside above the
+village street, he must pass the small house separated from all
+others--the house which was the appointed resting-place of all who
+lived in Spenersberg to die there--known as the Corpse-house. To it
+the bodies of deceased persons were always taken after death, and
+there they remained until the hour when they were carried forth for
+burial.
+
+As Mr. Wenck approached he saw that the door stood open: a few steps
+farther, and this fact was accounted for. A bent and wrinkled old
+woman stood there with a broom in her hand, which she had been using
+in a plain, straight-forward manner.
+
+"Ah, Mary," he said, "what does this mean, my good woman?"
+
+"It is the minister," she answered in a low voice, curtseying. "I was
+moved to come here this morning, sir, and see to things. It was time
+to be brushing up a little, I thought. It is a month now since the
+last."
+
+"I will take down the old boughs then, and garnish the walls with new
+ones. And have you looked at the lamp too, Mary?"
+
+"It is trimmed, sir," said the woman; and the minister's readiness to
+assist her drew forth the confession: "I was thinking on my bed in the
+night-watches that it must be done. There will one be going home soon.
+And it may be myself, sir. I could not have been easy if I had not
+come up to tidy the house."
+
+Having finished her task, which was a short one and easily performed,
+the woman now waited to watch the minister as he selected cedar boughs
+and wove them into wreaths, and suspended them from the walls and
+rafters of the little room; and it comforted the simple soul when,
+standing in the doorway, the good man lifted his eyes toward heaven
+and said in the words of the church litany:
+
+ From error and misunderstanding,
+ From the loss of our glory in Thee,
+ From self-complacency,
+ From untimely projects,
+ From needless perplexity,
+ From the murdering spirit and devices of Satan,
+ From the influence of the spirit of this world,
+ From hypocrisy and fanaticism,
+ From the deceitfulness of sin,
+ From all sin,
+ _Preserve us, gracious Lord and God_--
+
+and devoutly she joined in with him in the solemn responsive cry.
+
+It was very evident that the minister's work that day was not to be
+performed in his silent home among his books.
+
+On the brightest day let the sun become eclipsed, and how the earth
+will pine! What melancholy will pervade the busy streets, the pleasant
+fields and woods! How disconsolately the birds will seek their mates
+and their nests!
+
+The children came together, but many a half hour passed during
+which the shadow of an Unknown seemed to come between them and their
+teacher. The bright soul, was she too suffering from an eclipse? Does
+it happen that all souls, even the most valiant, most loving, least
+selfish, come in time to passes so difficult that, shrinking back,
+they say, "Why should I struggle to gain the other side? What is
+there worth seeking? Better to end all here. This life is not worth
+enduring"? And yet, does it also come to pass as certainly that these
+valiant, unselfish, loving ones will struggle, fight, climb, wade,
+creep on, on while the breath of life remains in them, and never
+surrender? It seemed as if Sister Benigna had arrived at a place where
+her baffled spirit stood still and felt its helplessness. Could she
+do nothing for Elise, the dear child for whose happiness she would
+cheerfully give her life, and not think the price too dear?
+
+By and by the children were aware that Sister Benigna had come again
+among them: the humblest little flower lifted up its head, and the
+smallest bird began to chirp and move about and smooth its wings.
+
+Sister Benigna! what had she recollected?--that but a single day
+perhaps was hers to live, and here were all these children! As she
+turned with ardent zeal to her work--which indeed had not failed of
+accustomed conduct so far as routine went--tell me what do you find in
+those lovely eyes if not the heavenliest assurances? Let who will
+call the scene of this life's operations a vale of tears, a world of
+misery, a prison-house of the spirit, here is one who asks for herself
+nothing of honors or riches or pleasures, and who can bless the
+Lord God for the glory of the earth he has created, and for those
+everlasting purposes of his which mortals can but trust in, and which
+are past finding out. Children, let us do our best to-day, and wait
+until to-morrow for to-morrow's gifts. This exhortation was in the
+eyes, mien, conduct of the teacher, and so she led them on until, when
+they came to practice their hymns for the festival, every little heart
+and voice was in tune, and she praised them with voice so cheerful,
+how should they guess that it had ever been choked by anguish or had
+ever fainted in despair?
+
+O young eyes saddening over what is to you a painful, insoluble
+problem! yet a little while and you shall see the mists of morning
+breaking everywhere, and the great conquering sun will enfold you too
+in its warm embrace: the humble laurels of the mountain's side, even
+as the great pines and cedars of the mountain's crest, have but to
+receive and use what the sterile rock and the blinding cloud, the
+wintry tempest and the rain and the summer's heat bestow, and lo! the
+heights are alive with glory. But it is not in a day.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+WILL THE ARCHITECT HAVE EMPLOYMENT?
+
+
+On entering the factory, Leonhard met Loretz near the door talking
+with Albert Spener. When he saw Leonhard, Loretz said, "I was just
+saying to Mr. Spener that I expected you, sir, and how he might
+recognize you; but you shall speak for yourself. If you will spend a
+little time looking about, I shall be back soon: perhaps Mr. Spener--"
+
+"Mr. Leonhard Marten, I believe," said Mr. Albert Spener with a little
+exaggeration of his natural stiffness. Perhaps he did not suspect that
+all the morning he had been manifesting considerable loftiness toward
+Loretz, and that he spoke in a way that made Leonhard feel that his
+departure from Spenersberg would probably take place within something
+less than twenty-four hours.
+
+Yet within half an hour the young men were walking up and down the
+factory, examining machinery and work, and talking as freely as if
+they had known each other six months. They were not in everything
+as unlike as they were in person. Spener was a tall, spare man, who
+conveyed an impression of mental strength and physical activity. He
+could turn his hand to anything, and _attempt_ anything that was to be
+done by skillful handicraft; and whether he could use his wits well
+in shaping men, let Spenersberg answer. His square-shaped head was
+covered with bright brown hair, which had a reddish tinge, and his
+moustache was of no stinted growth: his black eyes penetrated and
+flashed, and could glow and glare in a way to make weakness and
+feebleness tremble. His quick speech did not spare: right and left he
+used his swords of thought and will. Fall in! or, Out of the way! were
+the commands laid down by him since the foundations of Spenersberg
+were laid. In the fancy-goods line he might have made of himself a
+spectacle, supposing he could have remained in the trade; but set
+apart here in this vale, the centre of a sphere of his own creation,
+where there was something at stake vast enough to justify the exercise
+of energy and authority, he had a field for the fair play of all that
+was within him--the worst and the best. The worst that he could be he
+was--a tyrant; and the best that he could be he was--a lover. Hitherto
+his tyrannies had brought about good results only, but it was well
+that the girl he loved had not only spirit and courage enough to love
+him, but also faith enough to remove mountains.
+
+If Leonhard had determined that he would make a friend of Spener
+before he entered the factory, he could not have proceeded more wisely
+than he did. First, he was interested in the works, and intent on
+being told about the manufacture of articles of furniture from a
+product ostensibly of such small account as the willow; then he was
+interested in the designs and surprised at the ingenious variety, and
+curious to learn their source, and amazed to hear that Mr. Spener had
+himself originated more than half of them. Then presently he began to
+suggest designs, and at the end of an hour he found himself at a table
+in Spener's office drawing shapes for baskets and chairs and tables
+and ornamental devices, and making Spener laugh so at some remark as
+to be heard all over the building.
+
+"You say you are an architect," he said after Leonhard had covered a
+sheet of paper with suggestions written and outlined for him, which he
+looked at with swiftly-comprehending and satisfied eyes. "What do you
+say to doing a job for me?"
+
+"With all my heart," answered Leonhard, "if it can be done at once."
+
+These words were in the highest degree satisfactory. Here was a man
+who knew the worth of a minute. He was the man for Spener. "Come with
+me," he said, "and I'll show you a building-site or two worth putting
+money on;" and so they walked together out of the factory, crossed a
+rustic foot-bridge to the opposite side, ascended a sunny half-cleared
+slope and passed across a field; and there beneath them, far below,
+rolled the grand river which had among its notable ports this little
+Spenersberg.
+
+"What do you think of a house on this site, sir?" asked Spener,
+looking with no small degree of satisfaction around him and down the
+rocky steep.
+
+"I think I should like to be commissioned to build a castle with
+towers and gates of this very granite which you could hew out by
+the thousand cord from the quarry yonder. What a perfect gray for
+building!"
+
+"I have always thought I would use the material on the ground--the
+best compliment I could pay this place which I have raised my fortune
+out of," said Spener.
+
+"There's no better material on the earth," said Leonhard.
+
+"But I don't want a castle: I want a house with room enough in
+it--high ceilings, wide halls, and a piazza fifteen or twenty feet
+wide all around it."
+
+"Must I give up the castle? There isn't a better site on the Rhine
+than this."
+
+"But I'm not a baron, and I live at peace with my neighbors--at least
+with outsiders." That last remark was an unfortunate one, for it
+brought the speaker back consciously to confront the images which were
+constantly lurking round him--only hid when he commanded them out of
+sight in the manfulness of a spirit that would not be interfered
+with in its work. He sat looking at Leonhard opposite to him, who had
+already taken a note-book and pencil from his pocket, and, planting
+his left foot firmly against one of the great rocks of the cliff, he
+said, "Loretz tells me you stayed all night at his house."
+
+"Yes, he invited me in when I inquired my way to the inn."
+
+"Sister Benigna was there?"
+
+"She wasn't anywhere else," said Leonhard, looking up and smiling.
+"Excuse the slang. If you are where she is, you may feel very certain
+about her being there."
+
+"Not at all," said Albert, evidently nettled into argument by the
+theme he had introduced. "She is one of those persons who can be in
+several places at the same time. You heard them sing, I suppose. They
+are preparing for the congregation festival. It is six years since
+we started here, but we only built our church last year: this year
+we have the first celebration in the edifice, and of course there is
+great preparation."
+
+"I have been wondering how I could go away before it takes place ever
+since I heard of it."
+
+"If you wonder less how you can stay, remain of course," said Spener
+with no great cordiality: he owed this stranger nothing, after all.
+
+"It will only be to prove that I am really music-mad, as they have
+been telling me ever since I was born. If that is the case, from the
+evidences I have had since I came here I think I shall recover."
+
+"What do you mean?" asked Spener.
+
+"I mean that I see how little I really know about the science. I
+never heard anything to equal the musical knowledge and execution of
+Loretz's daughter and this Sister Benigna you speak of."
+
+"Ah! I am not a musician. I tried the trombone, but lacked the
+patience. I am satisfied to admire. And so you liked the singers?
+Which best?"
+
+"Both."
+
+"Come, come--what was the difference?"
+
+"The difference?" repeated Leonhard reflecting.
+
+Spener also seemed to reflect on his question, and was so absorbed
+in his thinking that he seemed to be startled when Leonhard, from his
+studies of the square house with the wide halls and the large rooms
+with high ceilings, turned to him and said, "The difference, sir, is
+between two women."
+
+"No difference at all, do you mean? Do you mean they are alike? They
+are not alike."
+
+"Not so alike that I have seen anything like either of them."
+
+"Ah! neither have I. For that reason I shall marry one of them, while
+the other I would not marry--no, not if she were the only woman on the
+continent."
+
+"You are a fortunate man," said Leonhard.
+
+"I intend to prove that. Nothing more is necessary than the girl's
+consent--is there?--if you have made up your mind that you must have
+her."
+
+"I should think you might say that, sir."
+
+"But you don't hazard an opinion as to which, sir."
+
+"Not I."
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"It might be Miss Elise, if--"
+
+"If what?"
+
+"I am not accustomed to see young ladies in their homes. I have only
+fancied sometimes what a pretty girl might be in her father's house."
+
+"Well, sir?" said Spener impatiently.
+
+"A young lady like Miss Elise would have a great deal to say, I should
+suppose."
+
+"Is she dumb? I thought she could talk. I should have said so."
+
+"I should have guessed, too, that she would always be singing about
+the house."
+
+"And if not--what then?"
+
+"Something must be going wrong somewhere. So you see it can't be Miss
+Elise, according to my judgment."
+
+Spener laughed when this conclusion was reached.
+
+"Come here again within a month and see if she can talk and sing,"
+said he with eyes flashing. "Perhaps you have found that it is as easy
+to frighten a bugbear out of the way as to be frightened by one. I
+never found, sir, that I couldn't put a stumbling-block out of my
+path. We have one little man here who is going to prove himself a
+nuisance, I'm afraid. He is a good little fellow, too. I always liked
+him until he undertook to manage my affairs. I don't propose to give
+up the reins yet a while, and until I do, you see, he has no chance.
+I am sorry about it, for I considered him quite like a friend; but a
+friend, sir, with a flaw in him is worse than an enemy. I know where
+to find my enemies, but I can't keep track of a man who pretends to be
+a friend and serves me ill. But pshaw! let me see what you are doing."
+
+Leonhard was glad when the man ceased from discoursing on
+friendship--a favorite theme among Spenersbergers, he began to
+think--and glad to break away from his work, for he held his pencil
+less firmly than he should have done.
+
+Spener studied the portion completed, and seemed surprised as well as
+pleased. "You know your business," said he. "Be so good as to finish
+the design."
+
+Then returning the book to Leonhard, he looked at his watch. "It is
+time I went to dinner," he said. "Come with me. Loretz knows you are
+with me, and will expect you to be my guest to-day." So they walked
+across the field, but did not descend by the path along which they had
+ascended. They went farther to the east, and Spener led the way down
+the rough hillside until he came to a point whence the descent was
+less steep and difficult. There he paused. A beautiful view was spread
+before them. Little Spenersberg lay on the slope opposite: between ran
+the stream, which widened farther toward the east and narrowed toward
+the west, where it emptied into the river. Eastward the valley also
+widened, and there the willows grew, and looked like a great garden,
+beautiful in every shade of green.
+
+"I should not have the river from this point," said Spener, "but I
+should have a great deal more, and be nearer the people: I do not
+think it would be the thing to appear even to separate myself from
+them. I have done a great deal not so agreeable to me, I assure you,
+in order to bring myself near to them. One must make sacrifices to
+obtain his ends: it is only to count the cost and then be ready to put
+down the money. Suppose you plant a house just here."
+
+"How could it be done?"
+
+"You an architect and ask me!"
+
+"Things can be planted anywhere," answered Leonhard, "but whether the
+cost of production will not be greater than the fruit is worth, is
+the question. You can have a platform built here as broad as that the
+temple stood on if you are willing to pay for the foundations."
+
+"That is the talk!" said Spener. "Take a square look, and let me know
+what you can do toward a house on the hillside. You see there is no
+end of raw material for building, and it is a perfect prospect. But
+come now to dinner."
+
+CAROLINE CHESEBRO.
+
+[TO BE CONTINUED.]
+
+
+
+
+COUNTRY-HOUSE LIFE IN ENGLAND.
+
+
+The love for country life is, if possible, stronger in England now
+than at any previous period in her history. There is no other country
+where this taste has prevailed to the same extent. It arose originally
+from causes mainly political. In France a similar condition of things
+existed down to the sixteenth century, and was mainly brought to an
+end by the policy of ministers, who dreaded the increasing power of
+petty princes in remote provinces becoming in combination formidable
+to the central power. It was specially the object of Richelieu and
+Mazarin to check this sort of baronial _imperium in imperio_, and
+it became in the time of Louis XIV the keystone of that monarch's
+domestic policy. This tended to encourage the "hanging on" of _grands
+seigneurs_ about the court, where many of the chief of them, after
+having exhausted their resources in gambling or riotous living, became
+dependent for place or pension on the Crown, and were in fact the
+creatures of the king and his minister. Of course this did not apply
+to all. Here and there in the broad area of France were to be found
+magnificent châteaux--a few of which, especially in Central France,
+still survive--where the marquis or count reigned over his people an
+almost absolute monarch.
+
+There is a passage in one of Horace Walpole's letters in which that
+virtuoso expresses his regret, after a visit to the ancestral "hôtels"
+of Paris, whose contents had afforded him such intense gratification,
+that the nobility of England, like that of France, had not
+concentrated their treasures of art, etc. in London houses. Had he
+lived a few years longer he would probably have altered his views,
+which were such as his sagacious and manly father, who dearly loved
+his Norfolk home, Houghton, would never have held.
+
+In England, from the time that anything like social life, as we
+understand the phrase, became known, the power of the Crown was so
+well established that no necessity for resorting to a policy such as
+Richelieu's for diminishing the influence of the noblesse existed.
+
+In fact, a course distinctly the reverse came to be adopted from
+the time of Elizabeth down to even a later period than the reign of
+Charles II.
+
+In the reign of Elizabeth an act was passed, which is to this hour
+probably on the statute book, restricting building in or near the
+metropolis. James I appears to have been in a chronic panic on this
+subject, and never lost an opportunity of dilating upon it. In one of
+his proclamations he refers to those swarms of gentry "who, through
+the instigation of their wives, or to new model and fashion their
+daughters who, if they were unmarried, marred their reputations,
+and if married, lost them--did neglect their country hospitality and
+cumber the city, a general nuisance to the kingdom." He desired the
+Star Chamber "to regulate the exorbitancy of the new buildings about
+the city, which were but a shelter for those who, when they had spent
+their estates in coaches, lacqueys and fine clothes like Frenchmen,
+lived miserably in their houses like Italians; but the honor of the
+English nobility and gentry is to be hospitable among their tenants.
+
+"Gentlemen resident on their estates," said he, very sensibly,
+"were like ships in port: their value and magnitude were felt
+and acknowledged; but when at a distance, as their size seemed
+insignificant, so their worth and importance were not duly estimated."
+
+Charles I., with characteristic arbitrariness, carried matters with
+a still higher hand. His Star Chamber caused buildings to be actually
+razed, and fined truants heavily. One case which is reported displays
+the grim and costly humor of the illegal tribunal which dealt with
+such cases. Poor Mr. Palmer of Sussex, a gay bachelor, being called
+upon to show cause why he had been residing in London, pleaded in
+extenuation that he had no house, his mansion having been destroyed by
+fire two years before. This, however, was held rather an aggravation
+of the offence, inasmuch as he had failed to rebuild it; and Mr.
+Palmer paid a penalty of one thousand pounds--equivalent to at least
+twenty thousand dollars now.
+
+A document which especially serves to show the manner of life of the
+ancient noblesse is the earl of Northumberland's "Household Book"
+in the early part of the sixteenth century. By this we see the great
+magnificence of the old nobility, who, seated in their castles, lived
+in a state of splendor scarcely inferior to that of the court. As
+the king had his privy council, so the earl of Northumberland had
+his council, composed of his principal officers, by whose advice and
+assistance he established his code of economic laws. As the king had
+his lords and grooms of the chamber, who waited in their respective
+turns, so the earl was attended by the constables of his several
+castles, who entered into waiting in regular succession. Among other
+instances of magnificence it may be remarked that not fewer than
+eleven priests were kept in the household, presided over by a doctor
+or bachelor of divinity as dean of the chapel.
+
+An account of how the earl of Worcester lived at Ragland Castle before
+the civil wars which began in 1641 also exhibits his manner of life
+in great detail: "At eleven o'clock the Castle Gates were shut and the
+tables laid: two in the dining-room; three in the hall; one in Mrs.
+Watson's appartment, where the chaplains eat; two in the housekeeper's
+room for my ladie's women. The Earl came into the Dining Room attended
+by his gentlemen. As soon as he was seated, Sir Ralph Blackstone,
+Steward of the House, retired. The Comptroller, Mr. Holland, attended
+with his staff; as did the Sewer, Mr. Blackburn, and the daily waiters
+with many gentlemen's sons, from two to seven hundred pounds a year,
+bred up in the Castle; my ladie's Gentleman Usher, Mr. Harcourt; my
+lord's Gentlemen of the Chamber, Mr. Morgan and Mr. Fox.
+
+"At the first table sat the noble family and such of the nobility as
+came there. At the second table in the Dining-room sat Knights and
+honorable gentlemen attended by footmen.
+
+"In the hall at the first table sat Sir R. Blackstone, Steward, the
+Comptroller, Secretary, Master of the Horse, Master of the Fishponds,
+my Lord Herbert's Preceptor, with such gentlemen as came there under
+the degree of knight, attended by footmen and plentifully served with
+wine.
+
+"At the third table in the hall sate the Clerk of the Kitchen, with
+the Yeomen, officers of the House, two Grooms of the Chamber, etc.
+
+"Other officers of the Household were the Chief Auditor, Clerk of
+Accounts, Purveyor of the Castle, Usher of the Hall, Closet Keeper,
+Gentleman of the Chapel, Keeper of the Records, Master of the
+Wardrobe, Master of the Armoury, Master Groom of the Stable for the 12
+War-horses, Master of the Hounds, Master Falconer, Porter and his men,
+two Butchers, two Keepers of the Home Park, two Keepers of the Red
+Deer Park, Footmen, Grooms and other Menial Servants to the number of
+150. Some of the footmen were Brewers and Bakers.
+
+"_Out offices_.--Steward of Ragland, Governor of Chepstow Castle,
+Housekeeper of Worcester House in London, thirteen Bailiffs, two
+Counsel for the Bailiffs--who looked after the estate--to have
+recourse to, and a Solicitor."
+
+In a delicious old volume now rarely to be met with, called _The
+Olio_, published eighty years ago, Francis Grose the antiquary thus
+describes certain characters typical of the country life of the
+earlier half of the seventeenth century: "When I was a young man there
+existed in the families of most unmarried men or widowers of the rank
+of gentlemen, resident in the country, a certain antiquated female,
+either maiden or widow, commonly an aunt or cousin. Her dress I have
+now before me: it consisted of a stiff-starched cap and hood, a little
+hoop, a rich silk damask gown with large flowers. She leant on an
+ivory-headed crutch-cane, and was followed by a fat phthisicky dog
+of the pug kind, who commonly reposed on a cushion, and enjoyed the
+privilege of snarling at the servants, and occasionally biting their
+heels, with impunity. By the side of this old lady jingled a bunch of
+keys, securing in different closets and corner-cupboards all sorts
+of cordial waters, cherry and raspberry brandy, washes for the
+complexion, Daffy's elixir, a rich seed-cake, a number of pots of
+currant jelly and raspberry jam, with a range of gallipots and phials
+and purges for the use of poorer neighbors. The daily business of this
+good lady was to scold the maids, collect eggs, feed the turkeys and
+assist at all lyings-in that happened within the parish. Alas! this
+being is no more seen, and the race is, like that of her pug dog and
+the black rat, totally extinct.
+
+"Another character, now worn out and gone, was the country squire:
+I mean the little, independent country gentleman of three hundred
+pounds a year, who commonly appeared in a plain drab or plush coat,
+large silver buttons, a jockey cap, and rarely without boots. His travels
+never exceeded the distance to the county-town, and that only at
+assize-and session-time, or to attend an election. Once a week
+he commonly dined at the next market-town with the attorneys and
+justices. This man went to church regularly, read the weekly journal,
+settled the parochial disputes between the parish officers at the vestry,
+and afterward adjourned to the neighboring ale-house, where he
+usually got drunk for the good of his country. He never played at cards
+but at Christmas, when a family pack was produced from the mantelpiece.
+He was commonly followed by a couple of greyhounds and a pointer,
+and announced his arrival at a friend's house by cracking his whip or
+giving the view-halloo. His drink was generally ale, except on Christmas,
+the Fifth of November or some other gala-day, when he would make
+a bowl of strong brandy punch, garnished with a toast and nutmeg.
+A journey to London was by one of these men reckoned as great an
+undertaking as is at present a voyage to the East Indies, and
+undertaken with scarcely less precaution and preparation. The mansion
+of one of these squires was of plaster striped with timber, not unaptly
+called calimanco-work, or of red brick; large casemented bow-windows,
+a porch with seats in it, and over it a study, the eaves of the house well
+inhabited by swallows, and the court set round with hollyhocks. The
+hall was furnished with flitches of bacon, and the mantelpiece with guns
+and fishing-rods of different dimensions, accompanied by the broadsword,
+partisan and dagger borne by his ancestors in the Civil Wars. The
+vacant spaces were occupied by stags' horns. Against the wall was
+posted King Charles's _Golden Rules_, Vincent Wing's _Almanack_
+and a portrait of the duke of Marlborough: in his window lay Baker's
+_Chronicle_, Fox's _Book of Martyrs_, Glanvil on _Apparitions_,
+Quincey's _Dispensatory_, the _Complete Justice_ and a _Book of
+Farriery_. In the corner, by the fireside, stood a large wooden
+two-armed chair with a cushion; and within the chimney-corner were
+a couple of seats. Here, at Christmas, he entertained his tenants
+assembled round a glowing fire made of the roots of trees and other
+great logs, and told and heard the traditionary tales of the village
+respecting ghosts and witches till fear made them afraid to move.
+In the mean time the jorum of ale was in continual circulation.
+The best parlor, which was never opened but on particular occasions,
+was furnished with Turk-worked chairs, and hung round with portraits
+of his ancestors--the men, some in the character of shepherds with
+their crooks, dressed in full suits and huge full-bottomed perukes,
+and others in complete armor or buff-coats; the females, likewise
+as shepherdesses with the lamb and crook, all habited in high heads
+and flowing robes. Alas! these men and these houses are no more!
+The luxury of the times has obliged them to quit the country and
+become humble dependants on great men, to solicit a place or
+commission, to live in London, to rack their tenants and draw their
+rents before due. The venerable mansion is in the mean time
+suffered to tumble down or is partly upheld as a farm-house,
+till after a few years the estate is conveyed to the steward of the
+ neighboring lord, or else to some nabob, contractor or limb of the law."
+
+It is unquestionably owing to the love of country life amongst the
+higher classes that England so early attained in many respects what
+may be termed an even civilization. In almost all other countries the
+traveler beyond the confines of a few great cities finds himself in a
+region of comparative semi-barbarism. But no one familiar with English
+country life can say that this is the case in the rural districts
+of England, whilst it is most unquestionably so in Ireland, simply
+because she has through absenteeism been deprived of those influences
+which have done so much for her wealthy sister. Go where you will
+in England to-day, and you will find within five miles of you a good
+turnpike road, leading to an inn hard by, where you may get a clean
+and comfortable though simple dinner, good bread, good butter, and
+a carriage--"fly" is the term now, as in the days of Mr. Jonathan
+Oldbuck--to convey you where you will. And this was the case long
+before railways came into vogue.
+
+The influence of the great house has very wide ramifications, and
+extends far beyond the radius of park, village and estate. It greatly
+affects the prosperity of the country and county towns. Go into Exeter
+or Shrewsbury on a market-day in the autumn months, and you will find
+the streets crowded with carriages. If a local herald be with you, he
+will tell you all about their owners by glancing at the liveries and
+panels. They belong, half of them, to the old county gentry, who have
+shopped here--always at the same shops, according as their proprietors
+are Whigs or Tories--for generations. It may well be imagined what
+a difference the custom of twenty gentlemen spending on an average
+twenty-five thousand dollars a year makes to a grocer or draper.
+Besides, this class of customer demands a first-rate article, and
+consequently it is worth while to keep it in stock. The fishmonger
+knows that twenty great houses within ten miles require their handsome
+dish of fish for dinner as regularly as their bread and butter. It
+becomes worth his while therefore to secure a steady supply. In this
+way smaller people profit, and country life becomes pleasant to them
+too, inasmuch as the demands of the rich contribute to the comfort of
+those in moderate circumstances.
+
+Let us pass to the daily routine of an affluent country home. The
+breakfast hour is from nine to eleven, except where hunting-men or
+enthusiasts in shooting are concerned. The former are often in the
+saddle before six, and young partridge-slayers may, during the first
+fortnight of September--after that their ardor abates a bit--be found
+in the stubbles at any hour after sunrise.
+
+A country-house breakfast in the house of a gentlemen with from three
+thousand a year upward, when several guests are in the house, is a
+very attractive meal. Of course its degree of excellence varies, but
+we will take an average case in the house of a squire living on his
+paternal acres with five thousand pounds a year and knowing how to
+live.
+
+It is 10 A.M. in October: family prayers, usual in nine country-houses
+out of ten, which a guest can attend or not as he pleases, are over.
+The company is gradually gathering in the breakfast-room. It is an
+ample apartment, paneled with oak and hung with family pictures. If
+you have any appreciation for fine plate--and you are to be pitied if
+you have not--you will mark the charming shape and exquisite
+chasing of the antique urn and other silver vessels, which shine as
+brilliantly as on the day they left the silversmiths to Her Majesty,
+Queen Anne. No "Brummagem" patterns will you find here.
+
+On the table at equidistant points stand two tiny tables or
+dumb-waiters, which are made to revolve. On these are placed sugar,
+cream, butter, preserves, salt, pepper, mustard, etc., so that every
+one can help himself without troubling others--a great desideratum,
+for many people are of the same mind on this point as a well-known
+English family, of whom it was once observed that they were very nice
+people, but didn't like being bored to pass the mustard.
+
+On the sideboard are three beautiful silver dishes with spirit-lamps
+beneath them. Let us look under their covers. Broiled chicken, fresh
+mushrooms on toast, and stewed kidney. On a larger dish is fish, and
+ranged behind these hot viands are cold ham, tongue, pheasant and
+game-pie. On huge platters of wood, with knives to correspond, are
+farm-house brown bread and white bread, whilst on the breakfast-table
+itself you will find hot rolls, toast--of which two or three fresh
+relays are brought in during breakfast--buttered toast, muffins and
+the freshest of eggs. The hot dishes at breakfast are varied almost
+every morning, and where there is a good cook a variety of some twenty
+dishes is made.
+
+Marmalade (Marie Malade) of oranges--said to have been originally
+prepared for Mary queen of Scots when ill, and introduced by her into
+Scotland--and "jams" of apricot and other fruit always form a part
+of an English or Scotch breakfast. The living is just as good--often
+better--among the five-thousand-pounds-a-year gentry as among the
+very wealthy: the only difference lies in the number of servants and
+guests.
+
+The luncheon-hour is from one to two. At luncheon there will be a
+roast leg of mutton or some such _pièce de résistance_, and a
+made dish, such as minced veal--a dish, by the way, not the least
+understood in this country, where it is horribly mangled--two hot
+dishes of meat and several cold, and various sorts of pastry. These,
+with bread, butter, fruit, cheese, sherry, port, claret and beer,
+complete the meal.
+
+Few of the men of the party are present at this meal, and those who
+are eat but little, reserving their forces until dinner. All is placed
+on the table at once, and not, as at dinner, in courses. The servants
+leave the room when they have placed everything on the table, and
+people wait on themselves. Dumb-waiters with clean plates, glasses,
+etc. stand at each corner of the table, so that there is very little
+need to get up for what you want.
+
+The afternoon is usually passed by the ladies alone or with only
+one or two gentlemen who don't care to shoot, etc., and is spent in
+riding, driving and walking. Englishwomen are great walkers. With
+their skirts conveniently looped up, and boots well adapted to defy
+the mud, they brave all sorts of weather. "Oh it rains! what a bore!
+We can't go out," said a young lady, standing at the breakfast-room
+window at a house in Ireland; to which her host rejoined, "If you
+don't go out here when it rains, you don't go out at all;" which is
+pretty much the truth.
+
+About five o'clock, as you sit over your book in the library, you
+hear a rapid firing off of guns, which apprises you that the men have
+returned from shooting. They linger a while in the gun-room talking
+over their sport and seeing the record of the killed entered in the
+game-book. Then some, doffing the shooting-gear for a free-and-easy
+but scrupulously neat attire, repair to the ladies' sitting-room or
+the library for "kettledrum."
+
+On a low table is placed the tea equipage, and tea in beautiful little
+cups is being dispensed by fair hands. This is a very pleasant time
+in many houses, and particularly favorable to fun and flirtation. In
+houses where there are children, the cousins of the house and others
+very intimate adjourn to the school-room, where, when the party is
+further reinforced by three or four boys home for the holidays, a
+scene of fun and frolic, which it requires all the energies of the
+staid governess to prevent going too far, ensues.
+
+So time speeds on until the dressing-bell rings at seven o'clock,
+summoning all to prepare for the great event of the day--dinner. Every
+one dons evening-attire for this meal; and so strong a feeling obtains
+on this point that if, in case of his luggage going wrong or other
+accident, a man is compelled to join the party in morning-clothes, he
+feels painfully "fish-out-of-waterish." We know, indeed, of a case in
+which a guest absurdly sensitive would not come down to dinner until
+the arrival of his things, which did not make their appearance for a
+week.
+
+Ladies' dress in country-houses depends altogether upon the occasion.
+If it be a quiet party of intimate friends, their attire is of the
+simplest, but in many fashionable houses the amount of dressing is
+fully as great as in London. English ladies do not dress nearly as
+expensively or with so much taste as Americans, but, on the other
+hand, they have the subject much less in their thoughts; which is
+perhaps even more desirable.
+
+There is a degree of pomp and ceremony, which, however, is far from
+being unpleasant, at dinner in a large country-house. The party is
+frequently joined by the rector and his wife, a neighboring squire
+or two, and a stray parson, so that it frequently reaches twenty. Of
+course in this case the pleasantness of the prandial period depends
+largely upon whom you have the luck to get next to; but there's this
+advantage in the situation over a similar one in London--that you
+have, at all events, a something of local topics in common, having
+picked up a little knowledge of places and people during your stay, or
+if you are quite a new-comer, you can easily set your neighbor a-going
+by questions about surroundings. Generally there is some acquaintance
+between most of the people staying in a house, as hosts make up their
+parties with the view of accommodating persons wishing to meet others
+whom they like. Young men will thus frequently get a good-natured
+hostess to ask some young lady whose society they especially affect,
+and thus country-houses become proverbially adapted for match-making.
+
+There are few houses now-a-days in which the gentlemen linger in
+the dining-room long after the ladies have left it. Habits of hard
+drinking are now almost entirely confined to young men in the army
+and the lower classes. The evenings are spent chiefly in conversation:
+sometimes a rubber of whist is made up, or, if there are a number of
+young people, there is dancing.
+
+A rather surprising step which occasioned something of a scandalous
+sensation in the social world was resorted to some years ago at a
+country-house in Devonshire. Two or three fast young ladies, finding
+the evening somewhat heavy, and lamenting a dearth of dancing men,
+rang the bell, and in five minutes the lady of the house, who was
+in another room, was aghast at seeing them whirling round in
+their Jeames's arms. It was understood that the ringleader in this
+enterprise, the daughter of an Irish earl, was not likely to be asked
+to repeat her visit.
+
+About eleven wine and water and biscuits are brought into the
+drawing-room, and a few minutes later the ladies retire. The wine and
+water, with the addition of other stimulants, are then transferred
+to the billiard- and smoking-rooms, to which the gentlemen adjourn
+so soon as they have changed their black coats for dressing-gowns or
+lounging suits, in which great latitude is given to the caprice of
+individual fancy.
+
+The sittings in these apartments are protracted until any hour, as the
+servants usually go to bed when they have provided every one with
+his flat candle-stick--that emblem of gentility which always so
+prominently recurred to the mind of Mrs. Micawber when recalling the
+happy days when she "lived at home with papa and mamma." In some fast
+houses pretty high play takes place at such times.
+
+It not unfrequently happens that the master of the house takes but
+a very limited share in the recreations of his guests, being much
+engrossed by the various avocations which fall to the lot of a
+country proprietor. After breakfast in the morning he will make it his
+business to see that each gentleman is provided with such recreation
+as he likes for the day. This man will shoot, that one will fish;
+Brown will like to have a horse and go over to see some London friends
+who are staying ten miles off; Jones has heaps of letters which
+must be written in the morning, but will ride with the ladies in the
+afternoon; and when all these arrangements are completed the squire
+will drive off with his old confidential groom in the dog-cart, with
+that fast-trotting bay, to attend the county meeting in the nearest
+cathedral town or dispense justice from the bench at Pottleton;
+and when eight o'clock brings all together at dinner an agreeable
+diversity is given to conversation by each man's varied experiences
+during the day.
+
+Of course some houses are desperately dull, whilst others are always
+agreeable. Haddo House, during the lifetime of Lord Aberdeen, the
+prime minister, had an exceptional reputation for the former quality.
+It was said to be the most silent house in England; and silence in
+this instance was regarded as quite the reverse of golden. The family
+scarcely ever spoke, and the guest, finding that his efforts brought
+no response, became alarmed at the echoes of his own voice. Lord
+Aberdeen and his son, Lord Haddo--an amiable but weak and eccentric
+man, father of the young earl who dropped his title and was drowned
+whilst working as mate of a merchantman--did not get on well together,
+and saw very little of each other for some years. At length a
+reconciliation was effected, and the son was invited to Haddo. Anxious
+to be pleasant and conciliatory, he faltered out admiringly, "The
+place looks nice, the trees are very green." "Did you expect to see
+'em blue, then?" was the encouraging paternal rejoinder.
+
+The degree of luxury in many of these great houses is less remarkable
+than its completeness. Everything is in keeping, thus presenting a
+remarkable contrast to most of our rich men's attempts at the same.
+The dinner, cooked by a _cordon bleu_ of the cuisine [A]--whose
+resources in the way of "hot plates" and other accessories for
+furnishing a superlative dinner are unrivaled--is often served on
+glittering plate, or china almost equally valuable, by men six
+feet high, of splendid figure, and dressed with the most scrupulous
+neatness and cleanliness. Gloves are never worn by servants in
+first-rate English houses, but they carry a tiny napkin in their hands
+which they place between their fingers and the plates. Nearly all
+country gentlemen are hospitable, and it very rarely happens that
+guests are not staying in the house. A county ball or some other such
+gathering fills it from garret to cellar.
+
+[Footnote A: Frenchmen say that the best English dinners are now the
+best in the world, because they combine the finest French _entrées_
+and _entremets_ with _pièces de résistance_ of unrivaled excellence.]
+
+The best guest-rooms are always reserved for the married: bachelors
+are stowed away comparatively "anywhere." In winter fires are always
+lit in the bedrooms about five o'clock, so that they may be warm at
+dressing-time; and shortly before the dressing-bell rings the servant
+deputed to attend upon a guest who does not bring a valet with him
+goes to his room, lays out his evening-toilette, puts shirt, socks,
+etc. to air before the fire, places a capacious pitcher of boiling
+water on the washing-stand, and having lit the candles, drawn the
+easy-chair to the fire, just ready on provocation to burst into a
+blaze, lights the wax candles on the dressing-table and withdraws.
+
+In winter the guest is asked whether he likes a fire to get up by,
+and in that event a housemaid enters early with as little noise as
+possible and lights it. On rising in the morning you find all your
+clothes carefully brushed and put in order, and every appliance for
+ample ablutions at hand.
+
+A guest gives the servant who attends him a tip of from a dollar and
+a quarter to five dollars, according to the length of his stay. If he
+shoots, a couple of sovereigns for a week's sport is a usual fee to a
+keeper. Some people give absurdly large sums, but the habit of giving
+them has long been on the decline. The keeper supplies powder and
+shot, and sends in an account for them. Immense expense is involved
+in these shooting establishments. The late Sir Richard Sutton, a
+great celebrity in the sporting world, who had the finest shooting in
+England, and therefore probably in the world, used to say that every
+pheasant he killed cost him a guinea. On some estates the sale of the
+game is in some degree a set-off to the cost of maintaining it, just
+as the sale of the fruit decreases the cost of pineries, etc. Nothing
+but the fact that the possession of land becomes more and more vested
+in those who regard it as luxury could have enabled this sacrifice of
+farming to sport to continue so long. It is the source of continual
+complaint and resentment on the part of the farmers, who are only
+pacified by allowance being made to them out of their rent for damage
+done by game.
+
+The expense of keeping up large places becomes heavier every year,
+owing to the constantly-increasing rates of wages, etc., and in
+some cases imposes a grievous burden, eating heavily into income
+and leaving men with thousands of acres very poor balances at their
+bankers to meet the Christmas bills. Those who have large families
+to provide for, and get seriously behindhand, usually shut up or let
+their places--which latter is easily done if they be near London or
+in a good shooting country--and recoup on the Continent; but of
+late years prices there have risen so enormously that this plan of
+restoring the equilibrium between income and expenditure is far less
+satisfactory than it was forty years ago. The encumbrances on many
+estates are very heavy. A nobleman who twenty years ago succeeded to
+an entailed estate, with a house almost gutted, through having had
+an execution put in it, and a heavy debt--some of which, though not
+legally bound to liquidate, he thought it his duty to settle--acted
+in a very spirited manner which few of his order have the courage to
+imitate. He dropped his title, went abroad and lived for some years
+on about three thousand dollars a year. He has now paid off all
+his encumbrances, and has a clear income, steadily increasing, of
+a hundred thousand dollars a year. In another case a gentleman
+accomplished a similar feat by living in a corner of his vast mansion
+and maintaining only a couple of servants.
+
+In Ireland, owing to the lower rates of wages and far greater--in the
+remoter parts--cheapness of provisions, large places can be maintained
+at considerably less cost, but they are usually far less well kept,
+partly owing to their being on an absurdly large scale as compared
+with the means of the proprietors, and partly from the slovenly habits
+of the country. And in some cases people who could afford it will not
+spend the money. There are, however, notable exceptions. Powerscourt
+in Wicklow, the seat of Viscount Powerscourt, and Woodstock in
+Kilkenny, the beautiful demesne of Mr. Tighe, are probably in as
+perfect order as any seats in England. A countryman was sent over to
+the latter one day with a message from another county. "Well, Jerry,"
+said the master on his return, "what did you think of Woodstock?"
+"Shure, your honor," was the reply, "I niver seed such a power of
+girls a-swaping up the leaves."
+
+Country-house life in Ireland and Scotland is almost identical with
+that in England, except that, in the former especially, there is
+generally less money. Scotland has of late years become so much the
+fashion, land has risen so enormously in value, and properties are
+so very large, that some of the establishments, such as those at
+Drumlanrig, Dunrobin, Gordon Castle and Floors, the seats respectively
+of the dukes of Buccleuch, Sutherland, Richmond and Roxburghe, are on
+a princely scale. The number of wealthy squires is far fewer than
+in England. It is a curious feature in the Scottish character that
+notwithstanding the radical politics of the country--for scarcely
+a Conservative is returned by it--the people cling fondly to
+primogeniture and their great lords, who, probably to a far greater
+extent than in England, hold the soil. The duke of Sutherland
+possesses nearly the whole of the county from which he derives his
+title, whilst the duke of Buccleuch owns the greater part of four.
+
+Horses are such a very expensive item that a large stable is seldom
+found unless there is a very large income, for otherwise the rest
+of the establishment must be cut down to a low figure. Hunting
+millionaires keep from ten to twenty, or even thirty, hacks and
+hunters, besides four or five carriage-horses. Three or four
+riding-horses, three carriage-horses and a pony or two is about the
+usual number in the stable of a country gentleman with from five to
+six thousand pounds a year. The stable-staff would be coachman, groom
+and two helpers. The number of servants in country-houses varies from
+seven or eight to eighty, but probably there are not ten houses in the
+country where it reaches so high a figure as the last: from fifteen to
+twenty would be a common number.
+
+There are many popular bachelors and old maids who live about half the
+year in the country-houses of their friends. A gentleman of this sort
+will have his chambers in London and his valet, whilst the lady will
+have her lodgings and maid. In London they will live cheaply and
+comfortably, he at his club and dining out with rich friends, she in
+her snug little room and passing half her time in friends' houses.
+There is not the slightest surrender of independence about these
+people. They would not stay a day in a house which they did not like,
+but their pleasant manners and company make them acceptable, and
+friends are charmed to have them.
+
+One of the special recommendations of a great country-house is that
+you need not see too much of any one. There is no necessary meeting
+except at meals--in many houses then even only at dinner--and in the
+evening. Many sit a great deal in their own rooms if they have writing
+or work to do; some will be in the billiard-room, others in the
+library, others in the drawing-room: the host's great friend will be
+with him in his own private room, whilst the hostess's will pass most
+of the time in that lady's boudoir.[A]
+
+[Footnote A: Perhaps the most charming idea of a country-house was
+that conceived by Mr. Mathew of Thomastown--a huge mansion still
+extant, now the property of the count de Jarnac, to whom it descended.
+This gentleman, who was an ancestor of the celebrated Temperance
+leader, probably had as much claret drunk in his house as any one in
+his country; which is saying a good deal.
+
+He had an income which would be equivalent to one hundred and
+twenty-five thousand dollars a year in our money, and for several
+years traveled abroad and spent very little. On his return with an
+ample sum of ready money, he carried into execution a long-cherished
+scheme of country life.
+
+He arranged his immense mansion after the fashion of an inn. The
+guests arrived, were shown to their rooms, and treated as though they
+were in the most perfectly-appointed hotel. They ordered dinner when
+they pleased, dined together or alone as suited them, hunted, shot,
+played billiards, cards, etc. at will, and kept their own horses.
+There was a regular bar, where drinks of the finest quality were
+always served. The host never appeared in that character: he was just
+like any other gentleman in the house.
+
+The only difference from a hotel lay in the choice character of the
+company, and the fact that not a farthing might be disbursed. The
+servants were all paid extra, with the strict understanding that they
+did not accept a farthing, and that any dereliction from this rule
+would be punished by instant dismissal.
+
+Unlike most Irish establishments, especially at that date (about the
+middle of the last century), this was managed with the greatest order,
+method and economy.
+
+Among the notable guests was Dean Swift, whose astonishment at the
+magnitude of the place, with the lights in hundreds of windows at
+night, is mentioned by Dr. Sheridan.
+
+It is pleasant to add in this connection that the count and countess
+de Jarnac worthily sustain the high character earned a century
+since by their remarkable ancestor, who was one of the best and most
+benevolent men of his day.]
+
+In some respects railroads have had a very injurious effect on the
+sociability of English country life. They have rendered people in
+great houses too apt to draw their supplies of society exclusively
+from town. English trains run so fast that this can even be done in
+places quite remote from London. The journey from London to Rugby,
+for instance, eighty miles, is almost invariably accomplished in two
+hours. Leaving at five in the afternoon, a man reaches that station at
+7.10: his friend's well-appointed dog-cart is there to meet him, and
+that exquisitely neat young groom, with his immaculate buckskins and
+boots in which you may see yourself, will make the thoroughbred do the
+four miles to the hall in time to enable you to dress for dinner
+by 7.45. Returning on Tuesday morning--and all the lines are most
+accommodating about return tickets--the barrister, guardsman,
+government clerk can easily be at his post in town by eleven o'clock.
+Thus the actual "country people" get to be held rather cheap, and come
+off badly, because Londoners, being more in the way of hearing,
+seeing and observing what is going on in society, are naturally more
+congenial to fine people in country-houses who live in the metropolis
+half the year.
+
+It is evident from the following amusing squib, which appeared in one
+of the Annuals for 1832, how far more dependent the country gentleman
+was upon his country neighbors in those days, when only idle men could
+run down from town:
+
+"Mr. J., having frequently witnessed with regret country gentlemen,
+in their country-houses, reduced to the dullness of a domestic circle,
+and nearly led to commit suicide in the month of November, or, what is
+more melancholy, to invite the ancient and neighboring families of
+the Tags, the Rags and the Bobtails, has opened an office in Spring
+Gardens for the purpose of furnishing country gentlemen in their
+country-houses with company and guests on the most moderate terms. It
+will appear from the catalogue that Mr. J. has a choice and elegant
+assortment of six hundred and seventeen guests, ready to start at a
+moment's warning to any country gentleman at any house. Among them
+will be found three Scotch peers, several ditto Irish, fifteen decayed
+baronets, eight yellow admirals, forty-seven major-generals on half
+pay (who narrate the whole Peninsular War), twenty-seven dowagers,
+one hundred and eighty-seven old maids on small annuities, and several
+unbeneficed clergymen, who play a little on the fiddle. All the above
+play at cards, and usually with success if partners. No objection to
+cards on Sunday evenings or rainy mornings. The country gentleman to
+allow the guests four feeds a day, and to produce claret if a Scotch
+or Irish peer be present."
+
+A country village very often has no inhabitants except the parson
+holding the rank of gentry. The majority of ladies in moderate or
+narrow circumstances live in county-towns, such as Exeter, Salisbury,
+etc., or in watering-places, which abound and are of all degrees of
+fashion and expense. County-town and watering-place society is a thing
+_per se_, and has very little to do with "county" society, which
+means that of the landed gentry living in their country-houses.
+Thus, noblemen and gentlemen within a radius of five miles of such
+watering-places as Bath, Tonbridge Wells and Weymouth would not have a
+dozen visiting acquaintances resident in those towns.
+
+To get into "county" society is by no means easy to persons without
+advantages of position or connection, even with ample means, and to
+the wealthy manufacturer or merchant is often a business of years. The
+upper class of Englishmen, and more especially women, are accustomed
+to find throughout their acquaintance an almost identical style and
+set of manners. Anything which differs from this they are apt to
+regard as "ungentlemanlike or unladylike," and shun accordingly. The
+dislike to traders and manufacturers, which is very strong in those
+counties, such as Cheshire and Warwickshire, which environ great
+commercial centres, arises not from the folly of thinking commerce a
+low occupation, but because the county gentry have different tastes,
+habits and modes of thought from men who have worked their way up from
+the counting-room, and do not, as the phrase goes, "get on" with
+them, any more than a Wall street broker ordinarily gets on with a
+well-read, accomplished member of the Bar.
+
+A result of this is that a large number of wealthy commercial men, in
+despair of ever entering the charmed circle of county society, take up
+their abode in or near the fashionable watering-places, where,
+after the manner of those at our own Newport, they build palaces in
+paddocks, have acres of glass, rear the most marvelous of pines and
+peaches, and have model farms which cost them thousands of pounds
+a year. To this class is owing in a great degree the extraordinary
+increase of Leamington, Torquay, Tonbridge Wells, etc.--places which
+have made the fortunes of the lucky people who chanced to own them.
+
+English ladies, as a rule, take a great deal of interest in the poor
+around them, and really know a great deal of them. The village near
+the hall is almost always well attended to, but it unfortunately
+happens that outlying properties sometimes come off far less well. The
+classes which see nothing of each other in English rural life are the
+wives and daughters of the gentry and those of the wealthier farmers
+and tradesmen: between these sections a huge gulf intervenes, which
+has not as yet been in the least degree bridged over. In former days
+very great people used to have once or twice in the year what were
+called "public days," when it was open house for all who chose to
+come, with a sort of tacit understanding that none below the class
+of substantial yeomen or tradesmen would make their appearance. This
+custom has now fallen into disuse, but was maintained to the last by
+the Hon. Doctor Vernon-Harcourt, who was for more than half a century
+archbishop of York, and is yet retained by Earl Fitzwilliam at
+Wentworth House, his princely seat in Yorkshire. There, once or twice
+a year, a great gathering takes place. Dinner is provided for hundreds
+of guests, and care is taken to place a member of the family at every
+table to do his or her part toward dispensing hospitality to high and
+low.
+
+During the summer and early autumn croquet and archery offer good
+excuses for bringing young people together, and reunions of this kind
+palliate the miseries of those who cannot afford to partake of the
+expensive gayeties of the London season. The archery meetings are
+often exceedingly pretty fêtes. Somtimes they are held in grounds
+specially devoted to the purpose, as is the case at St. Leonard's,
+near Hastings, where the archery-ground will well repay a visit. The
+shooting takes place in a deep and vast excavation covered with the
+smoothest turf, and from the high ground above is a glorious view of
+the old castle of Hastings and the ocean. In Devonshire these meetings
+have an exceptional interest from the fact that they are held in the
+park of Powderham Castle, the ancestral seat of the celebrated family
+of Courtenay. All the county flocks to them, some persons coming fifty
+miles for this purpose. Apropos of one of these meetings, we shall
+venture to interpolate an anecdote which deserves to be recorded for
+the sublimity of impudence which it displays. The railway from London
+to Plymouth skirts the park of Powderham, running so close beside
+it that each train sends a herd of deer scampering down the velvety
+glades. One afternoon a bouncing young lady, who belonged to a family
+which had lately emerged from the class of yeoman into that of gentry,
+and whose "manners had not the repose which stamps the caste of Vere
+de Vere," found herself in a carriage with two fashionably-attired
+persons of her own sex. As the train ran by the park, one of these
+latter exclaimed to her companion, "Oh look, there's Powderham! Don't
+you remember that archery-party we went to there two years ago?" "To
+be sure," was the rejoinder. "I'm not likely to forget it, there were
+some such queer people. Who were those vulgarians whom we thought so
+particularly objectionable? I can't remember." "Oh, H----: H----
+of P----! That was the name." Upon this the other young lady in the
+carriage bounced to her feet with the words, "Allow me to tell you,
+madam, that I am Miss H---- of P----!" Neither of those she addressed
+deigned to utter a word in reply to this announcement, nor did it
+appear in the least to disconcert them. One slowly drew out a gold
+double eye-glass, leisurely surveyed Miss H---- of P---- from head to
+foot, and then proceeded to talk to her companion in French. Perhaps
+the best part of the joke was that Miss H---- made a round of visits
+in the course of the week, and detailed the disgusting treatment to
+which she had been subjected to a numerous acquaintance, who, it
+is needless to say, appeared during the narration as indignant and
+sympathetic as she could have wished, but who are declared by some
+ill-natured persons to have been precisely those who in secret
+chuckled over the insult with the greatest glee.
+
+English gentlemen experience an almost painful sensation as they
+journey through our land and observe the utter indifference of its
+wealthier classes to the charms of such a magnificent country. "Pearls
+before swine," they say in their hearts. "God made the country and man
+made the town." "Yes, and how obviously the American prefers the work
+of man to the work of the Almighty!" These and similar reflections
+no doubt fill the minds of many a thoughtful English traveler as the
+train speeds over hill and dale, field and forest. What sites are
+here! he thinks. What a perfect park might be made out of that wild
+ground! what cover-shooting there ought to be in that woodland! what
+fishing and boating on that lake! And then he groans in spirit as the
+cars enter a forest where tree leans against tree, and neglect reigns
+on all sides, and he thinks of the glorious oaks and beeches so
+carefully cared for in his own country, where trees and flowery are
+loved and petted as much as dogs and horses. And if anything can
+increase the contempt he feels for those who "don't care a rap" for
+country and country life, it is a visit to such resorts as Newport and
+Saratoga. There he finds men whose only notion of country life is what
+he would hold to be utterly destitute of all its ingredients. They
+build palaces in paddocks, take actually no exercise, play at cards
+for three hours in the forenoon, dine, and then drive out "just like
+ladies," we heard a young Oxonian exclaim--"got up" in the style that
+an Englishman adopts only in Hyde Park or Piccadilly.
+
+When an American went to stay with Lord Palmerston at Broadlands, the
+great minister ordered horses for a ride in the delicious glades of
+the New Forest. When they came to the door his guest was obliged to
+confess himself no horseman. The premier, with ready courtesy, said,
+"Oh, then, we'll walk: it's all the same to me;" but it wasn't quite
+the same. The incident was just one of those which separate the
+Englishman of a certain rank from the American.
+
+There is of course a certain class of Americans, more especially among
+the _jeunesse dorée_ of New York, who greatly affect sport: they
+"run" horses and shoot pigeons, but these are not persons who commend
+themselves to real gentlemen, English or American. They belong to
+the bad style of "fast men," and are as thoroughly distasteful to
+a Devonshire or Cheshire squire as to one who merits "the grand old
+name"--which they conspicuously defame--in their own country.
+
+The English country-loving gentleman to whom we have been referring
+is, for the most part, of a widely different mould--a man of
+first-rate education, frequently of high attainments, and often one
+whose ends and aims in life are for far higher things than pleasure,
+even of the most innocent kind, but who, when he takes it, derives it
+chiefly from the country. Many of this kind will instantly occur to
+those acquainted with English worthies: to mention two--John Evelyn
+and Sir Fowell Buxton.
+
+REGINALD WYNFORD.
+
+
+
+
+THE FOREST OF ARDEN.
+
+
+A girl of seventeen--a girl with a "missish" name, with a "missish"
+face as well, soft skin, bright eyes, dark hair, medium height and a
+certain amount of coquetry in her attire. This completes the "visible"
+of Nellie Archer. And the invisible? With an exterior such as this,
+what thoughts or ideas are possible within? Surely none worth the
+trouble of searching after. It is a case of the rind being the better
+part of the fruit, the shell excelling the kernel; and with a slight
+effort we can imagine her acquirements. Some scraps of geography,
+mixed up with the topography of an embroidery pattern; some grammar,
+of much use in parsing the imperfect phrases of celebrated authors,
+to the neglect of her own; some romanticism, finding expression in the
+arrangement of a spray of artificial flowers on a spring bonnet; some
+idea of duty, resulting in the manufacture of sweet cake or "seeing
+after" the dessert for dinner; and a conception of "woman's mission"
+gained from Tennyson--
+
+ Oh teach the orphan-boy to read,
+ Or teach the orphan-girl to sew.
+
+No! no! no! not so fast, please. In spite of Nellie's name, of her
+face, of her attire, that little head is filled quite otherwise. It is
+not her fault that this is so: is it her misfortune? But to give the
+history of this being entire, it is necessary to begin seventeen years
+back, at the very beginning of her life, for in our human nature, as
+in the inanimate world, a phenomenon is better understood when we know
+its producing causes.
+
+Nellie's father was a business-man of a type common in America--one
+whose affairs led him here, there and everywhere. Never quiet while
+awake, and scarcely at rest during slumber, he resembled Bedreddin
+Hassan in frequently going to sleep in one town, to awake in another
+far distant, but without the benighted Oriental's surprise at the
+transfer, the afrit who performed this prodigy being a steam-engine,
+and the magician it obeyed the human mind.
+
+In these rapid peregrinations it would not have been easy for Mr.
+Archer to carry an infant with him; so, when his wife died and left
+Nellie to his sole care at six months old, he speedily cast about in
+his mind to rid himself of the encumbrance.
+
+Having heard that country air is good for children, he sent the little
+one to the interior, and quite admired himself for giving her such an
+advantage: then, too, the house in the city could be sold.
+
+But to whom did he entrust his child? For a while this had been the
+great difficulty. In vain he thought over the years he had lived, to
+find a friend: he had been too busy to make friends. For an honest
+person he had traversed the world too hurriedly to perceive the
+deeper, better part of mankind; he had floated on the surface with the
+scum and froth, and could recall no one whom he could trust. At last,
+away back in the years of his childhood, he saw a face--that of a
+young but motherly Irishwoman, who had lived in his father's family as
+a faithful servant, and had been a fond partisan of his in his fickle
+troubles when a boy.
+
+He sought and found her in his need. She had married, borne children
+and grown old: her offspring, after much struggling and little help
+from the parent birds, had learned to fly alone, and had left the
+home-nest to try their own fortunes. It was not hard for Mr. Archer
+to persuade Nurse Bridget and her husband to inhabit his house in the
+country and take charge of the baby. In a short time the arrangements
+were complete, and the three were installed in comfort, for the busy
+man did not grudge money.
+
+If in the long years that followed a thought of the neglected little
+one did at times reproach him, he dismissed it with the resolution of
+doing something for her when she should be grown up; but at what date
+this event was to take place, or what it was that he intended to do,
+he did not definitely settle.
+
+The mansion in the country was an old rambling house, in which
+there were enough deserted rooms to furnish half a dozen ghosts with
+desirable lodgings, without inconvenience to the living dwellers. The
+front approach was through an avenue of hemlocks, dark and untrimmed.
+Under the closed windows lay a tangled garden, where flowers grew
+rank, shadowed by high ash and leafy oak, outposts of the forest
+behind--a forest jealous of cultivation, stealthily drawing nearer
+each year, and threatening to reconquer its own.
+
+There was an unused well in a corner that looked like the habitation
+of a fairy--of a good fairy, I am sure, because the grass grew
+greenest and best about the worn curb, and the tender mosses and
+little plants that could not support the heat in summer found a refuge
+within its cool circle and flourished there.
+
+On the other side of the house, and dividing it from level fields,
+were the kitchen-garden and orchard. In springtime you might have
+imagined the latter to be a grove of singing trees, bearing song
+for fruit: in autumn, had you seen it when the sun was low, glinting
+through leaves and gilding apples and stem, you would have been
+reminded of the garden of the Hesperides.
+
+Below the fields lay a broad river--in summer, languid and clear;
+in winter, turbid and full. The child often wondered (as soon as
+she could wonder) if, when it was lying so tranquil under the summer
+clouds, it was thinking of the frolic it would have with the great
+blocks of ice in the winter; whether it loved best the rush and
+struggle of the floods or the quiet of low water; and, above all,
+whither it was going.
+
+The homely faces and bent, ungainly forms of the old nurse and her
+husband harmonized well with the mellow gloom about them; and the
+infant Nellie completed the scene, like the spot of sunlight in the
+foreground of a picture by Rembrandt.
+
+Now, Nellie inherited her father's active disposition, and, left to
+her own amusement, her occupations were many and various. At three
+years of age she was turned loose in the orchard, with three blind
+puppies in lieu of toys. Day by day she augmented her store, until she
+had two kittens, one little white pig with a curly tail, half a dozen
+soft piepies, one kid, and many inanimate articles, such as broken
+bottles, dishes, looking-glass and gay bits of calico. When the little
+thing became sleepy she would toddle through the long grass to a
+corner, whence the river could be heard fretting against its banks,
+and lie there: she said the water sang to her. Finding that this was
+her favorite spot, the old nurse placed there a bright quilt for her
+to rest on, and in case she should awake hungry there stood a tin
+of milk hard by. This was all the attention she received, unless the
+fairy of the well took her under her protection, but for that I cannot
+vouch. Sometimes the puppies drank her milk before she awoke; then she
+went contentedly and ate green apples or ripe cherries. Thus she lived
+and grew.
+
+By the time Nellie was seven she had seen whole generations of pets
+pass away. It was wonderful what knowledge she gained in this golden
+orchard. She knew that piepies became chickens--that they were killed
+and eaten; so death came into her world. She knew that the kid grew
+into a big goat, and became very wicked, for he ran at her one day,
+throwing her to the ground and hurting her severely; so sin came into
+her world. She saw innate depravity exemplified in the conduct of her
+innocent white pig, that would take to puddles and filth in spite of
+her gentle endeavors to restrain its wayward impulses. Her puppies
+too bit each other, would quarrel over a bone, growl and get generally
+unmanageable. None of her animals fulfilled the promise of their
+youth, and her care was returned with base ingratitude. Even
+the little wrens bickered with the blue-birds, and showed their
+selfishness and jealousy in chasing them from the crumbs she
+impartially spread for all in common.
+
+So at seven she was a wise little woman, and said to her nurse one
+day, "I do not care for pets any more: they all grow up nasty."
+
+Was Solomon's "All is vanity" truer?
+
+With so much experience Nellie felt old, for life is not counted by
+years alone: it is the loss of hope, the mistrust of appearance, the
+vanishing of illusion, that brings age. A hopeful heart is young at
+seventy, and youth is past when hope is dead. But, in spite of all,
+hope was not dead in the heart of the little maid, and though deceived
+she was quite ready to be deceived a second time, as was Solomon, and
+as we are all.
+
+It was now that the girl began to be fond of flowers. She made
+herself a bed for them in a sunny corner of the kitchen-garden, and
+transplanted daisy roots and spring-beauties, with other wood- and
+field-plants as they blossomed. She watched the ferns unroll their
+worm-like fronds, made plays with the nodding violets, and ornamented
+her head with dandelion curls. This was indeed a happy summer.
+Her rambles were unlimited, and each day she was rewarded by new
+discoveries and delightful secrets--how the May-apple is good to eat,
+that sassafras root makes tea, that birch bark is very like candy,
+though not so sweet, and slippery elm a feast.
+
+Her new playmates were as lovely and perfect as she could desire.
+_They_ did not "grow up nasty," but in the autumn, alas! they died.
+
+One day at the end of the Indian summer, after having wandered for
+hours searching for her favorites, she found them all withered. The
+trees also looked forlorn, shivering in the chill air, with scarce a
+leaf to cover them: the wind moaned, and the sky was gray instead
+of the bright summer blue. The little one, tired and disappointed,
+touched by this mighty lesson of decay, threw herself on a friendly
+bank and wept.
+
+It is true the beautiful face of Nature had grown sad each winter, and
+her flowers and lovely things had yearly passed away, but Nellie had
+not then loved them.
+
+Here she was found by a boy rosy-cheeked and bright, who all his life
+had been loved and caressed to the same extent that Nellie had been
+neglected. He lived beyond the forest, and had come this afternoon
+to look for walnuts. Seeing the girl unhappy, he essayed some of the
+blandishing arts his mother had often lavished on him, speaking to her
+in a kindly tone and asking her why she cried.
+
+The child looked up at the sound of this new voice, and her
+astonishment stopped her tears. After gazing at him for some time with
+her eyes wide open, she remarked, wonderingly, "You are little, like
+me."
+
+"I am not very small," replied the boy, straightening himself.
+
+"Oh, but you _are_ young and little," she insisted.
+
+"I am young, but not little. Come stand up beside me. See! you don't
+more than reach my shoulder."
+
+"Shall you ever get bigger?"
+
+"Of course I shall."
+
+"Shall you grow up nasty?" she continued, trying to bring her stock of
+experience to bear on this new phenomenon.
+
+"No, I sha'n't!" he answered very decidedly.
+
+"Shall you die?"
+
+"No, not until I am old, old, old."
+
+"I am very glad: I will take you for a pet, All my little animals get
+nasty, and my flowers have died, but I don't care, now that you have
+come: I think I shall like you best."
+
+"But I won't be your pet," said the boy, offended.
+
+"Why not?" she asked, looking at him beseechingly. "I should be very
+good to you;" and she smoothed his sleeve with her brown hand as if it
+were the fur of one of her late darlings.
+
+"Who are you?" he demanded inquisitively.
+
+"I am myself," she innocently replied.
+
+"What is your name?"
+
+"I am Nellie. Have you a name?" she eagerly went on. "If you haven't,
+I'll give you a pretty one. Let me see: I will call you--"
+
+"You need not trouble yourself, thank you: I have a name of my own,
+Miss Nellie. I am Danby Overbeck."
+
+"Dan--by--o--ver--beck!" she repeated slowly. "Why, you have an awful
+long name, Beck, for such a little fellow."
+
+"I am not little, and I will not have you call me Beck: that is no
+name."
+
+"I forgot all but the last. Don't get nasty, please;" and she patted
+his arm soothingly. "What does your nurse call you?"
+
+"I am no baby to have a nurse," he said disdainfully.
+
+"You have no nurse? Poor thing! What do you do? who feeds you?"
+
+"I feed myself."
+
+"Where do you live," she asked, looking about curiously, as if she
+thought he had some kind of a nest near at hand.
+
+"Oh, far away--at the other side of the woods."
+
+"Won't you come and live with me? Do!"
+
+"No indeed, gypsy: I must go home. See, the sun is almost down. You
+had better go too: your mother will be anxious."
+
+"I have no mother, and my flowers are all dead. I wish you would be my
+pet--I wish you would come with me;" and her lip trembled.
+
+"My gracious, child! what would the old lady at home say? Why, there
+would be an awful row."
+
+"Never mind, come," she answered coaxingly, rubbing her head against
+his sleeve like a kitten. "Come, I will love you so much."
+
+"You go home," he said, patting her head, "and I will come again some
+day, and will bring you flowers."
+
+"The flowers are all dead," she replied, shaking her head.
+
+"I can make some grow. Go now, run away: let me see you off."
+
+She looked for a moment at this superior being, who could make flowers
+grow and could live without the care of a nurse, and then, obeying the
+stronger intelligence, she trotted off toward home.
+
+And now life contained new pleasure for Nellie, for the boy was
+large-hearted and kind, coming almost daily to take her with him on
+his excursions. Indeed, he was as lonely as the child, companions
+being difficult to find in that out-of-the-way neighborhood, and the
+odd little thing amused him. She would trudge bravely by his side
+when he went to fish, or carry his bag when he went gunning; and his
+promise of flowers was redeemed with gifts from the conservatory,
+which enhanced her opinion of this divinity, seeing that they were
+even more beautiful than those of her own fields. Often, when tired of
+sport, Danby would read to her, sitting in the shade of forest trees,
+stories of pirates and robbers or of wonderful adventures: these were
+the afternoons she enjoyed the most.
+
+One day, seeing her lips grow bright and her eyes dark from her
+intense interest in the story, he offered her the book as he was
+preparing to go, saying, "Take it home, Nellie, and read it."
+
+She took the volume in her hand eagerly, looked at the page a little
+while, a puzzled expression gradually passing over her face, until
+finally she turned to him open-eyed and disappointed, saying simply,
+"I can't."
+
+"Oh try!"
+
+"How shall I try?"
+
+"It begins _there_: now go on, it is easy. _There_" he repeated,
+pointing to the word, "go on," he added impatiently.
+
+"Where shall I go?"
+
+"Why read, Stupid! Look at it."
+
+She bent over and gazed earnestly where the end of his finger touched
+the book. "I look and look," she said, shaking her head, "but I do
+not see the pretty stories that you do. They seem quite gone away, and
+nothing is left but little crooked marks."
+
+"I do believe you can't read."
+
+"I do believe it too," said Nellie.
+
+"But you must try; such a big girl as you are getting to be!"
+
+"I try and I look, but it don't come to me."
+
+"You must learn."
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Do you intend to do it?"
+
+"Why should I? You can read to me."
+
+"You will never know anything," exclaimed the boy severely. "How do
+you spend your time in the morning, when I am not here?"
+
+"I do nothing."
+
+"Nothing?"
+
+"That is, I wait until you come," in an explanatory tone.
+
+"What do you do while you are waiting?"
+
+"I think about you, and wonder how soon you will be here; and I walk
+about, or lie on the grass and look at the clouds."
+
+"Well, did I ever hear of such an idle girl? I shall not come again
+if you don't learn to read." Nellie was not much given to laughter
+or tears. She had lived too much alone for such outward appeals for
+sympathy. Why laugh when there is no one near to smile in return? Why
+weep when there is no one to give comfort? She only regarded him with
+a world of reproach in her large eyes.
+
+"Nellie," he said, in reply to her eyes, "you ought to learn to read,
+and you _must_. Did no one ever try to teach you?"
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"Have you no books?"
+
+Again a negative shake.
+
+"Just come along with me to the house. I'll see about this thing: it
+must be stopped." And Danby rose and walked off with a determined air,
+while the girl, abashed and wondering, followed him. When they arrived
+he plunged into the subject at once: "Nurse Bridget, can you read?"
+
+"An' I raly don't know, as I niver tried."
+
+"Fiddlesticks! Of course Maurice is too blind, and very likely he
+never tried either. Are there no books in the house?"
+
+"An' there is, then--a whole room full of them, Master Danby. We are
+not people of no larnin' here, I can tell you. There is big books,
+an' little books, an' some awful purty books, an' some," she added
+doubtfully, "as is not so purty."
+
+"You know a great deal about books!" said the boy sarcastically.
+
+"An' sure I do. Haven't I dusted them once ivery year since I came to
+this blessed place? And tired enough they made me, too. I ain't likely
+to forgit them."
+
+"Well, let us see them."
+
+"Sure they're locked."
+
+"Open them," said the impatient boy.
+
+"Do open them," added Nellie timidly.
+
+But it required much coaxing to accomplish their design, and after
+nurse did consent time was lost in looking for the keys, which were at
+last found under a china bowl in the cupboard. Then the old woman led
+the way with much importance, opening door after door of the unused
+part of the house, until she came to the library. It was a large,
+sober-looking room, with worn furniture and carpet, but rich in
+literature, and even art, for several fine pictures hung on the
+walls. The ancestor from whom the house had descended must have been
+a learned man in his day, and a wise, for he had gathered about him
+treasures. Danby shouted with delight, and Nellie's eyes sparkled as
+she saw his pleasure.
+
+"Open all the windows, nurse, please, and then leave us. Why, Nellie,
+there is enough learning here to make you the most wonderful woman in
+the world! Do you think you can get all these books into your head?"
+he asked mischievously, "because that is what I expect of you. We will
+take a big one to begin with." The girl looked on while he, with mock
+ceremony, took down the largest volume within reach and laid it open
+on a reading-desk near. "Now sit;" and he drew a chair for her before
+the open book, and another for himself. "It is nice big print. Do you
+see this word?" and he pointed to one of the first at the top of the
+page.
+
+She nodded her head gravely.
+
+"It is _love_: say it."
+
+She repeated the word after him.
+
+"Now find it all over the page whereever it occurs."
+
+With some mistakes she finally succeeded in recognizing the word
+again.
+
+"Don't you forget it."
+
+"Yes."
+
+"No, you must _not_."
+
+"I mean I won't."
+
+"All right! Here is another: it is called _the_. Now find it."
+
+Many times she went through the same process. In his pride of teaching
+Danby did not let his pupil flag. When he was going she asked timidly,
+"Shall you come again?"
+
+"Of course I shall, Ignoramus, but don't you forget your lesson."
+
+"No, no," she answered brightening. "I will think of it all the time I
+am asleep."
+
+"That is a good girl," he said patronizingly, and bade her good-bye.
+
+It was thus she learned to read, not remarkably well, but well enough
+to content Danby, which was sufficient to content Nellie also; and the
+ambitious boy was not satisfied until she could write as well.
+
+An end came to this peaceful life when the youth left home for
+college. The girl's eyes seemed to grow larger from intense gazing at
+him during the last few weeks that preceded his departure, but that
+was her only expression of feeling. The morning after he left, the
+nurse, not finding her appear at her usual time, went to her chamber
+to look for her. She lay on the bed, as she had been lying all the
+night, sleepless, with pale face and red lips. Nurse asked her what
+was the matter.
+
+"Nothing," was the reply.
+
+"Come get up, Beauty," coaxed the nurse.
+
+But Nellie turned her face to the wall and did not answer. She lay
+thus for a week, scarcely eating or sleeping, sick in mind and body,
+struggling with a grief that she hardly knew was grief. At the end
+of that time she tottered from the bed, and, clothing herself with
+difficulty, crept to the library.
+
+The instinct that sends a sick animal to the plant that will cure
+it seemed to teach Nellie where to find comfort. Danby was gone, but
+memory remained, and the place where he had been was to her made
+holy and possessed healing power, as does the shrine of a saint for a
+believer. Her shrine was the reading-desk, and the chair on which he
+had sat during those happy lessons. To make all complete, she lifted
+the heavy book from the shelf and opened it at the page from which she
+had first learned. She put herself in his chair and caressed the words
+with her thin hand, her fingers trembling over the place that his had
+touched, then dropping her head on the desk where his arm had lain,
+she smiling slept.
+
+She awoke with the nurse looking down on her, saying, "Beauty, you are
+better."
+
+And so she was: she drank the broth and ate the bread and grapes that
+had been brought her, and from that day grew stronger. But the shadow
+in her eyes was deeper now, and the veins in her temples were bluer,
+as if the blood had throbbed and pained there. Every morning found
+her at her post: she had no need to roam the woods and fields now--her
+world lay within her. It was sad for one so young to live on memory.
+
+For many days her page and these few words were sufficient to content
+her, and to recall them one after another, as Danby had taught, was
+her only occupation. But by and by the words themselves began to
+interest her, then the context, and finally the sense dawned upon
+her--dawned not less surely that it came slowly, and that she was now
+and then compelled to stop and think out a word.
+
+And what did she learn? Near the top of the large page the first
+word, "love." It ended a sentence and stood conspicuous, which was the
+reason it had caught the eye of the eager boy when he began to teach.
+What did it mean? What went before? What after? It was a long time
+before she asked herself these questions, for her understanding had
+not formed the habit of being curious. Previously her eyes alone had
+sight, now her intellect commenced seeing. What was the web of which
+this word was the woof, knitting together, underlying, now appearing,
+now hidden, but always there? She turned the leaves and counted where
+it recurred again and again, like a bird repeating one sweet note, of
+which it never tires. Then the larger type in the middle of each page
+drew her attention: she read, _As You Like It_. "What do I like? This
+story is perhaps as I like it. I wonder what it is about? I don't care
+now for pirates and robbers: I liked them when _he_ read to me, but
+not now." Her thoughts then wandered off to Danby, and she read no
+more that day.
+
+However, Nellie had plenty of time before her, and when her thinking
+was ended she would return to her text. I do not know how long a time
+it required for her to connect the sentence that followed the word
+"love;" but it became clear to her finally, just as a difficult puzzle
+will sometimes resolve itself as you are idly regarding it. And this
+is what she saw: "Love! But it cannot be sounded: my affection hath an
+unknown bottom, like the bay of Portugal." The phrase struck her as
+if it was her own, and for the first time in her life she blushed.
+She did not know much about the bay of Portugal, it is true, but she
+understood the rest. From that time forth the book possessed a strange
+interest for her. Much that she did not comprehend she passed by.
+Often for several days she would not find a passage that pleased her,
+but when such a one was discovered her slow perusal of it and long
+dwelling on it gave a beauty and power to the sentiment that more
+expert students might have lost. I cannot describe the almost feverish
+effect upon her of that poetical quartette beginning with--
+
+ Good shepherd, tell this youth what 'tis to love.
+
+How she hung over it, smiled at it, brightening into delight at the
+echo of her own feelings! In the raillery of Rosalind her heart found
+words to speak; and her sense and wit were awakened by the sarcasm of
+the same character. "Pray you, no more of this: 'tis like the howling
+of Irish wolves against the moon," came like a healthy tonic after a
+week of ecstasy spent over the preceding lines.
+
+Her mind grew in such companionship. She lived no more alone: she
+had found friends who sympathized with her. Smiles and tears became
+frequent on her face, making it more beautiful. _As You Like It_ was
+just as she liked it. The forest of Arden was her forest. Rosalind's
+banished father was her father: that busy man she had never seen. With
+the book for interpreter she fell in love with her world over again.
+Sunset and dawn possessed new charms; the little flowers seemed
+dignified; moonlight and fairy-land unveiled their mysteries; nothing
+was forgotten. It appeared as if all the knowledge of the world was
+contained in those magic pages, and the master-key to this treasure,
+the dominant of this harmony, was _love_--the word that Danby
+had taught her. The word? The feeling as well, and with the
+feeling--_all_.
+
+Circling from this passion as from a pole-star, all those great
+constellations of thought revolved. With Lear's madness was Cordelia's
+affection; with the inhumanity of Shylock was Jessica's trust; with
+the Moor's jealousy was Desdemona's devotion. The sweet and bitter
+of life, religion, poetry and philosophy, ambition, revenge and
+superstition, controlled, created or destroyed by that little word.
+And _how_ they loved--Perdita, Juliet, Miranda--quickly and entirely,
+without shame, as she had loved Danby--as buds bloom and birds warble.
+Oh it was sweet, sweet, sweet! Amid friends like these she became gay,
+moved briskly, grew rosy and sang. This was her favorite song, to a
+melody she had caught from the river:
+
+ Under the greenwood tree
+ Who loves to lie with me,
+ And turn his merry note
+ Unto the sweet bird's throat,
+ Come hither, come hither, come hither:
+ Here shall he see
+ No enemy
+ But winter and rough weather.
+
+Four years passed by--not all spent with one book, however. Nellie's
+desire for study grew with what it fed on. This book opened the way
+for many. Reading led to reflection; reflection, to observation;
+observation, to Nature; and thus in an endless round.
+
+About this time her busy father remembered he possessed a "baby," laid
+away somewhere, like an old parchment, and he concluded he would "look
+her up." His surprise was great when he saw the child a woman--still
+greater when he observed her self-possession, her intelligence, and a
+certain quaint way she had of expressing herself that was charming in
+connection with her fresh young face. She was neither diffident nor
+awkward, knowing too little of the world to fear, and having naturally
+that simplicity of manner which touches nearly upon high breeding.
+But Mr. Archer being one of those men who think that "beauty should
+go beautifully," her toilette shocked him. Under the influence of her
+presence he felt that he had neglected her. The whole house reproached
+him: the few rooms that had been furnished were dilapidated and worn.
+
+"I did not know things looked so badly down here," he said
+apologetically. "I am sure I must have had everything properly
+arranged when Nurse Bridget came. Your cradle was comfortable, was it
+not?"
+
+"I scarcely remember," answered his daughter demurely.
+
+"Oh! ah! yes! It is some time ago, I believe?"
+
+"Seventeen years."
+
+"Y-e-s: I had forgotten."
+
+He had an idea, this man of a hundred schemes, that his "baby"
+was laughing at him, and, singularly enough, it raised her in his
+estimation. He even asked her to come and live with him in the city,
+but she refused, and he did not insist.
+
+Then he set about making a change, which was soon accomplished. He
+sent for furniture and carpets, and cleared the rubbish from without
+and within. Under his decided orders a complete outfit "suitable for
+his daughter" soon arrived, and with it a maid. Nellie, whose ideas
+of maids were taken from Lucetta, was much disappointed in the actual
+being, and the modern Lucetta was also disappointed when she saw
+the "howling wilderness" to which she had been inveigled; so the two
+parted speedily. But Mr. Archer remained: he was one of those men
+who do things thoroughly which they have once undertaken. When he
+was satisfied with Nellie's appearance he took her to call on all the
+neighboring families within reach.
+
+Among others, they went to see Mrs. Overbeck, Danby's mother, whom
+Mr. Archer had known in his youth. Nellie wore her brave trappings
+bravely, and acted her part nicely until Mrs. Overbeck gave her a
+motherly kiss at parting, when she grew pale and trembled. Why should
+she? Her hostess thought it was from the heat, and insisted on her
+taking a glass of wine.
+
+In the autumn of this year Danby graduated and returned home. Nellie
+had not seen him during all this interval: he had spent his vacations
+abroad, and had become quite a traveled man. While she retained her
+affection for him unchanged, he scarcely remembered the funny little
+girl who had been so devoted to him in the years gone by. A few days
+after he arrived, his mother, in giving him the local news, mentioned
+the charming acquaintance she had made of a young lady who lived in
+the neighborhood. On hearing her name the young man exclaimed, "Why,
+that must be Nellie!"
+
+"Do you know her?" asked his mother in surprise.
+
+"Of course I do, and many a jolly time I have had with her. Odd little
+thing, ain't she?"
+
+"I should not call her odd," remarked his mother.
+
+"You do not know her as I do."
+
+"Perhaps not. I suppose you will go with me when I return her visit."
+
+"Certainly I will--just in for that sort of thing. A man feels the
+need of some relaxation after a four years' bore, and there is nothing
+like the society of the weaker sex to give the mind repose."
+
+"Shocking boy!" said the fond mother with a smile.
+
+In a short time the projected call was made.
+
+"You will frighten her with all that finery, my handsome mother,"
+remarked Danby as they walked to the carriage.
+
+"I think she will survive it, but I shall not answer for the effect of
+those brilliant kids of yours."
+
+"The feminine eye is caught by display," said her son sententiously.
+
+They chatted as they drove rapidly through the forest to the old
+house, entered the front gate and rolled up the broad avenue.
+
+"I had no idea the place looked so well," remarked Danby, _en
+connaisseur_, as they approached. "I always entered by the back way;"
+and he gave his moustache a final twirl.
+
+After a loud knock from a vigorous hand the door was opened by a small
+servant, much resembling Nellie some four years before. Danby was
+going to speak to her, but recalling the time that had elapsed, he
+knew it could not be she. All within was altered. Three rooms
+_en suite_, the last of which was the library, had been carefully
+refurnished. He looked about him. Could this be the place in which he
+had passed so many days? But he forgot all in the figure that advanced
+to receive them. With a pretty grace she gave her hand to his mother
+and welcomed "Mr. Overbeck." How she talked--talked like a babbling
+brook! It was now his turn to open big eyes and be silent. He tried
+to recall the girl he had left. Vain endeavor! This bright creature,
+grave and gay, silent but ready, respectful yet confident, how could
+he follow her? The visit came to an end, but was repeated again and
+again by Danby, and each time with new astonishment, new delight. She
+had the coquetry of a dozen women, yet her eyes looked so true. She
+was a perfect elf for pranks and jokes, yet demure as a nun. When he
+tried to awe her with his learning, she was saucy; if he was serious,
+she was gay; if he wished to teach, she rebelled. She was self-willed
+as a changeling, refractory yet gentle, seditious but just,--only
+waiting to strike her colors and proclaim him conqueror; but this he
+did not know, for she kept well hid in her heart what "woman's fear"
+she had. She was all her favorite heroines in turn, with herself added
+to the galaxy.
+
+One day he penetrated into the library, notwithstanding some very
+serious efforts on her part to prevent him: by this time he would
+occasionally assert himself. The furniture there was not much altered.
+A few worn things had been replaced, but the room looked so much the
+same that the scene of that first reading-lesson came vividly to his
+mind. He turned to the side where the desk had stood. It was still
+there, with the two chairs before it, and on it was the book. She
+would not for the world have had it moved, but it was, as it were,
+glorified. Mr. Archer had wished "these old things cleared away," but
+Nellie had besought him so earnestly that he allowed them to stay,
+stipulating, however, that they should be upholstered anew. To this
+she assented, saying, "Send me the best of everything and _I_ will
+cover them--the very best, mind;" and her father, willing to please
+her, did as she desired.
+
+So the old desk became smart in brocade and gold-lace, the book
+received a cushion all bullion and embroidery, and the chairs emulated
+the splendor. It required a poet or a girl in love to clothe a fancy
+so beautifully, and Nellie was both. It was her shrine: why should she
+not adorn it?
+
+I cannot follow the process of thought in Danby's mind as he looked
+at this and at Nellie--Nellie blushing with the sudden guiltiness that
+even the discovery of a harmless action will bring when we wish to
+conceal it. Sometimes a moment reveals much.
+
+"Nellie"--it was the first time he had called her so since his
+return--"I must give you a reading-lesson: come, sit here."
+
+Mechanically she obeyed him, all the rebel fading away: she looked
+like the Nellie of other days. She felt she had laid bare her soul,
+but in proportion as her confusion overcame her did he become decided.
+It is the slaves that make tyrants, it is said.
+
+Under the impulse of his hand the book opened at the well-worn page.
+
+"Read!"
+
+For a little while she sat with downcast eyes. Well she knew the
+passage to which he was pointing: "Love! But it cannot be sounded: my
+affection hath an unknown bottom, like the bay of Portugal."
+
+The sentence seemed to dance and grow till it covered the page--grow
+till in her sight it assumed the size of a placard, and then it took
+life and became her accuser--told in big letters the story of her
+devotion to the mocking boy beside her.
+
+"There is good advice on the preceding page," he whispered smiling.
+"Orlando says he would kiss before he spoke: may I?"
+
+She started up and looked at his triumphant face a moment, her mouth
+quivering, her eyes full of tears. "How can you--" she began.
+
+But before she could finish he was by her side: "Because I love
+you--love you, all that the book says, and a thousand times more.
+Because if you love me we will live our own romance, and I doubt if we
+cannot make our old woods as romantic as the forest of Arden. Will you
+not say," he asked tenderly, "that there will be at least one pair of
+true lovers there?"
+
+I could not hear Nellie's answer: her head was so near his--on his
+shoulder, in fact--that she whispered it in his ear. But a moment
+after, pushing him from her with the old mischief sparkling from her
+eyes, she said, "'Til frown and be perverse, and say thee nay, so thou
+wilt woo,'" and looked a saucy challenge in his face.
+
+"Naughty sprite!" he exclaimed, catching her in his arms and shutting
+her mouth with kisses.
+
+It was not long after, perhaps a year, that a happy bride and groom
+might have been seen walking up the hemlock avenue arm in arm.
+
+"Do you remember," she asked, smiling thoughtfully--"do you remember
+the time I begged you to come home with me and be my pet?"
+
+The young husband leaned down and said something the narrator did
+not catch, but from the expression of his face it must have been very
+spoony: with a bride such as that charming Nellie, how could he help
+it?
+
+Yes, she had brought him home. Mr. Archer had given the house with its
+broad acres as a dowry to his daughter, and Nellie had desired that
+the honeymoon should be spent in her "forest of Arden."
+
+ITA ANIOL PROKOP.
+
+
+
+
+JACK, THE REGULAR.
+
+
+ In the Bergen winter night, when the hickory fire is roaring,
+ Flickering streams of ruddy light on the folk before it pouring--
+ When the apples pass around, and the cider follows after,
+ And the well-worn jest is crowned by the hearers' hearty laughter--
+ When the cat is purring there, and the dog beside her dozing,
+ And within his easy-chair sits the grandsire old, reposing,--
+ Then they tell the story true to the children, hushed and eager,
+ How the two Van Valens slew, on a time, the Tory leaguer,
+ Jack, the Regular.
+
+ Near a hundred years ago, when the maddest of the Georges
+ Sent his troops to scatter woe on our hills and in our gorges,
+ Less we hated, less we feared, those he sent here to invade us
+ Than the neighbors with us reared who opposed us or betrayed us;
+ And amid those loyal knaves who rejoiced in our disasters,
+ As became the willing slaves of the worst of royal masters,
+ Stood John Berry, and he said that a regular commission
+ Set him at his comrades' head; so we called him, in derision,
+ "Jack, the Regular."
+
+ When he heard it--"Let them fling! Let the traitors make them merry
+ With the fact my gracious king deigns to make me Captain Berry.
+ I will scourge them for the sneer, for the venom that they carry;
+ I will shake their hearts with fear as the land around I harry:
+ They shall find the midnight raid waking them from fitful slumbers;
+ They shall find the ball and blade daily thinning out their numbers:
+ Barn in ashes, cattle slain, hearth on which there glows no ember,
+ Neatless plough and horseless wain; thus the rebels shall remember
+ Jack, the Regular!"
+
+ Well he kept his promise then with a fierce, relentless daring,
+ Fire to rooftrees, death to men, through the Bergen valleys bearing:
+ In the midnight deep and dark came his vengeance darker, deeper--
+ At the watch-dog's sudden bark woke in terror every sleeper;
+ Till at length the farmers brown, wasting time no more on tillage,
+ Swore those ruffians of the Crown, fiends of murder, fire and pillage,
+ Should be chased by every path to the dens where they had banded,
+ And no prayers should soften wrath when they caught the bloody-handed
+ Jack, the Regular.
+
+ One by one they slew his men: still the chief their chase evaded.
+ He had vanished from their ken, by the Fiend or Fortune aided--
+ Either fled to Powles Hoek, where the Briton yet commanded,
+ Or his stamping-ground forsook, waiting till the hunt disbanded;
+ So they checked pursuit at length, and returned to toil securely:
+ It was useless wasting strength on a purpose baffled surely.
+ But the two Van Valens swore, in a patriotic rapture,
+ _They_ would never give it o'er till they'd either kill or capture
+ Jack, the Regular.
+
+ Long they hunted through the wood, long they slept upon the hillside;
+ In the forest sought their food, drank when thirsty at the rill-side;
+ No exposure counted hard--theirs was hunting border-fashion:
+ They grew bearded like the pard, and their chase became a passion:
+ Even friends esteemed them mad, said their minds were out of balance,
+ Mourned the cruel fate and sad fallen on the poor Van Valens;
+ But they answered to it all, "Only wait our loud view-holloa
+ When the prey shall to us fall, for to death we mean to follow
+ Jack, the Regular."
+
+ Hunted they from Tenavlieon to where the Hudson presses
+ To the base of traprocks high; through Moonachie's damp recesses;
+ Down as far as Bergen Hill; by the Ramapo and Drochy,
+ Overproek and Pellum Kill--meadows flat and hilltops rocky--
+ Till at last the brothers stood where the road from New Barbadoes,
+ At the English Neighborhood, slants toward the Palisadoes;
+ Still to find the prey they sought left no sign for hunter eager:
+ Followed steady, not yet caught, was the skulking, fox-like leaguer
+ Jack, the Regular.
+
+ Who are they that yonder creep by those bleak rocks in the distance,
+ Like the figures born in sleep, called by slumber to existence?--
+ Tories doubtless from below, from the Hoek, sent out for spying.
+ "No! the foremost is our foe--he so long before us flying!
+ Now he spies us! see him start! wave his kerchief like a banner!
+ Lay his left hand on his heart in a proud, insulting manner.
+ Well he knows that distant spot's past our ball, his low scorn flinging.
+ If you cannot feel the shot, you shall hear the firelock's ringing,
+ Jack, the Regular!"
+
+ Ha! he falls! An ambuscade? 'Twas impossible to strike him!
+ Are there Tories in the glade? Such a trick is very like him.
+ See! his comrade by him kneels, turning him in terror over,
+ Then takes nimbly to his heels. Have they really slain the rover?
+ It is worth some risk to know; so, with firelocks poised and ready,
+ Up the sloping hills they go, with a quick lookout and steady.
+ Dead! The random shot had struck, to the heart had pierced the Tory--
+ Vengeance seconded by luck! Lies there, cold and stiff and gory,
+ Jack, the Regular.
+
+ "Jack, the Regular, is dead! Honor to the man who slew him!"
+ So the Bergen farmers said as they crowded round to view him;
+ For the wretch that lay there slain had with wickedness unbending
+ To their roofs brought fiery rain, to their kinsfolk woeful ending.
+ Not a mother but had prest, in a sudden pang of fearing,
+ Sobbing darlings to her breast when his name had smote her hearing;
+ Not a wife that did not feel terror when the words were uttered;
+ Not a man but chilled to steel when the hated sounds he muttered--
+ Jack, the Regular.
+
+ Bloody in his work was he, in his purpose iron-hearted--
+ Gentle pity could not be when the pitiless had parted.
+ So, the corse in wagon thrown, with no decent cover o'er it--
+ Jeers its funeral rites alone--into Hackensack they bore it,
+ 'Mid the clanging of the bells in the old Brick Church's steeple,
+ And the hooting and the yells of the gladdened, maddened people.
+ Some they rode and some they ran by the wagon where it rumbled,
+ Scoffing at the lifeless man, all elate that death had humbled
+ Jack, the Regular.
+
+ Thus within the winter night, when the hickory fire is roaring,
+ Flickering streams of ruddy light on the folk before it pouring--
+ When the apples pass around, and the cider follows after,
+ And the well-worn jest is crowned by the hearers' hearty laughter--
+ When the cat is purring there, and the dog beside her dozing,
+ And within his easy-chair sits the grandsire old, reposing,--
+ Then they tell the story true to the children, hushed and eager,
+ the two Van Valens slew, on a time, the Tory leaguer,
+ Jack, the Regular.
+
+THOMAS DUNN ENGLISH.
+
+
+
+
+OBSERVATIONS AND ADVENTURES IN SUBMARINE DIVING.
+
+
+ [Greek: --liphon
+ eponumon te reuma kai petraerephae
+ autoktit' antra.]--AESCHYLUS: _Prometheus Bound_.
+
+Did you ever pause before a calm, bright little pool in the woods, and
+look steadily at the picture it presents, without feeling as if you
+had peeped into another world? Every outline is preserved, every tint
+is freshened and purified, in the cool, glimmering reflection. There
+is a grace and a softness in the prismatic lymph that give a new form
+and color to the common and familiar objects it has printed in its
+still, pellucid depths. Every little basin of clear water by the
+roadside is a magic mirror, and transforms all that it encloses. There
+is a vastness of depth, too, in that concave hemisphere, through
+which the vision sinks like a falling star, that excites and fills the
+imagination. What it shows is only a shadow, but all things seen are
+mere shadows painted on the retina, and you have, at such times,
+a realistic sense of the beautiful and bold imagery which calls a
+favorite fountain of the East the Eye of the Desert.
+
+The alluring softness of this mimic world increases to sublimity when,
+instead of some rocky basin, dripping with mossy emeralds and coral
+berries, you look upon the deep crystalline sea. Each mates to its
+kind. This does not gather its imagery from gray, mossy rock or
+pendent leaf or flower, but draws into its enfolding arms the wide
+vault of the cerulean sky. The richness of the majestic azure is
+deepened by that magnificent marriage. The pale blue is darkened to
+violet. Far through the ever-varying surface of the curious gelatinous
+liquid breaks the phosphorescence, sprinkled into innumerable lights
+and cross-lights. As you look upon those endless pastures thought is
+quickened with the conception of their innumerable phases of vitality.
+The floating weed, whose meshes measure the spaces of continents and
+archipelagoes, is everywhere instinct with animal and vegetable life.
+The builder coral, glimmering in its softer parts with delicate hues
+and tints, throws up its stony barrier through a thousand miles of
+length and a third as much in breadth, fringing the continents with
+bays and sounds and atoll islands like fairy rings of the sea.
+Animate flowers--sea-nettles, sea anemones, plumularia, campanularia,
+hydropores, confervae, oscillatoria, bryozoa--people the great waters.
+Sea-urchins, star-fish, sea-eggs, combative gymnoti, polypes, struggle
+and thrive with ever-renewing change of color; gelatinous worms
+that shine like stars cling to every weed; glimmering animalcules,
+phosphorescent medusae, the very deep itself is vivid with sparkle
+and corruscation of electric fire. So through every scale, from the
+zoophyte to the warm-blooded whale, the sea teems with life, out of
+which fewer links have been dropped than from sub-aërial life. It is a
+matter for curious speculation that the missing species belong not to
+the lower subsidiary genera, as in terrene animals, but to the
+highest types of marine life. In the quarries of Lyme Regis, among the
+accumulations of a sea of the Liassic period, lay the huge skeleton of
+the Ichthyosaurus, a warm-blooded marine existence, with huge saucer
+eyes of singular telescopic power, that gleamed radiant "with the
+eyelids of the morning," "by whose neesings alight doth shine"--the
+true leviathan of Job. In the same extinct sea is found the skeleton
+of the Plesiosaurus, a marine lizard of equal size, and warm-blooded,
+whose swan-like neck and body graced the serene seas of the
+pre-adamite world. Another was that of the Pterodactyl, the antique
+aragon, a winged fish. The task of sustaining these existences was too
+great for old Ocean, and the monsters dropped from the upper end of
+the chain into the encrusting mud, the petrified symbols of failure.
+So one day man may drop into the limbo of vanities, among the
+abandoned tools in the Creator's workshop.
+
+But, however high or low the degree in the scale, one distinguishing
+feature marks the vital creation in vegetable or animal--an
+intelligence capable of adjusting itself to the elements about it, and
+electing its food. The sunflower, even, does not follow the sun by a
+mechanical law, but, growing by a fair, bright sheet of water, looks
+as constantly at that shining surface for the beloved light as
+ever did the fabled Greek boy at his own image in the fountain.
+The tendrils of the vine seek and choose their own support, and the
+thirsty spongioles of the root find the nourishing veins of water.
+Growth, says a naturalist, is the conscious motion of vegetable life.
+But this theory of kinship, imperfect in the plant, becomes plain
+and distinct in the animate creation. However far removed, the wild
+dolphin at play and the painted bird in the air are cousins of man,
+with a responsive chord of sympathy connecting them.
+
+It is this feeling that sends an exhilarating thrill through the
+submarine explorer when a school of porpoises frisk by with undulating
+grace, the marine type of a group of frolicking children. It is the
+instinctive perception that it is a pure enjoyment to the fish, the
+healthy glow and laugh of submarine existence. But for that sense of
+sympathetic nature the flying-fish, reeling porpoise and dolphin would
+be no more to him than the skipping shuttle in a weaver's loom, the
+dull impetus of senseless machinery. Self-generated motion is the
+outward and visible sign of vitality--its wanton exercise the symbol
+and expression of enjoyment. The poor philosopher who distinguished
+humanity as singular in the exhibition of humor had surely never heard
+a mocking-bird sing, watched a roguish crow or admired a school of
+fish.
+
+This keen appreciation of a kindred life in the sea has thrown its
+charm over the poetry and religion of all races. Ocean us leaves the
+o'erarching floods and rocky grottoes at the call of bound Prometheus;
+Cyrene, with her nymphs, sits in the cool Peneus, where comes
+Aristaeus mourning for his stolen bees; the Druid washed his
+hedge-hyssop in the sacred water, and priestesses lived on coral reefs
+visited by remote lovers in their sundown seas; Schiller's diver
+goes into the purpling deep and sees the Sea-Horror reaching out its
+hundred arms; the beautiful Undine is the vivid poetry of the sea.
+Every fountain has its guardian saint or nymph, and to this day not
+only the German peasant and benighted English boor thrill at the sight
+of some nymph-guarded well, but the New Mexican Indian offers his rude
+pottery in propitiation of the animate existence, the deity of the
+purling spring.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Der Taucher," for all the rhythm and music that clothes his luckless
+plunge, was but a caitiff knight to some of our submarine adventurers.
+A diver during the bay-fight in Mobile harbor had reason to apprehend
+a more desperate encounter. A huge cuttle-fish, the marine monster of
+Pliny and Victor Hugo, had been seen in the water. His tough,
+sinuous, spidery arms, five fathoms long, wavered visibly in the blue
+transparent gulf,
+
+ Und schaudernd dacht ich's--da kroch's heran,
+ Regte hundert Gelenke zugleich,
+ Will schnappen nach mir.
+
+A harpoon was driven into the leathery, pulpy body of the monster, but
+with no other effect than the sudden snapping of the inch line like
+thread. It was subsequent to this that, as the diver stayed his steps
+in the unsteady current, his staff was seized below. The water was
+murky with the river-silt above the salt brine, and he could see
+nothing, but after an effort the staff was rescued or released.
+Curious to know what it was, he probed again, and the stick was
+wrenched from his hand. With a thrill he recognized in such power the
+monster of the sea, the devil-fish. He returned anxious, doubtful, but
+resolute. Few like to be driven from a duty by brute force. He armed
+himself, and descended to renew the hazardous encounter in the gloomy
+solitude of the sea-bottom. I would I had the wit to describe that
+tournament beneath the sea; the stab, thrust, curvet, plunge--the
+conquest and capture of the unknown combatant. A special chance
+preserves the mediaeval character of the contest, saving it from the
+sulphurous associations of modern warfare that might be suggested by
+the name of devil-fish. No: the antagonist wore a coat-of-mail and
+arms of proof, as became a good knight of the sea, and was besides
+succulent, digestible--a veritable prize for the conqueror. It was a
+monstrous crab.
+
+The constant encounter of strange and unforeseen perils enables the
+professional diver to meet them with the same coolness with which
+ordinary and familiar dangers are confronted on land. On one occasion
+a party of such men were driven out into the Gulf by a fierce
+"norther," were tossed about like chips for three days in the vexed
+element, scant of food, their compass out of order, and the horizon
+darkened with prevailing storm. At another time a party wandered out
+in the shallows of one of the keys that fringe the Gulf coast. They
+amused themselves with wading into the water, broken into dazzling
+brilliance. A few sharks were seen occasionally, which gradually and
+unobserved increased to, a squadron. The waders meanwhile continued
+their sport until the evening waned away. Far over the dusk violet
+Night spread her vaporous shadows:
+
+ The blinding mist came up and hid the land,
+ And round and round the land,
+ And o'er and o'er the land,
+ As far as eye could see.
+
+At last they turned their steps homeward, crossing the little sandy
+key, between which and the beach lay a channel shoulder-deep, its
+translucent waves now glimmering with phosphorescence. But here
+they were met by an unexpected obstacle. The fleet of sharks, with
+a strategical cunning worthy of admiration, had flanked the little
+island, and now in the deeper water formed in ranks and squadrons,
+and, with their great goggle eyes like port-fires burning, lay ready
+to dispute the passage. Armed with such weapons as they could clutch,
+the men dashed into the water with paeans and shouts and the broken
+pitchers of fallen Jericho. The violet phosphorescence lighted them on
+their way, and tracked with luminous curve and star every move of the
+enemy. The gashed water at every stroke of club or swish of tail or
+fin bled in blue and red fire, as if the very sea was wounded. The
+enemy's line of battle was broken and scattered, but not until more
+than one of the assailants had looked point-blank into the angry eyes
+of a shark and beaten it off with actual blows. It was the Thermopylae
+of sharkdom, with numbers reversed--a Red Sea passage resonant with
+psalms of victory.
+
+There are novel difficulties as well as dangers to be encountered. The
+native courage of the man must be tempered, ground and polished. On
+land it is the massing of numbers that accomplishes the result--the
+accumulation of vital forces and intelligence upon the objective
+point. The innumerable threads of individual enterprise, like the
+twist of a Manton barrel, give the toughest tensile power. Under the
+sea, however, it is often the strength of the single thread, the
+wit of the individual pitted against the solid impregnability of the
+elements, the _vis inertiae_ of the sea. It looks as if uneducated
+Nature built her rude fastnesses and rocky battlements with a special
+view to resistance, making the fickle and unstable her strongest
+barricade. An example of the skill and address necessary to conquer
+obstacles of the latter kind was illustrated in Mobile Bay. There lay
+about a sunken vessel an impenetrable mail of quicksand. It became
+necessary to sink piles into this material. The obstacle does not
+lie in its fickle, unstable character, but its elastic tension. It
+swallows a nail or a beam by slow, serpent-like deglutition. It is
+hungry, insatiable, impenetrable. Try to force it, to drive down
+a pile by direct force: it resists. The mallet is struck back by
+reverberating elasticity with an equal force, and the huge pointed
+stake rebounds. Brute force beats and beats in vain. The fickle sand
+will not be driven--no, not an inch.
+
+Wit comes in where weight breaks down. A force-pump, a common
+old-style fire-engine, was rigged up, the nozzle and hose bound to a
+huge pile,
+
+ to equal which the tallest pine
+ Hewn on Norwegian hills, to be the mast
+ Of some great ammiral, were but a wand.
+
+The pump was set to work. The water tore through the nostril-pipe,
+boring a hole with such rapidity that the tall beam dropped into the
+socket with startling suddenness. Still breathing torrents, the pipe
+was withdrawn: the clutching sand seized, grappled the stake. It is
+cemented in.
+
+ You may break, you may shatter the _stake_, if you will,
+
+but--you can never pull it out.
+
+Perhaps the most singular and venturesome exploit ever performed in
+submarine diving was that of searching the sunken monitor Milwaukee
+during the bay-fight in Mobile harbor. This sea-going fortress was a
+huge double-turreted monitor, with a ponderous, crushing projectile
+force in her. Her battery of four fifteen-inch guns, and the tough,
+insensible solidity of her huge wrought-iron turrets and heavy plated
+hulk, burdened the sleepy waters of the bay. Upon a time she braced
+her iron jacket about her, girded her huge sides with fifteen-inch
+pistolry, and went rolling her clumsy volume down the bay to mash Fort
+Taylor to rubbish and débacle. The sea staggered under her ponderous
+gliding and groaned about her massive bulk as she wended her awkward
+course toward the bay-shore over against the fort. She sighted her
+blunderbusses, and, rolling, grunting, wheezing in her revolving
+towers like a Falstaff ill at ease, spat her gobbets of flame and
+death. The poor little water-spaniel fort ran down to the shore and
+barked at her of course. _Cui bono_ or _malo?_ Why, like Job's mates,
+fill its poor belly with the east wind, or try to draw out leviathan
+with a hook, or his tongue with a cord thou lettest down? Yet who
+treads of the fight between invulnerable Achilles and heroic Hector,
+and admires Achilles? The admiral of the American fleet, sick of the
+premature pother, signaled the lazy solidity to return. The loathly
+monster, slowly, like a bull-dog wrenched from his victim, rolled
+snarling, lazily, leisurely down the bay, not obeying and yet not
+disobeying the signal.
+
+All along the sunny coast, like flowers springing up in a
+battle-field, were rows of little white cottages, tenanted by women
+and children--love, life and peace in the midst of ruin and sudden
+death. At the offending spectacle of homely peace among its enemies
+the unglutted monster eased its huge wrath. Tumbling and bursting
+among the poor little pasteboard shells of cottages, where children
+played and women gossiped of the war, and prayed for its end, no
+matter how, fell the huge globes and cones of murder. Shrieks and
+cries, slain babes and wounded women on shore; surly, half-mutinous
+officers and crew on that iron hulk, shocked at the fell work they
+were set to do; and the glimmer and wash of the bay-water below--that
+sweet, tranquil, half-transparent liquid, with idle weeds and chips
+upon it, empty crates and boxes of dead merchandise, sacked of their
+life and substance by the war, as one might swallow an oyster; the
+soft veils of shadowy ships and the distant city spires; umbrageous
+fires and slips of shining sand all mirrored in the soft and quiet
+sea, while this devilish pother went on. There is a buoy adrift! No,
+it is a sodden cask, perhaps of spoiling meat, while the people in the
+town yonder are starving; and still the huge iron, gluttonous monster
+bursts its foam of blood and death, while the surly crew curse and
+think of mothers and babes at home. Better to look at the bay, the
+idle, pleasing summer water, with chips and corks and weeds upon it;
+better to look at the bubbling cask yonder--much better, captain,
+if you only knew it! But the reluctant, heavy iron turret groans and
+wheezes on its pivotal round, and it will be a minute or half a minute
+before the throated hell speaks again. But it _will_ speak: machinery
+is fatally accurate to time and place. Can nothing stay it, or
+stop the trembling of those bursting iron spheres among yon pretty
+print-like homes? No: look at the buoy, wish-wash, rolling lazily,
+bobbing in the water, a lazy, idle cask, with nothing in the world
+to do on this day of busy mischief. What hands coopered it in the new
+West? what farmer filled it? There is the grunting of swine, lowing of
+cattle, in the look of the staves. But the turret groans and wheezes
+and goes around, whether you look at it or not. What cottage this
+time? The soft lap-lap of the water goes on, and the tedious cask gets
+nearer: it will slide by the counter. You have a curious interest in
+that. No: it grates under the bow; it--Thunder and wreck and ruin!
+Has the bay burst open and swallowed us? The huge, invulnerable iron
+monster--not invulnerable after all--has met its master in the idle
+cask. It is blind, imprisoned Samson pulling down the pillars of the
+temple. The tough iron plates at the bow are rent and torn and twisted
+like wet paper. A terrible hole is gashed in the hull. The monster
+wobbles, rolls, gasps, and drinks huge gulps of water like a wounded
+man--desperately wounded, and dying in his thirsty veins and arteries.
+The swallowed torrent rushes aft, hissing and quenching the fires;
+beats against the stern, and comes forward with the rush of that
+repulse to meet the incoming wave. Into the boats, the water--anywhere
+but here. She reels again and groans; and then, as a desperate hero
+dies, she slopes her huge warlike beak at the hostile water and rushes
+to her own ruin with a surge and convulsion. The victorious sea sweeps
+over it and hides it, laughing at her work. She will keep it safely.
+That is the unsung epic of the Milwaukee, without which I should have
+little to say of the submarine diving during the bay-fight.
+
+The harbor of Mobile is shaped like a rude Innuit boot. At the top,
+Tensaw and Mobile Rivers, in their deltas, make, respectively, two
+and three looplike bands, like the straps. The toe is Bonsecour
+Bay, pointing east. The heel rests on Dauphin Island, while the main
+channel flows into the hollow of the foot between Fort Morgan and
+Dauphin Island. In the north-west angle, obscured by the foliage,
+lay the devoted city, suffering no less from artificial famine, made
+unnecessarily, than the ligatures that stopped the vital current of
+trade. Tons of meat were found putrefying while the citizens, and
+even the garrison, had been starving on scanty rations. Food could
+be purchased, but at exorbitant rates, and the medium of exchange,
+Confederate notes, all gone to water and waste paper. The true story
+of the Lost Cause has yet to be written. North of Mobile, in the
+Trans-Mississippi department, thousands whose every throb was devoted
+to the enterprise, welcomed the Northern invaders, not as destroyers
+of a hope already dead by the act of a few entrusted with its defence,
+but as something better than the anarchy that was not Southern
+independence or anything else human.
+
+Such were the condition, period and place--the people crushed
+between the upper and nether millstones of two hostile and contending
+civilizations--when native thrift evoked a new element, that set
+in sharp contrast the heroism of life and the heroism of death, the
+courage that incurs danger to save against the courage that
+accepts danger to destroy. The work was the saving of the valuable
+arms--costing the government thirty thousand dollars per gun--and the
+machinery of the sunken Milwaukee.[A] By a curious circumstance this
+party of divers was composed partly, if not principally or entirely,
+of mechanics and engineers who were exempt from military service
+under the economic laws of the Confederacy, yet who in heart and soul
+sympathized with the rebellion. They had worked to save for the South:
+now they were to work and save for the North. It was a service of
+superadded danger. All the peril incurred from missile weapons
+was increased by the hidden danger of the secret under-sea and the
+presence of the terrible torpedoes. These floated everywhere, in all
+innocent, unsuspicious shapes. One monster, made of boiler iron, a
+huge cross, is popularly believed to be still hidden in the bay. The
+person possessing the chart wherein the masked battery's place was set
+down is said to have destroyed it and fled. Let us hope, however, that
+this is an error.
+
+[Footnote A: The Milwaukee was sunk nearly due east of the city: the
+Osage, Tecumseh, several despatch-boats and steamers, besides the
+three monitors, were sunk by torpedoes in the bay.]
+
+Keep in mind, in reading this account, the contrasted picture of peace
+in Nature and war in man--the calm blue sky; the soft hazy outlines
+of woods and bay-shore dropping their soft veils in the water; the
+cottages, suggesting industry and love; the distant city; the delicate
+and graceful spars of the Hartford; the busy despatch-steamers plying
+to and fro; the bursting forts and huge ugly monitors; the starry
+arches of flying shells by night and flying cloud by day; the soft lap
+of the water; the sensuous, sweet beauty of that latitude of eternal
+spring; and the soft dark violet of the outer sea, glassing itself in
+calm or broken into millioned frets of blue, red and starry fire; the
+danger above and the danger below; the dark mysterious caverns of the
+sea, rich with coral grots and grove and abounding marine life; the
+impenetrable gloom of the ship's hold, whose unimaginable darkness and
+labyrinthine intricacy of machinery set obstacles at every turn and
+move and step; the darkness; the fury; the hues and shape, all that
+art can make or Nature fashion, gild or color wrought into one grand
+tablature of splendor and magnificence. War and peaceful industry met
+there in novel rivalry, and each claimed its privileges. The captain
+of the Search said to the officers, while crowding his men behind the
+turret, with sly, dry humor, "Come, you are all _paid_ to be shot at:
+my men are not."
+
+More than once the accuracy of the enemy's fire drove the little party
+to shelter. Though the diver was shielded by the impenetrable fickle
+element that gave Achilles invulnerability, the air-pump above was
+exposed, and thus the diver might be slain by indirection. There
+lay Achilles' heel, the exposed vulnerable part that Mother Thetis's
+baptism neglected.
+
+The work below was arduous: the hulk crowded with the entangling
+machinery of sixteen engines, cuddies, ports, spars, levers, hatches,
+stancheons, floating trunks, bibulous boxes heavy with drink, and the
+awful, mysterious gloom of the water, which is not night or darkness,
+but the absence of any ray to touch the sensitive optic nerve. The
+sense of touch the only reliance, and the life-line his guide.
+
+But the peril incurred can be better understood through an
+illustrative example of a perilous adventure and a poor return.
+Officers and men of the unfortunate monitor asked for the rescue of
+their property, allowing a stipulated sum in lieu of salvage. Among
+these was a petty officer, anxious for the recovery of his chest.
+It involved peculiar hazards, since it carried the diver below
+the familiar turret-chamber, through the _inextricabilis error_ of
+entangling machinery in the engine-room, groping among floating and
+sunken objects, into a remote state-room, the Acheron of the cavernous
+hold. He was to find by touch a seaman's chest; handle it in that
+thickening gloom; carry it, push it, move it through that labyrinthine
+obscurity to a point from which it could be raised. To add
+immeasurably to the intricacy of this undertaking, there was the need
+of carrying his life-line and air-hose through all that entanglement
+and obscurity. Three times in that horror of thick darkness like wool
+the line tangled in the web of machinery, and three times he had, by
+tedious endeavor, to follow it up, find the knot and release it. Then
+the door of the little state-room, the throat of exit, was shut to,
+and around and around the dense chamber he groped as if in a dream,
+and could find no vent. All was alike--a smooth, slimy wall, glutinous
+with that gelatinous liquid, the sea-water. The tangled line became a
+blind guide and fruitful source of error; the hours were ebbing away,
+drowning life and vital air in that horrible watery pit;
+
+ Aut hoc inclusi ligno occultantur Achivi,
+
+or, a worse enemy than the subtle Greek's, death from the suspended
+air-current. Speed, nimbleness, strength and activity were worthless:
+with tedious fingers he must follow the life-line, find its
+entanglements and slowly loosen them, carefully taking up the slack,
+and so follow the straightened cord to the door. Then the chest: he
+must not forget that. Slowly he heaves and pushes, now at this, now
+at the life-line hitching on knob, handle, lever or projecting peg--on
+anything or nothing in that maze of machinery; by involution and
+evolution, like the unknown quantity in a cubic equation, through all
+the twists, turns, assumptions and substitutions, and always with that
+unmanageable, indivisible coefficient the box, until he reaches the
+upper air.
+
+In Aesop's fable, when the crane claimed the reward of the wolf for
+using his long neck and bill as a forceps in extracting a bone from
+the latter's oesophagus, Lupus suggests that for the crane to have had
+his head down in the lupine throat and _not_ get it snapped off
+was reward enough for any reasonable fowl. The petty officer was
+sufficiently learned in the Lyceum to administer a like return. The
+stipulated salvage was never paid or offered.[A]
+
+[Footnote A: It was a warrant-officer of the Milwaukee: I do not wish
+to be more definite; but the money (fifty dollars) may be sent to the
+editor of this Magazine, who will forward it to the diver.]
+
+The monitors had small square hatches or man-ports let into the deck,
+admitting one person conveniently.
+
+ Hinc via, Tartanii quae fert Acherontis ad undas.
+
+A swinging ladder, whose foot was clear of the floor, led down
+into the recesses. A diver, having completed his task, ascended the
+treacherous staircase to escape, and found the hatch blocked up.
+A floating chest or box had drifted into the opening, and, fitting
+closely, had firmly corked the man up in that dungeon, tight as a fly
+in a bottle. From his doubtful perch on the ladder he endeavored to
+push the obstacle from its insertion. Two or more equal difficulties
+made this impossible. The box had no handle, and it was slippery with
+the ooze and mucus of the sea. The leverage of pushing only wedged
+it faster in the orifice. The inconstant ladder swayed from it as
+a fulcrum. Again and again by art and endeavor and angle of push he
+essayed, and the ladder made sport of it. It was deadly sport, that
+swing and seesaw on the slippery rungs in the immeasurable loneliness
+of the silent, shrouded cabin. It was no rush of air, sending life
+tingling in the blood made brilliant with carmine of oxidation, but
+the dense, mephitic sough of the thick wool of water. He descended
+and sat upon the floor to think. Feasible methods had failed, and the
+sands of his life were running out like the old physician's. Now to
+try the impracticable. There are heaps of wisdom in the wrong way
+sometimes, which, I suppose, is the reason some of us like it. The
+box was out of his reach, choked in the gullet of that life-hole. No
+spring or leap from floor or ladder could reach its slippery side
+or bear it from its fixture. The sea had caught him prowling in its
+mysteries, and blocked him up, as cruel lords of ancient days walled
+up the intruder on their domestic privacy. Wit after brute force:
+man and Nature were pitted against each other in the uncongenial
+gloom--life the stake.
+
+He groped about his prison, glutinous with infusoriae and the oily
+consistence of the sea. Here a nail, there a block or lever, shaped
+out mentally by the touch, theorized, studied upon and thrown down.
+Now a hatchet, monkey-wrench, monkey's-tail, or gliding fish or
+wriggling eel, companions of his imprisonment. At last the cold
+touch of iron: the hand encloses and lifts it; its weight betrays its
+length; he feels it to the end--blunt, square, useless. He tries the
+other end--an edge or spike. That will do. Standing under the hatch,
+guided by the ladder to the position, and with a strong swinging,
+upward blow, the new tool is driven into the soft, fibrous and
+adhesive pine bottom of the box. On the principle on which your
+butler's practiced elbow draws the twisted screw sunk into the
+cobwebbed seal of your '48 port, he uncorks himself. The box pulled
+out of the hatch, the sea-gods threw up the sponge, that zoophyte
+being handy.
+
+These few incidents, strung together at random, and embracing only
+limited experiences out of many in one enterprise, are illustrative,
+in their variety and character, of this hardy pursuit, and the
+fascination of danger which is the school of native hardihood.
+But they give the reader a very imperfect idea of the nature and
+appearance of the new element into which man has pushed his industry.
+The havoc and spoil, the continued danger and contention, darken the
+gloom of the submarine world as a flash of lightning leaves blacker
+the shadow of the night and storm.
+
+The first invention to promote subaqueous search was the diving-bell,
+a clumsy vessel which isolates the diver. It is embarrassing, if not
+dangerous, where there is a strong current or if it rests upon a slant
+deck. It limits the vision, and in one instance it is supposed the
+wretched diver was taken from the bell by a shark. It permits an
+assistant, however, and a bold diver will plunge from the deck above
+and ascend in the vessel, to the invariable surprise of his companion.
+An example of one of its perils, settling in the mud, occurred, I
+think, in the port of New York. A party of amateurs, supported by
+champagne flasks and a reporter, went down. The bell settled and stuck
+like a boy's sucker. One of the party proposed shaking or rocking the
+bell, and doing so, the water was forced under and the bell lifted
+from the ooze.
+
+But a descent in submarine armor is the true way to visit the world
+under water. The first sensation in descending is the sudden bursting
+roar of furious, Niagarac cascades in the ears. It thunders and booms
+upon the startled nerve with the rush and storm of an avalanche. The
+sense quivers with it. But it is not air shaken by reflected blows: it
+is the cascades driven into the enclosing helmet by the force-pump.
+As the flexile hose has to be stiffly distended to bear an aqueous
+gravity of twenty-five to fifty pounds to the square inch, the force
+of the current can be estimated. The tympanum of the ear yields to
+the fierce external pressure. The brain feels and multiplies the
+intolerable tension as if the interior was clamped in a vice, and
+that tumultuous, thunderous torrent pours on. Involuntarily the mouth
+opens: the air rushes in the Eustachian tube, and with sudden velocity
+strikes the intruded tension of the drum, which snaps back to its
+normal state with a sharp, pistol-like crack. The strain is momently
+relieved to be renewed again, and again relieved by the same attending
+salutes.
+
+In your curious dress you must appear monstrous, even to that marine
+world, familiar with abnormal creations. The whale looks from eyes on
+the top of his head; the flat-fish, sole, halibut have both eyes on
+the same side; and certain Crustacea place the organ on a foot-stalk,
+as if one were to hold up his eye in his hand to include a wider
+horizon. But the monster which the fish now sees differs from all
+these. It has four great goggle eyes arranged symmetrically around
+its head. Peering through these plate-glass optics, the diver sees
+the curious, strange beauty of the world around him, not as the bather
+sees it, blurred and indistinct, but in the calm splendor of its own
+thallassphere. The first thought is one of unspeakable admiration of
+the miraculous beauty of everything around him--a glory and a splendor
+of refraction, interference and reflection that puts to shame the
+Arabian story of the kingdom of the Blue Fish. Above him is that pure
+golden canopy with its rare glimmering lustrousness--something like
+the soft, dewy effulgence that comes with sun-breaks through showery
+afternoons. The soft delicacy of that pure straw-yellow that prevails
+everywhere is crossed and lighted by tints and glimmering hues of
+accidental and complementary color indescribably elegant. The floor of
+the sea rises like a golden carpet in gentle incline to the surface;
+but this incline, experience soon teaches, is an ocular deception,
+the effect of refraction, such as a tumbler of water and a spoon can
+exhibit in petty. It is perhaps the first observable warning that you
+are in a new medium, and that your familiar friend, the light, comes
+to you altered in its nature; and it is as well to remember this and
+"make a note on it."
+
+Raising your eyes to the horizontal and looking straight forward,
+a new and beautiful wealth of color is developed. It is at first a
+delicate blue, as if an accidental color of the prevailing yellow.
+But soon it deepens into a rich violet. You feel as if you had never
+before appreciated the loveliness of that rich tint. As your eye
+dwells upon it the rich lustrous violet darkens to indigo, and sinking
+into deeper hues becomes a majestic threat of color. It is ominous,
+vivid blue-black--solid, adamantine, a crystal wall of amethyst. It is
+all around you. You are cased, dungeoned in the solid masonry of the
+waters. It is beauty indeed, but the sombre and awful beauty of the
+night and storm. The eye turns for relief and reassurance to the
+paly-golden lustrous roof, and watches that tender penciling which
+brightens every object it touches. The hull of the sunken ship,
+lying slant and open to the sun, has been long enough submerged to
+be crusted with barnacles, hydropores, crustacea and the labored
+constructions of the microscopic existences and vegetation that fill
+the sea. The song of Ariel becomes vivid and realistic in its rich
+word-power:
+
+ Full fathom five thy father lies;
+ Of his bones are coral made;
+ Those are pearls that were his eyes:
+ Nothing of him that doth fade
+ But doth suffer a sea-change
+ Into something rich and strange.
+
+The transfiguration of familiar objects is indeed curious and
+wonderful. The hulk, once gaudy with paint and gilding, has come under
+the skill of the lapidary and sea-artist. It is crusted with emerald
+and flossy mosses, and glimmers with diamond, jacinth, ruby, topaz,
+sapphire and gold. Every jewel-shape in leaf, spore, coral or plume,
+lying on a greenish crystalline ground, is fringed with a soft
+radiance of silver fire, and every point is tipped in minute ciliate
+flames of faint steely purple. It is spotted with soft velvety black
+wherever a shadow falls, that mingles and varies the wonderful display
+of color. It is brilliant, vivid, changeable with the interferences
+of light from the fluctuating surface above, which transmogrifies
+everything--touches the coarsest objects with its pencil, and they
+become radiant and spiritual. A pile of brick, dumped carelessly
+on the deck, has become a huge hill of crystal jewelry, lively with
+brilliant prismatic radiance. Where the light falls on the steps of
+the staircase it shows a ladder of silver crusted with emeralds. The
+round-house, spars, masts, every spot where a peak or angle catches
+the light, have flushed into liquid, jeweled beauty; and each point, a
+prism and mirror, catches, multiplies and reflects the other splendor.
+A rainbow, a fleecy mist over the lake, made prismal by the sunlight,
+a bunch of sub-aqueous moss, a soap-bubble, are all examples in our
+daily experience of that transforming power of water in the display of
+color. The prevailing tone is that soft, golden effulgence which,
+like the grace of a cheerful and loving heart, blends all into one
+harmonious whole.
+
+But observation warns the spectator of the delusive character of all
+that splendor of color. He lifts a box from the ooze: he appears
+to have uncorked the world. The hold is a bottomless chasm. Every
+indentation, every acclivity that casts a shadow, gives the impression
+of that soundless depth. The bottom of the sea seems loopholed with
+cavities that pierce the solid globe and the dark abysses of space
+beyond. The diver is surrounded by pitfalls, real and imaginary. There
+is no graduation. The shallow concave of a hand-basin is as the shadow
+of the bottomless well.
+
+If the exploration takes place in the delta of a great river, the
+light is affected by the various densities of the double refracting
+media. At the proper depth one can see clearly the line where these
+two meet, clean cut and as sharply defined as the bottom of a green
+glass tumbler through the pure water it contains. The salt brine or
+gelatinous sea-water sinks weighted to the bottom, and over it flows
+the fresh river-water. If the latter is darkened with sediment, it
+obscures the silent depths with a heavy, gloomy cloud. In seasons of
+freshet this becomes a total darkness.
+
+But even on a bright, sunshiny day, under clear water, the shadow of
+any object in the sea is unlike any shade in the upper atmosphere. It
+draws a black curtain over everything under it, completely obscuring
+it. Nor is this peculiarity lost when the explorer enters the shadow;
+but, as one looking into a tunnel from without can see nothing
+therein, though the open country beyond is plainly visible, so,
+standing in that submarine shadow, all around is dark, though beyond
+the sable curtain of the shadow the view is clear. Apply this optical
+fact to the ghastly story of a diver's alleged experience in the
+cabin of a sunken ship. It is narrated that there was revealed to
+his appalled sight the spectacle of the drowned passengers in various
+attitudes of alarm or devotion when the dreadful suffocation came.
+The story is told with great effect and power, but unless a voltaic
+lantern is included in the stage furniture, the ghastly tableaux must
+sink into the limbo of incredibilities.
+
+The cabin of a sunken vessel is dark beyond any supernal conception of
+darkness. Even a cabin window does not alter this law, though it
+may be itself visible, with objects on its surface, as in a child's
+magic-lantern. As the rays of light pass through an object flatwise,
+like the blade of a knife through the leaves of a book, and may be
+admitted through another of like character in the plane of the first,
+so a ray of light can penetrate with deflection through air and water.
+But becoming polarized, the interposition of a third medium ordinarily
+transparent will stop it altogether. Hence the plate-glass window
+under water admits no light into the interior of a cabin. The distrust
+of sight grows with the diver's experience. The eye brings its habit
+of estimating proportion and distance from an attenuated atmosphere
+into another and denser medium, and the seer is continually deceived
+by the change. He hesitates, halts, and is observant of the pitfalls
+about him. A gang-plank slightly above the surface of the deck is
+bordered, where its shadow falls, by dismal trenches. There is a range
+of hills crossing the deck before him. As he approaches he estimates
+the difficulty of the ascent. At its apparent foot he reaches to
+clamber the steep sides, and the sierra is still a step beyond his
+reach. Drawing still nearer, he prepares to crawl up; his hand touches
+the top; it is less than shoulder-high.
+
+But perhaps the strongest illustration of the differing densities
+of these two media is furnished by an attempt to drive a nail
+under water. By an absolute law such an effort, if guided by sight
+independent of calculation, must fail. Habit and experience, tested
+in atmospheric light, will control the muscles, and direct the blow
+at the very point where the nail-head is not. For this reason the
+ingenious expedient of a voltaic lantern under water has proved to
+be impracticable. It is not the light alone which is wanted, but that
+sweet familiar atmosphere through which we are habituated to look. The
+submarine diver learns to rely wholly on the truer sense of touch, and
+guided by that he engages in tasks requiring labor and skill with the
+easy assurance of a blind man in the crowded street.
+
+The conveyance of sound through the inelastic medium of water is so
+difficult that it has been called the world of silence. This is only
+comparatively true. The fish has an auditory cavity, which, though
+simple in itself, certifies the ordinary conviction of sound, but it
+is dull and imperfect; and perhaps all marine creatures have other
+means of communication. There is an instance, however, of musical
+sounds produced by marine animals, which seems to show an appreciation
+of harmony. In one of the lakes of Ceylon, Sir Emerson Tennent heard
+soft musical sounds, like the first faint notes of the aeolian harp
+or the faint vibrations of a wineglass when its rim is rubbed by a wet
+finger. This curious harmony is supposed to be produced by a species
+of testaceous mollusk. A similar intonation is heard at times along
+the Florida coast.
+
+Interesting as this may be, as indicating an appreciation of that
+systematic order in arrangement which in music is harmony, it does not
+alter the fact that to the ears of the diver, save the cascade of the
+air through the life-hose, it is a sea of silence. No shout or spoken
+word reaches him. Even a cannon-shot comes to him dull and muffled,
+or if distant it is unheard. But a sharp, quick sound, that appears to
+break the air, like ice, into sharp radii, can be heard, especially if
+struck against anything on the water. The sound of driving a nail on
+the ship above, for example, or a sharp tap on the diving-bell below,
+is distinctly and reciprocally audible. Conversation below the surface
+by ordinary methods is out of the question, but it can be sustained
+by placing the metal helmets of the interlocutors together, thus
+providing a medium of conveyance.
+
+The effort to clothe with intelligence subaqueous life must have been
+greatly strengthened among primitive nations by the musical sounds
+to which I have referred. Those mysterious breathings were associated
+with a human will, and gave forebodings from their very sweetness.
+Everywhere they are associated with a passionate or pathetic mystery,
+and the widely-spread area over which their island home is portrayed
+as existing strengthens the conclusion that the strange music of the
+sea belongs not to Ceylon or Florida or the Mediterranean alone. It
+affords us another instance, by that common enjoyment of sweet sounds,
+of the chain of sympathy between all intelligent creatures, and better
+prepares us for familiar acquaintance with the beings which people the
+sea. We have prejudices and preconceived ideas to get rid of, whose
+strength has crystallized into aphorisms. "Cold as a fish" and
+"fish-eyed" are ordinary expressions. Then the touch of a fish, cold,
+slippery, serpent-like, causes an involuntary shrinking.
+
+But the submarine diver has a new revelation of piscine character and
+beauty, and perhaps can better understand the enticings of a siren or
+fantastic Lurlei than the classical scholar. In the flush of aureal
+light tinging their pearly glimmering armor are the radiant, graceful,
+frolicsome inhabitants of the sea. The glutinous or oily exudation
+that covers them is a brilliant varnish. Their lustrous colors,
+variety of crystalline tints and beautiful markings and spots, attract
+the eye of the artist even in the fish-market; but when glowing with
+full life, lively, nimble, playful, surely the most graceful living
+creatures of earth, air or sea, the soul must be blind indeed that can
+look upon them unmoved.
+
+The dull optic seen glazing in the death-throes upon the market-stall,
+with coarse vulgar surroundings, becomes, in its native element,
+full of intelligence and light. In even the smaller fry the round orb
+glitters like a diamond star. One cannot see the fish without seeing
+its eye. It is positive, persistent, prevalent, the whole animate
+existence expressed in it. As far as the fish can be seen its eye is
+visible. The glimmer of scales, the grace of perfect motion, the rare
+golden pavilion with its jeweled floor and heavy violet curtains,
+complete a scene whose harmony of color, radiance and animal life is
+perfect. The minnow and sun-perch are the pages of the tourney on the
+cloth of gold. There is a fearless familiarity in these playful
+little things, a social, frank intimacy with their novel visitor, that
+astonishes while it pleases. They crowd about him, curiously touch
+him, and regard all his movements with a frank, lively interest.
+Nor are the larger fish shy. The sheeps-head, red and black groper,
+sea-trout and other, familiar fish of the sportsman, receive him with
+frank bonhommie or fearless curiosity. In their large round beautiful
+eyes the diver reads evidence of intelligence and curious wonder that
+sometimes startles him with its entirely human expression. There is
+a look of interest mixed with curiosity, leading to the irresistible
+conclusion of a kindred nature. No faithful hound or pet doe could
+express a franker interest in its eyes. Curiosity, which I take to
+be expressly destructive of the now-exploded theory of instinct, is
+expressed not only by the eye, but by the movements. As in man there
+is an eager passion to handle that which is novel, so these curious
+denizens of the sea are persistent in their efforts to touch the
+diver. An instance of this occurred, attended with disagreeable
+results to one of the parties, and that not the fish. The Eve of this
+investigation was a large catfish. These fish are the true rovers of
+the water. They have a large round black eye, full of intelligence
+and fire: their warlike spines and gaff-topsails give them the true
+buccaneer build. One of these, while the diver was engaged, incited by
+its fearless curiosity, slipped up and touched him with its cold nose.
+The man involuntarily threw back his hand, and the soft palm striking
+the sharp gaff, it was driven into the flesh. There was an instant's
+struggle before the fish wrenched itself loose from the bleeding
+member, and then it only swung off a little, staring with its bold
+black eyes at the intruder, as if it wished to stay for further
+question. It is hard to translate the expression of that look of
+curious wonder and surprise without appearing to exaggerate, but the
+impression produced was that if the fish did not speak to him, it was
+from no lack of intelligent emotions to be expressed in language.
+
+A prolonged stay in one place gave a diver an opportunity to test this
+intelligence further, and to observe the trustful familiarity of this
+variety of marine life. He was continually surrounded at his work by
+a school of gropers, averaging a foot in length. An accident having
+identified one of them, he observed it was a daily visitor. After the
+first curiosity the gropers apparently settled into the belief that
+the novel monster was harmless and clumsy, but useful in assisting
+them to their food. The species feed on Crustacea and marine
+worms, which shelter under rocks, mosses and sunken objects at the
+sea-bottom. In raising anything out of the ooze a dozen of these fish
+would thrust their heads into the hollow for their food before the
+diver's hand was removed. They would follow him about, eyeing his
+motions, dashing in advance or around in sport, and evidently with
+a liking for their new-found friend. Pleased with such an unexpected
+familiarity, the man would bring them food and feed them from his
+hand, as one feeds a flock of chickens. The resemblance, in their
+familiarity and some of their ways, to poultry was, in fact, very
+striking. As a little chick will sometimes seize a large crumb and
+scurry off, followed by the flock, so a fish would sometimes snatch a
+morsel and fly, followed by the school. If he dropped it or stopped to
+enjoy his _bonne bouche_, his mates would be upon him. Sometimes two
+would get the same morsel, and there would be a trial of strength,
+accompanied with much flash and glitter of shining scales. But no
+matter how called off, their interest and curiosity remained with the
+diver. They would return, pushing their noses about him, caressingly
+in appearance if not intent, and bob into the treasures of worm and
+shellfish his labor exposed. He became convinced that they were
+sportive, indulging in dash and play for the fun of it, rather than
+for any grosser object to be attained.
+
+This curious intimacy was continued for weeks: the fish, unless driven
+away by some rover of prey of their kind, were in regular attendance
+during his hours of work. Perhaps the solitude and silence of that
+curious submarine world strengthened the impression of recognition
+and intimacy, but by every criterion we usually accept in terrestrial
+creation these little creatures had an interest and a friendly feeling
+for one who furnished them food, and who was always careful to avoid
+injuring them or giving them any unnecessary alarm. He could not,
+of course, take up a fish in his hand, any more than a chicken will
+submit to handling; but as to the comparative tameness of the two,
+the fish is more approachable than the chicken. That they knew and
+expected the diver at the usual hour was a conclusion impossible
+to deny, as also that they grew into familiarity with him, and were
+actuated by an intelligent recognition of his service to them. It
+would be hard to convince this gentleman that a school of fish cannot
+be as readily and completely tamed as a flock of chickens.
+
+Why not? The fear of man is no instinctive feeling in the invertebrate
+creation. The pioneer who penetrates into the uninhabited wilds of
+our Western frontier finds bird and beast fearless and familiar. Man's
+cruelty is a lesson of experience. The timid and fearful of the lower
+creation belong to creatures of prey. The shark, for example, is as
+cowardly as the wolf.
+
+I thought to speak of other marine creations with which the diver
+grows acquainted, finding in them only a repetition of the same degree
+of life he has seen in the upper world. But let it be enough to state
+the conclusion--as yet only an impression, and perhaps never to be
+more--that in marine existence there is to be found the counterpart
+always of some animate existence on earth, invertebrate or radiate,
+in corresponding animals or insects, between whose habits and modes
+of existence strong analogies are found. The shrimps that hang in
+clusters on your hand under the water are but winged insects of the
+air in another frame that have annoyed you on the land.
+
+Let me dismiss the subject with the brief account of a diver caught in
+a trap.
+
+In the passion of blind destruction that followed and attended the
+breaking out of hostilities between the North and the South, as a
+child breaks his rival's playthings, the barbarism of war destroyed
+the useful improvements of civilization. Among the things destroyed by
+this iconoclastic fury was the valuable dry-dock in Pensacola Bay. It
+was burned to the water's edge, and sunk. A company was subsequently
+organized to rescue the wreck, and in the course of the submarine
+labor occurred the incident to which I refer.
+
+The dry-dock was built in compartments, to ensure it against sinking,
+but the ingenuity which was to keep it above water now served
+effectually to keep it down. Each one of these small water-tight
+compartments held the vessel fast to the bottom, as Gulliver was bound
+by innumerable threads to the ground of Lilliput. It was necessary
+to break severally into the lower side of each of these chambers, and
+allow the water to flow evenly in all. The interior of the hull was
+checkered by these boxes. Huge beams and cross-ties intersected
+each other at right angles, forming the frame for this honeycombed
+interior, pigeon-holed like a merchant's desk. It was necessary to
+tear off the skin and penetrate from one to the other in order to
+effect this.
+
+It was a difficult and tedious job under water. The net of
+intersecting beams lay so close together that the passage between was
+exceedingly narrow and compressed, barely admitting the diver's
+body. The pens, so framed by intersecting beams, were narrowed and
+straitened, embarrassing attempts at labor in them, which the cold,
+slippery, serpent-like touch of the sea-water was not likely to make
+pleasanter. It folded the shuddering body in its coils, and a most
+ancient and fish-like smell did not improve the situation. The toil
+was multiplied by the innumerable pigeon-holes, as if they fitted
+into one another like a Chinese puzzle, with the unlucky diver in the
+middle box. It was a nightmare of the sea, the furniture of a dream
+solidified in woody fibre.
+
+Into one of these crowding holes the diver crawled. There was the
+tedious work of tearing off the casing to occupy an hour or more, and
+when it was accomplished he endeavored to back out of his situation.
+He was stopped fast and tight in his regression. The arrangement of
+the armor about the head and shoulders, making a cone whose apex was
+the helmet, prevented his exit. It was like the barb of a harpoon,
+and caught him fast in the wood. Such a danger is not sudden in its
+revelation. There is at first only a feeling of impatience at the
+embarrassment, a disposition to "tear things." In vain attempts at
+doubling and other gymnastic feats the diver wasted several hours,
+until his companions above became alarmed at the delay. They renewed
+and increased their labors at the force-pump, and the impetuous
+torrent came surging about the diver's ears. It served to complete
+his danger. It sprung the trap in which he lay enclosed. The inflated
+armor swelled and filled up the crowded spaces. It stiffened out the
+casing of the helmet to equal the burden of fifty pounds to the square
+inch, and made it as hard as iron. He was caught like the gluttonous
+fox. The bulky volume of included air made exit impossible. It was no
+longer a labyrinth as before, where freedom of motion incited courage:
+he was in the fetters of wind and water, bound fast to the floor of
+his dungeon den. He signaled for the pump to stop. It was the only
+alternative. He might die without that life-giving air, but he would
+certainly die if its volume was not reduced. The cock at the back
+of the helmet for discharging the vessel was out of his reach. The
+invention never contemplated a case in which the diver would perish
+from the presence of air.
+
+As the armor worn was made tight at the sleeves with elastic
+wristbands, his remedy was to insert his fingers under it, and slowly
+and tediously allow the bubbling air to escape. In this he persevered
+steadily, encouraged by the prospect of escape. The way was long and
+difficult, but release certain with the reduction of that huge bulk.
+
+But a new and subtler danger attacked him--the very wit of Nature
+brought to bear upon his force and ingenuity. It was as if the
+mysterious sirens of the sea saw in that intellectual force the real
+strength of their prisoner, and sought to steal it from him while they
+lulled him to indifference. Inhaling and reinhaling the reduced volume
+of air, it became carbonized and foul, not with the warning of sudden
+oppression, but
+
+ Sly as April melts to May,
+ And May slips into June.
+
+The senses, intoxicated by the new companion sent them by the lungs,
+began to sport with it, as ignorant children with a loaded shell,
+forgetful of duty and the critical condition of the man. They began to
+wander in vagaries and delusions. A soft chime of distant bells rang
+in his ears with the sweet sleepy service of a Sabbath afternoon; the
+sound of hymns and the organ mingled with the melody and the chant of
+the sirens of the sea.
+
+ There is sweet music here that softer falls
+ Than petals from blown roses on the grass,
+ Or night-dew on still waters, between walls
+ Of shadowy granite in a gleaming pass--
+ Music that gentler on the spirit lies
+ Than tired eyelids upon tired eyes.
+ Here are cool mosses deep,
+ And through the moss the ivies creep,
+ And in the stream the long-leaved flowers weep,
+ And from the craggy ledge the poppy hangs in sleep.
+
+The sensuous beauty, the infinite luxury of repose sung by the poet,
+filled and steeped his senses. The desire to sleep was intoxicating,
+delicious, irresistible; and with it ran delicious, restful thrills
+through all his limbs, the narcotism of the blood. It was partly,
+no doubt, the effect of inhaling that pernicious air; partly
+that hibernation of the bear which in the freezing man precedes
+dissolution; and possibly more than that, something more than any mere
+physical cause--life perhaps preparing to lay this tired body down,
+its future usefulness destroyed.
+
+This delicious enervation had to be constantly resisted and dominated
+by a superior will. One more strenuous effort to relieve that
+straitened garrison, to release that imprisoned and fettered body,
+and then, if that failed, an unconditional surrender to the armies of
+eternal steep. But it did not fail. That constant, persevering tugging
+of the fingers at the wristbands, pursued mechanically in that strange
+condition of pleasing stupor, had reduced the exaggerated distensions
+of the bulbous head-gear. A stout, energetic push set the diver free,
+and he was drawn to the surface dazed, drowsy, and only half conscious
+of the peril undergone. But with the rush of fresh, untainted air to
+the lungs came an emotion of gratitude to the Giver of life and the
+full consciousness of escape.
+
+And this sums up my sketch illustrative of the peculiar character of
+marine life, and the hazards of submarine adventure, hitherto known to
+few, for--well, for _divers_ reasons.
+
+WILL WALLACE HARNEY.
+
+
+
+
+CONFIDENTIAL.
+
+
+My ear has ever been considered public property for private usage. I
+cannot call to mind the time when I was not somebody's confidante,
+the business beginning as far back as the winter I ran down to Aunt
+Rally's to receive my birthday-party of sweet or bitter sixteen, as
+will appear.
+
+Ralph Romer was the first to spread the news of my arrival in the
+village among the girls of my own age. Ralph Romer it was who had
+braved the dangers of "brier and brake" to find the bright holly
+berries with which Aunt Hally had decorated the cheery little parlor
+for the occasion; and it was with Ralph Romer I danced the oftenest on
+that famous night.
+
+"Wouldn't I just step out on the porch a short little minute," he
+whispered as he came around in the rear of Aunt Hally to bid me
+good-night, ending the whisper, according to the style of all
+boy-lovers, "I've got something to tell you."
+
+The door stood open and conveniently near, and I suppose I wanted to
+see how high the snow had drifted since dark; and, a better reason
+still, I couldn't afford to let Ralph take my hand off with him; and
+so I had to go out on the porch just long enough to get it back,
+while he said: "Ettie Moore says she loves me, and we are going to
+correspond when I go back to college; and as you know all lovers
+and their sweethearts must have a confidante to smuggle letters and
+valentines across the lines, we have both chosen you for ours. Oh, I
+was so afraid you wouldn't come!"
+
+I found the snow had drifted--well, I don't believe I knew how many
+inches.
+
+I have not promised a recital of all my auricular experiences. Enough
+to say, that in time I settled down into the conviction that it was
+my special mission to be the receptacle of other people's secrets; and
+they seemed determined to convince me that they thought so too.
+
+So, when Mr. Tennent Tremont happened along and became a candidate for
+auricular favors, like a tradesman who has gained the self-sustaining
+ground which has made him indifferent as to custom-seeking, I could
+afford to be entirely independent about giving a previous promise to
+keep his secrets for him; and so, dear reader, they are as much yours
+as mine.
+
+When my brother introduced him into our family circle we took him
+to be a Northern college-chum, met with during his
+just-returned-from-trip to Washington; for it was in those days when
+Southern hospitality was as much appreciated as it was liberally
+bestowed. It was a good time for a modest stranger to come among new
+faces. We were in the flutter and bustle which a wedding in the family
+makes, and it gave him an opportunity to get used to us, and left us
+none to observe him unpleasantly much.
+
+But when the wedding was over, and I had made up my week of lost
+sleep, and he and my brother had kept themselves out of the way on a
+camp-hunt, for my mother to do up her week of house-cleaning,--it is
+here that our story proper begins.
+
+As we were leaving the breakfast-table one morning my brother caught
+my dress-sleeve, and, dropping in the rear of Mr. Tennent Tremont,
+allowed him to find the verandah: "Really, sis, I don't think you are
+doing the clever thing, quite."
+
+"How?"
+
+"Why, in not helping me to entertain my friend."
+
+"Getting tired of him?"
+
+"No, he isn't one of that kind; but, to tell the truth, I am too busy
+just now to give him the whole of my time."
+
+"Too busy turning your own cakes. Yes, I see."
+
+"Which is no more than my sister is doing; which reminds me to say
+that J.B. will call this morning, he desired me to inform you. But,
+dear sis, we must not be so absorbed in our own love-matters as to
+give my friend only a moiety of our attention, for, poor fellow! he
+has one of his own."
+
+"So I am to bore him for the sake of relieving you? Is that my role?"
+
+"Now stop! He simply wants a lady confidante."
+
+I broke away from my brother's hold, and ran up to my room to see if
+all was right for my expected caller, giving my right ear a pull, by
+way of saying to that victimized organ, "You are needed."
+
+And what think you I did next? Got out my embroidery-material bag, and
+put it in order for action at a moment's warning. I was prepared for a
+reasonable amount of martyrdom pertaining to my profession, but I was
+always an economist of time, and not another unemployed hour would I
+yield to the selfish demands of my forthcoming job.
+
+The next day was one of November drizzle, the house confinement of
+which, my adroit brother declared, could only be mitigated by my
+presence in the sitting-room until the improved state of the weather
+allowed their escape from it.
+
+I was in the habit of appropriating such weather to my piano, and I
+had not touched it for a month. Whether Mr. Tennent Tremont's nerves
+were in a sound state or not, I was determined to practice until
+twelve. But when he came in from the library and assisted me in
+opening the instrument, I was obliged to ask him what he would have.
+They were my first direct words to him, our three weeks' guest.
+
+"Oh, 'Summer Night' is a favorite," he said.
+
+I gave him the song, and then executed the long variations; then,
+dropping my tired hands in my lap, inquired whether he liked vocal or
+instrumental best.
+
+"Not any more of either, just now, thanking you kindly for what you
+have given me," he said. "Have you ever been a confidante, Miss ----?"
+
+"That is my vocation, Mr. Tremont," I replied, grasping my bag.
+
+"Which? your embroidery or--"
+
+"Both combined," I tried to say pleasantly, "as on this occasion. I am
+at Mr. Tremont's service;" and I threaded my tapestry-needle.
+
+Without a prefatory word he began: "Years before your young heart was
+awakened to 'the sweetest joy, the wildest woe,' I loved."
+
+"And single yet!" I exclaimed as I let my hands drop and glanced up
+at his brown hair, to see if all those years had left their silver
+footprints there.
+
+"And single yet," he repeated slowly, "and still worshiping at the
+same shrine; and to no other will I ever bow until this head is
+silvered o'er, and this strong arm palsied with the infirmities of
+age--if a long life is indeed to be mine."
+
+His ardor startled me, but I managed to stitch away composedly, and he
+went on:
+
+"I know it is in the highest degree selfish to inflict on you a
+recital of what may not interest you; but I have tried to keep my
+secret buried from human eyes, from all but _hers_, and you are now
+the only being on earth to whom I have ever _said_, 'I love.' As
+intimate as I have been with your brother, if he knows it, it is by
+his penetration, for no word of acknowledgment has ever passed my lips
+before. May I go on?" he asked.
+
+"Oh yes," I answered, taken by surprise. "I suppose so. It is a relief
+to talk, and to listen, I have told you, is my vocation."
+
+"How long can you listen?" he questioned in delighted eagerness.
+
+I fancied he would have to be allowanced, and I held up my paper
+pattern before me: "This bouquet of flowers is to be transferred.
+I will give you all the time it will take to do it. Remember, the
+catastrophe must be reached by that time. Some one else will probably
+want my ear."
+
+"But," said he, "listening is not the only duty of a confidante: you
+must aid me by your counsel. Only a woman may say how a woman may be
+won."
+
+"You have my sympathies, Mr. Tremont, on the score of your being a
+very dear brother's friend. I know nothing of her--next to nothing of
+you. I can neither counsel nor aid you."
+
+"That brother is familiar with every page of my outward life-history.
+It was in our family he spent his vacation, while you and your father
+were traveling in Europe."
+
+"Well, then, that will do about yourself. Now about her?"
+
+The door-bell was rung: the waiter announced--well, my obliging
+brother has already given enough of his name--"Mr. J.B." My confessor
+withdrew.
+
+The next morning, as I was bringing the freshened flower-vases into
+the sitting-room, he brought me my bag, saying, "Now about her."
+
+I opened the piano, repeated his favorite, kept my seat and cultivated
+my roses vigorously.
+
+"Miss ----," he began, "I would not knowingly give pain to a human
+creature. Yesterday, when your visitor found me by your side, I
+observed a frown on his face. I detest obtrusiveness, but if there is
+anything in the relation in which you stand to each other which will
+make my attentions objectionable to either of you, they shall cease
+this moment. You are at perfect liberty to repeat to him every word I
+have said to you."
+
+"I thank you sincerely for your considerateness," I said. "I am under
+no obligations of the kind to him or any other gentleman."
+
+He introduced his topic by saying: "I am glad that I shall have to
+say little more of myself. Oh, what a strange joy it is to be able to
+speak unreservedly of her, and of the long pent-up hopes and fears
+of the past years! And now, if you will assist me in interpreting
+her conduct toward me--if you will inspire me with even faint hope
+of success--if you will advise me as you would a brother how to
+proceed,--gratitude will be too weak a word for my feeling toward you
+for the remainder of my life."
+
+"I have not yet sufficient light on her part of the affair to aid you
+by advice," I answered. "In these slowly-developing love-affairs
+there is usually but one great hindering cause. Do you know," I said,
+laughing as much as I dared, looking into his woebegone face, "that
+you have not told me what has passed between you?"
+
+His moment or two of death silence made me almost regret my last
+words.
+
+"In the first of our acquaintance I was ever tortured by her
+indifference. My first attentions were quietly received, never
+encouraged. Then came the still more torturing fear--agony let me call
+it--lest she was pre-engaged. Thank God! that burden was lifted from
+my poor heart, but only, it seemed, to make room for the very one of
+all in the catalogue of causes by which a lover's hope dies beyond the
+possibility of a resurrection. It is the rock--no, I fear the
+placid waters of friendship into which my freighted bark is now
+drifting--which may lie between it and the bright isle of love, the
+safe harbor" (he shuddered), "not the blissful possession."
+
+Reader, the roses were not growing under my needle: my sympathies were
+at last fully enlisted.
+
+"You have well said," I answered. "Friendship is the 'nine notch'
+in which a lover makes 'no count' in the game of hearts. But steer
+bravely past these dark gulfs of despair. Have you ever had recourse
+to jealousy in your desperation?" I queried.
+
+"I scorn such a base ally. Your brother can tell you I am here partly
+because I would avoid increasing an affection in another which I
+cannot return."
+
+"Does she know of that?" I asked, not at all prepared in my own mind
+to yield the potency of the ally in my sincere desire to aid him by
+this test of a woman's affection.
+
+"Yes: I have no reason, however, for thinking that the fact has raised
+her estimate of the article," he said, making a poor attempt to smile.
+
+I felt ashamed of my suggestion, and said quickly, "You correspond,
+of course: how are her letters?" Now I was sure of my safest clue in
+finding her out.
+
+"It was through the medium of her letters that I first obtained my
+knowledge of her mind, her temperament, her disposition, her admirable
+domestic virtues; for they were written without reserve. They excited
+my highest admiration; they stimulated my desire to know more of her;
+but they contain no word of love for me."
+
+His want of boldness almost excited my contempt. My skill was baffled
+on every side, and, not caring much to conceal my impatience, I said,
+"You have asked me to advise you as I would my brother. She is cold
+and selfish: give her up."
+
+"Give her up!" he said with measured and emphatic slowness--"give
+her up, when I have sought her beneath every clime on which the sun
+shines--not for months, but for years? Give her up, when her presence
+gives me all I have ever known of happiness? Give her up!" and he
+leaned his head on the back of his chair and closed his eyes.
+
+I had imagined him gifted with wonderful self-control, but when I
+looked up from my work all color had faded from his cheeks, the lips
+seemed ready to yield the little blood left there by the clinch of the
+white-teeth upon them, while every muscle of the face quivered with
+spasmodic effort to control emotion. When the eyes were opened and
+fixed on the ceiling, I saw no trace in them of anger, revenge, or
+even of wounded pride. They were full of tears, ready to gush in one
+last flood-tide of feeling over a subdued, chastened, but breaking
+heart.
+
+It was very evident that my treatment was not adding much comfort to
+my patient, however salutary it might prove in the end. I knew of his
+intention to leave the next day: there was little time left me to aid
+him, and I had come to regard the unknown woman's mysterious nature or
+strategic warfare as pitted against my superior penetration. That
+he might be victorious she must be vanquished. _She_ was, then, my
+antagonist.
+
+The deepening twilight was producing chilliness. I flooded the room
+with brilliant light, stirred the grate into glowing warmth, and
+invited him to a seat near the fire.
+
+"You will not leave me, will you? This may be--_it will be_--my last
+demand on you as a confidante. How is the bouquet progressing?" he
+asked.
+
+"See," I said, holding my embroidery up before me: "we must hurry. I
+have but one more tendril to add."
+
+"Tendrils are clinging things, like hope, are they not?" he said
+pensively.
+
+But sentimentalizing was not the business of the hour, and I intimated
+as much to him. "Yes," I replied, "but hope must now give place to
+effort. I see you are not going to take my 'give-her-up' advice."
+
+"No--only from her who has the right to give it."
+
+I now considered my patient out of danger.
+
+"Then why do you torture yourself longer with doubts? Perhaps your
+irresolution has caused a want of confidence in the strength of
+your affection. At least give her an opportunity to define her true
+position toward you. Beard the lions of indifference and friendship in
+their dens, and do not yield to unmanly cowardice. Strange that I have
+given you the counsel last which should have been given first! But do
+not, I beseech you, lose any time in seeking her. Assure her of your
+long and unwavering devotion. Constancy is the most valued word in a
+true woman's vocabulary. You have staked too much happiness to lose:
+you _must_ win."
+
+"And if I lose," he said--holding up something before him which I
+took to be a picture, though it was in the shape of a heart--"and if
+I lose, then perish all of earth to me. But leave me only this, and
+should I hold you thus, and gaze on what I have first and last and
+only loved until this perishable material on which I have placed you
+turn to dust, still will you be graven on a heart whose deathless love
+can know no death; for a thing so holy as the love I bear you was not
+made to die."
+
+My work--now my completed work--dropped beneath my fingers, for the
+last stitch was taken.
+
+If I could not prevent his self-torture, he should not, at least,
+torture me longer; and snatching the thing from his grasp, I exclaimed
+as I closed my hands over it, "Now, before I return it, you must, you
+_shall_, promise me that you will take the last advice I gave you; or
+will you allow me to look at it, and then unseal the silent lips
+and give you the prophetic little 'yes' or 'no' which a professed
+physiognomist like your confidante can always read in the eye?"
+
+"I would rather you did the last," he said; and I rose, leaned my
+elbow on the corner of the mantel nearest the gaslight, rested my head
+on my empty hand, so as to shade my eyes from the intensity of the
+brilliant burner near me, and with the awe creeping over me with
+which the old astrologers read the horoscope of the midnight stars,
+I looked, and saw--only a wonderfully faithful copy of the portrait
+hanging just over me, of which Mr. Tennent Tremont's confidante was
+the original. I threw it from me, and burst into tears. He stood quite
+near me. I thought I hated him, but my obtuse, blundering, idiotic
+self more than him. I waved my hand in token either of his silence or
+withdrawal, for in all my life long I, with a whole dictionary in
+my mind of abusive epithets, was never more at a loss for a word. My
+token was unheeded.
+
+He only murmured softly,
+
+ I had never seen thee weeping:
+ I cannot leave thee now.
+
+When you snatched my picture from me a moment ago I saw a glistening
+tear of sympathy in your eye; but what are these?"
+
+"So cruel! so ungenerous! so unfair!" I said, still pressing my hands
+tightly over my eyes. "How can I ever forgive you?"
+
+With softer murmur than the last he repeated the words,
+
+ "'Tis sweet to let the pardoned in."
+
+"Astounding presumption that!" I said, now giving him the benefit of
+my full gaze--"to speak of pardon before making a confession of
+your guilt! But before I give you time even for that, the remaining
+mysteries which still hang around your tale of woe shall be cleared
+up. Please to inform the court how the original of your purloined
+sketch could have been the object of years of devotion, when it has
+been only four weeks to-day since you laid your mortal eyes on her?"
+
+"Ah! you may well say mortal; but you know the soul too has its visual
+organs. I saw and loved and worshiped my ideal in those years, and
+sought her too--how unceasingly!--and I said,
+
+ Only for the real will I with the ideal part:
+ Another shall not even tempt my heart.
+
+When I saw her just four weeks since, I knew her,
+
+ And my heart responded as, with unseen wings,
+ An angel touched its unswept strings,
+ And whispers in its song,
+ Where hast thou strayed so long?"
+
+But the avenging demon of curiosity was not to be exorcised by
+sentimental evasion: "Those letters, sir, of which you spoke, _they_
+must have been of a real, tangible form--not a part of the mythical
+phantasmagoria of your idealistic vision."
+
+He laughed as a light-hearted child would, but knitted his brow with
+a perplexed air as he said, "Why don't the British government send
+a woman to find the source of the Nile? I must thank your
+unsophisticated brother's pride in his sister's epistolary
+accomplishments for my privilege of perusal. What next?"
+
+I thought a moment. Before, I had fifty other queries to propound, but
+now as I looked into the glowing anthracite before me which gave us
+those pleasant Reveries, they very naturally all resolved themselves
+into explained mysteries without his aid.
+
+He insists that the "prophetic little yes or no" never came.
+
+Upon my honor, dear reader, as a confidante, I still think it the
+most unfair procedure which ever "disgraced the annals of civilized
+warfare;" but I shall have abundant opportunity for revenge, for we
+are to make the journey of life together.
+
+
+
+
+GLIMPSES OF JOHN CHINAMAN.
+
+
+When John Marshall picked up the first golden nugget in California,
+a call was sounded for the gathering of an immense gold-seeking
+army made up of many nationalities; and among the rest China sent a
+battalion some fifty thousand strong.
+
+John Chinaman has remained with us ever since, despised and abused,
+being neither a co-worshiper nor a co-sympathizer in aught save
+the getting of gold. In dress, custom and language his is still a
+nationality as distinct from ours as are the waters of the Gulf Stream
+from those of the ocean.
+
+It is possible that this may be but the second migration of Tartars to
+the American shore. It is possible that the North American Indian and
+the Chinaman may be identical in origin and race. Close observers find
+among the aboriginal tribes resident far up on the north-west American
+coast peculiar habits and customs, having closely-allied types among
+the Chinese. The features of the Aleuts, the natives of the Aleutian
+Islands, are said to approximate closely to those of the Mongolians.
+The unvarying long black hair, variously-shaded brown skin, beardless
+face and shaven head are points, natural and artificial, common to
+the Indian and Mongolian. There is a hint of common custom between the
+Indian scalplock and Chinese cue.
+
+"John" has been a thorough gleaner of the mines. The "superior race"
+allowed him to make no valuable discoveries. He could buy their
+half-worked-out placers. The "river-bed" they sold him when its
+chances of yielding were deemed desperate. When the golden fruitage
+of the banks was reduced to a dollar per day, they became "China
+diggings." But wherever "John" settled he worked steadily, patiently
+and systematically, no matter whether his ten or twelve hours' labor
+brought fifty cents or fifty dollars; for his industry is of an
+untiring mechanical character. In the earlier and flusher days of
+California's gold-harvest the white man worked spasmodically. He
+was ever leaving the five-dollar diggings in hand for the fifty- or
+hundred-dollar-per-day claims afar off in some imaginary bush. These
+golden rumors were always on the wing. The country was but half
+explored, and many localities were rich in mystery. The white vanguard
+pushed north, south and east, frequently enduring privation and
+suffering. "John," in comparative comfort, trotted patiently after,
+carrying his snugly made-up bundle of provisions and blankets at one
+end of a bamboo pole, his pick, shovel, pan and rocker at the other,
+to work over the leavings. The leavings sometimes turned out more gold
+than "new ground," much to the chagrin of the impatient Caucasian. But
+John, according to his own testimony, never owned a rich claim. Ask
+him how much it yielded per day, and he would tell you, "sometimes
+four, sometimes six bittee" (four or six shillings). He had many
+inducements for prevarication. Nearly every white man's hand was
+against him. If he found a bit of rich ground, "jumpers" were ready to
+drive him from it: Mexicans waylaid him and robbed him of his dust. In
+remote localities he enclosed his camp by strong stockades: even these
+were sometimes forced and carried at night by bands of desperadoes.
+Lastly came the foreign miner's tax-collector, with his demand of four
+dollars monthly per man for the privilege of digging gold. There
+were hundreds and thousands of other foreign laborers in the
+mines--English, German, French, Italian and Portuguese--but they paid
+little or none of this tax, for they might soon be entitled to a vote,
+and the tax-collector was appointed by the sheriff of the county, and
+the sheriff, like other officials, craved a re-election. But John was
+never to be a voter, and so he shouldered the whole of this load, and
+when he could not pay, the official beat him and took away his tools.
+John often fought this persecutor by strategy. In localities where no
+white men would betray him he signalized his coming from afar. From
+the crags of Red Mountain on the Tuolumne River I have often seen the
+white flag waved as the dreaded collector came down the steep trail
+to collect his monthly dues. That signal or a puff of smoke told the
+Chinese for miles along the river-valley to conceal themselves from
+the "license-man." Rockers, picks and shovels were hastily thrust into
+clumps of chapparal, and their owners clambered up the hillsides
+into artificial caves or leafy coverts. Out of companies of fifty
+the collector finds but twenty men at work. These pay their tax, the
+official rides on down the river, the hidden thirty Mongolians emerge
+from cover; and more than once has a keen collector "doubled on them"
+by coming back unexpectedly and detecting the entire gang on their
+claim.
+
+John has been invaluable to the California demagogue, furnishing
+for him a sop of hatred and prejudice to throw before "enlightened
+constituencies." It needs but to mention the "filthy Chinaman" to
+provoke an angry roar from the mass-meeting. Yet the Chinaman is
+not entirely filthy. He washes his entire person every day when
+practicable; he loves clean clothes; his kitchen-utensils will bear
+inspection. When the smallpox raged so severely in San Francisco a few
+years since, there were very few deaths among his race. But John
+_is_ not nice about his house. He seems to have none of our ideas
+concerning home comfort. Smoke has no terror for him; soap he keeps
+entirely for his clothes and person; floor-and wall-washing are things
+never hinted at; and the refuse of his table is scarcely thrown out
+of doors. Privacy is not one of his luxuries--he wants a house full:
+where there is room for a bunk, there is room for a man. An anthill,
+a beehive, a rabbit-warren are his models of domestic comfort: what is
+stinted room for two Americans is spaciousness for a dozen Chinese.
+Go into one of their cabins at night, and you are in an oven full of
+opium- and lamp-smoke. Recumbent forms are dimly seen lying on bunks
+above and below. The chattering is incessant. Stay there ten minutes,
+and as your eye becomes accustomed to the smoke you will dimly see
+blue bundles lying on shelves aloft. Anon the bundles stir, talk and
+puff smoke. Above is a loft six feet square: a ladder brings it in
+communication with the ground floor. Mongolians are ever coming down,
+but the gabble of tongues above shows that a host is still left. Like
+an omnibus, a Chinese house is never full. Nor is it ever quiet. At
+all hours of the night may be heard their talk and the clatter of
+their wooden shoes. A Chinaman does not retire like an American,
+intending to make a serious business of his night's sleeping. He
+merely "lops down" half dressed, and is ready to arise at the least
+call of business or pleasure.
+
+While at work in his claim his fire is always kindled near by, and
+over it a tea-pot. This is his beverage every half hour. His tea must
+be hot, strong and without milk or sugar. He also consumes a terrible
+mixture sold him by white traders, called indiscriminately brandy, gin
+or whisky, yet an intoxicated Chinaman is the rarest of rare sights.
+Rice he can cook elegantly, every grain being steamed to its utmost
+degree of distension. Soup he makes of no other meat than pork. The
+poorest among his hordes must have a chicken or duck for his holiday.
+He eats it merely parboiled. He will eat dog also, providing it is not
+long past maturity.
+
+The Chinese grocery-stores are museums to the American. There are
+strange dried roots, strange dried fish, strange dried land and marine
+plants, ducks and chickens, split, pressed thin and smoked; dried
+shellfish; cakes newly made, yellow, glutinous and fatty, stamped with
+tea-box characters; and great earthen jars filled with rottenness. I
+speak correctly if perhaps too forcibly, for when those imposing jars
+are opened to serve a customer with some manner of vegetable cut in
+long strips, the native-born American finds it expedient to hold
+his nose. American storekeepers in the mines deal largely in Chinese
+goods. They know the Mongolian names of the articles inquired for,
+but of their character, their composition, how they are cooked or
+how eaten, they can give no information. It is heathenish "truck," by
+whose sale they make a profit. Only that and nothing more.
+
+A Chinese miner's house is generally a conglomeration of old boards,
+mats, brush, canvas and stones. Rusty sheets of tin sometimes help to
+form the edifice. Anything lying about loose in the neighborhood is
+certain in time to form a part of the Mongolian mansion.
+
+When the white man abandons mining-ground he often leaves behind very
+serviceable frame houses. John comes along to glean the gold left by
+the Caucasian. He builds a cluster of shapeless huts. The deserted
+white man's house gradually disappears. A clapboard is gone, and then
+another, and finally all. The skeleton of the frame remains: months
+pass away; piece by piece the joists disappear; some morning they are
+found tumbled in a heap, and at last nothing is left save the cellar
+and chimneys. Meantime, John's clusters of huts swell their rude
+proportions, but you must examine them narrowly to detect any traces
+of your vanished house, for he revels in smoke, and everything about
+him is soon colored to a hue much resembling his own brownish-yellow
+countenance. Thus he picks the domiciliary skeleton bare, and then
+carries off the bones. He is a quiet but skillful plunderer. John No.
+1 on his way home from his mining-claim rips off a board; John No.
+2 next day drags it a few yards from the house. John No. 3 a week
+afterward drags it home. In this manner the dissolution of your
+house is protracted for months. In this manner he distributes the
+responsibility of the theft over his entire community. I have seen a
+large boarding-house disappear in this way, and when the owner, after
+a year's absence, revisited the spot to look after his property, he
+found his real estate reduced to a cellar.
+
+John himself is a sort of museum in his character and habits. We must
+be pardoned for giving details of these, mingled promiscuously,
+rather after the museum style. His New Year comes in February. For
+the Chinaman of limited means it lasts a week, for the wealthy it may
+endure three. His consumption of fire-crackers during that period is
+immense. He burns strings a yard in length suspended from poles over
+his balconies. The uproar and sputtering consequent on this festivity
+in the Chinese quarter at San Francisco is tremendous. The city
+authorities limit this Celestial Pandemonium to a week.
+
+He does not forsake the amusement of kite-flying even when arrived at
+maturity. His artistic imitations of birds and dragons float over
+our housetops. To these are often affixed contrivances for producing
+hollow, mournful, buzzing sounds, mystifying whole neighborhoods.
+His game of shuttlecock is to keep a cork, one end being stuck with
+feathers, flying in the air as long as possible, the impelling member
+being the foot, the players standing in a circle and numbering from
+four to twenty. Some show great dexterity in kicking with the heel.
+His vocal music to our ears seems a monotonous caterwaul. His violin
+has but one string: his execution is merely a modified species of
+saw-filing.
+
+He loves to gamble, especially in lotteries. He is a diligent student
+of his own comfort. Traveling on foot during a hot day, he protects
+himself with an umbrella and refreshes himself with a fan. In place of
+prosaic signs on his store-fronts, he often inscribes quotations from
+his favorite authors.
+
+He is a lover of flowers. His balconies and window-sills are often
+thickly packed with shrubs and creepers in pots. He is not a speedy
+and taciturn eater. His tea-table talks are full of noisy jollity, and
+are often prolonged far into the night.
+
+He is a lover of the drama. A single play sometimes requires months
+for representation, being, like a serial story, "continued" night
+after night. He never dances. There is no melody in the Mongolian
+foot. Dancing he regards as a species of Caucasian insanity.
+
+To make an oath binding he must swear by the head of a cock cut off
+before him in open court. Chinese testimony is not admissible in
+American courts. It is a legal California axiom that a Chinaman
+cannot speak the truth. But cases have occurred wherein, he being an
+eye-witness, the desire to hear what he _might_ tell as to what he had
+seen has proved stronger than the prejudice against him; and the more
+effectually to clinch the chances of his telling the truth, the above,
+his national form of oath, has been resorted to. He has among us some
+secret government of his own. Before his secret tribunals more than
+one Mongolian has been hurried in Star-Chamber fashion, and never
+seen afterward. The nature of the offences thus visited by secret and
+bloody punishment is scarcely known to Americans. He has two chief
+deities--a god and a devil. Most of his prayers are offered to his
+devil. His god, he says, being good and well-disposed, it is not
+necessary to propitiate him. But his devil is ugly, and must be won
+over by offering and petition. Once a year, wherever collected in any
+number, he builds a flimsy sort of temple, decorates it with ornaments
+of tinsel, lays piles of fruit, meats and sugared delicacies on an
+altar, keeps up night and day a steady crash of gongs, and installs
+therein some great, uncouth wooden idols. When this period of worship
+is over the "josh-house" disappears, and the idols are unceremoniously
+stowed away among other useless lumber.
+
+He shaves with an instrument resembling a butcher's cleaver in
+miniature. Nature generally denies him beard, so he shaves what a
+sailor would term the fore and after part of his head. He reaps his
+hirsute crop dry, using no lather. His cue is pieced out by silken
+braid, so interwoven as gradually to taper into a slim tassel,
+something like a Missouri mule-driver's "black snake" whip-lash. To
+lose this cue is to lose caste and standing among his fellows. No
+misfortune for him can be greater.
+
+Coarse cowhide boots are the only articles of American wear that he
+favors. He inclines to buy the largest sizes, thinking he thereby gets
+the most for his money, and when his No. 7 feet wobble and chafe in
+No. 12 boots he complains that they "fit too much."
+
+He cultivates the vegetables of his native land in California. They
+are curiosities like himself. One resembles our string-bean, but is
+circular in shape and from two to three feet in length. It is not
+in the least stringy, breaks off short and crisp, boils tender very
+quickly and affords excellent eating. He is a very careful cultivator,
+and will spend hours picking off dead leaves and insects from the
+young plants. When he finds a dead cat, rat, dog or chicken, he throws
+it into a small vat of water, allows it to decompose, and sprinkles
+the liquid fertilizer thus obtained over his plantation. Watermelon
+and pumpkin seeds are for him dessert delicacies. He consumes his
+garden products about half cooked in an American culinary point of
+view, merely wilting them by an immersion in boiling water.
+
+There are about fifteen English words to be learned by a Chinaman on
+arriving in California, and no more. With these he expresses all his
+wants, and with this limited stock you must learn to convey all that
+is needful to him. The practice thus forced upon one in employing
+a Chinese servant is useful in preventing a circumlocutory habit of
+speech. Many of our letters the Mongolian mouth has no capacity for
+sounding. _R_ he invariably sounds like _l_, so that the word "rice"
+he pronounces "lice"--a bit of information which may prevent an
+unpleasant apprehension when you come to employ a Chinese cook. He
+rejects the English personal pronoun I, and uses the possessive "my"
+in its place; thus, "My go home," in place of "I go home."
+
+When he buries a countryman he throws from the hearse into the
+air handfuls of brown tissue-paper slips, punctured with Chinese
+characters. Sometimes, at his burial-processions, he gives a small
+piece of money to every person met on the road. Over the grave he
+beats gongs and sets off packs of fire-crackers. On it he leaves
+cooked meats, drink, delicacies and lighted wax tapers. Eventually the
+bones are disinterred and shipped to his native land. In the remotest
+mining-districts of California are found Chinese graves thus opened
+and emptied of their inmates. I have in one instance seen him, so
+far as he was permitted, render some of these funeral honors to an
+American. The deceased had gained this honor by treating the Chinese
+as though they were partners in our common humanity. "Missa Tom," as
+he was termed by them, they knew they could trust. He acquired among
+them a reputation as the one righteous American in their California
+Gomorrah. Chinamen would come to him from distant localities, that
+he might overlook their bills of sale and other documents used in
+business intercourse with the white man. Their need of such, an honest
+adviser was great. The descendants of the Pilgrim Fathers often took
+advantage of their ignorance of the English language, written or
+spoken. "Missa Tom" suddenly died. I had occasion to visit his farm a
+few days after his death, and on the first night of my stay there saw
+the array of meats, fruit, wine and burning tapers on a table in front
+of the house, which his Chinese friends told me was intended as an
+offering to "Missa Tom's" spirit.
+
+We will dive for a moment into a Chinese wash-cellar. "John" does
+three-fourths of the washing of California. His lavatories are on
+every street. "Hip Tee, Washing and Ironing," says the sign, evidently
+the first production of an amateur in lettering. Two doors above is
+the establishment of Tong Wash--two below, that of Hi Sing. Hip Tee
+and five assistants are busy ironing. The odor is a trinity of steam,
+damp clothes and opium. More Mongolian tongues are heard from smoky
+recesses in the rear. As we enter, Hip Tee is blowing a shower of
+moisture from his mouth, "very like a whale." This is his method
+of dampening the linen preparatory to ironing. It is a skilled
+performance. The fluid leaves his lips as fine as mist. If we are on
+business we leave our bundles, and in return receive a ticket covered
+with hieroglyphics. These indicate the kind and number of the garments
+left to be cleansed, and some distinguishing mark (supposing this
+to be our first patronage of Hip Tee) by which we may be again
+identified. It may be by a pug nose, a hare lip, red hair, no hair or
+squint eyes. They never ask one's name, for they can neither pronounce
+nor write it when it is given. The ticket is an unintelligible tracery
+of lines, curves, dots and dashes, made by a brush dipped in India
+ink on a shred of flimsy Chinese paper. It may teem with abuse and
+ridicule, but you must pocket all that, and produce it on calling
+again, or your shirts and collars go into the Chinese Circumlocution
+Wash-house Office. It is very difficult getting one's clothes back if
+the ticket be lost--very. Hip Tee now dabs a duplicate of your ticket
+in a long book, and all is over. You will call on Saturday night for
+your linen. You do so. There is apparently the same cellar, the same
+smell of steam, damp clothes and opium, the same sputter of sprinkling
+water, and apparently the same Hip Tee and assistants with brown
+shaven foreheads and long cues hanging straight down behind or coiled
+in snake-like fashion about their craniums. You present your ticket.
+Hip Tee examines it and shakes his head. "No good--oder man," he says,
+and points up the street. You are now perplexed and somewhat alarmed.
+You say: "John, I want my clothes. I left them here last Monday. You
+gave me that ticket." "No," replies Hip Tee very decidedly, "oder
+man;" and again he waves his arm upward. Then you are wroth. You
+abuse, expostulate, entreat, and talk a great deal of English, and
+some of it very strong English, which Hip Tee does not understand;
+and Hip Tee talks a great deal of Chinese, and perhaps strong Chinese,
+which you do not understand. You commence sentences in broken Chinese
+and terminate them in unbroken English. Hip Tee commences sentences
+in broken English and terminates them in pure Chinese, from a like
+inability to express his indignation in a foreign tongue. "What for
+you no go oder man? No my ticket--tung sung lung, ya hip kee--_ping!"_
+he cries; and all this time the assistants are industriously ironing
+and spouting mist, and leisurely making remarks in their sing-song
+unintelligibility which you feel have uncomplimentary reference to
+yourself. Suddenly a light breaks upon you. This is not Hip Tee's
+cellar, this is not Hip Tee. It is the establishment of Hi Sing. This
+is Hi Sing himself who for the last half hour has been endeavoring
+with his stock of fifteen English words to make you understand that
+you are in the wrong house. But these Chinese, as to faces and their
+wash-houses, and all the paraphernalia of their wash-houses, are so
+much alike that this is an easy mistake to make. You find the lavatory
+of Hip Tee, who pronounces the hieroglyphics all correct, and delivers
+you your lost and found shirts clean, with half the buttons broken,
+and the bosoms pounded, scrubbed and frayed into an irregular sort of
+embroidery.
+
+"He can only dig, cook and wash," said the American miner
+contemptuously years ago: "he can't work rock." To work rock in mining
+parlance is to be skillful in boring Earth's stony husk after mineral.
+It is to be proficient in sledging, drilling and blasting. The
+Chinaman seemed to have no aptitude for this labor. He was content to
+use his pick and shovel in the gravel-banks: metallic veins of gold,
+silver or copper he left entirely to the white man.
+
+Yet it was a great mistake to suppose he could not "work rock," or
+do anything else required of him. John is a most apt and intelligent
+labor-machine. Show him once your tactics in any operation, and ever
+after he imitates them as accurately as does the parrot its memorized
+sentences. So when the Pacific Railroad was being bored through the
+hard granite of the Sierras it was John who handled the drill and
+sledge as well as the white laborer. He was hurled by thousands on
+that immense work, and it was the tawny hand of China that hewed out
+hundreds of miles for the transcontinental pathway. Nor is this
+all. He is crowding into one avenue of employment after another in
+California. He fills our woolen- and silk-mills; he makes slippers and
+binds shoes; he is skilled in the use of the sewing-machine; cellar
+after cellar in San Francisco is filled with these Celestial brownies
+rolling cigars; his fishing-nets are in every bay and inlet; he is
+employed in scores of the lesser establishments for preserving fruit,
+grinding salt, making matches, etc. He would quickly jump into the
+places of the carpenter, mason and blacksmith were he allowed, for
+there are numbers of them whose knowledge of these and other trades is
+sufficient at least to render them useful as assistants. He is handy
+on shipboard: the Panama steamers carry Chinese foremast hands. He is
+preferred as a house-servant: the Chinese boy of fourteen or sixteen
+learns quickly to cook and wash in American fashion. He is neat
+in person, can be easily ruled, does not set up an independent
+sovereignty in the kitchen, has no followers, will not outshine
+his mistress in attire; and, although not perfect, yet affords a
+refreshing change from our Milesian tyrants of the roast and wash-tub.
+But when you catch this Celestial domestic treasure, be sure that the
+first culinary operations performed for his instruction are correctly
+manipulated, for his imitativeness is of a cast-iron rigidity. Once
+in the mould, it can only with great difficulty be altered. Burn your
+toast or your pudding, and he is apt to regard the accident as the
+rule.
+
+The young Chinese, especially in San Francisco, are anxious to acquire
+an English education. They may not attend the public schools. A few
+years since certain Chinese mission-schools were established by the
+joint efforts of several religious denominations. Young ladies and
+gentlemen volunteered their services on Sunday to teach these Chinese
+children to read. They make eager, apt and docile pupils. Great is
+their pride on mastering a few lines of English text. They become much
+attached to their teachers, and it is possible, if the vote of the
+latter were taken, it would evidence more liking for their yellow,
+long-cued pupils than for any class of white children. But while so
+assiduous to learn, it is rather doubtful whether much real religious
+impression is made upon them. It is possible that their home-training
+negatives that.
+
+We have spoken entirely of the Chinaman. What of the Chinawoman in
+America? In California the word "Chinawoman" is synonymous with what
+is most vile and disgusting. Few, very few, of a respectable class
+are in the State. The slums of London and New York are as respectable
+thoroughfares compared with the rows of "China alleys" in the heart of
+San Francisco. These can hardly be termed "abandoned women." They
+have had no sense of virtue, propriety or decency to abandon. They are
+ignorant of the disgrace of their calling: if the term may be allowed,
+they pursue it innocently. Many are scarcely more than children. They
+are mere commodities, being by their own countrymen bought in China,
+shipped and consigned to factors in California, and there sold for a
+term of years.
+
+The Chinaman has bitter enemies in San Francisco: they thirst to
+annihilate him. He is accustomed to blows and brickbats; he is
+legitimate game for rowdies, both grown and juvenile; and children
+supposed to be better trained can scarce resist the temptation of
+snatching at his pig-tail as he passes through their groups in front
+of the public schools. Even on Sundays nice little boys coming from
+Sabbath-school, with their catechisms tucked under their jackets,
+and texts enjoining mercy and gentleness fresh upon their lips, will
+sometimes salute the benighted heathen as he passes by with a volley
+of stones. If he turns on his small assailants, he is apt to meet
+larger ones. Men are not wanting, ready and panting, to take up the
+quarrel thus wantonly commenced by the offspring of the "superior
+race." There are hundreds of families, who came over the sea to seek
+in America the comfort and prosperity denied them in the land of their
+birth, whose children from earliest infancy are inculcated with the
+sentiment that the Chinaman is a dog, a pest and a curse. On the
+occasion of William H. Seward's visit to a San Francisco theatre, two
+Chinese merchants were hissed and hooted by the gallery mob from a
+box which they had ventured to occupy. This assumption of style and
+exclusiveness proved very offensive to the shirt-sleeved, upper-tier
+representatives of the "superior race," who had assembled in large
+numbers to catch a glimpse of one of the black man's great champions.
+Ethiopia could have sat in that box in perfect safety, but China in
+such a place was the red rag rousing the ire of the Democratic bull.
+John has a story of his own to carry back home from a Christian land.
+
+For this prejudice and hostility there are provocative causes,
+although they may not be urged in extenuation. The Chinaman is a
+dangerous competitor for the white laborer; and when the latter, with
+other and smaller mouths to feed, once gets the idea implanted in
+his mind that the bread is being taken from them by what he deems a
+semi-human heathen, whose beliefs, habits, appearance and customs are
+distasteful to him, there are all the conditions ready for a state
+of mind toward the almond-eyed Oriental which leans far away from
+brotherly love.
+
+Brotherly love sometimes depends on circumstances. "Am I not a man and
+brother?" cries John from his native shore. "Certainly," we respond.
+Pass round the hat--let us take up a contribution for the conversion
+of the poor heathen. The coins clink thickly in the bottom of the
+charitable chapeau. We return home, feeling ourselves raised an inch
+higher heavenward.
+
+"Am I not a man and brother?" cries John in our midst, digging our
+gold, setting up opposition laundries and wheeling sand at half a
+dollar per day less wages. "No. Get out, ye long-tailed baste! An' wad
+ye put me on a livil with that--that baboon?" Pass round the hat.
+The coins mass themselves more thickly than ever. For what? To buy
+muskets, powder and ball. Wherefore? Wait! More than once has the
+demagogue cried, "Drive them into the sea!"
+
+PRENTICE MULFORD.
+
+
+
+
+A WINTER REVERIE.
+
+
+ We stood amid the rustling gloom alone
+ That night, while from the blue plains overhead,
+ With golden kisses thickly overblown,
+ A shooting star into the darkness sped.
+ "'Twas like Persephone, who ran," we said,
+ "Away from Love." The grass sprang round our feet,
+ The purple lilacs in the dusk smelled sweet,
+ And the black demon of the train sped by,
+ Rousing the still air with his long, loud cry.
+
+ The slender rim of a young rising moon
+ Hung in the west as you leaned on the bar
+ And spun a thread of some sweet April tune,
+ And wished a wish and named the falling star.
+ We heard a brook trill in the fields afar;
+ The air wrapped round us that entrancing fold
+ Of vanishing sweet stuff that mortal hold
+ Can never grasp--the mist of dreams--as down
+ The street we went in that fair foreign town.
+
+ I might have whispered of my love that night,
+ But something wrapped you as a shield around,
+ And held me back: your quiver of affright,
+ Your startled movement at some sudden sound--
+ A night-bird rustling on the leafy ground--
+ Your hushed and tremulous whisper of alarm,
+ Your beating heart pressed close against my arm,--
+ All, all were sweet; and yet _my_ heart beat true,
+ Nor shrined one wish I might not breathe to you.
+
+ So when we parted little had been said:
+ I left you standing just within the door,
+ With the dim moonlight streaming on your head
+ And rippling softly on the checkered floor.
+ I can remember even the dress you wore--
+ Some dainty white Swiss stuff that floated round
+ Your supple form and trailed upon the ground,
+ While bands of coral bound each slender wrist,
+ Studded with one great purple amethyst.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ My story is not much--is it?--to tell:
+ It seems a wandering line of music, faint,
+ Whose sweet pathetic measures rise and swell,
+ Then, strangled, fall with curious restraint.
+ 'Tis like the pictures that the artists paint,
+ With shadows forward thrown into the light
+ From the real figures hidden out of sight.
+ And is not life crossed in this strange, sad way
+ With dreams whose shadows lengthen day by day?
+
+ But you, dear heart--sweet heart loved all these years--
+ Will recognize the passion of the strain:
+ Who eats the lotos-flower of Love with tears,
+ Will know the rapture of that numb, vague pain
+ Which thrills the heart and stirs the languid brain.
+ All day amid the toiling throng we strive,
+ While in our heart these sacred, sweet loves thrive,
+ And in choice hours we show them, white and cool
+ Like lilies floating on a troubled pool.
+
+MILLIE W. CARPENTER.
+
+
+
+
+"PASSPORTS, GENTLEMEN!"
+
+
+The close of July, 1870, found our party tarrying for a few days at
+Geneva. We had left home with the intention of "doing" Europe in less
+than four months. June and July were already gone, but in that time,
+traveling as only Americans can, Great Britain, Belgium, the Rhine
+country and portions of Switzerland had been visited and admired. We
+were now pausing for a few days to take breath and prepare for yet
+wider flights. Our proposed route from Geneva would lead us through
+Northern Germany, returning by way of Paris to London and Liverpool.
+
+We had intentionally left Paris for the last, hoping that the
+Communist disturbances would be completely quieted before September.
+At this time their forces had been recently routed, and the Versailles
+troops were occupying the capital. The leaders of the Commune were
+scattered in every direction, and, if newspaper accounts were to be
+believed, were being captured in every city of France. Especially was
+this true of the custom-house upon the Swiss frontier, where report
+said that more than one leading Communist had been stopped by the
+lynx-eyed officials, who would accept no substitute for the signed and
+countersigned passport, and hold no parley until such a passport had
+been presented.
+
+In view of these facts, the American minister in Paris had issued a
+circular letter to citizens of the United States traveling abroad,
+requesting them to see that their passports had the official visé
+before attempting to enter France, thus saving themselves and friends
+a large amount of unnecessary trouble and delay. Nothing was said
+of those who might think proper to attempt an entrance _without_ a
+passport, such temerity being in official eyes beyond all advice or
+protection. Influenced by this letter and several facts which had come
+under our notice proving the uncertainty of all things, and especially
+of travel in France, we saw that our passports were made officially
+correct.
+
+While at Geneva our party separated for a few days. My friends
+proposed making an expedition up the lake, while I arranged to spend
+a day and night at Aix-les-Bains, a small town in the south of France.
+My object in visiting it was not to enjoy the sulphur-baths for which
+it is famous, but to see some friends who were spending the summer
+there. I had written, telling them to expect me by the five o'clock
+train on Wednesday afternoon. As my stay was to be so brief, I left
+my valise at the hotel in Geneva, and found myself now, for the first
+time, separated from that trusty sable friend which had until this
+hour been my constant companion by day and night.
+
+The train was just leaving the station when a lady sitting opposite to
+me, with her back to the locomotive, asked, in French, if I would be
+willing to change seats. Catching her meaning rather by her gestures
+than words, I inquired in English if she would like my seat, and found
+by her reply that I was traveling with an English lady.
+
+I should here explain that although I had studied the French language
+as part of my education, I found it impossible to speak French with
+any fluency or understand it when spoken. My newly-made friend,
+however (for friend she proved herself), spoke French and English with
+equal fluency.
+
+In the process of comparing notes (so familiar to all travelers)
+mention was made of the recent war and the unwonted strictness and
+severity of the custom-house officials. In an instant my hand was upon
+my pocket-book, only to find that I had neglected to take my passport
+from my valise.
+
+The embarrassment of the situation flashed upon me, and my troubled
+countenance revealed to my companion that something unusual had
+occurred. I answered her inquiring look by saying that I had left my
+passport in Geneva. Her immediate sympathy was only equaled by her
+evident alarm. She said there was but one thing to be done--return
+instantly for it. I fully agreed with her, but found, to my dismay,
+upon consulting a guide-book, that our train was an express, which did
+not stop before reaching Belgarde, the frontier-town.
+
+I would willingly have pulled the bell-rope had there been any, and
+stopped the train at any cost, but it was impossible, and nothing
+remained but to sit quietly while I was relentlessly hurried into the
+very jaws of the French officials. The misery of the situation was
+aggravated by the fact that I could not command enough French to
+explain how I came to be traveling without a passport. As a last
+resort, I applied to my friend, begging her to explain to the officer
+at the custom-house that I was a citizen of the United States, and had
+left my passport in Geneva. This she readily promised to do, although
+I could see that she had but little faith in the result. After a ride
+of an hour, during which my reflections were none of the pleasantest,
+we arrived at Belgarde. Here the doors of the railway carriages were
+thrown open, and we were politely requested to alight. We stepped
+out upon a platform swarming with fierce gendarmes, whom I regarded
+attentively, wondering which of them was destined to become my
+protector. From the platform we were ushered into a large room
+communicating by a narrow passage with a second room, into which our
+baggage was being carried. One by one my fellow-passengers approached
+the narrow and (to me) gloomy passage and presented their passports.
+These were closely scanned by the officer in charge, handed to an
+assistant to be countersigned, and the holder, all being right, was
+passed into the second room. Our turn soon came, and, accompanied by
+the English lady, I approached my fate.
+
+Her passport was declared to be official, and handing it back
+the officer looked inquiringly at me. My friend then began her
+explanation. As I stood attentively regarding the officer's face, I
+could see his puzzled look change into one of comprehension, and
+then of amusement. To her inquiry he replied that there would be
+no objection under the circumstances to my returning to Geneva and
+procuring my passport. Encouraged by the favorable turn my fortunes
+had taken, I asked, through my friend, if it would be possible for me
+to go on without a passport. An instantaneous change passed over his
+countenance, and, shrugging his shoulders, he replied that it was
+impossible: there was a second custom-house at Culoz, where I should
+certainly be stopped, forced to explain how I had passed Belgarde, and
+severely punished for attempting to enter without a passport. I did
+not, however, wait for him to finish his angry harangue, but passed on
+to the second room, where I was soon joined by my interpreting friend,
+who explained to me in full what I had already learned from the
+officer's countenance and gesture. She thought that I was fortunate in
+escaping so easily, and advised an immediate return to Geneva. I again
+consulted my guide-book, and found that there was no return train for
+several hours, and consequently that I should arrive in Geneva too
+late to start for Aix-les-Bains that night. This would necessitate
+waiting until Thursday, and perhaps force me to give up the trip, for
+our seats were engaged in the Chamouni coach for Friday morning. I
+imagined my friends in vain awaiting my arrival at Aix, and the smiles
+of our party when they found me in Geneva upon their return from the
+lake. But, more than all, the possibility of not reaching Aix at all
+troubled me, for I was very anxious to see my friends there, and had
+written home that I intended to see them.
+
+I found by my guide-book that our train reached Culoz before the
+Geneva return train; so on the instant I formed the desperate resolve
+of running the blockade at Belgarde, and if I found it impossible to
+pass the custom-house at Culoz, _there_ to take the return train for
+Geneva. I walked to the platform as if merely accompanying my friend,
+stood for a moment at the door of the carriage conversing with her,
+and then, as the train started for Culoz, quickly stepped in and shut
+the door. Her dismay was really pitiable: had I not been somewhat
+troubled in mind myself, I should have laughed outright. She saw
+nothing before me but certain destruction, and I am free to confess
+that the prospect of a telegram flashing over the wires at that moment
+from Belgarde to Culoz was not reassuring. The die, however, had
+been cast, and now nothing remained but to endure in silence the
+interminable hour which must elapse ere we should reach Culoz. There
+we were to change cars, the Geneva train going on to Paris, while
+we took the train on the opposite platform for Aix-les-Bains. This
+necessitated passing through the dépôt, and passing through the dépôt
+was passing through the custom-house. As our train stopped in front of
+the fatal door, and one by one the passengers filed into it and were
+lost to sight, I seemed to see written above the door, "All hope
+abandon, ye who enter here!" It was simply rushing into the jaws of
+fate: there was not the slightest possibility of my being able to pass
+through that dépôt unchallenged. I should be carried on to Paris if
+I remained in the train; I should be arrested if I remained on the
+platform; I was discovered if I entered the custom-house. Eagerly I
+glanced around for some means of escape. Every instant the number of
+passengers on the platform was decreasing, the danger of discovery
+rapidly increasing.
+
+I had feared lest some benevolent French officer, anxious for my
+safety, would be found waiting to assist me in alighting: I was
+thankful to find that I should be allowed to assist myself, and
+that no one paid any particular attention to me. As I stood there
+hesitating what course to pursue, and feeling how much easier my mind
+at this moment would be were I waiting on the Belgarde platform, I
+noticed a door standing open a few steps to the left. Without any
+further hesitation I walked directly in, to find myself in a railroad
+restaurant. It proved to be a tower of refuge.
+
+No one had noticed me. There were other passengers in the room,
+waiting for the Paris train; so, joining myself to them, I remained
+there until the custom-house doors were closed and the guards had left
+the platform. The question now arose, How should I reach the opposite
+platform? The train might start at any moment: the only legitimate
+passage was closed. I knew that the attempt would be fraught with
+danger, yet I felt that it was now too late to draw back. If I
+remained any length of time in the restaurant, I should be suspected
+and discovered; and as I thought of that moment a terrific scene arose
+before my mind in which an excited French official thundered at me
+in his choicest French, while I stood silent, unable to explain who
+I was, how I came there, whither I was going; I imagined myself being
+searched for treasonable documents and none being found; I seemed to
+see my captors consulting how they could best compel me to tell what
+I knew. These scenes and others of like nature entertained me while
+I waited for the coast--or rather platform--to be cleared. When at
+length all the immediate guards were gone, I started out to find
+my way, if possible, to the train for Aix. I have read of travelers
+cutting their way through trackless forests, of ice-bound mariners
+anxiously seeking the North-west passage, and, worse than all, of
+luckless countrymen wandering bewildered through the streets of
+Boston; but I am confident that no traveler, mariner or countryman
+ever sought his way with more circumspection and diligence than I in
+my search for a passage between those two platforms.
+
+As I glanced cautiously up and down I saw a door standing open at
+some little distance. Around that door all my hopes were immediately
+centred. It might lead directly to the custom-house; it might be the
+entrance to the barracks of the guards; it might be--I knew not what;
+but it might afford a passage to the other platform.
+
+I walked quickly to the door, glanced in, saw no one and entered. The
+room was a baggage-room, and at that moment unoccupied. It instantly
+occurred to me that a baggage-room _ought_ to open on both platforms.
+I felt as though I could have shouted "Eureka!" and I am confident
+that the joy of Archimedes as he rushed through the streets of
+Syracuse was no greater than mine as I felt that I had so unexpectedly
+discovered the passage I was seeking. Passing through this room, I
+found myself in a second, like the former unoccupied. It had occurred
+to me that all the doors might be closed, and the thought had
+considerably abated my rejoicing; but no! I saw a door which stood
+invitingly open.
+
+No guards were stationed on the platform; so I stepped out, and before
+me stood the train for Aix, into which my fellow-passengers were
+entering, some of them still holding their passports in their hands.
+Taking my seat in one of the carriages, in a few moments the train
+started and I was on my way to Aix. The relief was unspeakably great.
+An instant before it seemed as if nothing short of a miracle
+could save me from a French guard-house, and now, by the simplest
+combination of circumstances, in which a restaurant and baggage-room
+bore an important part, I had passed unchallenged. I remember that I
+enjoyed the scenery and views along the route from Culoz to Aix more
+than while passing from Belgarde to Culoz.
+
+My friends were found expecting me upon my arrival, and joined in
+congratulating me upon my happy escape. A night and day were passed
+very pleasantly, and then arose the question of return.
+
+I suggested telegraphing to Geneva for my passport, but that
+was vetoed, and it was decided that I should return as I had
+come--passportless. I confess that the attempt seemed somewhat
+hazardous. If it was dangerous to attempt an entrance into France,
+how much more so to attempt an exit, especially when the custom-house
+force had been doubled with the sole object that all possibility of
+escape might be precluded, and that any one passing Culoz might be
+stopped at Belgarde! It was urged, however, that our seats had been
+engaged in the diligence for Friday morning, and to send for the
+passport would consume considerable time--would certainly delay the
+party until Saturday, and perhaps until Monday, which delay would
+seriously affect all their plans, time being so limited and so many
+places remaining to be visited. I had passed once, why not again?
+Influenced by these facts, and thinking what a triumph it would be
+once more to baffle French vigilance, I determined to attempt the
+return. There was a train leaving Aix about eight P.M., reaching
+Geneva at eleven: it was decided that I should take this train. I had
+arranged a vague plan of action, although I expected to depend rather
+upon the suggestion of the moment.
+
+It was quite dark when we reached Culoz. As the train arrived at the
+platform, and we were obliged again to change cars, I thought of the
+friendly restaurant; but no! the restaurant was closed, and moreover
+a company of gendarmes was present to see that every one entered the
+door leading to the custom-house. There was no room for hesitation or
+delay. I entered under protest, but still I entered.
+
+In a moment I perceived the desperate situation. The room had two
+doors--one opening upon the platform from which we had just come, and
+now guarded by an officer; the other leading to the opposite platform,
+and there stood the custom-house officer receiving and inspecting the
+passports. It was indeed Scylla and Charybdis. If I attempted to pass
+the officer without a passport, I was undone; if I remained until all
+the other passengers had passed out, I was undone. For an instant I
+felt as if I had better give up the unequal contest. The forces of the
+enemy were too many for me. I saw that I had been captured: why fight
+against Fate? A moment's reflection, however, restored my courage. It
+was evident that one thing alone remained to be done: that was to find
+my way out of the door by which I had just entered, as speedily as
+possible. But there stood the guard.
+
+The train by which we had come was still before the platform: an idea
+suggested itself. Acting as if I had left some article in the train, I
+stepped hurriedly up to the guard, who, catching my meaning, made way
+for me without a word. Once upon the platform, I resolved never again
+to enter that door except as a prisoner. The guard followed me with
+his eyes for a moment, and then, seeing me open one of the carriage
+doors, turned back to his post. As soon as I perceived that I was
+no longer watched I glided off in the opposite direction under the
+shadows of the platform. I was looking for a certain door which I
+remembered well as a friend in need. I knew not in which direction it
+lay, nor could I have recognized it if shut; but hardly had I gone ten
+steps when the same door stood open before me. It was the act of an
+instant to spring through it, out of sight of the guard. Why this door
+and baggage-room should have been left thus open and unguarded when
+such evident and scrutinizing care was taken in every other quarter, I
+have to this day been unable to understand. But for that fact I should
+have found it utterly impossible to pass that custom-house going or
+coming.
+
+Once in the baggage-room, the way was familiar, and, passing into the
+second room, I found the door open as on the day previous, and in
+a moment stood undiscovered upon the platform. Entering the waiting
+train, I was soon on the way to Belgarde.
+
+My only thought during the ride was, What shall I do when we arrive at
+Belgarde? I expected to see the doors thrown open as before, and hear
+again the polite invitation to enter the custom-house. Was it not
+certain detection to refuse? was it not equally dangerous to obey? The
+officer at Belgarde had seen me the day before, and warned me not to
+go to Culoz. What reception would he give me when he saw me attempting
+to return? Or it might be he would not remember me, and then in
+the darkness and confusion I should surely be taken for an escaping
+Communist. That I had passed Culoz was no comfort when I remembered
+that this would only aggravate my guilt in their eyes.
+
+The case did indeed seem desperate. Willingly would I have jumped out
+and walked the entire distance to Geneva, if I might only thus
+escape that terrible custom-house, which every moment loomed up more
+terrifically. At length this troubled hour was passed: we had arrived
+at Belgarde, and the moment for action had come. I had determined to
+avoid the custom-house at all hazards. When the doors were thrown
+open I expected to alight, but not to enter. My plan was to find some
+sheltering door, or even corner, where I could remain until the others
+had presented their passports and were beginning to return, then join
+them and take my seat as before. The dépôt at Belgarde was brilliantly
+lighted, and the gendarmes pacing to and fro in the gaslight seemed
+not only to have increased in numbers, but to have acquired an
+additional ferocity since the day previous.
+
+As I looked but my spirit sank within me. I could only brace myself
+for the coming crisis. For several moments nothing was said or done.
+The doors remained shut, and no one seemed at all concerned about
+our presence. Each minute appeared an hour as I sat there awaiting
+my fate. The suspense was becoming too great: I felt that my stock of
+self-possession was entirely deserting me. At length I began to hope
+that they were satisfied with the examination at Culoz, and would
+allow us to pass unchallenged. Just at that moment, as hope was
+dawning into certainty, the door opened and the custom-house officer
+entered with a polite bow, while a body of gendarmes drew up behind
+him upon the platform. He uttered two French words, and I needed no
+interpreter to tell me that they were "Passports, gentlemen!"
+
+I shuddered as I saw him standing so near, within reach of my arm.
+There were six persons besides myself in the carriage, and I was
+occupying a seat beside the door farthest from the platform. Any one
+who has seen a European railway-carriage will understand me when I say
+that I sat next to the right-hand door, while he had entered by the
+left. One by one the passports were handed up to him until he held six
+in his hand.
+
+With the rest of the passengers I had taken out my pocket-book and
+searched as if for my passport, but had handed none to him, and now I
+sat awaiting developments. I saw that he would read the six passports,
+and then turn to me for the seventh.
+
+The desperate thought flashed upon me of opening the door and escaping
+into the darkness. The carriage itself was so dimly lighted that I
+could barely see the face of my opposite neighbor, and I therefore
+hoped to be able to slip out without any one perceiving it. The
+attempt was desperate, but so was the situation. The officer was
+buried in the passports, holding them near his face to catch the dim
+light. The door was fastened upon the outside, and so, watching him,
+I leaned far out of the window until I was able to reach the catch
+and unfasten the door. A slight push, and it swung noiselessly open. I
+glanced at the officer: he was intently reading the _last_ passport. I
+had placed one foot upon the outside step, and was about to glide out
+into the darkness, when he laid the paper down and looked directly at
+me.
+
+It would have been madness to attempt an escape with his eyes upon me;
+so, assuming as nonchalant a look as my present feelings would allow,
+I answered his inquiring glance with one of confident assurance.
+
+He saw my nonchalant expression. He saw the open pocket-book in my
+hand. He had _not_ counted the number of passports. All the passengers
+were settling themselves to sleep. It must be all right; so, with
+a polite "Bon soir, messieurs!" he bowed and left the carriage. My
+sensation of relief may be better imagined than described. Hardly had
+he left our carriage when we heard the sound of voices and hurrying
+feet upon the platform, and looking out saw some unfortunate
+individual carried off under guard. I trembled as I thought how
+narrowly I had escaped his fate. In a few moments, however, we were
+safely on our way to Geneva, and as we sped on into the darkness,
+while congratulating myself upon my fortunate escape, I firmly
+resolved to be better prepared for the emergency the next time I
+should hear those memorable words, "Passports, gentlemen!"
+
+A.H.
+
+
+
+
+OUR MONTHLY GOSSIP.
+
+THE CORNWALLIS FAMILY.
+
+
+The death was lately announced of two of the last survivors--only
+one of the name is now left--of a family whose chief played a very
+conspicuous, and for himself unfortunate, part in this country a
+century ago--the marquis Cornwallis. His only son, who married a
+daughter of the celebrated match-making duchess of Gordon, left no
+male issue, but five daughters. Two of them, the countess of St.
+Germans--wife of the earl who accompanied the prince of Wales on his
+visit here--and Lady Braybrook, died some years ago; and recently
+Lady Mary Ross, whose husband edited the correspondence of the first
+marquis, and Lady Louisa, who never married, have also gone to their
+graves.
+
+The family of Cornwallis is very ancient, and can point to many
+distinguished members. Its ancestral seat is at Brome, in Suffolk.
+This is a fine old mansion, and the hall, which is very lofty and open
+to the roof, is an excellent specimen of the work of other days. The
+chapel contains capital oak carving. In the village church there are
+monuments worth notice of the family.
+
+Following the fate of so many other places, Brome passed after the
+death of the second marquis to a _novus homo_, one Matthias Kerrison,
+who, having begun life as a carpenter, contrived in various ways to
+acquire a colossal fortune. His son rose to distinction in the army,
+obtained a seat in Parliament, which he held for thirty years, and was
+created a baronet.
+
+He left at his death a son and three daughters. The former, long
+married, is childless. The sisters are respectively the wives of Earl
+Stanhope, the well-known historian; Lord Henniker, a wealthy Suffolk
+proprietor; and Lord Bateman. It is understood that under the late
+baronet's will the son of the last will, in the event of the present
+baronet dying childless, succeed to the property. It will thus be
+observed that Brome, after having been for four centuries in one
+family, is destined to change hands repeatedly in a few years.
+
+When the second Marquis Cornwallis died sonless, the marquisate became
+extinct, but the earldom passed to his first cousin. This nobleman,
+by no means an able or admirable person, married twice. By his first
+marriage he had a daughter, who married Charles Wykeham-Martin, Esq.,
+M.P., whose father, by a concatenation of chances, became the owner
+of Leeds Castle, near Maidstone, in Kent--a splendid moated baronial
+pile, dating from the thirteenth century, but added to and improved
+in admirable taste. Leeds was formerly the property of the Fairfax
+family, whose chief, the present lord, resides near Washington. It
+came to them from the once famous family of Colepepper.
+
+Earl Cornwallis married a second time late in life, and had an only
+daughter, Lady Julia. From that time his one idea seemed to be to
+accumulate for this child, and accordingly at his death she was
+the greatest heiress in England, her long minority serving to add
+immensely to her father's hoards. Of course, when the time approached
+for her entering society under the chaperonage of her cousins, the
+marquis's daughters, speculation was very rife in the London world as
+to whom she would marry, and many a mamma of high degree cast sheep's
+eyes at the heiress, and thought how charmingly her accumulations
+would serve to clear the encumbrances on certain acres. But they were
+not kept long in suspense. One night during the London season, when
+the ladies Cornwallis gave a grand ball, a damper was cast over the
+proceedings, so far at least as aspirants to the heiress's money-bags
+were concerned, by the announcement of her engagement. Said a lady to
+a gentleman in the course of that evening, "Most extraordinary! There
+seem to be no men in the room to-night." "Why, of course not," was the
+rejoinder, "after this fatal news." Lady Julia's choice fell upon a
+young officer in the Guards, Viscount Holmesdale, eldest son of Earl
+Amherst. Lord Holmesdale was unexceptionable in point of position,
+but his pecuniary position was such as to make one hundred and fifty
+thousand dollars a year a very agreeable addition to his income. It
+may, however, be a satisfaction to those less richly endowed with this
+world's goods than Lady Holmesdale to reflect that being an heiress
+generally proves rather the reverse of a passport to matrimonial
+bliss; and by all accounts she is no exception to the usual fate in
+this respect. We can't have everything in this world.
+
+Lady Holmesdale's property was tied up by her old father (whose whole
+thoughts were given to this end, and who was in the habit of carrying
+his will on his person) to such a degree that in the event of her
+death her husband can only derive a very slight benefit from his
+wife's property beyond the insurances which may have been effected
+on her life. She is childless, and has very precarious health. Her
+principal seat is Linton Park, near Maidstone, Kent, in which county
+she is the largest landowner. In the event of her dying without issue,
+her estates pass to the son of Major Fiennes Cornwallis, who was
+second son of the late Mr. Wykeham-Martin by Lady Holmesdale's elder
+half-sister.
+
+A cousin of Lady Holmesdale, Miss Cornwallis, the last representative
+of a third branch, died some years ago. This lady, who possessed rare
+literary and social acquirements, bequeathed her property to Major
+Wykeham-Martin, who thereupon changed his name to Cornwallis. The
+major, a gallant officer, one of those of whom Tennyson says,
+
+ Into the jaws of death
+ Rode the six hundred,
+
+only survived the Balaklava charge to die a few years later through
+an accident in the hunting-field. "A fine, modest young officer," was
+Thackeray's verdict about him, when, after dinner at "Tom Phinn's," a
+noted bachelor barrister of eminence whose little dinners were not
+the least agreeable in London, the story of that famous ride had been
+coaxed out of the young _militaire_, who, if left to himself, would
+never have let you have a notion that he had seen such splendid
+service. The only Cornwallis now left is Lady Elizabeth, granddaughter
+of the first marquis.
+
+
+
+
+NOVELTIES IN ETHNOLOGY.
+
+
+Two savants of high reputation have lately undertaken to seek out the
+origin of that German race which has just put itself at the head of
+military Europe. One is Wilhelm Obermüller, a German ethnologist,
+member of the Vienna Geographical Society, whose startling theory
+nevertheless is that the Germans are the direct descendants of Cain!
+The other scholar, M. Quatrefages, a man of still greater reputation,
+devotes himself to a proposition almost as extraordinary--namely, that
+the Prussian pedigree is Finn and Slav, with only a small pinch of
+Teuton, and hence, in an ethnographical view, is anti-German!
+
+That M. Quatrefages should maintain such a postulate, his patriotism
+if not his scientific reputation might lead us to expect; but that
+Obermüller should be so eager to trace German origin back to the first
+murderer is rather more suprising. Obermüller's work embraces in
+its general scope the origin of all European nations, but the most
+striking part is that relating to Germany. He holds that, from
+the remotest era, the Celto-Aryan race, starting from the plain
+of Tartary, the probable cradle of mankind, split into two great
+branches--one the Oriental Aryans, and the other the Western Aryans,
+or Celts. The former--who, as he proceeds to show, were no other than
+the descendants of Cain--betook themselves to China, which land they
+found inhabited by the Mongolians, another great primordial race; and
+we are told that the Mongolians are indicated when mention is made in
+Scripture of Cain's marriage in the land of Nod. The intermixture of
+Cainists and Mongolians produced the Turks, while the pure Cainist
+tribes formed the German people, under the name of Swabians (Chinese,
+_Siampi_), Goths (_Yeuten_ in Chinese) and Ases (_Sachsons_). Such, in
+brief, is the curious theory of Obermüller.
+
+The question next arises, How is it that we find the Germans
+transplanted from the Hoang-Ho to the Rhine? We are told that, being
+driven out of China by the Turks, they poured into the European
+countries which the Celts or Western Aryans had already occupied.
+These latter had in the mean time gone out from the Asiatic cradle
+of the race, and following the course of the Indus to Hindostan and
+Persia, had, under the name of Chaldeans, overrun Armenia, Syria,
+Arabia, Egypt and North Africa, which latter they found inhabited by
+certain negro races, whereas in Egypt they discovered red-skins or
+Atlantides; which latter, by the way, form also our own aborigines.
+The intermixture of the Celts with these primitive races just named
+produced the Jews and Semitic people. At the time of the Celtic
+invasion Western Europe and Northern Africa were occupied by the race
+of the Atlantides, while the Mongolians, including also the Lapps,
+Finns and Huns, peopled the north of Europe and of Asia. The Celts
+pushed in between these two races, and only very much later the German
+people, driven out of China by the Turks, as we have said, arrived in
+Europe.
+
+When, therefore, did these Cainist invasions of Germany take place?
+Obermüller says that the date must have been toward the epoch of
+the Roman conquests. Gallia was then inhabited in the south by the
+primitive Atlantid race of Ligurians and by the Greek colony of
+Massilia; in the centre by the Gaelags (Celts) or Gauls, who, pouring
+northward from Spain, had conquered it fifteen hundred years before
+the Christian era; and in the north by the Belgic Cimbrians, who had
+come from Germany, and who were designated under the name of Germans
+(_Ghermann_) or border-men, and who, though called _Germani_ by Caesar
+and Tacitus, were yet not of the Cainist stock, but Celts. However,
+these Germans, whom the Romans encountered to their cost on the Rhine
+and Danube, were of the genuine Oriental Cainist stock, and these,
+after centuries of fierce struggle, they failed to conquer, though the
+Celts of Britain, Gaul and Spain, as well as all the old empires of
+the East, had fallen an easy prey to their victorious eagles.
+
+It only remains to add that this invasion of Germany by Cain's progeny
+was accomplished in three streams. The Ases (Sachsons) directed
+themselves to the Elbe and Danube, and thence to the north; the Suevi,
+or Swabians, chose the centre and south of Germany; while the Goths
+did not rest till they had overrun Italy, Southern France and Spain.
+But each of these three main streams was composed of many tribes,
+whom the old writers catalogue without system, mixing both Celtic and
+Teutonic tribes under the general name of Germans; and it is only in
+modern days that the careless enumeration of the classic writers has
+been rejected, and a more scientific method substituted. It will
+be seen, in fine, that in the main Obermüller does not differ from
+accepted theories in German ethnology, which have long carefully
+dissevered the Celts from the Teutons, and assigned to each tribe with
+approximate accuracy its earliest fixed abode in Europe. It is the
+tracing back of the German race proper to the first-born of Adam,
+according to scriptural genealogy, which makes this theory curious and
+amusing.
+
+To the work of M. Quatrefages we have only space to devote a
+paragraph. Originally contributed to the _Revue des Deux Mondes_,
+it bears the marks in its inferences, if not in its facts, of being
+composed for an audience of sympathizing countrymen, rather than for
+the world of science at large. M. Quatrefages says that the first
+dwellers in Prussia were Finns, who founded the stock, and were in
+turn overpowered by the Slavs, who imposed their language and customs
+on the whole of the Baltic region. The consequent mixture of Finns and
+Slavs created a population wholly un-German; and what dash of genuine
+Germanism Prussia now has was subsequently acquired in the persons of
+sundry traders from Bremen, followed by a class of roving nobility,
+who entered the half-civilized country with their retainers in quest
+of spoils. Besides these elements, Prussia, like England and America,
+received in modern times an influx of French Huguenots; which M.
+Quatrefages naturally considers a piece of great good fortune for
+Prussia. Briefly, then, the French savant regards Prussia as German
+only in her nobility and upper-middle classes, while the substratum
+of population is a composition of Slav and Finn, and hence thoroughly
+anti-German. As, according to the old saying, if you scratch a Russian
+you will find a Tartar beneath, so, according to M. Ouatrefages,
+we may suppose that scraping a Prussian would disclose a Finn. The
+political inferences which he draws are very fanciful. He traces
+shadowy analogies between the tactics of Von Moltke's veterans and
+the warlike customs of the ancient Slavs, and suggests that the basic
+origin of the Prussian population may lead it to cultivate a Russian
+alliance rather than an Austrian, forgetting, apparently, that by
+his own admission the ruling-classes of Prussia are German in origin,
+ideas and sympathies.
+
+L.S.
+
+
+
+
+THE STEAM-WHISTLE.
+
+
+While Mr. Ruskin was lately bewailing the bell-ringing propensity of
+mankind, the English Parliament and several American legislatures,
+city or State, were assaulting the greater nuisance of the
+steam-whistle, and trying to substitute bell-ringing for it. Mr.
+Ruskin's particular grievance was, that his own nerves were _crispé_
+by the incessant ding-dong of the church-bells of Florence summoning
+the devout to prayer, but he generalized his wrath. Possibly, he
+would have been less sensitive and fastidious regarding the musical
+carillons of the Italian city were he wont to dwell within ear-shot of
+an American factory or railroad-station. Not that Mr. Ruskin fails to
+appreciate--or, rather, to depreciate--railways in their connection
+with Italian landscapes; for, besides his series of complaints
+regarding the Florence bells, he denounces the railway from Rome to
+Naples, and the railway-tunnels under Monts Cenis and St. Gothard, and
+the railway-bridge leading into Venice, as enemies of the beautiful
+and picturesque in Nature. But it is the locomotive, independent of
+the shriek, that is his abomination; whereas a man less sensitive to
+sights, and (if possible) more sensitive to sounds, might pardon the
+cutting up of the landscape were his ear-drum spared from splitting.
+
+Emerson asks, "What is so odious as noise?" But a _Saturday Reviewer_
+once devoted an elaborate essay to the eulogy of unmitigated noise, or
+rather to the keen enjoyment of it by children. People with enviable
+nerves and unenviable tastes often enjoy sounds in the ratio of their
+lack of melody--say, such everyday thoroughfare music as the slap and
+bang of coach-wheels on the cobble-stones; the creaking of street-cars
+round a sharp curve, like Milton's infernal doors "grating harsh
+thunder;" the squeaking falsettos of the cries by old-clothes' men,
+itinerant glaziers, fishmongers, fruiterers, tinkers and what not; the
+yells of rival coachmen at the railway-stations, giving one an idea
+of Bedlam; the street-fiddlers and violinists with horribly untuned
+instruments; the Italian open-air singers hoarsely shouting,
+"Shoo Fly" or "Viva Garibaldi! viva l'Italia!" the gongs beaten on
+steamboats and by hotel-runners at stations on the arrival of trains;
+the unearthly squeals and shrieks of new "musical instruments" sold
+cheap by street-peddlers; the horrible noise-producers which boys
+invent for the torture of nervous people--such, for example, as this
+present season's, which is happily styled "the devil's fiddle," or
+"the chicken-box," whose simplest form is an emptied tomato-can, with
+a string passed through the end and pulled with the rosined fingers.
+Now, that a man may be pleased with a rattle, even if it be only a
+car-rattle, is conceivable, but it is hard to understand how he can
+retain a relish for the squeal of a locomotive-whistle. The practice
+of summoning workmen to factories by this shrill monitor, of using
+it to announce the dinner-hour, the hour of resuming work after the
+nooning, and the hour of quitting work for the night, ought to be
+abolished everywhere. There is not the faintest excuse for it, because
+clocks and bells will do the same work exactly as well. On the other
+hand, the whistle causes perpetual irritation to the nervous, feeble
+and sick, and frequent cases of horses running away with fright at the
+sudden shriek, smashing property or destroying life.
+
+Let us give moral aid and comfort to the campaign, Cisatlantic and
+Transatlantic, against the steam-whistle. In the local councils of
+Philadelphia, Camden and other cities it has been well opened in our
+country; in the House of Commons has been introduced a bill providing
+that "no person shall use or employ in any manufactory or any other
+place any steam-whistle or steam-trumpet for the purpose of summoning
+or dismissing workmen or persons employed, without the sanction of the
+sanitary authorities." They call this whistle, by the way, it
+would seem, the "American devil," for the Manchester _Examiner_
+congratulates its readers that the "American devil" has been taken by
+the throat, and ere long his yells will be heard no more.
+
+John Leech, it is said, was actually driven from house to house in
+a vain effort to escape the nuisance of organ-grinders, whom he has
+immortalized in Punch by many exquisite sketches, showing that they
+know "the vally of peace and quietness." Some of his friends declare
+that this nuisance so worked on his nerves that he may be said to
+have died of organ-grinders. Holmes has immortalized the same guild of
+wandering minstrels as a sort of "crusaders sent from infernal clime
+to dock the ears of melody and break the legs of time." And yet the
+hand-organ, so often the subject of municipal legislation, is dulcet
+music compared with the steam-whistle, even when the latter instrument
+takes its most ambitiously artistic form of the "Calliope."
+
+
+
+
+SIAMESE NEWS.
+
+
+Letters recently received from Bangkok, Siam, bearing date July 25,
+1872, give the following interesting items.
+
+His Majesty has just appointed an English tutor to his royal brothers,
+associating with them some of the sons of the higher nobles to the
+number of twenty. This certainly indicates progress in liberal and
+enlarged views in a land where hitherto no noble, however exalted his
+rank or worthy his character, was considered a fit associate for the
+princes of the royal family, who have always been trained to hold
+themselves entirely aloof from those about them. The young king now on
+the throne has changed all this, and says he wishes not only that his
+brothers shall have the advantage of studying with others of their own
+age, but that they should thus learn to know their people better, and
+by mingling with them freely in their studies and sports acquire more
+liberal views of men and things than their ancestors had. He insists
+that his young brothers and their classmates shall stand on precisely
+the same footing, and each be treated by the teacher according to his
+merits. The king intends to appoint yet other teachers in his family
+for both boys and girls; and though perhaps the time may not yet have
+come, it is certainly not far distant, when Siam will sustain high
+schools and colleges, both literary and scientific.
+
+The religious aspect of the nation is somewhat less promising. Though
+the royal edict gives protection to all religions, and permits every
+man to choose for himself in matters of conscience, it can scarcely be
+said that the two kings take any real interest in Christianity. They
+think less of Booddhism, its mystic creed and imposing ceremonies, and
+have made very many changes in the form of worship; but, apparently,
+they are no more Christians than were their respective fathers, the
+late first and second kings. They treat Christianity with outward
+respect, because they esteem it decorous to do so; and the same is
+true of the regent and prime minister; but none of them even profess
+any real regard for the worship of the true God. The concessions made
+thus far indicate progress in civilization, not in piety; and while
+the kings and their subjects are assuredly loosing their grasp on
+Booddhism, they are not reaching out to lay hold on Christianity. It
+seems rather as if the whole nation were swaying off into the frigid
+regions of skepticism, and, influenced by the example of many unworthy
+representatives of Christian countries, they live only for the
+luxuries and laxities of the present life. Priestly robes are much
+less frequently seen on the river and in the streets than formerly;
+and many of the clergy no longer reside at the temples, but with their
+families in their own houses; thus relinquishing even the pretence of
+celibacy, which has hitherto been one of the very strongest points
+of Booddhism, giving it an appearance of sanctity and a hold on
+the affections of the people that nothing else can do. With this
+rapidly-increasing renunciation of priestly celibacy and the
+daily-diminishing ranks of the clergy, Booddhism, the mammoth religion
+of the world, seems tottering to ruin, and even the present generation
+may see its utter demolition, at least so far as Siam is concerned.
+Services at the temples are now held in imitation of English morning
+and evening prayers; a moral essay is read, at which the body-guards
+of the kings and the government officers are generally required to
+be present, and the remainder of the day they are excused from duty,
+instead of being kept, as formerly, Sundays and week-days, in almost
+perpetual attendance on His Majesty.
+
+The supreme king is now in his twentieth year, and will take the
+reins of government this year. He is tall and slight in person,
+gentlemanlike in manners, perfectly well bred, and always courteous to
+strangers, though even more modest and unassuming than was his father,
+the priest-king, whose praises are still fresh in every heart. His
+Majesty speaks English quite creditably, wears the English dress most
+of the time, and keeps himself well informed as to matters and things
+generally. His reign, thus far, promises well for himself and his
+kingdom.
+
+The second king, still called King _George Washington_, is now about
+thirty, and a most noble specimen of the courtly Oriental gentleman.
+His tall, compact figure is admirably developed both for strength and
+beauty, his face is full and pleasing, and his head finely formed.
+He is affable in manner, converses readily in English, and is fond
+of Europeans and their customs. He keeps his father's palace and
+steamboats in excellent condition, and his body-guard under thorough
+drill. On a recent visit of the American steamer Moreton he came out
+on the battlements of his palace, and after watching her progress for
+some time, he signaled her to lay to, which she did just opposite his
+palace. He immediately went aboard, and remained for an hour or so,
+chatting merrily with both ladies and gentlemen, while the steamer
+puffed up the river a few miles, and then returned for His Majesty to
+disembark at his own palace. King George occasionally wears the _full_
+English dress, either civil or military, but generally only the
+hat, coat, linen and shoes, with the Siamese _pàh-nûng_ in lieu of
+pantaloons. The regent, the minister of foreign affairs and many of
+the princes and nobles have adopted this mongrel costume, and, to a
+greater or less extent, our language, manner of living and forms
+of etiquette. Visitors to the kings now sit on chairs, instead of
+crouching on cushions before the throne, as formerly; while native
+princes and ministers of state no longer prostrate themselves with
+their faces in the dust in the royal presence, but stand at the foot
+of the throne while holding an audience with their Majesties, each
+being allowed full opportunity to state his case or present any
+petition he may desire. The sovereigns are no longer unknown,
+mysterious personages, whose features their people have never been
+permitted to look upon; but they may be seen any fine day taking their
+drives in their own coaches or phaetons, and lifting their hats to
+passing friends. Nor do they on ordinary occasions deem it necessary
+to be surrounded by armed soldiers for protection, but go where they
+list, with only their liveried coachmen and footmen, and perhaps a
+single companion or secretary inside.
+
+The city itself has correspondingly improved. Within the walls have
+just been completed two new streets, meeting at right angles near
+the mayor's office, where is a public park of circular form very
+handsomely laid out. The streets radiating from this centre are broad,
+and lined with new brick houses of two stories and tiled roofs. These
+are mostly private dwellings, uniformly built; and with their broad
+sidewalks and shade trees of luxuriant tropical growth present a
+very picturesque appearance. One wide street, commencing at the royal
+palace, extends six or seven miles through the city, reaching
+the river near a little village called Pak-lat-bon. This is the
+fashionable _drive_, where may be seen not only their Majesties, the
+regent, the prime minister and other high dignitaries lounging in
+stately equipages drawn by two or four prancing steeds, but many
+private citizens of different nations in their light pony-carriages,
+palanquins, etc., instead of the invariable barges and _sampans_ of a
+few years ago, when the river was the "Broadway" of the city and the
+canals its cross-streets. Steamers of various dimensions now
+busily ply the river: the kings own several, which they use for
+pleasure-boats; eight or ten are fitted up as war-steamers, and others
+are packets to Singapore, China and elsewhere, carrying passengers and
+merchandise.
+
+The regent, _Pra-Nai-Wai,_ is a sedate, dignified, courteous gentleman
+of sixty-five, who walks erect with firm step and manly form, and with
+mental and physical powers still unimpaired. His half-brother, who
+filled the post of minister of foreign affairs at the commencement
+of the present reign, died blind some little time back, after twice
+paying ten thousand dollars to a Dutch oculist from Batavia to operate
+on his eyes for cataract. His successor, the present minister, is one
+of the finest specimens of a Siamese gentleman in the country. He
+was first a provincial governor; then went on a special embassy to
+England; last year attended the supreme king on his visit to Singapore
+and Batavia; and recently accompanied him again to India, whence the
+royal party have but just returned. The regal convoy consisted of five
+or six war-steamers, and His Majesty, besides his own officers, was
+escorted also by the English consul at Bangkok, the harbor-master and
+several European officers in the Siamese service. The royal tourist
+visited Rangoon, Calcutta, Madras, Bombay, Allahabad and Ceylon;
+and entered with great gusto into the spirit of his travels, seeing
+everything, asking questions and taking notes as he passed from point
+to point. The regent, in conjunction with the second king, held the
+reins of government during the absence of the first king; and in truth
+the regent has for the most part governed the country since the death
+of the late king, in 1868, the young heir being then but fifteen years
+of age. The regent is decidedly a favorite with both kings and people,
+and his rule has been popular and prosperous.
+
+
+
+
+MADISON AS A TEMPERANCE MAN.
+
+
+Many years ago, when the temperance movement began in Virginia,
+ex-President Madison lent the weight of his influence to the
+cause. Case-bottles and decanters disappeared from the sideboard at
+Montpelier--wine was no longer dispensed to the many visitors at that
+hospitable mansion. Nor was this all. Harvest began, but the customary
+barrel of whisky was not purchased, and the song of the scythemen in
+the wheatfield languished. In lieu of whisky, there was a beverage
+most innocuous, unstimulating and unpalatable to the army of dusky
+laborers.
+
+The following morning, Mr. Madison called in his head-man to make the
+usual inquiry, "Nelson, how comes on the crop?"
+
+"Po'ly, Mars' Jeems--monsus po'ly."
+
+"Why, what's the matter?"
+
+"Things is seyus."
+
+"What do you mean by serious?"
+
+"We gwine los' dat crap."
+
+"Lose the crop! Why should we lose it?"
+
+"'Cause dat ar crap ar heap too big a crap to be gethered 'thout
+whisky. 'Lasses-and-water nuver gethered no crap sence de woil' war'
+made, ner 'taint gwine to."
+
+Mr. Madison succumbed: the whisky was procured, the "crap" was
+"gethered," case-bottles and decanters reappeared, and the ancient
+order was restored at Montpelier, never again to be disturbed.
+
+
+
+
+NOTES.
+
+
+Amidst the recent hurly-burly of politics in France, involving the
+fate of the Thiers government, if not of the republic itself, a minor
+grievance of the artists has probably been little noticed by the
+general public. Yet a grievance it was, and one which caused men of
+taste and sentiment to cry out loudly. The threatened act of vandalism
+against which they protested was a proposal to fell part of the Forest
+of Fontainebleau. The castle and forest have long belonged to the
+state, but why the woods should now be cut down by the government is
+not clear. The motive is probably to turn the fine timber into
+cash, though a Paris wit, in pretended despair of other explanation,
+jokingly alleged, at the time of Prince Napoleon's late expulsion from
+France, that the government was afraid the prince, taking refuge in
+its dense recesses, might there conceal himself (_à la_ Charles II.,
+we presume) in one of its venerable oaks. At any rate, it was arranged
+to level a part of the timber, and on hearing of this threatened
+mutilation of a favorite resort the French artists rallied to beg M.
+Thiers, like the character in General Morris's ballad, to "spare those
+trees." And well may they petition, for the forest contains nearly
+thirty-five thousand acres, abounding in beautiful and picturesque
+scenery. It can boast finer trees than any other French forest, while
+its meadows, lawns and cliffs furnish specimens of almost every plant
+and flower to be found in France. Now, when we add that its views are
+exceedingly varied, its rocks, ravines, plateaus and thickets
+each offering some entirely different and admirable study to the
+landscape-painters who frequent it in great numbers during the spring
+and autumn months (for it is only fourteen or fifteen leagues out of
+Paris, on the high road to Lyons), we have shown reason enough for the
+consentaneous action on the part of the men and women of the brush and
+pencil.
+
+The traveled reader will hardly need to be told that good judges
+consider the forest and castle to compose the finest domain in France.
+But there are also numberless historic reminiscences intertwined with
+Fontainebleau. And, by the way, it was originally known as the
+Forêt de Bierre, until some thirsty huntsmen, who found its spring
+deliciously refreshing, rebaptized it as Fontaine Belle Eau. Such, at
+least, is the old story. The first founding of a royal residence there
+dates at least as far back as the twelfth century, and possibly much
+farther, while the present château was begun by Francis I. in the
+sixteenth. So many famous historic events, indeed, have taken place
+within the precincts of the forest that the committee of "Protection
+Artistique" is pardonable in claiming that "Fontainebleau Forest ought
+to be ranked with those national historic monuments which must at all
+hazards be preserved for the admiration of artists and tourists," as
+well as of patriotic Frenchmen. What illustrations shall we select
+from among the events connected with it, about which a thousand
+volumes of history, poetry, art, science and romance have been
+composed? At Fontainebleau, Charles V. was royally feasted by Francis;
+there the Edict of Nantes was revoked; there Condé died; there the
+decree of divorce between Napoleon and Josephine was pronounced; and
+there the emperor afterward signed his own abdication. It is true
+that nobody proposes to demolish the castle, and that is the historic
+centre; but the petitioners claim that it is difficult and dangerous
+to attempt to divide the domain into historic and non-historic,
+artistic and non-artistic parts, with a view to its mutilation. There
+is ground for hoping that a favorable response will be given to the
+eloquent appeal of the artists and amateurs.
+
+The vanity of Victor Hugo, though always "Olympian," perhaps never
+mounted to a sublimer height than in the reply he sent to M. Catulle
+Mendes on receiving from him the news of Gautier's death. It contained
+but half a dozen lines, yet found space to declare, "Of the men of
+1830, _I alone am left_. It is now my turn." The profound egotism of
+"_il ne reste plus que moi_" could not escape being vigorously lashed
+by V. Hugo's old comrades of the quill, dating back with him to 1830,
+and now so loftily ignored. "See, even in his epistles of condolence,"
+they cry, "the omnipresent _moi_ of Hugo must appear, to overshadow
+everything else!" One indignant writer declares the poet to be a mere
+walking personal pronoun. Another humorously pities those still extant
+contemporaries of 1830 who, after having for forty years dedicated
+their songs and romances and dramas to Hugo, now learn from the
+selfsame maw which has greedily gulped their praises that they
+themselves do not exist, never did exist. One man of genius
+slyly writes: "Some of us veterans will find ourselves
+embarrassed--Michelet, G. Sand, Janin, Sandeau _et un pen moi_. Is it
+possible that we died a long time ago, one after the other, without
+knowing it? Was it a delusion on our part to fancy ourselves existing,
+or was our existence only a bad dream?" But to Victor Hugo even these
+complaints will perhaps seem to smoke like fresh incense on the altar
+of self-adulation which this great genius keeps ever lighted.
+
+The reader may remember the story of that non-committal editor who
+during the late canvass, desiring to propitiate all his subscribers of
+both parties, hoisted the ticket of "Gr---- and ----n" at the top
+of his column, thus giving those who took the paper their choice of
+interpretations between "Grant and Wilson" and "Greeley and Brown."
+A story turning on the same style of point (and probably quite as
+apocryphal, though the author labels it "_historique_") is told of an
+army officers' mess in France. A brother-soldier from a neighboring
+detachment having come in, and a _champenoise_ having been uncorked in
+his honor, "Gentlemen," said the guest, raising his glass, "I am about
+to propose a toast at once patriotic and political." A chorus of hasty
+ejaculations and of murmurs at once greeted him. "Yes, gentlemen,"
+coolly proceeded the orator, "I drink to a thing which--an object
+that--Bah! I will out with it at once. It begins with an _R_ and ends
+with an _e_."
+
+"Capital!" whispers a young lieutenant of Bordeaux promotion. "He
+proposes the _Republique_, without offending the old fogies by saying
+the word."
+
+"Nonsense! He means the _Radicale_," replies the other, an old captain
+from Cassel.
+
+"Upon my word," says a third as he lifts his glass, "our friend must
+mean _la Royaute_."
+
+"I see!" cries a one-legged veteran of Froschweiler: "we drink to _la
+Revanche_."
+
+In fact, the whole party drank the toast heartily, each interpreting
+it to his liking.
+
+In the hands of a Swift even so trivial an incident might be made
+to point a moral on the facility with which alike in theology
+and politics--from Athanasian Creed to Cincinnati or Philadelphia
+Platform--men comfortably interpret to their own diverse likings some
+doctrine that "begins with an _R_ and ends with an _e_," and swallow
+it with great unanimity and enthusiasm.
+
+Possibly the death of Mr. Greeley, after a prolonged delirium induced
+in part by political excitement, may add for Americans some fresh
+interest to the theory of a paper which just previous to that pathetic
+event M. Lunier had read before the Paris Academy of Medicine. The
+author confessed his statistics to be incomplete, but regarded them
+as ample for the decisive formulation of the proposition that great
+political crises tend to increase the number of cases of mental
+alienation. The leading point of his elaborate argument appears to
+be the classification of fresh cases of insanity developed since the
+beginning of the late French war. The strongest comparison is one
+indicating an excess of seven per cent, in the number of such cases,
+proportioned to the population in the departments conquered and
+occupied by the Germans, over those which they did not invade.
+Finally, M. Lunier reckons the cases of mental alienation induced
+by the late political and military events in France at from
+twelve hundred to fifteen hundred. Politics without war may, it is
+considered, produce the same results--results not at all surprising,
+of course, except as to their extent. As to this last, if M. Lunier's
+figures and deductions be correct, the mental strain of exciting
+politics is even more destructive than has been generally supposed.
+
+
+
+
+LITERATURE OF THE DAY.
+
+
+Gareth and Lynette. By Alfred Tennyson, D.C.L., Poet-Laureate. Boston:
+J.R. Osgood & Co.
+
+"With this poem the author concludes the Idyls of the King." The
+occasion is a tempting one to review the long series of Arthurian lays
+written by Tennyson, from the _Mort d' Arthur_, and the pretty song
+about Lancelot and Guinevere, and the first casting of "Elaine's"
+legend in the form of _The Lady of Shallot_, down to the present tale,
+flung like a capricious field flower into a wreath complete enough
+without it. The poet's first adventure into the subject--the
+mysterious, shadowy and elevated performance called the _Mort d'
+Arthur_--will probably be always thought the best. Tennyson, when
+he wrote it, was just trying the peculiarities of his style: he was
+testing the quality of his cadences, the ring of his long sententious
+lines repeated continually as refrains, and the trustworthiness of his
+artful, much-sacrificing simplicity. He put as it were a spot or two
+of pigment on the end of his painting-knife, and held it up into the
+air of the vaporous traditions of the Round Table. It stood the test,
+it had the color; but the artist, uncertain of his style, his public
+and his own liking, made a number of other tentatives before he
+could decide to go on in the manner he commenced with. He tried the
+_Guinevere_, laughing and galloping in its ballad-movement; he tried
+the _Shallot_, with a triple rhyme and a short positive refrain, like
+a bell rung in an incantation, and brought up every minute by a finger
+pressed upon the edge. Either of these three--although the metre of
+the first was the only one endurable by the ear in the case of a long
+series of poems--either of these had, it may be positively said, a
+general tone more suitable to the ancient feeling, and more consistent
+with the duty of a modern poet arranging for new ears the legends
+collected by Sir Thomas Malory, than the general tone of the present
+Idyls. Those first experiments, charged like a full sponge with the
+essence and volume of primitive legend, went to their purpose without
+retrospection or vacillation: each short tale, whether it laughed or
+moaned, promulgated itself like an oracle. The teller seemed to have
+been listening to the voice of Fate, and whether, Guinevere swayed the
+bridle-rein, or Elaine's web flew out and floated wide, or Lancelot
+sang tirra-lirra by the river, it was asserted with the positiveness
+of a Hebrew chronicle, which we do not question because it is history.
+But we hardly have such an illusion in reading the late Idyls. We
+seem to be in the presence of a constructor who arranges things, of a
+moralist turning ancient stories with a latent purpose of decorum, of
+an official Englishman looking about for old confirmations of modern
+sociology, of a salaried laureate inventing a prototype of Prince
+Albert. The singleness of a story-teller who has convinced himself
+that he tells a true story is gone. That this diversion into the
+region of didactics is accompanied, on our poet's part, with every
+ingenuity of ornament, and every grace of a style which people have
+learned to like and which he has made his own, need not be said.
+The Tennysonian beauties are all there. The work takes its place
+in literature, obscuring the Arthurian work of Dryden, as Milton's
+achievement of _Paradise Lost_ obscured the Italian work on the same
+subject which preceded it. The story is told, and the things of the
+Round Table can hardly be related again in English, any more than the
+tale of Troy could be sung again in Greek after the poem of Homer.
+But beauties do not necessarily compose into perfect Beauty, and
+the achievement of a task neatly done does not prevent the eye from
+wandering over the work to see if the material has been used to the
+best advantage. So, the reader who has allowed himself to rest long
+in the simple magic evoked by Malory or in the Celtic air of
+Villemarque's legends, will be fain to ask whether a man of Tennyson's
+force could not have given to his century a recasting which would have
+satisfied primitive credulity as well as modern subtility. There is
+an antique bronze at Naples that has been cleaned and set up in a
+splendid museum, and perhaps looks more graceful than ever; but the
+pipe that used to lead to the lips, and the passage that used to
+communicate with the priest-chamber, are gone, and nothing can
+compensate for them: it used to be a form and a voice, and now it is
+nothing but a form.
+
+We have just observed that in our opinion the first essays made by the
+Laureate with his Arthurian material had the best ring, or at least
+had some excellences lost to the later work. _Gareth and Lynette_,
+however, by its fluency and simplicity, and by not being overcharged
+with meaning, seems to part company with some of this overweighted
+later performance, and to attempt a recovery of the directness and
+spring of the start. It is, however, far behind all of them in a
+momentous particular; for in narrating _them_, the poet, while able to
+keep up his immediate connection with the source of tradition, and to
+narrate with the directness of belief, had still some undercurrent of
+thought which he meant to convey, and which he succeeded in keeping
+track of: Arthur and Guinevere, in the little song, ride along like
+primeval beings of the world--the situation seems the type of all
+seduction; the Lady of Shallot is not alone the recluse who sees life
+in a mirror, she is the cloistered Middle Age itself, and when her
+mirror breaks we feel that a thousand glasses are bursting, a thousand
+webs are parting, and that the times are coming eye to eye with the
+actual. In those younger days, Tennyson, possessed with a subject, and
+as it were floating in it, could pour out a legend with the credulity
+of a child and the clear convincing insight of a teacher: when he came
+in mature life to apply himself to the rounded work, he had more of a
+disposition to teach, and less of that imaginative reach which is
+like belief; and _now_ he is telling a story again for the sake of
+the story, but without the deeper meaning. Lynette is a supercilious
+damsel who asks redress of the knights of the Round Table: Gareth,
+a male Cinderella, starts from the kitchen to defend her, and after
+conquering her prejudices by his bravery, assumes his place as a
+disguised prince. It is a plain little comedy, not much in Tennyson's
+line: there are places where he tries to imitate the artless
+disconnected speech of youth; and here, as with the little nun's
+babble in _Guinevere_, and with some other passages of factitious
+simplicity, the poet makes rather queer work:
+
+ Gold? said I gold?--ay then, why he, or she,
+ Or whosoe'er it was, or half the world,
+ Had ventured--_had_ the thing I spake of been
+ Mere gold--but this was all of that true steel
+ Whereof they forged the brand Excalibur,
+ And lightnings played about it in the storm, etc.
+
+It may be questioned whether hap-hazard talk ever, in any age of human
+speech, took a form like that, though it is just like Tennyson in many
+a weary part of his poetry. The blank verse, for its part, is broken
+with all the old skill, and there are lines of beautiful license, like
+this:
+
+ Camelot, a city of shadowy palaces,
+
+or strengthened with the extra quantity, like this:
+
+ Stay, felon knight, I avenge me for my friend!
+
+or imitating the motion described, as these:
+
+ The hoof of his horse slept in the stream, the stream
+ Descended, and the Sun was washed away;
+
+but occasionally the effort to give variety leads into mere puzzles
+and disagreeable fractures of metre, such as the following quatrain:
+
+ Courteous or bestial from the moment,
+ Such as have nor law nor king; and three of these
+ Proud in their fantasy, call themselves the Day,
+ Morning-Star, and Noon-Sun, and Evening-Star.
+
+The first line in this quotation, if it be not a misprint of the
+American edition, can only be brought to any kind of rule by accenting
+each polysyllable on the last, and is not, when even that is done, a
+pleasant piece of caprice. There are plenty of phrases that shock
+the attention sufficiently to keep it from stagnating on the smooth
+surface of the verse; such are--"ever-highering eagle-circles," "there
+were none but few goodlier than he," "tipt with trenchant steel," and
+the expression, already famous, of "tip-tilted" for Lynette's nose; to
+which may be added the object of Gareth's attention, mentioned in the
+third line of the poem, when he "stared at the _spate_." But in the
+matter of descriptive power we do not know that the Laureate
+has succeeded better for a long time past in his touches of
+landscape-painting: the pictures of halls, castles, rivers and
+woods are all felicitous. For example, this in five lines, where the
+travelers saw
+
+ Bowl-shaped, through tops of many thousand pines,
+ A gloomy-gladed hollow slowly sink
+ To westward; in the deeps whereof a mere,
+ Round as the red eye of an eagle-owl,
+ Under the half-dead sunset glared; and cries
+ Ascended.
+
+Or this simple and beautiful sketch of crescent moonlight:
+
+ Silent the silent field
+ They traversed. Arthur's harp tho' summer-wan,
+ In counter motion to the clouds, allured
+ The glance of Gareth dreaming on his liege.
+ A star shot.
+
+It is still, perfect, and utterly simple sketches like these, thrown
+off in the repose of power, that form the best setting for a heroic
+or poetical action: what better device was ever invented, even by
+Tennyson himself, for striking just the right note in the reader's
+mind while thinking of a noble primitive knight, than that in another
+Idyl, where Lancelot went along, looking at a star, "_and wondered
+what it was"?_ Of a more imaginative kind of beauty are the
+descriptions of the walls of rock near Castle Dangerous, decked by the
+hermit with tinted bas-reliefs, and the fine one of Camelot, looking
+as if "built by fairy kings," with its city gate surmounted by the
+figures of the three mystic queens, "the friends of Arthur," and
+decked upon the keystone with the image of the Lady, whose form is
+set in ripples of stone and crossed by mystic fish, while her drapery
+weeps from her sides as water flowing away. The most charming part of
+the character-painting is where the shrewish Lynette, as her estimate
+of the scullion-knight gradually rises in view of his mighty deeds,
+evinces her kindlier mood, not directly in speech, but by catches of
+love-songs breaking out of the midst of her scornful gibes: this is
+a very subtle and suitable and poetical way of eliciting the
+under-workings of the damsel's mind, and it is continued through five
+or six pages in an interrupted carol, until at last the maiden, wholly
+won, bids him ride by her side, and finishes her lay:
+
+ O trefoil, sparkling on the rainy plain,
+ O rainbow, with three colors after rain,
+ Shine sweetly: thrice my love hath smiled on me.
+
+The allegory by which Gareth's four opponents are made to form a sort
+of stumbling succession representing Morn, Noon, Evening, and Night or
+Death, is hardly worth the introduction, but it is not insisted
+upon: the last of these knights, besieging Castle Perilous in a skull
+helmet, and clamoring for marriage with Lynette's sister Lyonors,
+turns out to be a large-sized, fresh-faced and foolish boy, who issues
+from the skull "as a flower new blown," and fatuously explains that
+his brothers have dressed him out in burlesque and deposited him as a
+bugbear at the gate. This is not very salutary allegorizing, but it
+is soon over, and the poem closed, leaving a pleasant perfume in the
+reader's mind of chivalry, errantry and the delicious days before the
+invention of civilization.
+
+
+
+Handbook of the History of Philosophy. By Dr. Albert Schwegler.
+Translated arid annotated by James Hutchison Stirling, LL.D. New York:
+Putnam.
+
+Spinoza teaches that "substance is God;" but, says Mr. Matthew Arnold,
+"propositions about substance pass by mankind at large like the idle
+wind, which mankind at large regards not: it will not even listen to
+a word about these propositions, unless it first learns what their
+author was driving at with them, and finds that this object of his
+is one with which it sympathizes." There is no way of getting the
+multitude to listen to Spinoza's _Ethics_ or Plato's _Dialectics_ but
+something is gained when a man of science like Dr. Schwegler happens
+to possess the gift of fluent and easy statement, and can pour into a
+work like the present, which is the expansion of a hasty encyclopaedia
+article, the vivacity of current speech, and the impulse which gives
+unity to a long history while it excludes crabbed digressions. It
+happens that the American world received the first translation of
+Schwegler's _History_ _of Philosophy_; and it may be asked, What need
+have Americans of a subsequent version by a Scotch doctor of laws? The
+answer is, that Mr. Seelye's earlier rendering was taken from a first
+edition, and that the present one includes the variations made in five
+editions which have now been issued. Even on British ground the work
+thus translated has reached three editions, and the multitude of
+"mankind at large," hearing of these repeated editions in Edinburgh
+and of twenty thousand copies sold in Germany, may begin to prick
+up its ears, and to think that this is one of the easily-read
+philosophies of modern times, of which Taine and Michelet have the
+secret. It is not so: abstractions stated with scientific precision in
+their elliptic slang or technicality are not and cannot be made easy
+reading: the strong hands of condensation which Schwegler pressed down
+upon the material he controlled so perfectly have not left it lighter
+or more digestible. The reader of this manual, for instance, will be
+invited to consider the Eleatic argumentation that nothing exists but
+Identity, "which is the beënt, and that Difference, the non-beënt,
+does not exist; and therefore that he must not only not go on talking
+about difference, but that he must not allude to difference as being
+anything but the non-beënt; for if he casts about for a synonym, and
+arrives at the notion that he may say non-existent for non-beënt, he
+is abjectly wrong, for beënt does not mean existent, and non-beënt
+non-existent, but it must be considered that the beënt is strictly the
+non-existent, and the existent the non-beënt." Such are the amenities
+of expression into which an eloquent metaphysician, trying his best
+to speak popularly, is led. Yet the book is readable to that orderly
+application of the mind which such studies exact, and is the firmest
+and strictest guide now speaking our English tongue. Its steady
+attention to the business in hand, from the pre-Socratic philosphies
+down through the great age of the Greek revival, to Germany and Hegel
+at last, is most sustained and admirable. Indeed, few thinkers of
+Anglo-Saxon birth are able even to praise such a book as it deserves.
+The only real impediment to its acceptance by scholars of our race is
+that its attention to modern philosophy is rather partial, the French
+and the Germans getting most of the story, and English philosophers
+like Locke and Hume receiving scant attention, while Paley is not
+recognized. This class of omissions is attended to by the Scotch
+translator in a mass of annotations which lead him into a broad and
+interesting view of British philosophy, in the course of which he has
+some severe reflections on the ignorance of Mr. Lewes and Mr. Mill. On
+account of these valuable notes, and also for the alterations made
+by Schwegler himself, we feel that we must invite American scholars
+possessing the Seelye translation to replace it or accompany it by
+this present version, which is a cheap and compassable volume.
+
+
+
+Joseph Noirel's Revenge. By Victor Cherbuliez. Translated from the
+French by Wm. F. West, A.M. New York: Holt & Williams.
+
+M. Victor Cherbuliez belongs to a Genevese family long and honorably
+connected with literature in the capacity of publishers both at Paris
+and Geneva. It is in the latter town and the adjacent region that the
+scene of the present story--the first, we believe, of the author's
+works which has found its way into English--is laid; and much of
+its charm is derived from the local coloring with which many of the
+characters and incidents are invested. Even the quiet home-life of
+so beautiful and renowned a place cannot but be tinted by reflections
+from the incomparable beauties of its surroundings, and from the
+grand and vivid passages of its singularly picturesque history. The
+subordinate figures on the canvas have accordingly an interest greater
+than what arises from their commonplace individualities and their
+meagre part in the action--like barndoor fowls pecking and clucking
+beside larger bipeds in a walled yard steeped in sunlight. But the
+sunlight which gives a delicious warmth and brightness to the earlier
+chapters of the novel is soon succeeded by gloom and tempest. The
+interest is more and more concentrated on the few principal persons;
+and the action, which at the outset promised to be light and amusing,
+with merely so much of tenderness and pathos as may belong to the
+higher comedy, becomes by degrees deeply tragical, and ends in a
+catastrophe which is saved from being horrible and revolting only by
+the shadows that forecast and the softening strains that attend it. In
+point of construction and skillful handling the story is as effective
+as French art alone could have made it, while it has an under-meaning
+rendered all the more suggestive by being left to find its way into
+the reader's reflections without any obvious prompting. The heroine,
+sole child of a prosperous bourgeois couple, stands between two
+lovers--one the last relic of a noble Burgundian family; the other a
+workman with socialist tendencies. Marguerite Mirion is invested with
+all the fascination which beauty of face, simplicity of mind, purity
+of soul, sweetness of disposition and joyousness of spirit can impart.
+Yet she is, and feels herself to be, entirely _bourgeoise,_ longing
+for no ideal heights, worldly or spiritual, ready for all ordinary
+duties, content with simple and innocent pleasures, rinding in the
+life, the thoughts, the occupations and enjoyments of her class all
+that is needed to make the current of her life run smoothly and to
+satisfy the cravings of her bright but gentle nature. It is in simple
+obedience to the will of her parents that she marries Count Roger
+d'Ornis, and is carried from her happy home at Mon-Plaisir to a
+dilapidated castle in the Jura, where there are no smiling faces or
+loving hearts to make her welcome--where, on the contrary, she meets
+only with haughty, spiteful or morose looks and a chilling and gloomy
+atmosphere. It is from sheer necessity that she accepts the aid
+of Joseph Noirel, her father's head-workman, whose ardent spirit,
+quickened by the consciousness of talent, but rendered morbid by the
+slights which his birth and position have entailed, has been plunged
+into blackest night by the loss of the single star that had illumined
+its firmament. Count Roger is not wholly devoid of honor and
+generosity; but he has no true appreciation of his wife, and will
+sacrifice her without remorse to save his own reputation. Joseph, on
+the other hand, is ready to dare all things to protect her from
+harm; but he cannot forego the reward which entails upon her a deeper
+misery. It is Marguerite alone who, in the terrible struggle of fate
+and of clashing interests and desires, rises to the height of absolute
+self-abnegation; and this not through any sudden development of
+qualities or intuitions foreign to her previous modes of thought,
+but by the simple application of these to the hard and complicated
+problems which have suddenly confronted her. Herein lies the novelty
+of the conception and the lesson which the author has apparently
+intended to convey. See, he seems to say, how the bourgeois nature,
+equally scorned by the classes above and below it as the embodiment of
+vulgar ease and selfishness, contains precisely the elements of true
+heroism which are wanting alike in those who set conventional rules
+above moral laws and in those who revolt against all restrictions. The
+book is thus an apology for a class which is no favorite with poets
+or romancers; but, as we have said, the design is only to be inferred
+from the story, and may easily pass unnoticed, at least with American
+readers. The character of Noirel is powerfully drawn, but it is less
+original than that of the heroine, belonging, for example, to the
+same type as the hero of _Le Rouge et le Noir_--"ce Robespierre de
+village," as Sainte-Beuve, we believe, calls him.
+
+
+
+Homes and Hospitals; or, Two Phases of Woman's Work, as exhibited in
+the Labors of Amy Button and Agnes E. Jones. Boston: American Tract
+Society; New York: Hurd & Houghton.
+
+Doubtless we should not, though most of us do, feel a tenderness for
+the Dorcas who proves to be a lady of culture and distinction, rather
+different from the careless respect we accord to the Dorcas who has
+large feet and hands, and mismanages her _h_'s. In this elegant little
+book "Amy" is the descendant of influential patrons and patronesses,
+and "Agnes" is the lovely saint whom Miss Nightingale calls "Una,"
+though her high-bred purity and lowly self-dedication rather recall
+the character of Elizabeth of Hungary. Agnes, in Crook lane and
+Abbot's street, encounters old paupers who have already enjoyed the
+bounty of her ancestress's (Dame Dutton) legacy. When she becomes
+interested in the old Indian campaigner, Miles, she is able to procure
+his admission to Chelsea through the influence of "my brother, Colonel
+Dutton." She lightens her watches by reading Manzoni's novel,
+_I Promessi Sposi,_ she quotes Lord Bacon, and compares the
+hospital-nurses to the witches in _Macbeth_. These mental and
+social graces do not, perhaps, assist the practical part of her
+ministrations, but they undoubtedly chasten the influence of
+her ministrations on her own character. It is as a purist and an
+aristocrat of the best kind that Miss Dutton forms within her own mind
+this resolution: "If the details of evil are unavoidably brought under
+your eye, let not your thoughts rest upon them a moment longer than is
+absolutely needful. Dismiss them with a vigorous effort as soon as you
+have done your best to apply a remedy: commit the matter into higher
+Hands, then turn to your book, your music, your wood-carving, your pet
+recreation, whatever it is. This is one way, at least, of keeping the
+mind elastic and pure." And with the discretion of rare breeding she
+carries into the haunts of vice and miserable intrigue the Italian
+byword: _Orecchie spalancate, e bocca stretta_. A similar elevation,
+but also a sense that responsibility to her caste requires the most
+tender humility, may be found in "Una." When about to associate with
+coarse hired London nurses at St. Thomas's Hospital, she asks herself,
+"Are you more above those with whom you will have to mix than our
+Saviour was in every thought and sensitive refinement?" It was by
+such self-teaching that these high-spirited girls made their life-toil
+redound to their own purification, as it did to the cause of humanity.
+The purpose served by binding in one volume the district experiences
+of Miss Dutton and the hospital record of Miss Jones is that of
+indicating to the average young lady of our period a diversity of ways
+in which she may serve our Master and His poor. With "Amy" she may
+retain her connection with society, and adorn her home and her circle,
+all the while that she reads the Litany with the decayed governess or
+_Golden Deeds_ to the dying burglar. With "Agnes" she may plunge into
+more heroic self-abnegation. Leaving the fair attractions of the world
+as utterly as the diver leaves the foam and surface of the sea, she
+may grope for moral pearls in the workhouse of Liverpool or train
+for her sombre avocation in the asylum at Kaiserwerth. Such absolute
+dedication will probably have some effect on her "tone" as a lady. She
+can no longer keep up with the current interests of society. Instead
+of Shakespeare and Italian literature, which we have seen coloring
+the career of the district visitor, her life will take on a sort of
+submarine pallor. The sordid surroundings will press too close for any
+gleam from the outer world to penetrate. The things of interest will
+be the wretched things of pauperdom and hospital service--the slight
+improvement of Gaffer, the spiritual needs of Gammer, the harsh
+tyranny of upper nurses. "To-day when out walking," says the brave
+young lady, as superintendent of a boys' hospital, "I could only keep
+from crying by running races with my boys." The effect of a training
+so rigid--training which sometimes includes stove-blacking and
+floor-washing--is to try the pure metal, to eject the merely
+ornamental young lady whose nature is dross, and to consolidate
+the valuable nature that is sterling. Miss Agnes, plunged in hard
+practical work, and unconsciously acquiring a little workmen's slang,
+gives the final judgment on the utility of such discipline: "Without
+a regular hard London training I should have been nowhere." Both the
+saints of the century are now dead, and these memoirs conserve the
+perfume of their lives.
+
+
+
+Songs from the Old Dramatists. Collected and Edited by Abby Sage
+Richardson, New York: Hurd & Houghton.
+
+Any anthology of old English lyrics is a treasure if one can depend
+upon the correctness of printing and punctuating. Mrs. Richardson has
+found a quantity of rather recondite ones, and most of the favorites
+are given too. Only to read her long index of first lines is to catch
+a succession of dainty fancies and of exquisite rhythms, arranged when
+the language was crystallizing into beauty under the fanning wings of
+song. That some of our pet jewels are omitted was to be expected.
+The compiler does not find space for Rochester's most sincere-seeming
+stanzas, beginning, "I cannot change as others do"--among the sweetest
+and most lyrical utterances which could set the stay-imprisoned hearts
+of Charles II.'s beauties to bounding with a touch of emotion. Perhaps
+Rochester was not exactly a dramatist, though that point is wisely
+strained in other cases. We do not get the "Nay, dearest, think me
+not unkind," nor do we get the "To all you ladies now on land," though
+sailors' lyrics, among the finest legacies of the time when gallant
+England ruled the waves, are not wanting. We have Sir Charles Sedley's
+
+ "Love still hath something of the sea
+ From which his mother rose,"
+
+and the siren's song, fit for the loveliest of Parthenopes, from
+Browne's _Masque of the Inner Temple_, beginning,
+
+ "Steer, hither steer your winged pines,
+ All beaten mariners!"--
+
+songs which severally repeat the fatigue of the sea or that daring
+energy of its Elizabethan followers which by a false etymology we term
+chivalrous. We do not find the superb lunacy of "Mad Tom of Bedlam" in
+the catch beginning, "I know more than Apollo," but we have something
+almost as spirited, where John Ford sings, in _The Sun's Darling_,
+
+ "The dogs have the stag in chase!
+ 'Tis a sport to content a king.
+ So-ho! ho! through the skies
+ How the proud bird flies,
+ And swooping, kills with a grace!
+ Now the deer falls! hark! how they ring."
+
+For what is pensive and retrospective in tone we are given a song
+of "The Aged Courtier," which once in a pageant touched the finer
+consciousness of Queen Elizabeth. The unemployed warrior, whose
+"helmet now shall make a hive for bees," treats the virgin sovereign
+as his saint and divinity, promising,
+
+ "And when he saddest sits in holy cell,
+ He'll teach his swains this carol for a song:
+ Blest be the hearts that wish my sovereign well!
+ Cursed be the souls that think her any wrong!
+ Goddess! allow this aged man his right
+ To be your beadsman now, that was your knight."
+
+The feudal feeling can hardly be more beautifully expressed.
+
+From the devotion that was low and lifelong we may turn to the
+devotion that was loud and fleeting. The love-songs are many and well
+picked: one is the madrigal from Thomas Lodge's _Eitphues' Golden
+Legacy,_ which "he wrote," he says, "on the ocean, when every line
+was wet with a surge, and every humorous passion counterchecked with
+a storm;" and which (the madrigal) had the good fortune to suggest and
+name Shakespeare's archest character, Rosalind. We cannot dwell
+upon this perfumed chaplet of love-ditties. Mrs. Richardson is here
+doubtless in her element, but she does not always lighten counsel
+with the wisdom of her words; for instance, when, in Beaumont and
+Fletcher's "Beauty clear and fair," she makes an attempted emendation
+in the lines--
+
+ "Where to live near,
+ And planted there,
+ Is still to live and still live new;
+ Where to gain a favor is
+ More than light perpetual bliss;
+ Oh make me live by serving you."
+
+On this the editress says: "I have always been inclined to believe
+that this line should read: 'More than _life_, perpetual bliss.'" The
+image here, where the whole figure is taken from flowers, is of being
+planted and growing in the glow of the mistress's beauty, whose favor
+is more fructifying than the sun, and to which he immediately begs
+to be recalled, "back again, to this _light_." To say that living
+anywhere is "more than life" is a forced bombastic notion not in
+the way of Beaumont and Fletcher, but coming later, and rather
+characteristic of Poe, with his rant about
+
+ "that infinity with which my wife
+ Was dearer to my soul than its soul-life."
+
+Mrs. Richardson's notes, in fact, contradict the impression of
+thoroughness which her selecting, we are glad to say, leaves on the
+mind. She is aware that the "Ode to Melancholy" in _The Nice Valour_
+begins in the same way as Milton's "Pensieroso," but she does not seem
+to know that the latter is also closely imitated from Burton's poem in
+his _Anatomy of Melancholy_. And she quotes John Still's "Jolly Good
+Ale and Old" as a "panegyric on old sack," sack being sweet wine.
+
+The publishers have done their part, and made of these drops of oozed
+gold what is called "an elegant trifle" for the holidays. Mr. John La
+Farge, a very "advanced" sort of artist and illustrator, has furnished
+some embellishments which will be better liked by people of broad
+culture, and especially by enthusiasts for Japanese art, than they
+will be by ordinary Christmas-shoppers, though the frontispiece to
+"Songs of Fairies," representing Psyche floating among water-lilies,
+is beautiful enough and obvious enough for anybody.
+
+
+
+
+
+_Books Received._
+
+
+A Concordance to the Constitution of the United States of America. By
+Charles W. Stearns, M.D. New York: Mason, Baker & Pratt.
+
+The Standard: A Collection of Sacred and Secular Music. By L.O.
+Emerson and H. R. Palmer. Boston: Oliver Ditson & Co.
+
+Gems of Strauss: A Collection of Dance Music for the Piano. By Johann
+Strauss. Boston: Oliver Ditson & Co.
+
+The Greeks of To-Day. By Charles K. Tuckerman. New York: G.P. Putnam &
+Sons.
+
+The Eustace Diamonds. By Anthony Trollope. New York: Harper &
+Brothers.
+
+How to Paint. By F.B. Gardner. New York: Samuel R. Wells.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Lippincott's Magazine Of Popular
+Literature And Science, No. 23, February, 1873, Vol. XI., by Various
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13636 ***
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+<body>
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13636 ***</div>
+
+ <h1>LIPPINCOTT'S MAGAZINE</h1>
+
+ <h3>OF</h3>
+
+ <h2><i>POPULAR LITERATURE AND SCIENCE.</i></h2>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <h4>FEBRUARY, 1873.<br />
+ Vol. XI., No. 23.</h4>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+
+ <h3>TABLE OF CONTENTS</h3>
+
+ <div class="toc">
+
+ <p><a href="#illustrations">ILLUSTRATIONS</a></p>
+
+ <p><a href="#H_4_0001">SEARCHING FOR THE QUININE-PLANT IN
+ PERU.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4"><a href="#H_4_0026">Concluding
+ Paper.</a></p>
+
+ <p><a href="#H_4_0002">A GLANCE AT THE SITE AND
+ ANTIQUITIES OF ATHENS By J.L.T. PHILLIPS.</a></p>
+
+ <p><a href="#H_4_0003">COMMONPLACE By CONSTANCE
+ FENIMORE WOOLSON.</a></p>
+
+ <p><a href="#H_4_0004">PROBATIONER LEONHARD; OR, THREE
+ NIGHTS IN THE HAPPY VALLEY By CAROLINE CHESEBRO.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4"><a href="#HCH0001">Chapter IV.&mdash;The
+ Test&mdash;With Mental Reservations.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4"><a href="#HCH0002">Chapter V.&mdash;Sister
+ Benigna.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4"><a href="#HCH0003">Chapter VI.&mdash;The Men
+ Of Spenersberg.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4"><a href="#HCH0004">Chapter VII.&mdash;The
+ Book.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4"><a href="#HCH0005">CHAPTER
+ VIII.&mdash;Conference Meeting.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4"><a href="#HCH0006">CHAPTER IX.&mdash;Will
+ The Architect Have Employment?</a></p>
+
+ <p><a href="#H_4_0011">COUNTRY-HOUSE LIFE IN ENGLAND
+ By REGINALD WYNFORD.</a></p>
+
+ <p><a href="#H_4_0012">THE FOREST OF ARDEN By ITA
+ ANIOL PROKOP.</a></p>
+
+ <p><a href="#H_4_0013">JACK, THE REGULAR By THOMAS
+ DUNN ENGLISH.</a></p>
+
+ <p><a href="#H_4_0014">OBSERVATIONS AND ADVENTURES IN
+ SUBMARINE DIVING By WILL WALLACE HARNEY.</a></p>
+
+ <p><a href="#H_4_0015">CONFIDENTIAL.</a></p>
+
+ <p><a href="#H_4_0016">GLIMPSES OF JOHN CHINAMAN By
+ PRENTICE MULFORD.</a></p>
+
+ <p><a href="#H_4_0017">A WINTER REVERIE By MILLIE W.
+ CARPENTER.</a></p>
+
+ <p><a href="#H_4_0018">"PASSPORTS, GENTLEMEN!" By
+ A.H.</a></p>
+
+ <p><a href="#H_4_0019">OUR MONTHLY GOSSIP.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4"><a href="#H_4_0027">The Cornwallis
+ Family.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4"><a href="#H_4_0020">Novelties In
+ Ethnology.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4"><a href="#H_4_0021">The
+ Steam-whistle.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4"><a href="#H_4_0022">Siamese News.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4"><a href="#H_4_0023">Madison As A Temperance
+ Man.</a></p>
+
+ <p><a href="#H_NOTE">NOTES.</a></p>
+
+ <p><a href="#H_4_0025">LITERATURE OF THE DAY.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4"><a href="#H_4_0028">Books Received.</a></p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+ <br />
+ <a name="illustrations"
+ id="illustrations"></a>
+
+ <h4>ILLUSTRATIONS</h4>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#image-0001">The Cones of
+ Patabamba.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#image-0002">"Pepe Garcia,
+ Who Marched Ahead, Announced the Print Of A South American
+ Tiger."</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#image-0003">"Napoleon-like,
+ They Washed Their Dirty Linen in The Family"</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#image-0004">"Aragon and his
+ Men Fell Upon the Deserters Without Mercy."</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#image-0005">"They Greeted
+ These Indian Relics As Crusoe Did The Footprints of the
+ Savages."</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#image-0006">"Another Savage
+ Had Found a Pair of Linen Pantaloons."</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#image-0007">View of the
+ Acropolis and The Columns Of The Temple Of Jupiter
+ Olympus.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#image-0008">Theatre of
+ Dionysus (Bacchus).</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#image-0009">Victory Untying
+ Her Sandals.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#image-0010">Temple of
+ Victory.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#image-0011">The
+ Parthenon.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#image-0012">Bas Relief of
+ the Gods (Frieze Of The Parthenon).</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#image-0013">Porch of the
+ Caryatides.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#image-0014">Monument of
+ Lysicrates.</a></p><br />
+ <hr />
+ <a name="H_4_0001"
+ id="H_4_0001"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h2>SEARCHING FOR THE QUININE-PLANT IN
+ PERU.</h2><a name="H_4_0026"
+ id="H_4_0026"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h3>CONCLUDING PAPER.</h3>
+
+ <p>Early on a brilliant morning, with baggage repacked, and the
+ lessening amount of provisions more firmly strapped on the
+ shoulders of the Indians, the explorers left their pleasant
+ site on the banks of the Maniri. The repose allowed to the bulk
+ of the party during the absence of their Bolivian companions
+ had been wholesome and refreshing. The success of the
+ bark-hunters in their search for cinchonas had cheered all
+ hearts, and the luxurious supper of dried mutton and chuno
+ arranged for them on their return gave a reminiscence of
+ splendor to the thatched hut on the banks of the stream. This
+ edifice, the last of civilized construction they expected to
+ see, had the effect of a home in the wilderness. The bivouac
+ there had been enjoyed with a sentiment of tranquil
+ carelessness. Little did the travelers think that savage eyes
+ had been peeping through the forest upon their fancied
+ security, and that the wild people of the valleys who were to
+ work them all kinds of mischief were upon their track from this
+ station forth.</p>
+
+ <p>The enormous fire kindled for breakfast mingled with the
+ stain of sunrise to cast a glow upon their departure. Across
+ the vale of the Cconi, as though a pair of sturdy porters had
+ arisen to celebrate their leavetaking, the cones of Patabamba
+ caught the first rays of the sun and held them aloft like
+ hospitable torches. These huge forms, soldered together at the
+ waist like Chang and Eng, and clothed with shaggy woods up to
+ the top, had been the guardian watchers over their days in the
+ ajoupa at Maniri. The sun just rising empurpled their double
+ cones, while the base and the surrounding landscape were washed
+ with the neutral tints of twilight.</p>
+
+ <p>After passing the narrow affluent after which the
+ camping-ground of Maniri was named, the party pursued the
+ course of the Cconi through a more level tract of country. The
+ stones and precipices became more rare, but in revenge the
+ sandy banks soon began to reflect a heat that was hardly
+ bearable. As the implacable sun neared its zenith the party
+ walked with bent heads and blinded eyes, now dashing through
+ great plains of bamboos, now following the hatchets of the
+ peons through thickets of heated shrubbery.</p>
+
+ <p>Whenever the country became more wooded in its character,
+ the bark-hunters, whose quest obliged them to stray in short
+ flights around the wings of the column, redoubled their mazes.
+ The careless air of these Bolivian retrievers, their voluntary
+ doublings through the most difficult jungles, and their easy
+ way of walking over everything with their noses in the air,
+ proved well their indifference to the obstacles which were
+ almost insurmountable to the rest.</p><a name="image-0001"
+ id="image-0001"><!--IMG--></a>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/0215.jpg"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/0215.jpg"
+ alt="The Cones of Patabamba" /></a> The Cones of
+ Patabamba
+ </div><!--IMAGE END-->
+
+ <p>Nothing could be more singular and interesting than to see
+ them consulting one by one the indications scattered around
+ them, and deciding on their probabilities or promises. Where
+ the height and thickness of the foliage prevented them from
+ seeing the sky, or even the shade of the surrounding green,
+ they walked bent toward the ground, stirring up the rubbish,
+ and choosing among the dead foliage certain leaves, of which
+ they carefully examined the two sides and the stem. When by
+ accident they found themselves near enough to speak to each
+ other&mdash;a rare chance, for each peon undertook a separate
+ line of search&mdash;they asked their friends, showing the
+ leaves they had found, whether their discoveries appertained to
+ the neighboring trees or whether the wind had brought the
+ pieces from a distance. This kind of investigation, pursued by
+ men who had prowled through forests all their lives, might seem
+ slightly puerile if the reader does not understand that it is
+ often difficult, or even impossible, to recognize the growing
+ tree by its bark, covered as it is from base to branches with
+ parasitic vegetation of every sort. In those forests whatever
+ has a stout stem is used without scruple by the bignonias and
+ air-plants, which race over the trunk, plant their root-claws
+ in the cracks, leap over the whole tree at a single jet, or
+ strangle it with multiplied knots, all the while adorning it
+ with a superb mantle of leaves and blossoms. This is a
+ difficulty which the most experienced <i>cascarilleros</i> are
+ not able to overcome. As an instance, the history is cited of a
+ <i>practico</i> or speculator who led an exploration for these
+ trees in the valley of Apolobamba. After having caused to be
+ felled, barked, measured, dried and trimmed all the cinchonas
+ of one of those natural thickets called <i>manchas</i>&mdash;an
+ operation which had occupied four months&mdash;he was about to
+ abandon the spot and pursue the exploration elsewhere, when
+ accident led him to discover, in the enormous trunk buried in
+ creepers against which he had built his cabin, a <i>Cinchona
+ nitida</i>, the forefather of all the trees he had
+ stripped.</p>
+
+ <p>In this kind of search the caravan pursued the borders of
+ the river, sometimes on this side and sometimes on that, now
+ passing the two-headed mountain Camanti, now sighting the
+ tufted peak of Basiri, now crossing the torrent called the
+ Garote. In the latter, where the dam and hydraulic works of an
+ old Spanish gold-hunter were still visible in a state of ruin,
+ the sacred golden thirst of Colonel Perez once more attacked
+ him. Two or three pins' heads of the insane metal were actually
+ unearthed by the colonel and displayed in a pie-dish; but the
+ business of the party was one which made even the finding of
+ gold insignificant, and they pursued their way.</p>
+
+ <p>The flanks of these mountains, however, were really of
+ importance to the botanical motive of the expedition. Along the
+ side of the Camanti, where the yellow Garote leaked downward in
+ a rocky ravine, the Bolivians were again successful. They
+ brought to Marcoy specimens of half a dozen cinchonas, for him
+ to sketch, analyze and decorate with Latin names. The colors of
+ two or three of these barks promised well, but the pearl of the
+ collection was a specimen of the genuine <i>Calisaya</i>, with
+ its silver-gray envelope and leaf ribbed with carmine. This
+ proud discovery was a boon for science and for commerce. It
+ threw a new light upon the geographical locality of the most
+ precious species of cinchona. It was incontestably the plant,
+ and the Bolivians appeared amazed rather than pleased to have
+ discovered outside of their own country a kind of bark proper
+ only to Bolivia, and hardly known to overpass the northern
+ extremity of the valley of Apolobamba. This discovery would
+ rehabilitate, in the European market, the quinine-plants of
+ Lower Peru, heretofore considered as inferior to those of Upper
+ Peru and Bolivia. The latter country has for some time secured
+ the most favorable reputation for its barks&mdash;a reputation
+ ably sustained by the efforts of the company De la Paz, to whom
+ the government has long granted a monopoly. This reputation is
+ based on the abundance in that country of two species, the
+ <i>Cinchona calisaya</i> and <i>Boliviana,</i> the best known
+ and most valued in the market. But for two valuable cinchonas
+ possessed by Bolivia, Peru can show twenty, many of them
+ excellent in quality, and awaiting only the enterprise of the
+ government and the natural exhaustion of the forests to the
+ south.</p>
+
+ <p>This magnificent bit of luck, the finding of the calisaya,
+ awakened in the susceptible bosom of Mr. Marcoy an ardent
+ desire to explore for himself the site of its discovery. But
+ Eusebio, the chief of the cascarilleros, assuming a mysterious
+ and warning expression, informed the traveler that the place
+ was quite inaccessible for a white man, and that he had risked
+ his own neck a score of times in descending the ravine which
+ separated the route from the hillside where the fortunate
+ plants were growing. He promised, however, to point out the
+ locality from afar, and to show, by a certain changeable gloss
+ proper to the leaf, the precise stratum of the calisaya amongst
+ the belts of the forest. This promise he forgot to execute more
+ particularly, but it appeared that the locality would never be
+ excessively hard to find, marked as it was by Nature with the
+ gigantic finger-post of Mount Camanti. Placing, then, in
+ security these precious specimens among their baggage, the
+ explorers continued their advance along the valley.</p>
+
+ <p>The footing was level and easy. Rocks and precipices were
+ left behind, and were displaced by a soft, slippery sort of
+ sand, where from space to space were planted, like so many
+ oases in a desert, clumps of giant reeds. By a strange but
+ natural caprice these beds of rustling verdure were cut in an
+ infinity of well-defined geometric forms. Seen from an eminence
+ and at a distance, this arrangement gave a singular effect. In
+ the midst of these native garden-beds were cut distinct and
+ narrow alleys, where the drifting sands were packed like
+ artificial paths. It is unnecessary to add that the soft
+ footways, notwithstanding their advertisement of verdure and
+ shade, proved to be of African temperature.</p>
+
+ <p>The last hours of daylight surprised the travelers among the
+ labyrinths of these strange gardens. A suitable spot was chosen
+ for the halt. As the porters were preparing to throw down their
+ packs, Pepe Garcia, who marched ahead, announced the print of a
+ South American tiger. The first care of the Indians, on hearing
+ this news, was to send forth a horrible cry and to throng
+ around the marks. The footprints disappeared at the thickest
+ part of the jungle. After an examination of the traces, which
+ resembled a large trefoil, they precipitated themselves on the
+ interpreter-in-chief, representing how impossible it was to
+ camp out in the neighborhood of the dreaded animal. But Pepe
+ Garcia, accustomed as he was by profession to try his strength
+ with the ferocious bear and the wily boar, was not the man to
+ be afraid of a tiger, even of a genuine tiger from Bengal. To
+ prove to the porters how slight was the estimation he placed on
+ the supposed enemy, and also to drill them in the case of
+ similar rencounters, he pushed the whole troop pellmell into
+ the thickest part of the reeds, with the surly order to cut
+ down the canes for sheds. Drawing his own knife, he slashed
+ right and left among the stems, which the Indians, trembling
+ with fear, were obliged to make into sheaves on the spot and
+ transport to the beach selected for the bivouac. Double rows of
+ these <i>arundos</i>, driven into the sand, formed the
+ partitions of the cabins, for which their interwoven leaves
+ made an appropriate thatch. The green halls with matted vaults
+ were picturesque enough; each peon, seeing how easily they were
+ constructed, chose to have a house for himself; and the Tiger's
+ Beach quickly presented the appearance of a camp disposed in a
+ long straight line, of which the timorous Indians occupied the
+ extremity nearest the river.</p>
+
+ <p>No "tiger" appeared to justify the apprehensions of the
+ porters; but what was lacking to their fears from beasts with
+ four feet was made up to them by beasts with wings. The night
+ closed in dry and serene. Since leaving Maniri, whether because
+ of the broadening of the valley, the rarity of the
+ water-courses or the decreasing altitude of the hills, the
+ adventurers had been little troubled with fogs at night. The
+ fauna of the region, too, had offered nothing of an alarming
+ complexion, except the footprints of the tiger in question: an
+ occasional tapir or peccary from the woods, and otters and fish
+ from the streams, had attracted the shots of the party, but
+ merely as welcome additions to their game-bags, not as food for
+ their fears. To-night, however, the veritable bugbear of the
+ tropical forest paid them a visit, and left a real souvenir of
+ his presence. As the Indian servants stretched themselves out
+ in slumber under the bright stars and in the partial shelter of
+ their ajoupas, a bat of the vampire species, attracted by the
+ emanations of their bodies, came sailing over them, and
+ emboldened by the silence reigning everywhere, selected a
+ victim for attack. Hovering over the fellow's exposed foot, he
+ bit the great toe, and fanning his prey in the traditional yet
+ inevitable manner by the natural movement of his wings, he
+ gorged himself with blood without disturbing the mozo. The
+ latter, on awakening in the morning, observed a slight swelling
+ in the perforated part, and on examination discovered a round
+ hole large enough to admit a pea. Without rising, the man
+ summoned his companions, who formed a group around him for the
+ purpose of furnishing a certain natural remedy in the shape of
+ a secretion which each one drew out of his ears. With this the
+ patient made himself a plaster for his wound, and appeared to
+ think but little of it. Questioned as to his sensations by the
+ white travelers, who found themselves a good deal more
+ disturbed with the idea of the vampire than they had been by
+ any indications of tigers or wild-boars, the fellow explained
+ that he had felt no sensation, unless it might have been an
+ agreeable coolness of his sand-baked feet. The incident seemed
+ so disagreeable and so likely of recurrence that Colonel Perez
+ ever afterward slept with his feet rolled up in a variety of
+ fantastic draperies, while Mr. Marcoy for several nights
+ retained his boots.</p><a name="image-0002"
+ id="image-0002"><!--IMG--></a>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/0216.jpg"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/0216.jpg"
+ alt="'Pepe Garcia, Who Marched Ahead, Announced the Print Of A South American Tiger.'" />
+ </a> 'Pepe Garcia, Who Marched Ahead, Announced the Print
+ Of A South American Tiger.'
+ </div><!--IMAGE END-->
+
+ <p>The path along the river-sands would have been voluntarily
+ followed by all the more irresponsible portion of the party,
+ notwithstanding the blinding heats, on account of its smoother
+ footing. The cascarilleros, however, objected that its tufts of
+ canes and passifloras offered no promise for their researches.
+ A compromise was effected. The porters, under the command of
+ Juan of Aragon, were allowed to follow the shore, and were
+ armed with a supply of fish-hooks to induce them to add from
+ time to time to the alarmingly diminished supply of provisions.
+ The grandees of the party followed the Bolivians, whose
+ specialty entitled them to control practically the direction of
+ the route, and plunged into the woods to botanize, to explore
+ and to search for game. A system of conversation by means of
+ shouts and pistol-shots was established between the two
+ divisions. The next night proved the wisdom of this
+ bifurcation. The united booty of earth, air and water, under
+ the form of a squirrel, a pair of toucans and a variety of
+ fish, afforded a meal which the porters described as <i>comida
+ opipara</i> or a sumptuous festival. Lulled and comforted by
+ the sensation which a contented stomach wafts toward the brain,
+ the explorers, after washing their hands and rinsing their
+ mouths at the riverside, betook themselves to a cheerful repose
+ <i>sub jove</i>, the locality offering no reeds of the
+ articulated species with which to construct a shelter.</p>
+
+ <p>The party, then, betook themselves to slumber with unusual
+ contentment, repeating the splendid supper in their dreams,
+ with the addition of every famous wine that Oporto and Rheims
+ could dispense, when they were awakened by a sudden and
+ terrible storm. A waterspout stooped over the forest and sucked
+ up a mass of crackling branches. The camp-fire hissed and went
+ out in a fume of smoke. A continuity of thunder, far off at
+ first, but approaching nearer and nearer, kept up a constant
+ and increasing fusillade, to whose reports was soon added the
+ voice of the Cconi, lashed in its bed and bellowing like the
+ sea. The surprising tumult went on in a <i>crescendo</i>. The
+ hardly-interrupted charges of the lightning gave to the eye a
+ strange vision of flying woods and soaring branches. Startled,
+ trembling and sitting bolt upright, the adventurers asked if
+ their last hour were come. The rain undertook to answer in
+ spinning down upon their heads drops that were like bullets,
+ and which for some time were taken for hail. Fearing to be
+ maimed or blinded as they sat, the party crowded together,
+ placing themselves back to back; and, unable to lay their heads
+ under their wings like the birds, sheltered them upon their
+ knees under the protection of their crossed arms. The fearful
+ deluge of heated shot lasted until morning. Then, as if in
+ laughter, the sun came radiantly out, the landscape readjusted
+ its disheveled beauties, and the ground, covered with boughs
+ distributed by the whirlwind, greedily drank in the waters from
+ heaven. Soon there remained nothing of the memorable tempest
+ but the diamonds falling in measured cadence from the refreshed
+ and stiffened leaves.</p>
+
+ <p>Up to sunrise the unfortunates rested stoically silent,
+ their knees in their mouths, and receiving the visitation like
+ a group of statuary. The rain ceasing with the same promptitude
+ with which it had risen, they raised their heads and looked
+ each other in the face, like the enemies over the fire in
+ Byron's <i>Dream</i>. Each countenance was blue, and decorated
+ with long flat locks of adhesive hair. The teeth of the whole
+ party were chattering like a concert of castanets. The sun,
+ like a practical joker, laughed ironically at the general
+ picture.</p>
+
+ <p>The first hours of morning were consecrated to a general
+ examination of the stores, especially the precious specimens of
+ cinchona. Bundles were restrapped, the damp provisions laid out
+ in the sun, and the clothing of the party, even to the most
+ intimate garment, was taken down to the river to be refreshed
+ and furbished up. A common disaster had created a common cause
+ amongst the whole troop, and with one accord
+ everybody&mdash;peons, mozos, interpreters, bark-strippers and
+ gentlemen&mdash;set in motion a grand cleaning-up day.
+ Napoleon-like, they washed their dirty linen in the family.
+ Whoever had seen the strangers coming and going from the beach
+ to the woods, clothed in most abbreviated fashion, and seeming
+ as familiar to the uniform as if they had always worn it under
+ the charitable mantle of the woods, would have taken them for a
+ savage tribe in the midst of its encampment. It is probable
+ they were so seen.</p>
+
+ <p>Thanks to the intense heat of the sun-shine, the garments
+ and baggage of the expedition were quickly dried. The first
+ were donned, the last was loaded on the porters, and the line
+ of march was taken up. Up to noon the road lay along the
+ blazing sands under a sun of fire. All the members of the party
+ felt fresh and hardy after the involuntary bath, except one of
+ the Indians, who was affected with a kind of ophthalmia. This
+ attack, which Mr. Marcoy attributed partly to the glare, partly
+ to the wet, and partly to a singular hobby peculiar to the
+ individual of sleeping with his eyes wide open, was of no long
+ duration. The pain which he complained of disappeared with a
+ few hours of exercise and with the determination he showed in
+ staring straight at the god of day, who, as if in memory of the
+ worship formerly extended toward him in the country, deigned to
+ serve as oculist for the sufferer. A little before sunset halt
+ was made for the night-camp in the centre of a beach protected
+ by clumps of reeds in three quarters of the wind. The Indian
+ porters, despatched for fish and firewood, returned suddenly
+ with a frightened mien to say that they had fallen into the
+ midst of a camp of savages. The white men quickly rejoined them
+ at the spot indicated, where they found a single hut in ruins,
+ made of reeds which appeared to have been cut for the
+ construction some fortnight before, and strewn with
+ fire-brands, banana skins and the tail of a large fish. Pepe
+ Garcia, consulted on these indications, explained that it was
+ in reality the camping-place of some of the savage Siriniris,
+ but that the narrowness of the hut seemed to indicate that not
+ more than two of the Indians, probably a man and woman, had
+ resided there during a short fishing-excursion.</p>
+
+ <p>This discovery cast a shade over the countenances of the
+ porters. After having collected the provisions necessary for a
+ slender supper, they drew apart, and, while cooking was going
+ on, began to converse with each other in a low voice. No notice
+ was taken of their behavior, however, though it would have
+ required little imagination to guess the subject of their
+ parliament. The tired eyes of the explorers were already
+ closed, while their ears, more alert, could hear the confused
+ murmur proceeding from the Indians' quarter, where the
+ disposition seemed to be to prolong the watch
+ indefinitely.</p><a name="image-0003"
+ id="image-0003"><!--IMG--></a>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/0219.jpg"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/0219.jpg"
+ alt="'Napoleon-like, They Washed Their Dirty Linen in The Family'" />
+ </a> 'Napoleon-like, They Washed Their Dirty Linen in The
+ Family'
+ </div><!--IMAGE END-->
+
+ <p>The dark hours filed past, and jocund day, according to
+ Shakespeare and Romeo, stood tiptoe on the mountain-tops of
+ Camanti and Basiri, when the travelers were awakened by a
+ fierce and terrible cry. Lifting their heads in astonishment,
+ they perceived the faithful Pepe Garcia, his face disfigured
+ with rage, and his fist shaking vigorously in the direction of
+ the Indians, who sat lowering and sullen in their places.
+ Aragon and the cascarilleros, collected around the chief
+ interpreter, far from trying to calm his anger, appeared to
+ feed it by their suggestions. An explanation of the scene was
+ demanded. Eight of the bearers, it appeared, had deserted,
+ leaving to their comrades the pleasure of watching over the
+ packages of cinchona, but assuming for their part the charge of
+ a good fraction of the provisions, which they had disappeared
+ with for the relief of their fellow-porters. This copious
+ bleeding of the larder drew from Colonel Perez a terrible oath,
+ and occasioned a more vivid sentiment in the entrails of Marcoy
+ than the defection of the men. If the evil was grand, the
+ remedy was correspondingly difficult. Indolent or mercurial at
+ pleasure, the Indians had doubtless threaded the woods with
+ winged feet, and were now far away. Mr. Marcoy proposed
+ therefore to continue the march without them, but to set down a
+ heavy account of bastinadoes to their credit when they should
+ turn up again at Marcapata. This proposition, as it erred on
+ the side of mercy, was unanimously rejected, and a
+ scouting-party was ordered in pursuit, consisting of the
+ bark-hunters and Juan of Aragon, to whom for the occasion Pepe
+ Garcia confided his remarkable
+ fowling-piece.</p><a name="image-0004"
+ id="image-0004"><!--IMG--></a>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:75%;">
+ <a href="images/0220.jpg"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/0220.jpg"
+ alt="'Aragon and his Men Fell Upon the Deserters Without Mercy.'" />
+ </a> 'Aragon and his Men Fell Upon the Deserters Without
+ Mercy.'
+ </div><!--IMAGE END-->
+
+ <p>In the afternoon the extemporized police reappeared. The
+ fugitives had been found tranquilly sitting on the banks of the
+ river, distending their abdomens with the stolen preserves and
+ chocolate. Aragon and his men fell upon the deserters without
+ mercy. The former, battering away at them with the stock of his
+ gun, and the latter, exercising upon their shoulders whatever
+ they possessed in the way of lassoes, axe-handles and
+ sabre-blades, maintained the argument effectually for some time
+ in this way, and did not descend to questions until muscular
+ fatigue caused them to desist. The catechism subsequently put
+ to the porters elicited the reply, from the spokesman of the
+ recusants, that they were tired of being afraid of the wild
+ Indians; that they objected to marching into the dens of
+ tigers; that, perceiving their rations diminished from day to
+ day, they had imagined the time not far distant when the same
+ would be withdrawn altogether. It was curious, as it seemed to
+ Marcoy when the argument was rehearsed to him presently, that
+ the fellows made no complaint of being footsore, overcharged
+ with burdens or conducted into paths too difficult for them. A
+ lurking admiration for the vigor with which, after all, they
+ played their crushing part of beasts of burden, procured them
+ immunity from further punishment after their return. Their
+ bivouacs were simply watched on the succeeding nights by
+ Bolivian sentinels.</p>
+
+ <p>After a few minutes allowed the strayed sheep to rub their
+ bruises, the march was continued. The afternoon afforded a
+ succession of the same sandy riverbanks, dressed with reeds,
+ false maize, calceolarias and purple passion-flowers, and
+ yielding for sole booty a brace of wild black ducks, and an
+ opossum holding in her pouch five saucy and scolding little
+ ones. The natural civet employed as a cosmetic by this animal
+ forbade the notion of using it for food, and it was thrown with
+ its family into the river, after being deprived of its glossy
+ skin.</p>
+
+ <p>As evening approached, and as all eyes were exploring the
+ banks for a suitable camping-ground, a spacious and even beach
+ was fixed upon as offering all the requisite conveniences. It
+ was agreed to halt there. Attaining the locality, however, they
+ were amazed to find all the traces of a previous occupation.
+ Several sheds, formed of bamboo hurdles set up against the
+ ground with sticks, like traps, were grouped together. Under
+ each was a hearth, a simple excavation, two feet across and a
+ few inches deep, and filled with ashes. A few arrows, feathers
+ and rude pieces of pottery were scattered around. They greeted
+ these Indian relics as Crusoe did the footprints of the
+ savages. Nor was it more reassuring to observe, among other
+ callers like themselves who had left their visiting-cards at
+ the doors since the departure of the proprietors, the
+ sign-manual of jaguars and tapirs, whose footprints were
+ plainly visible on the gravel.</p>
+
+ <p>A close examination was made of every detail pertaining to
+ the huts and their accessories, and the interpreters were asked
+ if it would be prudent to encamp in a spot thus leased in
+ advance. Pepe Garcia and Aragon were of opinion that it would
+ be better to pass the night there, assuring their employers
+ that there would be no danger in sleeping among the teraphim of
+ the savages, provided that nothing was touched or displaced.
+ Their motion was promptly adopted, to the great discomfiture of
+ the porters, who were poised on one foot ready for flight. A
+ salute of five shots was fired, with a vague intention of
+ giving any listeners the highest possible opinion of the white
+ explorers as a military power. An enormous fire was kindled,
+ sentinels were posted, and the party turned in, taking care,
+ however, during the whole night to close but one eye at a
+ time.</p><a name="image-0005"
+ id="image-0005"><!--IMG--></a>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/0222.jpg"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/0222.jpg"
+ alt="'They Greeted These Indian Relics As Crusoe Did The Footprints of the Savages.'" />
+ </a> 'They Greeted These Indian Relics As Crusoe Did The
+ Footprints of the Savages.'
+ </div><!--IMAGE END-->
+
+ <p>Day commenced to blush, when all ears were assaulted by a
+ concerted howl, proceeding from behind a bed of canes on the
+ other side of the river. "<i>Alerta! los Chunchos!</i>" cried
+ the sentinel. The three words produced a startling effect: the
+ porters sprang up like frightened deer; Mr. Marcoy grasped a
+ sheaf of pencils and a box of water-colors with a warlike air,
+ and the colonel's lips were crisped into a singular smile,
+ indicative of lively emotions. Hardly were the travelers
+ clothed and armed when the reeds parted with a rattling noise,
+ and three nude Indians, sepia-colored and crowned with tufts of
+ hair like horses' tails, leaped out like jacks-in-the-box. At
+ sight of the party standing to receive them they redoubled
+ their clamor, then, flourishing their arms and legs and turning
+ continually round, they gradually revolved into the presence of
+ the explorers. They selected as chiefs and sachems of the party
+ such as bore weapons, being the colonel, Marcoy and the two
+ interpreters. These they clasped in a warm, fulsome embrace:
+ they were smeared from head to foot with rocoa (crude arnotta),
+ and their passage through the river having dissolved this
+ pigment, they printed themselves off, in this act of amity,
+ upon the persons and clothing of their hosts. While the white
+ men, with a very bad grace, were cleaning off these tokens of
+ natural affection, the new-comers went on to present their
+ civilities all around. Two of the porters they recognized at
+ once, with their eagle eyesight, from having relieved them of
+ their shirts while the latter were working out some penalty at
+ the governor's farm of Sausipata, and proceeded to claim a warm
+ acquaintance on that basis; but the bearers, with equally
+ lively memories of the affront, responded simply with a frown
+ and the epithet of <i>Sua-sua</i>&mdash;double thief.</p>
+
+ <p>Pepe Garcia undertook a colloquy, and Aragon, not to be
+ behindhand, flashed a few words across the conversation, right
+ and left as it were, his expressions appearing to be in a
+ different tongue from those used by the chief interpreter, and
+ both utterly without perceptible resemblance to the rolling
+ consonants and gutturals of the savages. Marcoy imbibed a
+ strong impression that the only terms understood in common were
+ the words of Spanish with which the palaver was thickly
+ interlarded. This was the first time the interpreters were put
+ on their mettle in a strictly professional sense, and the test
+ was not altogether triumphant. However, by a careful raising of
+ the voice in all difficult passages, and a wild, expressive
+ pantomime, an understanding was arrived at.</p>
+
+ <p>The visitors belonged to the tribe of Siriniris, inhabiting
+ the space comprised between the valleys of Ocongate and
+ Ollachea, and extending eastwardly as far as the twelfth
+ degree. They lived at peace with their neighbors, the
+ Huat-chipayris and the Pukiris. For several days the reports of
+ the Christian guns (<i>tasa-tasa</i>) had advertised them of
+ the presence of white men in the valley, and, curious to judge
+ of their numbers, they had approached. They had formed a
+ cunning escort to the party, always faithful but never seen,
+ since the encampment at Maniri: every camping-ground since that
+ particular bivouac they faithfully described. They were, of
+ course, in particular and direful need of <i>sirutas</i> and
+ <i>bambas</i> (knives and hatchets), but their fears of the
+ <i>tasa-tasa</i>, or guns, was still stronger than their
+ desires, and their courage had not, until they saw the
+ strangers domiciled as guests in their own habitations,
+ attained the firmness and consistency necessary for a personal
+ approach. The three dancing ambassadors were ministers
+ plenipotentiary on the part of their tribe, located in a bamboo
+ metropolis five miles off.</p>
+
+ <p>The white men could not well avoid laying down their
+ <i>tasa-tasa</i> and disbursing <i>sirutas</i> and
+ <i>bambas</i>. The savages, after this triumph of diplomacy,
+ suddenly turned, and, thrusting their fingers in their mouths,
+ emitted a shrill note, which had the effect of enchanting the
+ forest of rushes across the river, and causing it to give birth
+ to a whole ballet of naked coryphei. Nine men, seven women and
+ three dogs composed the spectacle, of which the masculine part,
+ the human and the canine, proceeded to swim the stream and
+ fraternize with the strangers. The women rested on the bank
+ like river-nymphs: their costume was somewhat less prudish than
+ that of the men, the coat of rocoa being confined to their
+ faces, which were further decorated with joints of reed thrust
+ through the nose and ears. A glance of curiosity darted across
+ the water by the colonel was surprised in its flight by the
+ ambassadors, who addressed a hasty word or two to their ladies:
+ the latter, with one quick and cat-like gesture, whipped off
+ each a branch of the nearest foliage, and were dressed in a
+ single instant.</p>
+
+ <p>To reward all these vociferous mendicants with the
+ invaluable cutlery was hardly prudent. Seeing the hesitation of
+ their visitors, the savages adopted other tactics. Hurling
+ themselves across the river, they quickly reappeared, armed
+ with all the temptations they could think of to induce the
+ strangers to barter. The scene of these savages coming to
+ market was a picturesque one. Entering the water, provided with
+ their objects of exchange, which they held high above their
+ heads, and swimming with the right arm only, they began to cut
+ the river diagonally. The lifting of the waves and the dash of
+ spray almost concealed the file of dusky heads. Nothing could
+ be plainly seen but the left arms, standing out of the water as
+ stiff and inflexible as so many bars of bronze, relieved
+ against the silvery brightness of the water. These advancing
+ arms were adorned with the material of traffic&mdash;bird-skins
+ of variegated colors, bows and arrows, and live tamed parrots
+ standing upon perches of bamboo. The white spectators could not
+ but admire the native vigor, elegance and promptitude of their
+ motions as they rose from the water like Tritons, and, throwing
+ their treasures down in a heap, bounded forward to give their
+ visitors the conventional signals of friendship. A rapid
+ bargain was concluded, in which the sylvan booty of the wild
+ men (not forgetting the prudent exaction of their weapons) was
+ entirely made over to the custody of the explorers in exchange
+ for a few Birmingham knives worth fourpence each.</p>
+
+ <p>However curious and amicable might be their new relations
+ with the savages, the party were desirous to put an end to them
+ as soon as possible. Pepe Garcia announced that the pale
+ chiefs, wishing to resume their march, were about to separate
+ from them. This decision appeared to be unpleasant or
+ distressful in their estimation, and they tried to reverse it
+ by all sorts of arguments. No answer being volunteered, they
+ shouted to their women to await them, and betook themselves to
+ walking with the party. One of the three ambassadors, a
+ graceful rogue of twenty-five, marked all over with rocoa and
+ lote, so as to earn for himself the nickname of "the Panther,"
+ gamboled and caracoled in front of the procession as if to give
+ it an entertainment. His two comrades had garroted with their
+ arms the neck of the chief interpreter: another held Juan of
+ Aragon by the skirt of his blouse, and regulated his steps by
+ those of the youth. This accord of barbarism and civilization
+ had in it something decidedly graceful, and rather pathetic: if
+ ever the language natural to man was found, the medium in
+ circulation before our sickly machinery of speech came to be
+ invented, it was in this concert of persuasive action and
+ tender cooing notes. The main body of the Siriniris marched
+ pellmell along with the porters, whom this vicinage made
+ exceedingly uncomfortable, and who were perspiring in great
+ drops.</p>
+
+ <p>At the commencement of a wood the whites embraced the
+ occasion to take formal leave of their new acquaintances. As
+ they endeavored to turn their backs upon them they were at once
+ surrounded by the whole band, crying and gesticulating, and
+ opposing their departure with a sort of determined
+ playfulness.</p>
+
+ <p>At the same time a word often repeated, the word
+ <i>Huatinmio</i>, began to enter largely into their
+ conversation, and piqued the curiosity of the historiographer.
+ Marcoy begged the interpreter to procure him the explanation of
+ this perpetual shibboleth. Half by signs, half in the polyglot
+ jargon which he had been employing with the Siriniris, Garcia
+ managed to understand that the word in question was the name of
+ their village, situated at a small distance and in a direction
+ which they indicated. In this retreat, they said, no
+ inhabitants remained but women, children and old men, the rest
+ of the braves being absent on a chase. They proposed a visit to
+ their capital, where the strangers, they said, honored and
+ cherished by the tribe, might pass many enviable days.</p>
+
+ <p>The proposed excursion, which would cause a loss of
+ considerable time and a deflection from the intended route, was
+ declined in courteous terms by Marcoy through the
+ interpretation of Pepe Garcia. Among civilized folk this urbane
+ refusal would have sufficed, but the savages, taking such a
+ reply as a challenge to verbal warfare, returned to the charge
+ with increased tenacity. It were hard to say what natural logic
+ they put in practice or what sylvan persuasions they wrought
+ by, but their peculiar mode of stroking the white men's backs
+ with their hands, and the softer and still softer inflections
+ which they introduced into their voices, would have melted
+ hearts of marble. In brief, the civilized portion adopted the
+ more weakly part and allowed themselves to be led by the savage
+ portion.</p>
+
+ <p>The colonel and Pepe Garcia were still more easily persuaded
+ than Mr. Marcoy, and only awaited his adhesion. When it was
+ finally announced the Siriniris renewed their gambols and
+ uttered shouts of delight. They then took the head of the
+ excursion. A singularity in their guides, which quickly
+ attracted the notice of the explorers, was the perfect
+ indifference with which they took either the clearings or the
+ thickets in their path. Where the strangers were afraid of
+ tearing their garments, these unprotected savages had no care
+ whatever for their skins. It is true that their ingenuity in
+ gliding through the labyrinth resembled magic. However the
+ forest might bristle with undergrowth, they never thought of
+ breaking down obstacles or of cutting them, as the equally
+ practiced Bolivians did, with a knife. They contented
+ themselves with putting aside with one hand the tufts of
+ foliage as if they had been curtains or draperies, and that
+ with an easy decision of gesture and an elegance of attitude
+ which are hardly found outside of certain natural tribes.</p>
+
+ <p>The city of Huatinmio proved to be a group of seven large
+ sheds perched among plaintains and bananas, divided into
+ stalls, and affording shelter for a hundred individuals. The
+ most sordid destitution&mdash;if ignorance of comfort can be
+ called destitution&mdash;reigned everywhere around. The women
+ were especially hideous, and on receipt of presents of small
+ bells and large needles became additionally disagreeable in
+ their antics of gratitude. The bells were quickly inserted in
+ their ears, and soon the whole village was in
+ tintinnabulation.</p>
+
+ <p>A night was passed in the hospitality of these barbarians,
+ who vacated their largest cabin for their guests. A repast was
+ served, consisting of stewed monkey: no salt was used in the
+ cookery, but on the other hand a dose of pimento was thrown in,
+ which brought tears to the eyes of the strangers and made them
+ run to the water-jar as if to save their lives. The evening was
+ spent in a general conversation with the Siriniris, who were
+ completely mystified by the form and properties of a candle
+ which Mr. Marcoy drew from his baggage and ignited. The wild
+ men passed it from hand to hand, examining it, and singeing
+ themselves in turn. Still another marvel was the sheet of paper
+ on which the artist essayed a portrait of one of his hosts. The
+ finished sketch did not appear to attract them at all, or to
+ raise in their minds the faintest association with the human
+ form, but the texture and whiteness of the sheet excited their
+ lively admiration, and they passed it from one to another with
+ many exclamations of wonder. Meantime, a number of questions
+ were suggested and proposed through the interpreter.</p>
+
+ <p>The formality of marriage among the Siriniris was found to
+ be quite unknown; the most rudimentary idea of divine worship
+ could not be discovered; the treatment of the aged was shown to
+ be contemptuous and neglectful in the extreme; and the lines of
+ demarcation with the beasts seemed to be but feebly traced.
+ Finally, Mr. Marcoy begged the interpreter to propound the
+ delicate inquiry whether, among the viands with which they
+ nourished or had formerly nourished themselves, human flesh had
+ found a place. Garcia hesitated, and at first declined to push
+ the interrogation, but after some persuasion consented. The
+ Siriniris were not in the least shocked at the question, and
+ answered that the flesh of man, especially in infancy, was a
+ delicious food, far better than the monkey, the tapir or the
+ peccary; that their nation, in the days of its power,
+ frequently used it at the great feasts; but that the difficulty
+ of procuring such a rarity had increased until they were now
+ forced to strike it from their bill of fare.</p>
+
+ <p>The night passed without disturbance, and the next day's
+ parting was accompanied by reiterated requests for a repetition
+ of the visit. The Panther, who since their arrival had
+ oppressed the travelers with a multitude of officious
+ attentions, escorted them into the woods, and there took leave
+ of them with a gesture of his hand, relieving their eyes of his
+ slippery, snake-like robe of spots. A knife from their stores,
+ slung round his neck like a locket, smote his breast at each
+ step as he danced backward, and a couple of large fish-hooks
+ glanced in his ears.</p>
+
+ <p>With a feeling of relief and satisfied curiosity the
+ exploring party left behind them the traces of these children
+ of Nature, and returned toward the river. The cascarilleros,
+ all for their business, had regretted the waste of time, and
+ now betook themselves to an examination of the woods with all
+ their energy. After several hours of march their efforts were
+ crowned with success. Eusebio presently rejoined his employers,
+ showing leaves and berries of the <i>Cinchona scrobiculata</i>
+ and <i>pubescens</i>: the peons, on their side, had discovered
+ isolated specimens of the <i>Calisaya</i>, which, joined with
+ those found on Mount Camanti, indicated an extended belt of
+ that precious species. This was not the best. A veritable
+ treasure which they had unearthed, worth all the others put
+ together, was a line of those violet cinchonas which the native
+ exporters call <i>Cascarilla morada</i>, and the botanists
+ <i>Cinchona Boliviana</i>. The trees of this kind were grouped
+ in threes and fours, and extended for half a mile. This
+ repeated proof that the most valuable of all the cinchonas,
+ together with nearly every one of the others, were to be
+ discovered in a small radius along the valley of the Cconi,
+ filled the explorers with triumph, and demonstrated beyond a
+ doubt the sagacity of Don Santo Domingo in organizing the
+ expedition.</p>
+
+ <p>The purpose and intention of the journey was now abundantly
+ fulfilled. Had the travelers rested satisfied with the liberal
+ indications they had found, and consented to place themselves
+ between the haunts of the savages and the abodes of
+ civilization, with a tendency and determination toward the
+ latter, they might have returned with safety as with glory. The
+ estimate made by Eusebio, however, of the trend or direction of
+ the calisaya groves, induced him to forsake the bed of the
+ Cconi, and strike south-eastwardly, so as to cross the Ollachea
+ and the Ayapata.</p>
+
+ <p>"But the mountains are disappearing," hazarded Mr. Marcoy.
+ "Will not the cinchonas disappear with them?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh," answered the majordomo, like a pedagogue to a
+ confident school-boy, "the se&ntilde;or knows better how to put
+ ink or color on a sheet of paper than how to judge of these
+ things. The plain, the <i>campo llano</i>, is far enough to the
+ east. Before we should see the disappearance of the mountains,
+ we should have to cross as many hills and ravines as we have
+ left behind us."</p>
+
+ <p>"What do you think of doing, then?" naturally demanded
+ Marcoy, who had long since begun to feel that the expedition
+ had but one chief, and that was the sepia-colored cascarillero
+ from Bolivia,</p>
+
+ <p>"Everything and nothing," answered Eusebio.</p>
+
+ <p>These enigmas always carry the day. The apparatus of march
+ was once more set in motion toward the adjacent water-sheds.
+ After a considerable journey&mdash;rewarded, it must be said,
+ with a succession of cinchona discoveries&mdash;they halted
+ near a clearing in the forest, where large heaps of stones and
+ pebbles, arranged in semicircles, attracted their attention.
+ The cascarilleros explained this appearance as due to former
+ arrangements for gold-washing in an old river-bed, the San
+ Gavan or the Ayapata, that had now changed its locality.</p>
+
+ <p>While examining the unusual appearance an abominable clamor
+ burst from the woods around, and a band of Siriniris appeared,
+ led by a lusty ruffian crowned with oriole feathers, whom the
+ travelers recognized as having been among their previous
+ acquaintances.</p>
+
+ <p>The encounter was very disagreeable, but the strangers
+ determined to make the best of it. The manner of this band of
+ Indians was somewhat different from that of the others. They
+ brought nothing for barter, and had an indescribably coarse and
+ hardy style of behavior.</p>
+
+ <p>The travelers determined to buy a little information, if
+ nothing better, with their knives and fish-hooks. Garcia was
+ accordingly instructed to demand the meaning of the heaps and
+ causeways of stones. The savages laughed at first, but finally
+ informed the visitors that the constructions which puzzled them
+ so had been made by people of their own race many years ago,
+ for the purpose of gathering gold from the river which used to
+ run along there, but which now flowed seven miles off.</p>
+
+ <p>This information was dear to the historic instinct of
+ Marcoy. He spoke, by his usual proxy, to the Indian of the
+ oriole, commanding him not to begin every explanation by
+ laughing, as he had been doing, but to answer intelligently,
+ promising a reward of several knives. The savage exchanged a
+ rapid glance with his fellows, and then he and they stood up as
+ stiff and mute as the trees. Marcoy then asked him if he had
+ never heard his father or his grandfather speak of the great
+ city of San Gavan, built hereabouts formerly by the Spanish
+ chevaliers, and which the Caranga and Suchimani Indians from
+ the Inambari River had destroyed by fire.</p>
+
+ <p>The evident recognition of this legend by the savages, and
+ their rapid exchange among themselves of the words <i>sacapa
+ huayris Ipa&ntilde;os</i>, induced Marcoy to ask if they could
+ guide them to the site of the former city. They answered that a
+ day's march would be sufficient, and pointed with their arms in
+ the direction of north-north-west.</p>
+
+ <p>The temptation to see the place whose golden renown, after
+ having made the tour of the American continent, had reached
+ Spain and the world at large, was too strong to be resisted.
+ Colonel Perez, besides the magic attraction which the mention
+ of gold had for him, felt his national pride touched by the
+ idea of a place where his compatriots had added such
+ magnificence to the Spanish name, and gained so many ingots of
+ gold by paddling in the streams. The cascarilleros were
+ delighted to extend their journey, in hopes of yet larger
+ discoveries. As for the porters, since the manifestations of
+ the savages they clung to the party with as much anxiety as
+ they had ever shown to escape from it.</p>
+
+ <p>In 1767 the city of San Gavan, remaining intact amid the
+ ruin of all its neighbors, was the sole disburser of the riches
+ of the Caravaya Valley. The gold-dust, collected throughout the
+ whole territory on a government monopoly, was brought thither
+ upon the backs of Indians, melted into ingots, and distributed
+ to Lima and the world at large. On the night of the 15th and
+ 16th of December in that year the wealthy city was fired by the
+ Carangas and the Suchimanis, and all the inhabitants slain with
+ arrows or clubs. The first lords of the soil had resumed their
+ rights.</p>
+
+ <p>When the news of the event was brought to Lima, the viceroy
+ of the period, Antonio Amat, swore on a piece of the true cross
+ to exterminate every Indian in Peru. It is to the persuasions
+ of his favorite, Mariquita Gallegas, that the preservation of
+ the native tribes from a bloody extirpation is due. This woman,
+ <i>La Perichola</i>, whose caricatured likeness we see in the
+ most agreeable of Offenbach's operas, and whose deeds of mercy
+ and edifying end in a convent entitle her to some charitable
+ consideration, persuaded her royal lover to operate on the
+ natives with missionaries and teachers rather than with fire
+ and sword. Antonio Amat yielded, and the Indians have
+ survived.</p><a name="image-0006"
+ id="image-0006"><!--IMG--></a>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:70%;">
+ <a href="images/0224.jpg"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/0224.jpg"
+ alt="'Another Savage Had Found a Pair of Linen Pantaloons.'" />
+ </a> 'Another Savage Had Found a Pair of Linen Pantaloons.'
+ </div><!--IMAGE END-->
+
+ <p>Let no traveler go to South America and cross the Andes with
+ the idea of unearthing a Nineveh or a Babylon on the site of
+ San Gavan. The emissaries of Don Santo Domingo were quickly
+ standing, among the grinning and amused Indians, on the
+ locality of the Golden Depot of San Gavan. But Nature had
+ thoroughly reclaimed her own, and the place, indicated again
+ and again by the savages with absolute unanimity, showed
+ nothing but mounds of fern and moss under canopies of forest
+ trees.</p>
+
+ <p>A day's rest and a sketch or two were consecrated by Marcoy
+ to this historic spot, the grave of a civilization. It had been
+ well if he had restrained his feelings of romance, and betaken
+ himself with his companions to the homeward track.</p>
+
+ <p>As the explorers were breakfasting in the morning on a
+ squirrel and a couple of birds shot among the vanished streets
+ of San Gavan, a disagreeable incident supervened. The wild
+ Indians had disappeared over-night. But now, seemingly born
+ instantaneously from the trees, a throng of Siriniris burst
+ upon the scene, rushing up to the travelers, straining them
+ repeatedly in a rude embrace, then leaving them, then
+ assaulting them again, and accompanying every contact with the
+ eternal cry, <i>Siruta inta menea</i>&mdash;"Give me a knife."
+ Each member of the troop had now six savages at his heels, and
+ they were not those of the day before, but a new and rougher
+ band. The chiefs of the party rushed together and brandished
+ their muskets. This forced the savages to retire, but gave to
+ the rencounter that hostile air which, in consideration of the
+ disparity of numbers, ought at all hazards to have been
+ avoided. The wild men quickly formed a circle around the
+ artillery. The latter, fearing for their porters and the
+ precious baggage, leaped through this circle and joined their
+ servants, making believe to cock their fire-arms. Upon this the
+ Indians, half afraid of the guns, vanished into the woods,
+ first picking up whatever clothing and utensils they could lay
+ their hands on. In an instant they were showing these trophies
+ to their rightful owners from a safe distance, laughing as if
+ they would split their sides. One of the naked rascals had
+ seized a flannel undershirt of the colonel's, which was drying
+ on a branch. His efforts to introduce his great feet into the
+ sleeves were excruciating. Another savage had found a pair of
+ linen pantaloons, which he was endeavoring to put on like a
+ coat, appearing much embarrassed with the posterior portion,
+ which completely masked his face. Aragon had seen a young
+ reprobate of his own age make off with a pair of socks of his
+ property. Detecting the rogue half hidden by a tree, the mozo
+ made a sortie, seized the Indian, and by a violent shake
+ brought the property out of his mouth, where it had been
+ concealed as in a natural pocket.</p>
+
+ <p>The travelers immediately threw themselves into marching
+ order and took up their line of route. The savages followed. At
+ the first obstacle, a mass of matted trees, they easily
+ rejoined the party of whites.</p>
+
+ <p>Then, for the first time, the idea of their power seemed to
+ strike them, and they precipitated themselves upon the porters,
+ who took to flight, rolling from under their packs like animals
+ of burden. In a moment every article of baggage, every knife
+ and weapon, was seized, and the red-skins, singing and howling,
+ were making off through the woods. Among them was now seen the
+ Siriniri with orioles' feathers, who must have guided them to
+ their prey.</p>
+
+ <p>The expedition was pillaged, and pillaged as a joke. The
+ thieves were heard laughing as they scampered off like deer
+ through the woods.</p>
+
+ <p>It was hard to realize at once the gravity of the
+ misfortune. No one was hurt, no one was insulted. But
+ provisions, clothing, articles of exchange and weapons were all
+ gone, except such arms and ammunition as the travelers carried
+ on their persons. A collection of cinchonas was in possession
+ of one of the Bolivians, though it represented but a fraction
+ of the species discovered. The besiegers, however, had
+ disappeared, and a westerly march was taken up. Good time was
+ made that day, and a heavy night's sleep was the consequence.
+ With the morning light came the well-remembered and hateful
+ cry, and the little army found itself surrounded by a throng of
+ merry naked demons, among whom were some who had not profited
+ by the distribution of the spoils. At the magic word
+ <i>siruta</i> all these new-comers rushed in a mass upon the
+ white men. Marcoy managed to slip his fine ivory-handled
+ machete within his trowser leg, but every other cutting tool
+ disappeared as if by magic from the possession of the
+ explorers. The shooting-utensils the savages, believing them
+ haunted, would not touch. Then, half irritated at the
+ exhaustion of the booty, the amiable children of Nature burst
+ out into open derision. The artists of the tribe, filling their
+ palms with rocoa, and moistening the same with saliva, went up
+ to their late patrons and began to decorate their faces. The
+ latter, judging patience their best policy, sat in silence
+ while the delicate fancy of the savages expended itself in
+ arabesques and flourishes. Perez and Aragon had their eyes
+ surrounded with red spectacles. The face of Marcoy, covered
+ with a heavy beard, only allowed room for a "W" on the
+ forehead, and Pepe Garcia was quit for a set of interfacings
+ like a checkerboard. Having thus signed their marks upon their
+ visitors, the aborigines retired, catching up here and there a
+ stray ball of cord or a strip of beef, saluting with the hand,
+ and vanishing into the woods with the repeated compliment,
+ <i>Eminiki</i>&mdash;"I am off."</p>
+
+ <p>The victims rested motionless for fifteen minutes: then
+ pellmell, through the thickest of the brush and down the
+ steepest of the hill, blotted out under gigantic ferns and
+ covered by umbrageous vines, stealing along water-courses and
+ skirting the sides of the mountains, they rushed precipitately
+ westward.</p>
+
+ <p>Two months after the priest of Marcapata had dismissed with
+ his benediction the party of confident and enthusiastic
+ explorers, he received again his strayed flock, but this time
+ in rags, armed with ammunitionless guns and one poor knife,
+ wasted by hunger, baked by the sun, and tattooed like
+ Polynesians by the briers and insects. The good man could not
+ repress a tear. "Ah, my son," said he as he clasped Marcoy's
+ hand, "see what it costs to go hunting the cascarilla in the
+ land of the infidels!"</p>
+
+ <p>The explorations started by Don Juan Sanz de Santo Domingo
+ came to profitable result, but not to his advantage. Three
+ weeks after the pioneers arrived again in Cuzco, Don Juan
+ started another expedition, on a much larger scale, to
+ accomplish the working of the cinchona valleys, under charge of
+ the same Bolivians, who could make like a bee for every tree
+ they had discovered. A detachment of soldiers was to protect
+ the party, and the working force was more than double. Finally,
+ the night before the intended start, the Bolivian
+ cascarilleros, with their examinador, disappeared together. It
+ is probable that Don Juan's scheme, nursed, according to
+ custom, with too much publicity, had attracted the attention of
+ the merchants of Cuzco, who had found it profitable to buy off
+ the bark-searchers for their own interest.</p>
+
+ <p>The crash of this immense enterprise was too much for Don
+ Juan. Threatened with creditors, Jews, <i>escribanos</i> and
+ the police, he retired to a silver-mine he was opening in the
+ province of Abancay. This mine, in successful operation, he
+ depended on for satisfying his creditors. He found it choked
+ up, destroyed with a blast of powder by some enemy. Unable to
+ bear the disappointment, Don Juan blew out his brains in the
+ office belonging to his mine. A month afterward, Don Eugenic
+ Mendoza y Jara, the bishop of Cuzco, sent a couple of Indians
+ for the body, with instructions to throw it into a ditch: the
+ men attached a rope to the feet and dragged it to a ravine,
+ where dogs and vultures disposed of the unhallowed
+ remains.</p><a name="H_4_0002"
+ id="H_4_0002"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h2>A GLANCE AT THE SITE AND ANTIQUITIES OF ATHENS.</h2>
+
+ <p>The day is a happy one to the student-traveler from the
+ Western World in which he first looks upon the lovely plain of
+ Athens. Rounding the point where Hymettus thrusts his huge
+ length into the sea, the long, featureless mountain-wall of
+ Southern Attica suddenly breaks down, and gives place to a
+ broad expanse of fertile, and well-cultivated soil, sloping
+ gently back with ever-narrowing bounds until it reaches the
+ foot-hills of lofty Pentelicus. The wooded heights of Parnes
+ enclose it on the north, while bald Hymettus rears an
+ impassable barrier along the south. In front of the gently
+ recurved shore stretch the smooth waters of the Gulf of
+ Salamis, while beyond rises range upon range of lofty
+ mountain-peaks with strikingly varied outline, terminating on
+ the one hand in the towering cone of Egina, and on the other in
+ the pyramidal, fir-clad summit of Cithaeron. Upon the plain, at
+ the distance of three or four miles from the sea, are several
+ small rocky hills of picturesque appearance, isolated and
+ seemingly independent, but really parts of a low range parallel
+ to Hymettus. Upon one of the most considerable of these, whose
+ precipitous sides make it a natural fortress, stood the
+ Acropolis, and upon the group of lesser heights around and in
+ the valleys between clustered the dwellings of ancient
+ Athens.</p><a name="image-0007"
+ id="image-0007"><!--IMG--></a>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/0227.jpg"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/0227.jpg"
+ alt="View of the Acropolis and The Columns Of The Temple Of Jupiter Olympus." />
+ </a> View of the Acropolis and The Columns Of The Temple Of
+ Jupiter Olympus.
+ </div><!--IMAGE END-->
+
+ <p>It was a fitting site for the capital of a people keenly
+ sensitive to beauty, and destined to become the leaders of the
+ world in matters of taste, especially in the important
+ department of the Fine Arts. Nowhere are there more charming
+ contrasts of mountain, sea and plain&mdash;nowhere a more
+ perfect harmony of picturesque effect. The sea is not a dreary
+ waste of waters without bounds, but a smiling gulf mirroring
+ its mountain-walls and winding about embosomed isles, yet ever
+ broadening as it recedes, and suggesting the mighty flood
+ beyond from which it springs. The plain is not an illimitable
+ expanse over which the weary eye ranges in vain in quest of
+ some resting-place, but is so small as to be embraced in its
+ whole contour in a single view, while its separate
+ features&mdash;the broad, dense belt of olives which marks the
+ bed of its principal stream, the ancient Cephissus, the
+ vineyards, the grain-fields and the sunny hillside
+ pastures&mdash;are made to produce their full impression. The
+ mountains are not near enough to be obtrusive, much less
+ oppressive; neither are they so distant as to be indistinct or
+ to seem insignificant. Seen through the clear air, their naked
+ summits are so sharply defined and so individual in appearance
+ as to seem almost like sculptured forms chiseled out of the
+ hard rock.</p>
+
+ <p>The city which rose upon this favored spot was worthy of its
+ surroundings. The home of a free and enterprising race endowed
+ with rare gifts of intellect and sensibility, and ever on the
+ alert for improvement, it became the nurse of letters and of
+ arts, while the luxury begotten of prosperity awakened a taste
+ for adornment, and the wealth acquired by an extended commerce
+ furnished the means of gratifying it. The age of Pericles was
+ the period of the highest national development. At that time
+ were reared the celebrated structures in honor of the
+ virgin-goddess who was the patron of Athens&mdash;the
+ Parthenon, the Propylaea, the Erechtheum&mdash;which crowned
+ the Acropolis, and were the glory of the city as they were the
+ masterpieces of Grecian architecture. During the preceding half
+ century many works of utility and of splendor had been
+ constructed, and the city now became renowned not only in
+ Greece, but throughout the ancient world, for the magnificence
+ of its public buildings. Thucydides, writing about this time,
+ says that should Athens be destroyed, posterity would infer
+ from its ruins that the city had been twice as populous as it
+ actually was. Demosthenes speaks of the strangers who came to
+ visit its attractions. But the changes of twenty-three
+ centuries have passed upon this splendor&mdash;a sad story of
+ violence and neglect&mdash;and the queenly city has long been
+ in the condition of ruin imagined by Thucydides. Still, the
+ spell of her influence is not broken, and the charm which once
+ drew so many visitors to her shrines still acts powerfully on
+ the hearts of scholars in all lands, who, having looked up to
+ her poets, orators and philosophers as teachers and loved them
+ as friends, long to visit their haunts, to stand where they
+ stood, to behold the scenes which they were wont to view, and
+ to gaze upon what may remain of the great works of art upon
+ which their admiration was bestowed.</p>
+
+ <p>So the student-pilgrim from the Western World with native
+ ardor strains his sight to catch the first glimpse of the
+ Athenian plain and city. He is fresh from his studies, and
+ familiar with what books teach of the geography of Greece and
+ the topography of Athens. He needs not to be informed which
+ mountain-range is Parnes, and which Pentelicus&mdash;which
+ island is Salamis, and which Egina. Yet much of what he sees is
+ a revelation to him. The mountains are higher, more varied and
+ more beautiful than he had supposed, Lycabettus and the
+ Acropolis more imposing, Pentelicus farther away, and the plain
+ larger, the gulf narrower, and Egina nearer and more
+ mountainous, than he had fancied. He is astonished at the
+ smallness of the harbor at Peiraeus, having insensibly formed
+ his conception of its size from the notices of the mighty
+ fleets which sailed from it in the palmy days when Athens was
+ mistress of the seas. He is not prepared to see the southern
+ shore of Salamis so near to the Peiraeus, though it explains
+ the close connection between that island and Athens, and throws
+ some light upon the great naval defeat of the Persians. In
+ short, while every object is recognized as it presents itself,
+ yet a more correct conception is formed of its relative
+ position and aspect from a single glance of the eye than had
+ been acquired from books during years of study.</p>
+
+ <p>Arrived at the city, his experience is the same. He needs no
+ guide to conduct him to its antiquities, nor cicerone to
+ explain in bad French or worse English their names and history.
+ Still, unexpected appearances present themselves not
+ unfrequently. Hastening toward the Acropolis, he will first
+ inspect the remains of the great theatre of Dionysus, so
+ familiar to him as the place where, in the presence of all the
+ people and many strangers, were acted the plays of his favorite
+ poets, Eschylus and Sophocles, and where they won many prizes.
+ Hurrying over the eastern brow of the hill, he comes suddenly
+ upon the spot, enters at the summit, as many an Athenian did in
+ the olden time, and is smitten with amazement at the first
+ glance, and led to question whether this be indeed the site of
+ the ancient theatre. He finds, it is true, the topmost seats
+ cut in the solid rock, row above row, stripped now of their
+ marble lining and weather-worn, but yet the genuine ancient
+ seats of the upper tier. These he expected to find. But whence
+ are those fresh seats which fill the lower part of the hollow,
+ arranged as neatly as if intended for immediate use? and whence
+ the massive stage beyond? He bethinks himself that he has heard
+ of recent excavations under the patronage of the government,
+ and closer inspection shows that these are actually the lower
+ seats of the theatre in the time of the emperor Hadrian, whose
+ favorite residence was Athens, and who did so much to embellish
+ the city. The front seats consist of massive stone chairs, each
+ inscribed with the name of its occupant, generally the
+ priestess of some one of the numerous gods worshiped by that
+ people so given to idolatry. In the centre of the second row is
+ an elevated throne inscribed with the name of Hadrian. The
+ stage is seen to be the ancient Greek stage enlarged to the
+ Roman size to suit the demands of a later style of theatrical
+ representation.</p><a name="image-0008"
+ id="image-0008"><!--IMG--></a>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/0229.jpg"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/0229.jpg"
+ alt="Theatre of Dionysus (Bacchus)." /></a> Theatre of
+ Dionysus (Bacchus).
+ </div><!--IMAGE END-->
+
+ <p>After looking in vain for the seat occupied by the priestess
+ of the Unknown God, our traveler passes on and enters with a
+ beating heart the charmed precincts of the Acropolis itself.
+ The Propylaea, which he has been accustomed to regard too
+ exclusively as a mere entrance-gate to the glories beyond,
+ impresses him with its size and grandeur, and the little temple
+ of Victory by its side with its elegance.<a id="footnotetag1"
+ name="footnotetag1"></a><a href="#footnote1"><sup>1</sup></a>
+ But the steepness of the ascent perplexes him. It seems
+ impracticable for horses, yet he knows by unexceptionable
+ testimony that the Athenian youth prided themselves upon
+ driving their matched steeds in the great Panathenaic
+ procession which once every four years wound up the hill,
+ bearing the sacred peplus to the temple of the goddess. A
+ closer examination reveals the transverse creases of the
+ pavement designed to give a footing to the beasts, as well
+ as the marks of the chariot-wheels. Nevertheless, the ascent
+ (and much more the descent) must have been a perilous
+ undertaking, unless the teams were better broken than the
+ various accounts of chariot-races furnished by the poets
+ would indicate. Entering beneath the great gate, a little
+ distance forward to the left may readily be found the site
+ of the colossal bronze statue of the warrior-goddess in
+ complete armor, formed by Phidias out of the spoils taken at
+ Marathon. The square base, partly sunk in the uneven rock,
+ is as perfect as if just put in readiness to receive the
+ pedestal of that famous work. A road bending to the right
+ and slightly hollowed out of the rock leads to the
+ Parthenon. The outer platform which sustains this celebrated
+ temple is partly cut from the rock of the hill and partly
+ built up of common limestone. The inner one of three
+ courses, as well as the whole superstructure, is formed of
+ Pentelic marble of a compact crystalline structure and of
+ dazzling whiteness. Long exposure has not availed to destroy
+ its lustre, but only to soften its tone. The visitor,
+ planting himself at the western front, is in a position to
+ gain some adequate idea of the perfection of the noble
+ building. The interior and central parts suffered the
+ principal injury from the explosion of the Turkish powder
+ magazine in 1687. The western front remains nearly entire.
+ It has been despoiled, indeed, of its movable ornaments. The
+ statues which filled the pediment are gone, with the
+ exception of a fragment or two. The sculptured slabs have
+ been removed from the spaces between the triglyphs, and the
+ gilded shields which hung beneath have been taken down. Of
+ the magnificent frieze, representing the procession of the
+ great quadrennial festival, only the portion surrounding the
+ western vestibule is still in place.<a id="footnotetag2"
+ name="footnotetag2"></a><a href="#footnote2"><sup>2</sup></a></p><a name="image-0009"
+ id="image-0009"><!--IMG--></a>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/0230.jpg"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/0230.jpg"
+ alt="Victory Untying Her Sandals." /></a> Victory
+ Untying Her Sandals.
+ </div><!--IMAGE END-->
+ <a name="image-0010"
+ id="image-0010"><!--IMG--></a>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/0231.jpg"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/0231.jpg"
+ alt="Temple of Victory" /></a> Temple of Victory
+ </div><!--IMAGE END-->
+ <a name="image-0011"
+ id="image-0011"><!--IMG--></a>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/0232.jpg"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/0232.jpg"
+ alt="The Parthenon." /></a> The Parthenon.
+ </div><!--IMAGE END-->
+
+ <p>Still, as these were strictly decorations, and wholly
+ subordinate to the organic parts of the structure, their
+ presence, while it would doubtless greatly enhance the effect
+ of the whole, is not felt to be essential to its completeness.
+ The whole Doric columns still bear the massive entablature
+ sheltered by the covering roof. The simple greatness of the
+ conception, the just proportion of the several parts, together
+ with the elaborate finishing of the whole work, invest it with
+ a charm such as the works of man seldom possess&mdash;the pure
+ and lasting pleasure which flows from apparent perfection
+ Entering the principal apartment of the building, traces are
+ seen of the stucco and pictures with which the walls were
+ covered when it was fitted up as a Christian church in the
+ Byzantine period. Near the centre of the marble pavement is a
+ rectangular space laid with dark stone from the Peirseus or
+ from Eleusis. It marks the probable site of the colossal
+ precious statue of the goddess in gold and ivory&mdash;one of
+ the most celebrated works of Phidias. The smaller apartment
+ beyond, accessible only from the opposite front of the temple,
+ was used by the state as a place of deposit and safekeeping for
+ bullion and other valuables in the care of the state
+ treasurer.</p><a name="image-0012"
+ id="image-0012"><!--IMG--></a>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/0233.jpg"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/0233.jpg"
+ alt="Bas Relief of the Gods (Frieze Of The Parthenon)." />
+ </a> Bas Relief of the Gods (Frieze Of The Parthenon).
+ </div><!--IMAGE END-->
+
+ <p>Having examined the great temple, and tested the curvature
+ of its seemingly horizontal lines by sighting along the
+ unencumbered platform, and having stopped at several points of
+ the grand portico to admire the fine views of the city and
+ surrounding country, the traveler picks his way northward,
+ across a thick layer of fragments of columns, statues and
+ blocks of marble, toward the low-placed, irregular but elegant
+ Erechtheum, the temple of the most ancient worship and statue
+ of the patron-goddess of the city. This building sits close by
+ the northern as the Parthenon does by the southern wall of the
+ enclosure. It has suffered equally with the other from the
+ ravages of time, and its ruins, though less grand, are more
+ beautiful. Most of the graceful Ionic columns are still
+ standing, but large portions of the roof and entablature have
+ fallen. Fragments of decorated cornice strew the ground, some
+ of them of considerable length, and afford a near view of that
+ delicate ornamentation and exquisite finish so rare outside the
+ limits of Greece. The elevated porch of the Caryatides, lately
+ restored by the substitution of a new figure in place of the
+ missing statue now in the British Museum, attracts attention as
+ a unique specimen of Greek art, and also as showing how far a
+ skillful treatment will overcome the inherent difficulties of a
+ subject. The row of fair maidens looking out toward the
+ Parthenon do not seem much oppressed by the burden which rests
+ upon them, while their graceful forms lend a pleasing variety
+ to the scene. Passing out by the northern wing of the
+ Propylaea, a survey is had of the numerous fragments of
+ sculpture discovered among the ruins upon the hill, and
+ temporarily placed in the ancient Pinacotheca. The eye rests
+ upon sweet infant faces and upon rugged manly ones. Sometimes a
+ single feature only remains, which, touched by the finger of
+ genius, awakens admiration. A naked arm severed from the trunk,
+ of feminine cast, but with muscles tightly strained and hand
+ clenched as in agony, will arrest attention and dwell in the
+ memory.</p>
+
+ <p>North-west of the Acropolis, across a narrow chasm, lies the
+ low, rocky height of the Areopagus, accessible at the southeast
+ angle by a narrow flight of sixteen rudely-cut steps, which
+ lead to a small rectangular excavation on the summit, which
+ faces the Acropolis, and is surrounded upon three sides by a
+ double tier of benches hewn out of the rock. Here undoubtedly
+ the most venerable court of justice at Athens had its seat and
+ tried its cases in the open air. Here too, without doubt, stood
+ the great apostle when, with bold spirit and weighty words, he
+ declared unto the men of Athens that God of whom they confessed
+ their ignorance; who was not to be represented by gold or
+ silver or stone graven by art and man's device; who dwelt not
+ in temples made with hands, and needed not to be worshiped with
+ men's hands. In no other place can one feel so sure that he
+ comes upon the very footsteps of the apostle, and on no other
+ spot can one better appreciate his high gifts as an orator or
+ the noble devotion of his whole soul to the work of the Master.
+ How poor in comparison with his life-work appear the
+ performances of the greatest of the Athenian thinkers or
+ doers!</p>
+
+ <p>A little more than a quarter of a mile west of the Acropolis
+ is another rocky hill&mdash;the Pnyx&mdash;celebrated as the
+ place where the assembly of all the citizens met to transact
+ the business of the state. A large semicircular area was
+ formed, partly by excavation, partly by building up from
+ beneath, the bounds of which can be distinctly traced.
+ Considerable remains of the terrace-wall at the foot of the
+ slope exist&mdash;huge stones twelve or fourteen feet in length
+ by eight or ten in breadth. The chord of the semicircle is near
+ the top of the hill, formed by the perpendicular face of the
+ excavated rock, and is about four hundred feet in length by
+ twenty in depth. Projecting from it at the centre, and hewn out
+ of the same rock, is the bema or stone platform from which the
+ great orators from the time of Themistocles and Aristides, and
+ perhaps of Solon, down to the age of Demosthenes and the Attic
+ Ten, addressed the mass of their fellow-citizens. It is a
+ massive cubic block, with a linear edge of eleven feet,
+ standing upon a graduated base of nearly equal height, and is
+ mounted on either side by a flight of nine stone steps. From
+ its connection with the most celebrated efforts of some of the
+ greatest orators our race has yet seen, it is one of the most
+ interesting relics in the world, and its solid structure will
+ cause it to endure as long as the world itself shall stand,
+ unless, as there is some reason to apprehend will be the case,
+ it is knocked to pieces and carried off in the carpet-bags of
+ travelers. No traces of the Agora, which occupied the shallow
+ valley between the Pnyx and the Acropolis, remain. It was the
+ heart of the city, and was adorned with numerous public
+ buildings, porticoes, temples and statues. It was often
+ thronged with citizens gathered for purposes of trade,
+ discussion, or to hear and tell some new
+ thing.</p><a name="image-0013"
+ id="image-0013"><!--IMG--></a>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/0235.jpg"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/0235.jpg"
+ alt="Porch of the Caryatides." /></a> Porch of the
+ Caryatides.
+ </div><!--IMAGE END-->
+
+ <p>Half a mile or more to the south-east, on the banks of the
+ Ilissus, stood a magnificent structure dedicated to Olympian
+ Zeus&mdash;one of the four largest temples of Greece, ranking
+ with that of Demeter at Eleusis and that of Diana at Ephesus.
+ Its foundations remain, and sixteen of the huge Corinthian
+ columns belonging to its majestic triple colonnade. One of
+ these is fallen. Breaking up into the numerous disks of which
+ it was composed&mdash;six and a half feet in diameter by two or
+ more in thickness&mdash;and stretching out to a length of over
+ sixty feet, it gives an impressive conception of the size of
+ these columns, said to be the largest standing in Europe. The
+ level area of the temple is now used as a training-ground for
+ soldiers. Close by, and almost in the bed of the stream, which
+ is dry the larger part of the year, issues from beneath a ledge
+ of rock the copious fountain of sweet waters known to the
+ ancients as Calirrhoe. It furnished the only good
+ drinking-water of the city, and was used in all the sacrifices
+ to the gods. A little way above, on the opposite bank of the
+ Ilissus, is the site of the Panathenaic stadium, whose shape is
+ perfectly preserved in the smooth grass-grown hollow with
+ semicircular extremity which here lies at right angles to the
+ stream, between parallel ridges partly artificial.</p>
+
+ <p>Northward from the Acropolis, on a slight elevation, is the
+ best-preserved and one of the most ancient structures of
+ Athens&mdash;the temple of Theseus, built under the
+ administration of Cimon by the generation preceding Pericles
+ and the Parthenon. It is of the Doric order, and shaped like
+ the Parthenon, but considerably inferior to it in size as well
+ as in execution. It has been roofed with wood in modern times,
+ and was long used as a church, but is now a place of deposit
+ for the numerous statues and sculptured stones of various
+ kinds&mdash;mostly sepulchral monuments&mdash;which have been
+ recently discovered in and about the city. They are for the
+ most part unimportant as works of art, though many are
+ interesting from their antiquity or historic associations.
+ Among these is the stone which once crowned the burial-mound on
+ the plain of Marathon. It bears a single figure, said to
+ represent the messenger who brought the tidings of victory to
+ his countrymen.</p>
+
+ <p>Near the Theseium was the double gate (Dipylum) in the
+ ancient wall of the city whence issued the Sacred Way leading
+ to Eleusis, and bordered, like the Appian Way at Rome, with
+ tombs, many of them cenotaphs of persons who died in the public
+ service and were deemed worthy of a monument in the public
+ burying-ground. Within a few years an excavation has been made
+ through an artificial mound of ashes, pottery and other refuse
+ emptied out of the city, and a section of a few rods of this
+ celebrated road has been laid bare. The sepulchral monuments
+ are ranged on one side rather thickly, and crowd somewhat
+ closely upon the narrow pavement. They are, for the most part,
+ simple, thick slabs of white marble, with a triangular or
+ pediment-shaped top, beneath which is sculptured in low relief
+ the closing scene of the person commemorated, followed by a
+ short inscription. The work is done in an artistic style worthy
+ of the publicity its location gave it. On one of these slabs
+ you recognize the familiar full-length figure of Demosthenes,
+ standing with two companions and clasping in a parting grasp
+ the hand of a woman, who is reclining upon her deathbed. The
+ inscription is, <i>Collyrion, wife of Agathon</i>. On another
+ stone of larger size is a more imposing piece of sculpture. A
+ horseman fully armed is thrusting his spear into the body of
+ his fallen foe&mdash;a hoplite. The inscription relates that
+ the unhappy foot-soldier fell at Corinth <i>by reason of those
+ five words of his</i>!&mdash;a record intelligible enough,
+ doubtless, to his contemporaries, but sufficiently obscure and
+ provocative of curiosity to later generations.</p>
+
+ <p>There are other noted structures at Athens, such as the
+ Choragic Monument of Lysicrates&mdash;the highest type of the
+ Corinthian order of architecture, as the Erechtheum is of the
+ Ionic and the Parthenon of the Doric&mdash;but want of space
+ forbids any further description of them. Let the American
+ traveler visit Athens with the expectation of finding a city
+ occupying the most charming of sites, and containing by far the
+ most interesting and important monuments of antiquity, in their
+ original position, to be found in the whole world.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">J.L.T. PHILLIPS.</p><a name="image-0014"
+ id="image-0014"><!--IMG--></a>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/0237.jpg"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/0237.jpg"
+ alt="Monument of Lysicrates." /></a> Monument of
+ Lysicrates.
+ </div><!--IMAGE END-->
+ <a name="H_4_0003"
+ id="H_4_0003"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h2>COMMONPLACE.</h2>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i10">My little girl is commonplace, you
+ say?</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">Well, well, I grant it, as you use the
+ phrase</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">Concede the whole; although there was a
+ day</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">When I too questioned words, and from a
+ maze</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">Of hairsplit meanings, cut with
+ close-drawn line,</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">Sought to draw out a language
+ superfine,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Above the common, scarify with words and
+ scintillate with pen;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">But that time's over&mdash;now I am
+ content to stand with other men.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i10">It's the best place, fair youth. I see
+ your smile&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">The scornful smile of that ambitious
+ age</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">That thinks it all things knows, and all
+ the while</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">It nothing knows. And yet those smiles
+ presage</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">Some future fame, because your aim is
+ high;</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">As when one tries to shoot into the
+ sky,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">If his rash arrow at the moon he aims, a
+ bolder flight we see,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Though vain, than if with level poise it
+ safely reached the nearest tree.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i10">A common proverb that! Does it
+ disjoint</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">Your graceful terms? One more you'll
+ understand:</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">Cut down a pencil to too fine a
+ point,</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">Lo, it breaks off, all useless, in your
+ hand!</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">The child is fitted for her present
+ sphere:</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">Let her live out her life, without the
+ fear</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">That comes when souls, daring the heights
+ of dread infinity, are tost,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Now up, now down, by the great winds,
+ their little home for ever lost.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i10">My little girl seems to you
+ commonplace</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">Because she loves the daisies, common
+ flowers;</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">Because she finds in common pictures
+ grace,</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">And nothing knows of classic music's
+ powers:</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">She reads her romance, but the mystic's
+ creed</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">Is something far beyond her simple
+ need.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">She goes to church, but the mixed doubts
+ and theories that thinkers find</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">In all religious truth can never enter
+ her undoubting mind.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i10">A daisy's earth's own
+ blossom&mdash;better far</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">Than city gardener's costly hybrid
+ prize:</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">When you're found worthy of a higher
+ star,</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">'Twill then be time earth's daisies to
+ despise;</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">But not till then. And if the child can
+ sing</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">Sweet songs like "Robin Gray," why
+ should I fling</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">A cloud over her music's joy, and set for
+ her the heavy task</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Of learning what Bach knew, or finding
+ sense under mad Chopin's mask?</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i10">Then as to pictures: if her taste
+ prefers</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">That common picture of the
+ "Huguenots,"</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">Where the girl's heart&mdash;a tender
+ heart like hers&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">Strives to defeat earth's greatest
+ powers' great plots</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">With her poor little kerchief, shall I
+ change</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">The print for Turner's riddles wild and
+ strange?</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Or take her stories&mdash;simple tales
+ which her few leisure hours beguile&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And give her Browning's _Sordello_, a
+ Herbert Spencer, a Carlyle?</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i10">Her creed, too, in your eyes is
+ commonplace,</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">Because she does not doubt the Bible's
+ truth</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">Because she does not doubt the saving
+ grace</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">Of fervent prayer, but from her rosy
+ youth,</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">So full of life, to gray old age's
+ time,</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">Prays on with faith half ignorant, half
+ sublime.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Yes, commonplace! But if I spoil this
+ common faith, when all is done</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Can deist, pantheist or atheist invent a
+ better one?</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i10">Climb to the highest mountain's highest
+ verge,</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">Step off: you've lost the petty height
+ you had;</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">Up to the highest point poor reason
+ urge,</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">Step off: the sense is gone, the mind is
+ mad.</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">"Thus far, and yet no farther, shalt
+ thou go,"</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">Was said of old, and I have found it
+ so:</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">This planet's ours, 'tis all we have;
+ here we belong, and those are wise</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Who make the best of it, nor vainly try
+ above its plane to rise.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i10">Nay, nay: I know already your reply;</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">I have been through the whole long years
+ ago;</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">I have soared up as far as soul can
+ fly,</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">I have dug down as far as mind can
+ go;</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">But always found, at certain depth or
+ height,</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">The bar that separates the infinite</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">From finite powers, against whose
+ strength immutable we beat in vain,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Or circle round only to find ourselves at
+ starting-point again.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i10">If you must for yourself find out this
+ truth,</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">I bid you go, proud heart, with
+ blessings free:</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">'Tis the old fruitless quest of ardent
+ youth,</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">And soon or late you will come back to
+ me.</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">You'll learn there's naught so common as
+ the breath</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">Of life, unless it be the calm of
+ death:</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">You'll learn that with the Lord
+ Omnipotent there's nothing commonplace,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And with such souls as that poor child's,
+ humbled, abashed, you'll hide your face.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p class="center">CONSTANCE FENIMORE
+ WOOLSON.</p><a name="H_4_0004"
+ id="H_4_0004"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h2>PROBATIONER LEONHARD;<br />
+ OR,<br />
+ THREE NIGHTS IN THE HAPPY VALLEY.</h2>
+
+ <h3><a name="HCH0001"
+ id="HCH0001"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> CHAPTER IV.</h3>
+
+ <h3>THE TEST&mdash;WITH MENTAL RESERVATIONS.</h3>
+
+ <p>Elise went out to gather willow-twigs, as her mother had
+ said when her father asked for her.</p>
+
+ <p>A little later in the afternoon, Mr. Albert Spener walked
+ swiftly down the street toward the house occupied by the Rev.
+ Mr. Wenck. While he was yet at a distance Elise saw him
+ approaching, and possibly she thought, "He has seen me and
+ comes to meet me;" and many a pleasant stroll on many an
+ afternoon would have justified the thought.</p>
+
+ <p>But it was not until he had, as it were, stumbled upon Elise
+ that he noticed her. He carried in his hand a letter, and when
+ suddenly he stopped upon the sidewalk and looked at her, the
+ changeful aspects of his face were marvelous to behold.</p>
+
+ <p>"Where are you going?" he asked.</p>
+
+ <p>"I was going home," she answered, not a little surprised by
+ the abrupt and authoritative manner of his address.</p>
+
+ <p>"I want to talk with you," said he. "Is it to-day that I am
+ to begin to leave off loving you, Elise?"</p>
+
+ <p>"That you are&mdash;What do you say, Albert?" she asked.</p>
+
+ <p>"Have you not seen Brother Wenck's letter to your father,
+ Elise?"</p>
+
+ <p>She shook her head.</p>
+
+ <p>"The lot&mdash;the lot&mdash;" he repeated, but his voice
+ refused to help him tell the tale.</p>
+
+ <p>"Albert, may I see the letter?" Father and Mother Loretz
+ might have rejoiced in their daughter could they have seen and
+ heard her in those trying moments. Her gentleness and her
+ serene dignity said for her that she would not be over-thrown
+ by the storm which had burst upon her in a moment, unlocked for
+ as tempest and whirlwind out of a clear sky.</p>
+
+ <p>Spener thrust into her hands the letter addressed to him
+ that morning by the minister. It contained an announcement of
+ the decision rendered by the lot, couched in terms more brief,
+ perhaps, than those which conveyed the same intelligence to the
+ father of Elise.</p>
+
+ <p>She gave it back to him without a word.</p>
+
+ <p>"If Brother Wenck is going to stand by it," said he,
+ "there'll be no room for him in this place. I was just going to
+ his house to tell him so. Will you go with me? I should like to
+ have a witness. I'll make short work of it."</p>
+
+ <p>"No," said Elise, shrinking back amazed from her companion.
+ "I will not go with you to insult that good man."</p>
+
+ <p>"You will go with me&mdash;<i>not</i> to his house, then!
+ Come, Elise, we must talk about this. You must help me untie
+ this knot. I cannot imagine how I ever permitted things to take
+ their chance. I have never heard of a sillier superstition than
+ I seem to have encouraged. Talk about faith! Let a man act up
+ to light and take the consequences. I can see clear enough now.
+ <i>You</i> never looked for this to happen, Elise?"</p>
+
+ <p>She shook her head. Indeed, she never had&mdash;no, not for
+ a moment.</p>
+
+ <p>"To think I should have permitted it to go on!"</p>
+
+ <p>"But you did let it go on&mdash;and I&mdash;consented. Do
+ not let me forget that," she exclaimed. "I will go home,
+ Albert."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ha, Elise! I wish I could feel more confidence in your
+ teachers when you get there."</p>
+
+ <p>"I need no one to tell me what my duty is just here," she
+ answered.</p>
+
+ <p>"Have you ever loved me, child? <i>Child</i>! I am talking
+ to a rock. You do not yield to this?" He waved the letter
+ aloft, and as if he would dash it from him. Elise looked at
+ him, and did not speak. "Sister Benigna will of course feel
+ called upon to bless the Lord," said he. "But Wenck shall find
+ a way out of this difficulty. Then we will have done with them
+ both, my own."</p>
+
+ <p>"Am I to have no voice in this matter?" she asked. "What if
+ I say&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>Spener grasped her hand so suddenly that, as if in her
+ surprise she had forgotten what she was about to say, Elise
+ added, "Sister Benigna is my best friend. She knows nothing
+ about the lot."</p>
+
+ <p>"Does not?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I told you, Albert, that it was to be so. And&mdash;you do
+ not mean to threaten Mr. Wenck?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I mean to have him find a way out of this difficulty. He
+ ought to have said to your father that this lot business
+ belongs to a period gone by. He did hint at it. I supposed, of
+ course, that he would see the thing came out right, since he
+ let it go on."</p>
+
+ <p>"Did you then believe it was only a play or a trick?"
+ exclaimed Elise indignantly.</p>
+
+ <p>"Not quite, but I did not suppose that we were a company who
+ would stand by an adverse decision. You know, if you are the
+ Elise I have loved so long, that I must love you
+ always&mdash;that I am not going to give you up. Your father
+ was bent on the test, but look at him and tell me if he
+ expected this turn. He is twenty years older than he was
+ yesterday. Folks used to resort to the lot in deciding about
+ marriages, and it was all well enough if they didn't care how
+ it turned out, or hadn't faith to believe in their own ability
+ to choose. A pretty way of doing business, though! Suppose I
+ had tried it on this place! I have always asked for God's
+ blessing, and tried to act so that I need not blush when I
+ asked it; but a man must know his own mind, he must act with
+ decision. I say again, I don't like your teachers, Elise.
+ Between Sister Benigna and Mr. Wenck, now, what would be my
+ chances if I could submit to such a pair?"</p>
+
+ <p>"You and I have no quarrel," said Elise gently. "I suppose
+ that you acted in good faith. You know how much I
+ care&mdash;how humiliated I shall feel if you attack in any way
+ a man so good as Mr. Wenck. You do not understand Sister
+ Benigna."</p>
+
+ <p>It was well that she had these to speak of, and that she
+ need not confine herself to the main thought before them, for
+ Albert could do anything he attempted. Had not her father
+ always said, "Let Spener alone for getting what he wants: he'll
+ have it, but he's above-board and honest;" and what hopes,
+ heaven-cleaving, had spread wing the instant her eyes met
+ his!</p>
+
+ <p>"It is easy to say that I do not understand," said he. "One
+ has only to assume that another is so excellent and virtuous a
+ character as to be beyond your comprehension, and then your
+ mouth is stopped."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, how bitter you are!" exclaimed Elise. Her voice was
+ full of pain.</p>
+
+ <p>Spener silently reproached himself, and said, with a
+ tenderness that was irresistible, "You don't know what
+ temptations beset a man in business and everywhere, Elise. It
+ would be easier far to lie down and die, I have thought
+ sometimes, than to stand up and meet the enemy like a man. You
+ will never convince me that my duty is to let you go, to give
+ you up. I can think of nothing so wicked."</p>
+
+ <p>These words, which had a joyful sound to which she could not
+ seal her ears, made Elise stop suddenly, afraid of Albert,
+ afraid of herself. "I think," she said after a moment, "we had
+ best not walk together any longer. There is nothing we can say
+ that will satisfy ourselves or ought to satisfy each
+ other."</p>
+
+ <p>"Do you mean that you accept this decision?" said he.</p>
+
+ <p>"I promised, Albert. So did you."</p>
+
+ <p>"We will not talk about it. But we can at least walk
+ together, Elise. You need not speak. What you confessed just
+ now is true&mdash;you cannot say anything to the purpose."</p>
+
+ <p>So they walked on together. Silently, past all Spenersberg's
+ dwelling-places they walked, till they came to the cemetery,
+ and ascending the hill they strolled about that pleasant place
+ among the graves, and thought, perhaps, How blessed are the
+ dead! and oh to be lying there in a dreamless sleep beneath the
+ blooming wild roses, and where dirges were sounding through the
+ cedars day and night! Elise might have thought thus, but not
+ her companion. He was the last man to wish to pass from the
+ scene of his successes merely because a great failure
+ threatened him. Looking upon the slight young figure beside him
+ and her grave sweet face, a wrathful contempt was aroused
+ within him that he should have allowed himself to be placed in
+ a situation so absurd. As they walked down the hill again, he
+ startled his companion by a merry outbreak. "Tell me you are
+ not mine!" he said: "there never was a joke like it!"</p>
+
+ <h3><a name="HCH0002"
+ id="HCH0002"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> CHAPTER V.</h3>
+
+ <h3>SISTER BENIGNA.</h3>
+
+ <p>On her return home Elise found Sister Benigna seated at the
+ piano, attuning herself, as she said, after her work among the
+ restive children of her school.</p>
+
+ <p>When she looked upon her friend and recalled the bitter
+ words Albert had spoken against her, Elise felt their
+ injustice. It was true, as she had told him, he did not
+ understand Sister Benigna.</p>
+
+ <p>Sitting down beside the window, Elise began to busy herself
+ over the dainty basket she was elaborately decorating. After a
+ few moments Sister Benigna left the piano and stood looking at
+ Elise and her work. She had something to say, but how should
+ she say it? how approach the heart which had wrapped itself up
+ in sorrow and surrounded itself with the guards of silence?</p>
+
+ <p>Presently Elise looked at her, but not until she had so long
+ resisted the inclination to do so that there was something like
+ violence in the effort. When her eyes met the gaze of Sister
+ Benigna the warm blood rushed to her cheeks, and she looked
+ quickly down again. Did Sister Benigna know yet about the
+ letter Mr. Wenck had written?</p>
+
+ <p>A sad smile appeared on Benigna's face. She shook her head.
+ If she did not know what had happened, she no doubt understood
+ that some kind of trouble had entered the house.</p>
+
+ <p>Drawing a roll of needlework from her pocket, she quietly
+ occupied herself with it until Elise, unable to endure the
+ silence longer, said, "Oh, Sister Benigna, is it not time we
+ did something about the Sisters' House? I have been reading
+ about one: I forget where it is. What a beautiful Home you and
+ I could make for poor people, and sick girls not able to work,
+ and old women! We ought to have such a Home in Spenersberg. I
+ have been thinking all day it is what we must have, and it is
+ time we set about it."</p>
+
+ <p>"I do not agree with you," was the quiet answer. "There is
+ no real need for it here, and perhaps there never will be. Work
+ that is so unnecessary might better be avoided. In Spenersberg
+ it is better that the poor and the old and the sick should be
+ cared for in their homes, by their own households: there is no
+ want here."</p>
+
+ <p>"Will you read what I have been reading?" said Elise,
+ hesitating, not willing yet to give up the project which looked
+ so full of promise.</p>
+
+ <p>"I know all about Sisters' Houses, and they are excellent
+ institutions, but if you will go from house to house here you
+ will find that you would probably keep house by yourself a long
+ time if you opened such an establishment. No, no: you have your
+ work all prepared for you, and I certainly have mine. There is
+ a good deal to be done yet for the festival. Tomorrow, after
+ five, come to the schoolroom and we will practice a while. And
+ we might do something here tonight. The children surprise me: I
+ seem to be surrounded by a little company of angels while they
+ sing."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, Sister Benigna," exclaimed Elise throwing down her work
+ in despair, "I don't in the least care about the festival. I
+ should be glad to know it was all given up. I cannot sing at
+ it. I think I have lost my voice: I do, indeed. I tried it this
+ afternoon, and I croaked worse than anything you ever
+ heard."</p>
+
+ <p>"Croaked? We must see to that," said Sister Benigna; but,
+ though her voice was so cheerful, she closed her eyes as she
+ spoke, and passed her hands over them, and in spite of herself
+ a look of pain was for an instant visible on her always pale
+ face. She rose quickly and walked across the room, and crossed
+ it twice before she came again to the window.</p>
+
+ <p>"You don't understand me to-day," said Elise impetuously;
+ "and I don't want you to." But Elise would not have spoken at
+ all had she looked at Sister Benigna.</p>
+
+ <p>A silence of many seconds, which seemed much longer to
+ Elise, followed her words. She did not dare to go on. What was
+ Sister Benigna thinking? Would she never speak? Had she nothing
+ to say? Elise was about to rise also, because to sit still in
+ that silence or to break it by words had become equally
+ impossible, when Sister Benigna, approaching gently, laid her
+ hand upon her and said, "Wait one moment: I have something to
+ tell you, Elise."</p>
+
+ <p>And so Elise sat down. She could not summon the strength to
+ go with that voice in her ear and the touch of that hand
+ arresting her.</p>
+
+ <p>"I once had a friend as young as you are, of whom you often
+ remind me," said Benigna. "She had a lover, and their faith led
+ them to seek a knowledge of the Lord's will concerning their
+ marriage. It was inquired for them, and it was found against
+ the union. You often remind me of her, I said, but your
+ fortunes are not at all like hers."</p>
+
+ <p>"Sister Benigna, why do you tell me this?" asked Elise
+ quickly, in a voice hardly audible. She was afraid to listen.
+ She recalled Albert's words. She did not know if she might
+ trust the friendly voice that spoke.</p>
+
+ <p>"Because I have always thought that some time it would be
+ well for you to hear it; but if you do not wish to hear it, I
+ will go no farther."</p>
+
+ <p>Elise looked at Benigna&mdash;not trust her! "Please go on,"
+ she said.</p>
+
+ <p>"I knew the poor child very well. She had grown up in an
+ unhappy home, and had never known what it was to have comfort
+ and peace in the house, or even plenty to eat and to wear. She
+ was expected to go out and earn her living as soon as she had
+ learned the use of her hands and feet. Poor child! she felt her
+ fortune was a hard one, but God always cared for her. In one
+ way and another she in time picked up enough knowledge of music
+ to teach beginners. The first real friend she had was the
+ friend who became so dear to her that&mdash;I need not try to
+ find words to tell you how dear he was.</p>
+
+ <p>"She was soon skilled enough to be able to take more
+ intelligent and advanced pupils, and in the church-music she
+ had the leading parts. By and by the music was put into her
+ hands for festivals and the great days, Christmas and Easter,
+ as it has been put into mine here in Spenersberg. One day
+ <i>he</i> said to her, 'It seems to us the best thing in life
+ to be near each other. Would it might be God's will that we
+ should never part!' She responded to that prayer from the
+ depths of her heart, and a great gulf seemed to open before
+ her, for she thought what would her life be worth if they were
+ destined to part? Then he said, 'Let us inquire the will of our
+ Lord;' and she said, 'Let it be so;' and they had faith that
+ would enable them to abide by the decision. The lot pronounced
+ against them. I do not believe that it had entered the heart of
+ either of them to understand how necessary they had become to
+ each other, and when they saw that all was over it was a sad
+ awaking. For a little while it was with both as if they had
+ madly thrown a birthright away; for, though they had faith,
+ they were not yet perfect in it. Not soon did either see that
+ this life had a blessing for them every day&mdash;new every
+ morning, fresh every evening&mdash;and that from everlasting to
+ everlasting are the mercies of God. But at last he said, 'I am
+ afraid, my darling'" (Elise started at this word of endearment.
+ It was like a revelation to think that there had been lovers in
+ the world before her time), "'it will go harder with me than
+ with you. I cannot stay here and go on with my work. I must go
+ among new people, and begin again.' And so he went away, and at
+ last, when by the grace of God they met again&mdash;surely,
+ surely by no seeking of their own&mdash;they were no less true
+ friends because they had for their lifetime been led into
+ separate paths. Their faith saved them."</p>
+
+ <p>Low though the voice was in which these last words were
+ spoken, there was a strength and inspiration in them which
+ Elise felt. She looked at Sister Benigna with steady, wondering
+ eyes. Such a story from her lips, and told so, and told now!
+ And her countenance! what divine beauty glowed in it! The
+ moment had a vision that could never be forgotten.</p>
+
+ <p>Elise did not speak, but neither, having heard this tale,
+ did she now rise to depart. She folded her hands and bowed her
+ head upon them, and so they sat silent until the first chords
+ of the "Pastoral Symphony" drew the souls of both away up into
+ a realm which is entered only by the pure in heart.</p>
+
+ <p>About this time it was that Leonhard Marten, while passing,
+ heard that recitative of a soprano voice which so amazed him.
+ Dropping quickly into the shade of the trees opposite Loretz's
+ house, he listened to the announcement, "There were shepherds
+ abiding in the field, keeping watch over their flocks by
+ night," and there remained until he saw two men advancing
+ toward the house, one of them evidently approaching his
+ home.</p>
+
+ <p>Through the sleepless night Elise's thoughts were constantly
+ going over the simple incidents of the story Sister Benigna had
+ told her. But they had not by morning yielded all the
+ consolations which the teller of the tale perceived among their
+ possibilities, for the reason, perhaps, that Elise's sympathies
+ had been more powerfully excited by the tale than her faith. It
+ was not upon the final result of the severance effected by the
+ lot that her mind rested dismayed: her heart was full of pain,
+ thinking of that poor girl's early life, and that at last, when
+ all the recollection of it was put far from her by the joy
+ which shone upon her as the sun out of darkness, she must look
+ forward and by its light behold a future so dreary. "How
+ fearful!" she moaned once; and her closed eyes did not see the
+ face that turned toward her full of pain, full of love.</p>
+
+ <p>Of all doubts that could afflict the soul of Sister Benigna,
+ none more distracting than this was conceivable: Had she proved
+ the best instructor to this child of her spirit? Had she even
+ been <i>capable</i> of teaching her truest truth? Was it the
+ truth or herself to which Elise was always deferring? Was
+ obedience a duty when not impelled and sanctified by faith? In
+ what did the prime virtue of resignation consist? Would not
+ obedience without faith be merely a debasing superstitious
+ submission to the will of the believing? Her reflections were
+ not suggested by a shrewd guess. She knew that the lot had been
+ resorted to, and that the letters had been written to Elise and
+ Albert which acquainted them with the result; and the peace of
+ her prayerful soul was rent by the thought that a joyless
+ surrender of human will to a higher was, perhaps, no better
+ than the poor helpless slave's extorted sacrifice. The
+ happiness of the household seemed to Benigna in her keeping. If
+ they had gone lightly seeking the oracle of God, as they would
+ have sought a fortune-teller, was not the Most High dishonored?
+ She could not say this to Elise, but could she say it to Albert
+ Spener? Ought she not to say it to him? There was no other to
+ whom it could be said. Had the coming day any duty so
+ imperative as this? She arose to perform it, but Spener, as we
+ know, had gone away the day before.</p>
+
+ <h3><a name="HCH0003"
+ id="HCH0003"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> CHAPTER VI.</h3>
+
+ <h3>THE MEN OF SPENERSBERG.</h3>
+
+ <p>This Spenersberg, about which Leonhard was not a little
+ eager to know more when he shut the door of the apartment into
+ which his host had ushered him&mdash;for he must remain all
+ night&mdash;what was it?</p>
+
+ <p>A colony, or a brotherhood, or a community, six years old.
+ Such a fact does not lie ready for observation every
+ day&mdash;such a place does not lie in the hand of a man at his
+ bidding. What, then, was its history? We need not wait to find
+ out until morning, when Leonhard will proceed to discover. He
+ is satisfied when he lies down upon the bed, which awaited him,
+ it seems, as he came hither on the way-train&mdash;quite
+ satisfied that Spener of Spenersberg must be a man worth
+ seeing. Breathing beings possessed of ideas and homes here must
+ have been handled with power by a master mind to have brought
+ about this community, if so it is to be called, in six short
+ years, thinks Leonhard. He recalls his own past six years, and
+ turns uneasily on his bed, and finds no rest until he reminds
+ himself of the criticism he has been enabled to pass on Miss
+ Elise's rendering of "He is a righteous Saviour," and the
+ suggestion he made concerning the pitch of "Ye shall find rest
+ for your souls." The recollection acts upon him somewhat as the
+ advancing wave acts on the sand-line made by the wave
+ preceding. When he made the first suggestion, Sister Benigna
+ stood for a moment looking at him, surprised by his remark;
+ but, less than a second taken up with a thought of him, she had
+ passed instantly on to say, "Try it so, Elise: 'He is a
+ righteous Saviour.' We will make it a slower movement. Ah! how
+ impressive! how beautiful! It is the composer's very thought!
+ Again&mdash;slow: it is perfect!"</p>
+
+ <p>Was this kind of praise worth the taking? a source of praise
+ worth the seeking? Leonhard had said ungrateful things about
+ his prize-credentials to Miss Marion Ayres, and I do believe
+ that these very prizes, awarded for his various drawings, were
+ never so valued by him as the look with which priestly Benigna
+ seemed to admit him at least so far as into the fellowship of
+ the Gentiles' Court.</p>
+
+ <p>He would have fallen asleep just here with a pleasant
+ thought but for the recollection of Wilberforce's letter, which
+ startled him hardly less than the apparition of his friend in
+ the moonlight streaming through his half-curtained window would
+ have done. Is it always so pleasant a thought that for ever and
+ ever a man shall bear his own company?</p>
+
+ <p>But this Spenersberg? Seven years ago, on the day when he
+ came of age, Albert Spener, then a young clerk in a fancy-goods
+ store, went to look at the estate which his grandfather had
+ bequeathed to him the year preceding. Not ten years ago the old
+ man made his will and gave the property, on which he had not
+ quite starved, to his only grandson, and here was this
+ worthless gorge which stretched between the fields more
+ productive than many a famous gold-mine.</p>
+
+ <p>The youth had seen at once that if he should deal with the
+ land as his predecessors had done, he would be able to draw no
+ more from the stingy acres than they. He had shown the bent of
+ his mind and the nature of his talent by the promptness with
+ which he put things remote together, and by the directness with
+ which he reached his conclusions.</p>
+
+ <p>He had left his town-lodgings, having obtained of his
+ employer leave of absence for one week, and within twenty-four
+ hours had come to his conclusion and returned to his post. Of
+ that estate which he had inherited but a portion, and a very
+ small portion, offered to the cultivator the least
+ encouragement. The land had long ago been stripped of its
+ forest trees, and, thus defrauded of its natural fertilizers,
+ lay now, after successive seasons of drain and waste, as barren
+ as a desert, with the exception of that narrow strip between
+ the hills which apparently bent low that inland might look upon
+ river.</p>
+
+ <p>Along the banks of the stream, which flowed, a current of
+ considerable depth and swiftness, toward its outlet, the river,
+ willows were growing. Albert's employer was an importer to a
+ small extent, and fancy willow-ware formed a very considerable
+ share of his importations. The conclusion he had reached while
+ surveying his land was an answer to the question he had asked
+ himself: Why should not this land be made to bring forth the
+ kind of willow used by basket-weavers, and why should not
+ basket-weavers be induced to gather into a community of some
+ sort, and so importers be beaten in the market by domestic
+ productions? The aim thus clearly defined Spener had
+ accomplished. His Moravians furnished him with a willow-ware
+ which was always quoted at a high figure, and the patriotic
+ pride the manufacturer felt in the enterprise was abundantly
+ rewarded: no foreign mark was ever found on his home-made
+ goods.</p>
+
+ <p>But <i>his</i> Moravians: where did these people come from,
+ and how came they to be known as his?</p>
+
+ <p>The question brings us to Frederick Loretz. In those days he
+ was a porter in the establishment where Spener was a clerk. He
+ had filled this situation only one month, however, when he was
+ attacked with a fever which was scourging the neighborhood, and
+ taken to the hospital. Albert followed him thither with kindly
+ words and care, for the poor fellow was a stranger in the town,
+ and he had already told Spener his dismal story. Afar from wife
+ and child, among strangers and a pauper, his doom, he believed,
+ was to die. How he bemoaned his wasted life then, and the husks
+ which he had eaten!</p>
+
+ <p>In his delirium Loretz would have put an end to his life.
+ Spener talked him out of this horror of himself, and showed him
+ that there was always opportunity, while life lasted, for
+ wanderers to seek again the fold they had strayed from; for
+ when the delirium passed the man's conscience remained, and he
+ confessed that he had lived away from the brethren of his
+ faith, and was an outcast. Oh, if he could but be transported
+ to Herrnhut and set down there a well man in that sanctuary of
+ Moravianism, how devoutly would he return to the faith and
+ practice of his fathers!</p>
+
+ <p>When Spener returned from his trip of investigation he
+ hastened immediately to the hospital, sought out poor half-dead
+ Loretz, laid his hand on his shoulder, and said, "Come, get up:
+ I want you." And he explained his project: "I will build a
+ house for you, send for your wife and child, put you all
+ together, and start you in life. I am going into the basket
+ business, and I want you to look after my willows. After they
+ are pretty well grown you shall get in some
+ families&mdash;Simon-Pure Moravians, you know&mdash;and we will
+ have a village of our own. D'ye hear me?"</p>
+
+ <p>The poor fellow did hear: he struggled up in his bed, threw
+ his arms around Spener's neck, tried to kiss him, and
+ fainted.</p>
+
+ <p>"This is a good beginning," said Spener to himself as he
+ laid the senseless head upon the pillow and felt for the
+ beating heart. The beating heart was there. In a few moments
+ Loretz was looking, with eyes that shone with loving gratitude
+ and wondering admiration, on the young man who had saved his
+ life.</p>
+
+ <p>"I have no money," said this youth in further explanation of
+ his project&mdash;for he wanted his companion to understand his
+ circumstances from the outset&mdash;"but I shall borrow five
+ thousand dollars. I can pay the interest on that sum out of my
+ salary. Perhaps I shall sell a few lots on the river, if I can
+ turn attention to the region. It will all come out right,
+ anyhow. Now, how soon can you be ready? I will write to your
+ wife to-day if you say so, and tell her to come on with the
+ little girl."</p>
+
+ <p>"Wait a week," said Loretz in a whisper; and all that night
+ and the following day his chances for this world and the next
+ seemed about equal.</p>
+
+ <p>But after that he rallied, and his recovery was certain. It
+ was slow, however, hastened though it was by the hope and
+ expectation which had opened to him when he had reached the
+ lowest depth of despair and covered himself with the ashes of
+ repentance.</p>
+
+ <p>The letter for the wife and little girl was written, and
+ money sent to bring them from the place where Loretz had left
+ them when he set out in search of occupation, to find
+ employment as a porter, and the fever, and Albert Spener.</p>
+
+ <p>During the first year of co-working Loretz devoted himself
+ to the culture of the willow, and then, as time passed on and
+ hands were needed, he brought one family after another to the
+ place&mdash;Moravians all&mdash;until now there were at least
+ five hundred inhabitants in Spenersberg, a large factory and a
+ church, whereof Spener himself was a member "in good and
+ regular standing."</p>
+
+ <p>Seven years of incessant labor, directed by a wise
+ foresight, which looked almost like inspiration and miracle,
+ had resulted in all this real prosperity. Loretz never stopped
+ wondering at it, and yet he could have told you every step of
+ the process. All that had been <i>done</i> he had had a hand
+ in, but the devising brain was Spener's; and no wonder that, in
+ spite of his familiarity with the details, the sum-total of the
+ activities put forth in that valley should have seemed to
+ Loretz marvelous, magical.</p>
+
+ <p>He had many things to rejoice over besides his own
+ prosperity. His daughter was in all respects a perfect being,
+ to his thinking. For six years now she had been under the
+ instruction of Sister Benigna, not only in music, but in all
+ things that Sister Benigna, a well-instructed woman, could
+ teach. She sang, as Leonhard Marten would have told you,
+ "divinely," she was beautiful to look upon, and Albert Spener
+ desired to marry her.</p>
+
+ <p>Surely the Lord had blessed him, and remembered no more
+ those years of wanderings when, alienated from the brethren, he
+ sought out his own ways and came close upon destruction. What
+ should he return to the beneficent Giver for all these
+ benefits?</p>
+
+ <p>Poor Loretz! In his prosperity he thought that he should
+ never be moved, but he would not basely use that conviction and
+ forget the source of all his satisfaction. He remembered that
+ it was when he repented of his misdeeds that Spener came to him
+ and drew him from the pit. He could never look upon Albert as
+ other than a divine agent; and when Spener joined himself to
+ the Moravians, led partly by his admiration of them, partly by
+ religious impulse, and partly because of his conviction that to
+ be wholly successful he and his people must form a unit, his
+ joy was complete.</p>
+
+ <p>The proposal for Elise's hand had an effect upon her father
+ which any one who knew him well might have looked for and
+ directed. The pride of his life was satisfied. He remembered
+ that he and his Anna, in seeking to know the will of the Lord
+ in respect to their marriage, had been answered favorably by
+ the lot. He desired the signal demonstration of heavenly will
+ in regard to the nuptials proposed. Not a shadow of a doubt
+ visited his mind as to the result, and the influence of his
+ faith upon Spener was such that he acquiesced in the measure,
+ though not without remonstrance and misgiving and mental
+ reservation.</p>
+
+ <p>To find his way up into the region of faith, and quiet
+ himself there when the result of the seeking was known, was
+ almost impossible for Loretz. He could fear the Judge who had
+ decreed, but could he trust in Him? He began to grope back
+ among his follies of the past, seeking a crime he had not
+ repented, as the cause of this domestic calamity. But ah! to
+ reap such a harvest as this for any youthful folly! Poor soul!
+ little he knew of vengeance and retribution. He was at his
+ wit's end, incapable alike of advancing, retreating or of
+ peaceful surrender.</p>
+
+ <p>It was pleasant to him to think, in the night-watches, of
+ the young man who occupied the room next to his. He did not
+ see&mdash;at least had not yet seen&mdash;in Leonhard a
+ messenger sent to the house, as did his wife; but the presence
+ of the young stranger spoke favorable things in his behalf; and
+ then, as there was really nothing to be <i>done</i> about this
+ decision, anything that gave a diversion to sombre thoughts was
+ welcome. Sister Benigna had spoken very kindly to Leonhard in
+ the evening, and he had pointed out a place in one of Elise's
+ solos where by taking a higher key in a single passage a
+ marvelous effect could be produced. That showed knowledge; and
+ he said that he had taught music. Perhaps he would like to
+ remain until after the congregation festival had taken
+ place.</p>
+
+ <h3><a name="HCH0004"
+ id="HCH0004"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> CHAPTER VII.</h3>
+
+ <h3>THE BOOK.</h3>
+
+ <p>In the morning the master of the house rapped on Leonhard's
+ door and said: "When you come down I have something to show
+ you." The voice of Mr. Loretz had almost its accustomed
+ cheerfulness of tone, and he ended his remark with a brief "Ha!
+ ha!" peculiar to him, which not only expressed his own
+ good-humor, but also invited good-humored response.</p>
+
+ <p>Leonhard answered cheerily, and in a few moments he had
+ descended the steep uncovered stair to the music-room.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now for the book," Loretz called out as Leonhard
+ entered.</p>
+
+ <p>How handsome our young friend looked as he stood there
+ shaking hands with the elderly man, whose broad, florid face
+ now actually shone with hospitable feeling!</p>
+
+ <p>"Is father going to claim you as one of us, Mr. Marten?"
+ asked the wife of Loretz, who answered her husband's call by
+ coming into the room and bringing with her a large volume
+ wrapped in chamois skin.</p>
+
+ <p>"What shall I be, then?" asked Leonhard. "A wiser and a
+ better man, I do not doubt."</p>
+
+ <p>"What! you do not know?" the good woman stayed to say. "Has
+ nobody told you where you are, my young friend?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I never before found myself in a place I should like to
+ stay in always; so what does the rest signify?" answered
+ Leonhard. "What's in a name?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Not much perhaps, yet something," said Loretz. "We are all
+ Moravians here. I was going to look in this book here for the
+ names of your ancestors. I thought perhaps you knew about
+ Spenersberg."</p>
+
+ <p>"I am as new to it all as Christopher Columbus was to the
+ West India islands. If you find the names of my kinsmen down in
+ your book, sir, it&mdash;it will be a marvelous, happy sight
+ for me," said Leonhard.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll try my hand at it," said Loretz. "Ha! ha!" and he
+ opened the volume, which was bound in black leather, the leaves
+ yellowed with years. "This book," he continued, "is one hundred
+ and fifty years old. You will find recorded in it the names of
+ all my grandfather's friends, and all my father's. See, it is
+ our way. There are all the dates. Where they lived, see, and
+ where they died. It is all down. A man cannot feel himself cut
+ off from his kind as long as he has a volume like that in his
+ library. I have added a few names of my own friends, and their
+ birthdays. Here, you see, is Sister Benigna's, written with her
+ own hand. A most remarkable woman, sir. True as
+ steel&mdash;always the same. But"&mdash;he paused a moment and
+ looked at Leonhard with his head inclined to one side, and an
+ expression of perplexity upon his face&mdash;"there's something
+ out of the way here in this country. I have not more than one
+ name down to a dozen in my father's record, and twenty in my
+ grandfather's. We do not make friends, and we do not keep them,
+ as they did in old time. We don't trust each other as men ought
+ to. Half the time we find ourselves wondering whether the folks
+ we're dealing with are <i>honest</i>. Now think of that!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Are men any worse than they were in the old time?" asked
+ Leonhard, evidently not entering into the conversation with the
+ keenest enjoyment.</p>
+
+ <p>"I do not know how it is," said Loretz with a sigh,
+ continuing to turn the leaves of the book as he spoke.</p>
+
+ <p>"Perhaps we have less imagination, and don't look at every
+ new-comer as a friend until we have tried him," suggested
+ Leonhard. "We decide that everybody shall be tested before we
+ accept him. And isn't it the best way? Better than to be
+ disappointed, when we have set our heart on a man&mdash;or a
+ woman."</p>
+
+ <p>"I do not know&mdash;I cannot account for it," said Mr.
+ Loretz. Then with a sudden start he laid his right hand on the
+ page before him, and with a great pleased smile in his
+ deep-set, small blue eyes he said: "Here is your name. I felt
+ sure I should find it: I felt certain it was down. See here, on
+ my grandfather's page&mdash;<i>Leonhard Marten, Herrnhut</i>,
+ 1770. How do you like that?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I like it well," said Leonhard, bending over the book and
+ examining the close-fisted autograph set down strongly in
+ unfading ink. Had he found an ancestor at last? What could have
+ amazed him as much?</p>
+
+ <p>"What have you found?" asked Mrs. Loretz, who had heard
+ these remarks in the next room, where she was actively making
+ preparations for the breakfast, which already sent forth its
+ odorous invitations.</p>
+
+ <p>"We have found the name," answered her husband. "Come and
+ see. I have read it, I dare say, a hundred times: that was what
+ made me feel that an old friend had come."</p>
+
+ <p>"That means," said the good woman, hastening in at her
+ husband's call, and reading the name with a pleased
+ smile&mdash;"that means that you belong to us. I thought you
+ did. I am glad."</p>
+
+ <p>Were these folk so intent on securing a convert that in
+ these various ways they made the young stranger feel that he
+ was not among strangers in this unknown Spenersberg? Nothing
+ was farther from their thought: they only gave to their kindly
+ feeling hearty utterance, and perhaps spoke with a little extra
+ emphasis because the constraint they secretly felt in
+ consequence of their household trouble made them unanimous in
+ the effort to put it out of sight&mdash;not out of this
+ stranger's sight, but out of their own.</p>
+
+ <p>"Perhaps you will stop with us a while, and maybe write your
+ name on my page before you go," said Loretz, afraid that his
+ wife had gone a little too far.</p>
+
+ <p>"Without a single test?" Leonhard answered. "Haven't we just
+ agreed that we wise men don't take each other on trust, as they
+ did in our grandfathers' day?"</p>
+
+ <p>"A man living in Herrnhut in 1770 would not have for a
+ descendant a&mdash;a man I could not trust," said Loretz,
+ closing the book and placing it in its chamois covering again.
+ "Breakfast, mother, did you say?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Have you wanted ink?" asked Sister Benigna, entering at
+ that instant. "Are we writing in the sacred birthday book?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Not yet," said Leonhard hastily, the color rising to his
+ face in a way to suggest forked lightning somewhere beyond
+ sight.</p>
+
+ <p>"You have wanted ink, and are too kind to let me know," she
+ said. "I emptied the bottle copying music for the children
+ yesterday."</p>
+
+ <p>"The ink was put to a better use then than I could have
+ found for it this morning," said Leonhard.</p>
+
+ <p>And Mrs. Loretz, who looked into the room just then, said to
+ herself, as her eyes fell on him, "Poor soul! he is in
+ trouble."</p>
+
+ <p>In fact, this thought was in Leonhard's mind as he went into
+ breakfast with the family: "A deuced good friend I have
+ proved&mdash;to Wilberforce! Isn't there anybody here
+ clear-eyed enough to see that it would be like forgery to write
+ my name down in a book of friendship?"</p>
+
+ <p>The morning meal was enlivened by much more than the usual
+ amount of talk. Leonhard was curious to know about Herrnhut,
+ that old home of Moravianism, and the interest which he
+ manifested in the history Loretz was so eager to communicate
+ made him in turn an object of almost affectionate attention.
+ That he had no facts of private biography to communicate in
+ turn did net attract notice, because, however many such facts
+ he might have ready to produce, by the time Loretz had done
+ talking it was necessary that the day's work should
+ begin.</p><a name="HCH0005"
+ id="HCH0005"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h3><a name="HCH0008"
+ id="HCH0008"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> CHAPTER VIII.</h3>
+
+ <h3>CONFERENCE MEETING.</h3>
+
+ <p>The school-room was a large apartment in the basement of the
+ factory which had been used as a drying-room until it became
+ necessary to find for the increasing numbers of the little
+ flock more spacious accommodations. The basement was entered by
+ a door at the end of the building opposite that by which the
+ operatives entered the factory, and the hours were so timed
+ that the children went and came without disturbance to
+ themselves or others. The path that led to the basement door
+ was neatly bordered with flowering plants and bushes, and
+ sunlight was always to be found there, if anywhere in the
+ valley, from eight o'clock till two.</p>
+
+ <p>Leonhard walked to the factory with Sister Benigna, to whose
+ conduct Loretz had consigned him when called away by the tower
+ bell.</p>
+
+ <p>At the door of the basement Mr. Wenck was standing with a
+ printed copy of Handel's sacred oratorio of <i>The Messiah</i>
+ in his hand. Evidently he was waiting for Sister Benigna.</p>
+
+ <p>But when she had said to Leonhard, "Pass on to the other end
+ of the building and you will find the entrance, and Mr.
+ Spener's office in the corner as you enter," and Leonhard had
+ thanked her, and bowed and passed on, and she turned to Mr.
+ Wenck, it was very little indeed that he said or had to say
+ about the music which he held in his hand.</p>
+
+ <p>"I have no doubt that all the preparation necessary for
+ to-morrow evening is being made," he said. "You may need this
+ book. But I did not come to talk about it. Sister Benigna," he
+ continued in a different tone, and a voice not quite under his
+ control, "is it not unreasonable to have passed a sleepless
+ night thinking of Albert and Elise?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Very unreasonable." But he had not charged her, as she
+ supposed, with that folly, as his next words showed.</p>
+
+ <p>"It is, and yet I have done it&mdash;only because all this
+ might have been so easily avoided."</p>
+
+ <p>"And yet it was unavoidable," said she, looking toward the
+ school-room door as one who had no time to waste in idle
+ talk.</p>
+
+ <p>"Not that I question the wisdom of the resort if all were of
+ one mind," said Mr. Wenck, who had the dreary all-day before
+ him, and was not in the least pressed for time. "But I can see
+ that even on the part of Brother Loretz the act was not a
+ genuine act of faith."</p>
+
+ <p>Startled by the expression the minister was giving to her
+ secret thoughts, Benigna exclaimed, "And yet what can be
+ done?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Nothing," he answered. "If Loretz should yield to Spener,
+ and if I should&mdash;do you not see he has had everything his
+ own way here?&mdash;he would feel that nothing could stand in
+ opposition to him. If he were a different man! And they are
+ both so young!"</p>
+
+ <p>"I know that Elise has a conscience that will hold her fast
+ to duty," said Benigna, but she did not speak hopefully: she
+ spoke deliberately, however, thinking that these words
+ <i>conscience</i> and <i>duty</i> might arrest the minister's
+ attention, and that he would perhaps, by some means, throw
+ light upon questions which were constantly becoming more
+ perplexing to her. Was conscience an unfailing guide? Was one
+ person's duty to be pronounced upon by another without scruple,
+ and defined with unfaltering exactness? But the words had not
+ arrested the minister's attention.</p>
+
+ <p>"If they could only see that there is nothing to be done!"
+ said he. "Oh, they will, Benigna! Had they only the faith,
+ Benigna!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yet how vain their sacrifice, for they have it not!" said
+ she. And as if she would not prolong an interview which must be
+ full of pain, because no light could proceed from any words
+ that would be given them to speak, Sister Benigna turned
+ abruptly toward the basement door when she had said this, and
+ entered it without bestowing a parting glance even on the
+ minister.</p>
+
+ <p>He walked away after an instant's hesitation: indeed there
+ was nothing further to be said, and she did well to go.</p>
+
+ <p>Going homeward by a path which led along the hillside above
+ the village street, he must pass the small house separated from
+ all others&mdash;the house which was the appointed
+ resting-place of all who lived in Spenersberg to die
+ there&mdash;known as the Corpse-house. To it the bodies of
+ deceased persons were always taken after death, and there they
+ remained until the hour when they were carried forth for
+ burial.</p>
+
+ <p>As Mr. Wenck approached he saw that the door stood open: a
+ few steps farther, and this fact was accounted for. A bent and
+ wrinkled old woman stood there with a broom in her hand, which
+ she had been using in a plain, straight-forward manner.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, Mary," he said, "what does this mean, my good
+ woman?"</p>
+
+ <p>"It is the minister," she answered in a low voice,
+ curtseying. "I was moved to come here this morning, sir, and
+ see to things. It was time to be brushing up a little, I
+ thought. It is a month now since the last."</p>
+
+ <p>"I will take down the old boughs then, and garnish the walls
+ with new ones. And have you looked at the lamp too, Mary?"</p>
+
+ <p>"It is trimmed, sir," said the woman; and the minister's
+ readiness to assist her drew forth the confession: "I was
+ thinking on my bed in the night-watches that it must be done.
+ There will one be going home soon. And it may be myself, sir. I
+ could not have been easy if I had not come up to tidy the
+ house."</p>
+
+ <p>Having finished her task, which was a short one and easily
+ performed, the woman now waited to watch the minister as he
+ selected cedar boughs and wove them into wreaths, and suspended
+ them from the walls and rafters of the little room; and it
+ comforted the simple soul when, standing in the doorway, the
+ good man lifted his eyes toward heaven and said in the words of
+ the church litany:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">From error and misunderstanding,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">From the loss of our glory in Thee,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">From self-complacency,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">From untimely projects,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">From needless perplexity,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">From the murdering spirit and devices of
+ Satan,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">From the influence of the spirit of this
+ world,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">From hypocrisy and fanaticism,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">From the deceitfulness of sin,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">From all sin,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2"><i>Preserve us, gracious Lord and
+ God</i>&mdash;</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>and devoutly she joined in with him in the solemn responsive
+ cry.</p>
+
+ <p>It was very evident that the minister's work that day was
+ not to be performed in his silent home among his books.</p>
+
+ <p>On the brightest day let the sun become eclipsed, and how
+ the earth will pine! What melancholy will pervade the busy
+ streets, the pleasant fields and woods! How disconsolately the
+ birds will seek their mates and their nests!</p>
+
+ <p>The children came together, but many a half hour passed
+ during which the shadow of an Unknown seemed to come between
+ them and their teacher. The bright soul, was she too suffering
+ from an eclipse? Does it happen that all souls, even the most
+ valiant, most loving, least selfish, come in time to passes so
+ difficult that, shrinking back, they say, "Why should I
+ struggle to gain the other side? What is there worth seeking?
+ Better to end all here. This life is not worth enduring"? And
+ yet, does it also come to pass as certainly that these valiant,
+ unselfish, loving ones will struggle, fight, climb, wade, creep
+ on, on while the breath of life remains in them, and never
+ surrender? It seemed as if Sister Benigna had arrived at a
+ place where her baffled spirit stood still and felt its
+ helplessness. Could she do nothing for Elise, the dear child
+ for whose happiness she would cheerfully give her life, and not
+ think the price too dear?</p>
+
+ <p>By and by the children were aware that Sister Benigna had
+ come again among them: the humblest little flower lifted up its
+ head, and the smallest bird began to chirp and move about and
+ smooth its wings.</p>
+
+ <p>Sister Benigna! what had she recollected?&mdash;that but a
+ single day perhaps was hers to live, and here were all these
+ children! As she turned with ardent zeal to her
+ work&mdash;which indeed had not failed of accustomed conduct so
+ far as routine went&mdash;tell me what do you find in those
+ lovely eyes if not the heavenliest assurances? Let who will
+ call the scene of this life's operations a vale of tears, a
+ world of misery, a prison-house of the spirit, here is one who
+ asks for herself nothing of honors or riches or pleasures, and
+ who can bless the Lord God for the glory of the earth he has
+ created, and for those everlasting purposes of his which
+ mortals can but trust in, and which are past finding out.
+ Children, let us do our best to-day, and wait until to-morrow
+ for to-morrow's gifts. This exhortation was in the eyes, mien,
+ conduct of the teacher, and so she led them on until, when they
+ came to practice their hymns for the festival, every little
+ heart and voice was in tune, and she praised them with voice so
+ cheerful, how should they guess that it had ever been choked by
+ anguish or had ever fainted in despair?</p>
+
+ <p>O young eyes saddening over what is to you a painful,
+ insoluble problem! yet a little while and you shall see the
+ mists of morning breaking everywhere, and the great conquering
+ sun will enfold you too in its warm embrace: the humble laurels
+ of the mountain's side, even as the great pines and cedars of
+ the mountain's crest, have but to receive and use what the
+ sterile rock and the blinding cloud, the wintry tempest and the
+ rain and the summer's heat bestow, and lo! the heights are
+ alive with glory. But it is not in a day.</p><a name="HCH0006"
+ id="HCH0006"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h3><a name="HCH0009"
+ id="HCH0009"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> CHAPTER IX.</h3>
+
+ <h3>WILL THE ARCHITECT HAVE EMPLOYMENT?</h3>
+
+ <p>On entering the factory, Leonhard met Loretz near the door
+ talking with Albert Spener. When he saw Leonhard, Loretz said,
+ "I was just saying to Mr. Spener that I expected you, sir, and
+ how he might recognize you; but you shall speak for yourself.
+ If you will spend a little time looking about, I shall be back
+ soon: perhaps Mr. Spener&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Leonhard Marten, I believe," said Mr. Albert Spener
+ with a little exaggeration of his natural stiffness. Perhaps he
+ did not suspect that all the morning he had been manifesting
+ considerable loftiness toward Loretz, and that he spoke in a
+ way that made Leonhard feel that his departure from Spenersberg
+ would probably take place within something less than
+ twenty-four hours.</p>
+
+ <p>Yet within half an hour the young men were walking up and
+ down the factory, examining machinery and work, and talking as
+ freely as if they had known each other six months. They were
+ not in everything as unlike as they were in person. Spener was
+ a tall, spare man, who conveyed an impression of mental
+ strength and physical activity. He could turn his hand to
+ anything, and <i>attempt</i> anything that was to be done by
+ skillful handicraft; and whether he could use his wits well in
+ shaping men, let Spenersberg answer. His square-shaped head was
+ covered with bright brown hair, which had a reddish tinge, and
+ his moustache was of no stinted growth: his black eyes
+ penetrated and flashed, and could glow and glare in a way to
+ make weakness and feebleness tremble. His quick speech did not
+ spare: right and left he used his swords of thought and will.
+ Fall in! or, Out of the way! were the commands laid down by him
+ since the foundations of Spenersberg were laid. In the
+ fancy-goods line he might have made of himself a spectacle,
+ supposing he could have remained in the trade; but set apart
+ here in this vale, the centre of a sphere of his own creation,
+ where there was something at stake vast enough to justify the
+ exercise of energy and authority, he had a field for the fair
+ play of all that was within him&mdash;the worst and the best.
+ The worst that he could be he was&mdash;a tyrant; and the best
+ that he could be he was&mdash;a lover. Hitherto his tyrannies
+ had brought about good results only, but it was well that the
+ girl he loved had not only spirit and courage enough to love
+ him, but also faith enough to remove mountains.</p>
+
+ <p>If Leonhard had determined that he would make a friend of
+ Spener before he entered the factory, he could not have
+ proceeded more wisely than he did. First, he was interested in
+ the works, and intent on being told about the manufacture of
+ articles of furniture from a product ostensibly of such small
+ account as the willow; then he was interested in the designs
+ and surprised at the ingenious variety, and curious to learn
+ their source, and amazed to hear that Mr. Spener had himself
+ originated more than half of them. Then presently he began to
+ suggest designs, and at the end of an hour he found himself at
+ a table in Spener's office drawing shapes for baskets and
+ chairs and tables and ornamental devices, and making Spener
+ laugh so at some remark as to be heard all over the
+ building.</p>
+
+ <p>"You say you are an architect," he said after Leonhard had
+ covered a sheet of paper with suggestions written and outlined
+ for him, which he looked at with swiftly-comprehending and
+ satisfied eyes. "What do you say to doing a job for me?"</p>
+
+ <p>"With all my heart," answered Leonhard, "if it can be done
+ at once."</p>
+
+ <p>These words were in the highest degree satisfactory. Here
+ was a man who knew the worth of a minute. He was the man for
+ Spener. "Come with me," he said, "and I'll show you a
+ building-site or two worth putting money on;" and so they
+ walked together out of the factory, crossed a rustic
+ foot-bridge to the opposite side, ascended a sunny half-cleared
+ slope and passed across a field; and there beneath them, far
+ below, rolled the grand river which had among its notable ports
+ this little Spenersberg.</p>
+
+ <p>"What do you think of a house on this site, sir?" asked
+ Spener, looking with no small degree of satisfaction around him
+ and down the rocky steep.</p>
+
+ <p>"I think I should like to be commissioned to build a castle
+ with towers and gates of this very granite which you could hew
+ out by the thousand cord from the quarry yonder. What a perfect
+ gray for building!"</p>
+
+ <p>"I have always thought I would use the material on the
+ ground&mdash;the best compliment I could pay this place which I
+ have raised my fortune out of," said Spener.</p>
+
+ <p>"There's no better material on the earth," said
+ Leonhard.</p>
+
+ <p>"But I don't want a castle: I want a house with room enough
+ in it&mdash;high ceilings, wide halls, and a piazza fifteen or
+ twenty feet wide all around it."</p>
+
+ <p>"Must I give up the castle? There isn't a better site on the
+ Rhine than this."</p>
+
+ <p>"But I'm not a baron, and I live at peace with my
+ neighbors&mdash;at least with outsiders." That last remark was
+ an unfortunate one, for it brought the speaker back consciously
+ to confront the images which were constantly lurking round
+ him&mdash;only hid when he commanded them out of sight in the
+ manfulness of a spirit that would not be interfered with in its
+ work. He sat looking at Leonhard opposite to him, who had
+ already taken a note-book and pencil from his pocket, and,
+ planting his left foot firmly against one of the great rocks of
+ the cliff, he said, "Loretz tells me you stayed all night at
+ his house."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, he invited me in when I inquired my way to the
+ inn."</p>
+
+ <p>"Sister Benigna was there?"</p>
+
+ <p>"She wasn't anywhere else," said Leonhard, looking up and
+ smiling. "Excuse the slang. If you are where she is, you may
+ feel very certain about her being there."</p>
+
+ <p>"Not at all," said Albert, evidently nettled into argument
+ by the theme he had introduced. "She is one of those persons
+ who can be in several places at the same time. You heard them
+ sing, I suppose. They are preparing for the congregation
+ festival. It is six years since we started here, but we only
+ built our church last year: this year we have the first
+ celebration in the edifice, and of course there is great
+ preparation."</p>
+
+ <p>"I have been wondering how I could go away before it takes
+ place ever since I heard of it."</p>
+
+ <p>"If you wonder less how you can stay, remain of course,"
+ said Spener with no great cordiality: he owed this stranger
+ nothing, after all.</p>
+
+ <p>"It will only be to prove that I am really music-mad, as
+ they have been telling me ever since I was born. If that is the
+ case, from the evidences I have had since I came here I think I
+ shall recover."</p>
+
+ <p>"What do you mean?" asked Spener.</p>
+
+ <p>"I mean that I see how little I really know about the
+ science. I never heard anything to equal the musical knowledge
+ and execution of Loretz's daughter and this Sister Benigna you
+ speak of."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah! I am not a musician. I tried the trombone, but lacked
+ the patience. I am satisfied to admire. And so you liked the
+ singers? Which best?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Both."</p>
+
+ <p>"Come, come&mdash;what was the difference?"</p>
+
+ <p>"The difference?" repeated Leonhard reflecting.</p>
+
+ <p>Spener also seemed to reflect on his question, and was so
+ absorbed in his thinking that he seemed to be startled when
+ Leonhard, from his studies of the square house with the wide
+ halls and the large rooms with high ceilings, turned to him and
+ said, "The difference, sir, is between two women."</p>
+
+ <p>"No difference at all, do you mean? Do you mean they are
+ alike? They are not alike."</p>
+
+ <p>"Not so alike that I have seen anything like either of
+ them."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah! neither have I. For that reason I shall marry one of
+ them, while the other I would not marry&mdash;no, not if she
+ were the only woman on the continent."</p>
+
+ <p>"You are a fortunate man," said Leonhard.</p>
+
+ <p>"I intend to prove that. Nothing more is necessary than the
+ girl's consent&mdash;is there?&mdash;if you have made up your
+ mind that you must have her."</p>
+
+ <p>"I should think you might say that, sir."</p>
+
+ <p>"But you don't hazard an opinion as to which, sir."</p>
+
+ <p>"Not I."</p>
+
+ <p>"Why not?"</p>
+
+ <p>"It might be Miss Elise, if&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"If what?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I am not accustomed to see young ladies in their homes. I
+ have only fancied sometimes what a pretty girl might be in her
+ father's house."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, sir?" said Spener impatiently.</p>
+
+ <p>"A young lady like Miss Elise would have a great deal to
+ say, I should suppose."</p>
+
+ <p>"Is she dumb? I thought she could talk. I should have said
+ so."</p>
+
+ <p>"I should have guessed, too, that she would always be
+ singing about the house."</p>
+
+ <p>"And if not&mdash;what then?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Something must be going wrong somewhere. So you see it
+ can't be Miss Elise, according to my judgment."</p>
+
+ <p>Spener laughed when this conclusion was reached.</p>
+
+ <p>"Come here again within a month and see if she can talk and
+ sing," said he with eyes flashing. "Perhaps you have found that
+ it is as easy to frighten a bugbear out of the way as to be
+ frightened by one. I never found, sir, that I couldn't put a
+ stumbling-block out of my path. We have one little man here who
+ is going to prove himself a nuisance, I'm afraid. He is a good
+ little fellow, too. I always liked him until he undertook to
+ manage my affairs. I don't propose to give up the reins yet a
+ while, and until I do, you see, he has no chance. I am sorry
+ about it, for I considered him quite like a friend; but a
+ friend, sir, with a flaw in him is worse than an enemy. I know
+ where to find my enemies, but I can't keep track of a man who
+ pretends to be a friend and serves me ill. But pshaw! let me
+ see what you are doing."</p>
+
+ <p>Leonhard was glad when the man ceased from discoursing on
+ friendship&mdash;a favorite theme among Spenersbergers, he
+ began to think&mdash;and glad to break away from his work, for
+ he held his pencil less firmly than he should have done.</p>
+
+ <p>Spener studied the portion completed, and seemed surprised
+ as well as pleased. "You know your business," said he. "Be so
+ good as to finish the design."</p>
+
+ <p>Then returning the book to Leonhard, he looked at his watch.
+ "It is time I went to dinner," he said. "Come with me. Loretz
+ knows you are with me, and will expect you to be my guest
+ to-day." So they walked across the field, but did not descend
+ by the path along which they had ascended. They went farther to
+ the east, and Spener led the way down the rough hillside until
+ he came to a point whence the descent was less steep and
+ difficult. There he paused. A beautiful view was spread before
+ them. Little Spenersberg lay on the slope opposite: between ran
+ the stream, which widened farther toward the east and narrowed
+ toward the west, where it emptied into the river. Eastward the
+ valley also widened, and there the willows grew, and looked
+ like a great garden, beautiful in every shade of green.</p>
+
+ <p>"I should not have the river from this point," said Spener,
+ "but I should have a great deal more, and be nearer the people:
+ I do not think it would be the thing to appear even to separate
+ myself from them. I have done a great deal not so agreeable to
+ me, I assure you, in order to bring myself near to them. One
+ must make sacrifices to obtain his ends: it is only to count
+ the cost and then be ready to put down the money. Suppose you
+ plant a house just here."</p>
+
+ <p>"How could it be done?"</p>
+
+ <p>"You an architect and ask me!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Things can be planted anywhere," answered Leonhard, "but
+ whether the cost of production will not be greater than the
+ fruit is worth, is the question. You can have a platform built
+ here as broad as that the temple stood on if you are willing to
+ pay for the foundations."</p>
+
+ <p>"That is the talk!" said Spener. "Take a square look, and
+ let me know what you can do toward a house on the hillside. You
+ see there is no end of raw material for building, and it is a
+ perfect prospect. But come now to dinner."</p>
+
+ <p class="author">CAROLINE CHESEBRO.</p>
+
+ <p class="center">[TO BE CONTINUED.]</p><a name="H_4_0011"
+ id="H_4_0011"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h2>COUNTRY-HOUSE LIFE IN ENGLAND.</h2>
+
+ <p>The love for country life is, if possible, stronger in
+ England now than at any previous period in her history. There
+ is no other country where this taste has prevailed to the same
+ extent. It arose originally from causes mainly political. In
+ France a similar condition of things existed down to the
+ sixteenth century, and was mainly brought to an end by the
+ policy of ministers, who dreaded the increasing power of petty
+ princes in remote provinces becoming in combination formidable
+ to the central power. It was specially the object of Richelieu
+ and Mazarin to check this sort of baronial <i>imperium in
+ imperio</i>, and it became in the time of Louis XIV the
+ keystone of that monarch's domestic policy. This tended to
+ encourage the "hanging on" of <i>grands seigneurs</i> about the
+ court, where many of the chief of them, after having exhausted
+ their resources in gambling or riotous living, became dependent
+ for place or pension on the Crown, and were in fact the
+ creatures of the king and his minister. Of course this did not
+ apply to all. Here and there in the broad area of France were
+ to be found magnificent ch&acirc;teaux&mdash;a few of which,
+ especially in Central France, still survive&mdash;where the
+ marquis or count reigned over his people an almost absolute
+ monarch.</p>
+
+ <p>There is a passage in one of Horace Walpole's letters in
+ which that virtuoso expresses his regret, after a visit to the
+ ancestral "h&ocirc;tels" of Paris, whose contents had afforded
+ him such intense gratification, that the nobility of England,
+ like that of France, had not concentrated their treasures of
+ art, etc. in London houses. Had he lived a few years longer he
+ would probably have altered his views, which were such as his
+ sagacious and manly father, who dearly loved his Norfolk home,
+ Houghton, would never have held.</p>
+
+ <p>In England, from the time that anything like social life, as
+ we understand the phrase, became known, the power of the Crown
+ was so well established that no necessity for resorting to a
+ policy such as Richelieu's for diminishing the influence of the
+ noblesse existed.</p>
+
+ <p>In fact, a course distinctly the reverse came to be adopted
+ from the time of Elizabeth down to even a later period than the
+ reign of Charles II.</p>
+
+ <p>In the reign of Elizabeth an act was passed, which is to
+ this hour probably on the statute book, restricting building in
+ or near the metropolis. James I appears to have been in a
+ chronic panic on this subject, and never lost an opportunity of
+ dilating upon it. In one of his proclamations he refers to
+ those swarms of gentry "who, through the instigation of their
+ wives, or to new model and fashion their daughters who, if they
+ were unmarried, marred their reputations, and if married, lost
+ them&mdash;did neglect their country hospitality and cumber the
+ city, a general nuisance to the kingdom." He desired the Star
+ Chamber "to regulate the exorbitancy of the new buildings about
+ the city, which were but a shelter for those who, when they had
+ spent their estates in coaches, lacqueys and fine clothes like
+ Frenchmen, lived miserably in their houses like Italians; but
+ the honor of the English nobility and gentry is to be
+ hospitable among their tenants.</p>
+
+ <p>"Gentlemen resident on their estates," said he, very
+ sensibly, "were like ships in port: their value and magnitude
+ were felt and acknowledged; but when at a distance, as their
+ size seemed insignificant, so their worth and importance were
+ not duly estimated."</p>
+
+ <p>Charles I., with characteristic arbitrariness, carried
+ matters with a still higher hand. His Star Chamber caused
+ buildings to be actually razed, and fined truants heavily. One
+ case which is reported displays the grim and costly humor of
+ the illegal tribunal which dealt with such cases. Poor Mr.
+ Palmer of Sussex, a gay bachelor, being called upon to show
+ cause why he had been residing in London, pleaded in
+ extenuation that he had no house, his mansion having been
+ destroyed by fire two years before. This, however, was held
+ rather an aggravation of the offence, inasmuch as he had failed
+ to rebuild it; and Mr. Palmer paid a penalty of one thousand
+ pounds&mdash;equivalent to at least twenty thousand dollars
+ now.</p>
+
+ <p>A document which especially serves to show the manner of
+ life of the ancient noblesse is the earl of Northumberland's
+ "Household Book" in the early part of the sixteenth century. By
+ this we see the great magnificence of the old nobility, who,
+ seated in their castles, lived in a state of splendor scarcely
+ inferior to that of the court. As the king had his privy
+ council, so the earl of Northumberland had his council,
+ composed of his principal officers, by whose advice and
+ assistance he established his code of economic laws. As the
+ king had his lords and grooms of the chamber, who waited in
+ their respective turns, so the earl was attended by the
+ constables of his several castles, who entered into waiting in
+ regular succession. Among other instances of magnificence it
+ may be remarked that not fewer than eleven priests were kept in
+ the household, presided over by a doctor or bachelor of
+ divinity as dean of the chapel.</p>
+
+ <p>An account of how the earl of Worcester lived at Ragland
+ Castle before the civil wars which began in 1641 also exhibits
+ his manner of life in great detail: "At eleven o'clock the
+ Castle Gates were shut and the tables laid: two in the
+ dining-room; three in the hall; one in Mrs. Watson's
+ appartment, where the chaplains eat; two in the housekeeper's
+ room for my ladie's women. The Earl came into the Dining Room
+ attended by his gentlemen. As soon as he was seated, Sir Ralph
+ Blackstone, Steward of the House, retired. The Comptroller, Mr.
+ Holland, attended with his staff; as did the Sewer, Mr.
+ Blackburn, and the daily waiters with many gentlemen's sons,
+ from two to seven hundred pounds a year, bred up in the Castle;
+ my ladie's Gentleman Usher, Mr. Harcourt; my lord's Gentlemen
+ of the Chamber, Mr. Morgan and Mr. Fox.</p>
+
+ <p>"At the first table sat the noble family and such of the
+ nobility as came there. At the second table in the Dining-room
+ sat Knights and honorable gentlemen attended by footmen.</p>
+
+ <p>"In the hall at the first table sat Sir R. Blackstone,
+ Steward, the Comptroller, Secretary, Master of the Horse,
+ Master of the Fishponds, my Lord Herbert's Preceptor, with such
+ gentlemen as came there under the degree of knight, attended by
+ footmen and plentifully served with wine.</p>
+
+ <p>"At the third table in the hall sate the Clerk of the
+ Kitchen, with the Yeomen, officers of the House, two Grooms of
+ the Chamber, etc.</p>
+
+ <p>"Other officers of the Household were the Chief Auditor,
+ Clerk of Accounts, Purveyor of the Castle, Usher of the Hall,
+ Closet Keeper, Gentleman of the Chapel, Keeper of the Records,
+ Master of the Wardrobe, Master of the Armoury, Master Groom of
+ the Stable for the 12 War-horses, Master of the Hounds, Master
+ Falconer, Porter and his men, two Butchers, two Keepers of the
+ Home Park, two Keepers of the Red Deer Park, Footmen, Grooms
+ and other Menial Servants to the number of 150. Some of the
+ footmen were Brewers and Bakers.</p>
+
+ <p>"<i>Out offices</i>.&mdash;Steward of Ragland, Governor of
+ Chepstow Castle, Housekeeper of Worcester House in London,
+ thirteen Bailiffs, two Counsel for the Bailiffs&mdash;who
+ looked after the estate&mdash;to have recourse to, and a
+ Solicitor."</p>
+
+ <p>In a delicious old volume now rarely to be met with, called
+ <i>The Olio</i>, published eighty years ago, Francis Grose the
+ antiquary thus describes certain characters typical of the
+ country life of the earlier half of the seventeenth century:
+ "When I was a young man there existed in the families of most
+ unmarried men or widowers of the rank of gentlemen, resident in
+ the country, a certain antiquated female, either maiden or
+ widow, commonly an aunt or cousin. Her dress I have now before
+ me: it consisted of a stiff-starched cap and hood, a little
+ hoop, a rich silk damask gown with large flowers. She leant on
+ an ivory-headed crutch-cane, and was followed by a fat
+ phthisicky dog of the pug kind, who commonly reposed on a
+ cushion, and enjoyed the privilege of snarling at the servants,
+ and occasionally biting their heels, with impunity. By the side
+ of this old lady jingled a bunch of keys, securing in different
+ closets and corner-cupboards all sorts of cordial waters,
+ cherry and raspberry brandy, washes for the complexion, Daffy's
+ elixir, a rich seed-cake, a number of pots of currant jelly and
+ raspberry jam, with a range of gallipots and phials and purges
+ for the use of poorer neighbors. The daily business of this
+ good lady was to scold the maids, collect eggs, feed the
+ turkeys and assist at all lyings-in that happened within the
+ parish. Alas! this being is no more seen, and the race is, like
+ that of her pug dog and the black rat, totally extinct.</p>
+
+ <p>"Another character, now worn out and gone, was the country
+ squire: I mean the little, independent country gentleman of
+ three hundred pounds a year, who commonly appeared in a plain
+ drab or plush coat, large silver buttons, a jockey cap, and
+ rarely without boots. His travels never exceeded the distance
+ to the county-town, and that only at assize- and session-time,
+ or to attend an election. Once a week he commonly dined at the
+ next market-town with the attorneys and justices. This man went
+ to church regularly, read the weekly journal, settled the
+ parochial disputes between the parish officers at the vestry,
+ and afterward adjourned to the neighboring ale-house, where he
+ usually got drunk for the good of his country. He never played
+ at cards but at Christmas, when a family pack was produced from
+ the mantelpiece. He was commonly followed by a couple of
+ greyhounds and a pointer, and announced his arrival at a
+ friend's house by cracking his whip or giving the view-halloo.
+ His drink was generally ale, except on Christmas, the Fifth of
+ November or some other gala-day, when he would make a bowl of
+ strong brandy punch, garnished with a toast and nutmeg. A
+ journey to London was by one of these men reckoned as great an
+ undertaking as is at present a voyage to the East Indies, and
+ undertaken with scarcely less precaution and preparation. The
+ mansion of one of these squires was of plaster striped with
+ timber, not unaptly called calimanco-work, or of red brick;
+ large casemented bow-windows, a porch with seats in it, and
+ over it a study, the eaves of the house well inhabited by
+ swallows, and the court set round with hollyhocks. The hall was
+ furnished with flitches of bacon, and the mantelpiece with guns
+ and fishing-rods of different dimensions, accompanied by the
+ broadsword, partisan and dagger borne by his ancestors in the
+ Civil Wars. The vacant spaces were occupied by stags' horns.
+ Against the wall was posted King Charles's <i>Golden Rules</i>,
+ Vincent Wing's <i>Almanack</i> and a portrait of the duke of
+ Marlborough: in his window lay Baker's <i>Chronicle</i>, Fox's
+ <i>Book of Martyrs</i>, Glanvil on <i>Apparitions</i>,
+ Quincey's <i>Dispensatory</i>, the <i>Complete Justice</i> and
+ a <i>Book of Farriery</i>. In the corner, by the fireside,
+ stood a large wooden two-armed chair with a cushion; and within
+ the chimney-corner were a couple of seats. Here, at Christmas,
+ he entertained his tenants assembled round a glowing fire made
+ of the roots of trees and other great logs, and told and heard
+ the traditionary tales of the village respecting ghosts and
+ witches till fear made them afraid to move. In the mean time
+ the jorum of ale was in continual circulation. The best parlor,
+ which was never opened but on particular occasions, was
+ furnished with Turk-worked chairs, and hung round with
+ portraits of his ancestors&mdash;the men, some in the character
+ of shepherds with their crooks, dressed in full suits and huge
+ full-bottomed perukes, and others in complete armor or
+ buff-coats; the females, likewise as shepherdesses with the
+ lamb and crook, all habited in high heads and flowing robes.
+ Alas! these men and these houses are no more! The luxury of the
+ times has obliged them to quit the country and become humble
+ dependants on great men, to solicit a place or commission, to
+ live in London, to rack their tenants and draw their rents
+ before due. The venerable mansion is in the mean time suffered
+ to tumble down or is partly upheld as a farm-house, till after
+ a few years the estate is conveyed to the steward of the
+ neighboring lord, or else to some nabob, contractor or limb of
+ the law."</p>
+
+ <p>It is unquestionably owing to the love of country life
+ amongst the higher classes that England so early attained in
+ many respects what may be termed an even civilization. In
+ almost all other countries the traveler beyond the confines of
+ a few great cities finds himself in a region of comparative
+ semi-barbarism. But no one familiar with English country life
+ can say that this is the case in the rural districts of
+ England, whilst it is most unquestionably so in Ireland, simply
+ because she has through absenteeism been deprived of those
+ influences which have done so much for her wealthy sister. Go
+ where you will in England to-day, and you will find within five
+ miles of you a good turnpike road, leading to an inn hard by,
+ where you may get a clean and comfortable though simple dinner,
+ good bread, good butter, and a carriage&mdash;"fly" is the term
+ now, as in the days of Mr. Jonathan Oldbuck&mdash;to convey you
+ where you will. And this was the case long before railways came
+ into vogue.</p>
+
+ <p>The influence of the great house has very wide
+ ramifications, and extends far beyond the radius of park,
+ village and estate. It greatly affects the prosperity of the
+ country and county towns. Go into Exeter or Shrewsbury on a
+ market-day in the autumn months, and you will find the streets
+ crowded with carriages. If a local herald be with you, he will
+ tell you all about their owners by glancing at the liveries and
+ panels. They belong, half of them, to the old county gentry,
+ who have shopped here&mdash;always at the same shops, according
+ as their proprietors are Whigs or Tories&mdash;for generations.
+ It may well be imagined what a difference the custom of twenty
+ gentlemen spending on an average twenty-five thousand dollars a
+ year makes to a grocer or draper. Besides, this class of
+ customer demands a first-rate article, and consequently it is
+ worth while to keep it in stock. The fishmonger knows that
+ twenty great houses within ten miles require their handsome
+ dish of fish for dinner as regularly as their bread and butter.
+ It becomes worth his while therefore to secure a steady supply.
+ In this way smaller people profit, and country life becomes
+ pleasant to them too, inasmuch as the demands of the rich
+ contribute to the comfort of those in moderate
+ circumstances.</p>
+
+ <p>Let us pass to the daily routine of an affluent country
+ home. The breakfast hour is from nine to eleven, except where
+ hunting-men or enthusiasts in shooting are concerned. The
+ former are often in the saddle before six, and young
+ partridge-slayers may, during the first fortnight of
+ September&mdash;after that their ardor abates a bit&mdash;be
+ found in the stubbles at any hour after sunrise.</p>
+
+ <p>A country-house breakfast in the house of a gentlemen with
+ from three thousand a year upward, when several guests are in
+ the house, is a very attractive meal. Of course its degree of
+ excellence varies, but we will take an average case in the
+ house of a squire living on his paternal acres with five
+ thousand pounds a year and knowing how to live.</p>
+
+ <p>It is 10 A.M. in October: family prayers, usual in nine
+ country-houses out of ten, which a guest can attend or not as
+ he pleases, are over. The company is gradually gathering in the
+ breakfast-room. It is an ample apartment, paneled with oak and
+ hung with family pictures. If you have any appreciation for
+ fine plate&mdash;and you are to be pitied if you have
+ not&mdash;you will mark the charming shape and exquisite
+ chasing of the antique urn and other silver vessels, which
+ shine as brilliantly as on the day they left the silversmiths
+ to Her Majesty, Queen Anne. No "Brummagem" patterns will you
+ find here.</p>
+
+ <p>On the table at equidistant points stand two tiny tables or
+ dumb-waiters, which are made to revolve. On these are placed
+ sugar, cream, butter, preserves, salt, pepper, mustard, etc.,
+ so that every one can help himself without troubling
+ others&mdash;a great desideratum, for many people are of the
+ same mind on this point as a well-known English family, of whom
+ it was once observed that they were very nice people, but
+ didn't like being bored to pass the mustard.</p>
+
+ <p>On the sideboard are three beautiful silver dishes with
+ spirit-lamps beneath them. Let us look under their covers.
+ Broiled chicken, fresh mushrooms on toast, and stewed kidney.
+ On a larger dish is fish, and ranged behind these hot viands
+ are cold ham, tongue, pheasant and game-pie. On huge platters
+ of wood, with knives to correspond, are farm-house brown bread
+ and white bread, whilst on the breakfast-table itself you will
+ find hot rolls, toast&mdash;of which two or three fresh relays
+ are brought in during breakfast&mdash;buttered toast, muffins
+ and the freshest of eggs. The hot dishes at breakfast are
+ varied almost every morning, and where there is a good cook a
+ variety of some twenty dishes is made.</p>
+
+ <p>Marmalade (Marie Malade) of oranges&mdash;said to have been
+ originally prepared for Mary queen of Scots when ill, and
+ introduced by her into Scotland&mdash;and "jams" of apricot and
+ other fruit always form a part of an English or Scotch
+ breakfast. The living is just as good&mdash;often
+ better&mdash;among the five-thousand-pounds-a-year gentry as
+ among the very wealthy: the only difference lies in the number
+ of servants and guests.</p>
+
+ <p>The luncheon-hour is from one to two. At luncheon there will
+ be a roast leg of mutton or some such <i>pi&egrave;ce de
+ r&eacute;sistance</i>, and a made dish, such as minced
+ veal&mdash;a dish, by the way, not the least understood in this
+ country, where it is horribly mangled&mdash;two hot dishes of
+ meat and several cold, and various sorts of pastry. These, with
+ bread, butter, fruit, cheese, sherry, port, claret and beer,
+ complete the meal.</p>
+
+ <p>Few of the men of the party are present at this meal, and
+ those who are eat but little, reserving their forces until
+ dinner. All is placed on the table at once, and not, as at
+ dinner, in courses. The servants leave the room when they have
+ placed everything on the table, and people wait on themselves.
+ Dumb-waiters with clean plates, glasses, etc. stand at each
+ corner of the table, so that there is very little need to get
+ up for what you want.</p>
+
+ <p>The afternoon is usually passed by the ladies alone or with
+ only one or two gentlemen who don't care to shoot, etc., and is
+ spent in riding, driving and walking. Englishwomen are great
+ walkers. With their skirts conveniently looped up, and boots
+ well adapted to defy the mud, they brave all sorts of weather.
+ "Oh it rains! what a bore! We can't go out," said a young lady,
+ standing at the breakfast-room window at a house in Ireland; to
+ which her host rejoined, "If you don't go out here when it
+ rains, you don't go out at all;" which is pretty much the
+ truth.</p>
+
+ <p>About five o'clock, as you sit over your book in the
+ library, you hear a rapid firing off of guns, which apprises
+ you that the men have returned from shooting. They linger a
+ while in the gun-room talking over their sport and seeing the
+ record of the killed entered in the game-book. Then some,
+ doffing the shooting-gear for a free-and-easy but scrupulously
+ neat attire, repair to the ladies' sitting-room or the library
+ for "kettledrum."</p>
+
+ <p>On a low table is placed the tea equipage, and tea in
+ beautiful little cups is being dispensed by fair hands. This is
+ a very pleasant time in many houses, and particularly favorable
+ to fun and flirtation. In houses where there are children, the
+ cousins of the house and others very intimate adjourn to the
+ school-room, where, when the party is further reinforced by
+ three or four boys home for the holidays, a scene of fun and
+ frolic, which it requires all the energies of the staid
+ governess to prevent going too far, ensues.</p>
+
+ <p>So time speeds on until the dressing-bell rings at seven
+ o'clock, summoning all to prepare for the great event of the
+ day&mdash;dinner. Every one dons evening-attire for this meal;
+ and so strong a feeling obtains on this point that if, in case
+ of his luggage going wrong or other accident, a man is
+ compelled to join the party in morning-clothes, he feels
+ painfully "fish-out-of-waterish." We know, indeed, of a case in
+ which a guest absurdly sensitive would not come down to dinner
+ until the arrival of his things, which did not make their
+ appearance for a week.</p>
+
+ <p>Ladies' dress in country-houses depends altogether upon the
+ occasion. If it be a quiet party of intimate friends, their
+ attire is of the simplest, but in many fashionable houses the
+ amount of dressing is fully as great as in London. English
+ ladies do not dress nearly as expensively or with so much taste
+ as Americans, but, on the other hand, they have the subject
+ much less in their thoughts; which is perhaps even more
+ desirable.</p>
+
+ <p>There is a degree of pomp and ceremony, which, however, is
+ far from being unpleasant, at dinner in a large country-house.
+ The party is frequently joined by the rector and his wife, a
+ neighboring squire or two, and a stray parson, so that it
+ frequently reaches twenty. Of course in this case the
+ pleasantness of the prandial period depends largely upon whom
+ you have the luck to get next to; but there's this advantage in
+ the situation over a similar one in London&mdash;that you have,
+ at all events, a something of local topics in common, having
+ picked up a little knowledge of places and people during your
+ stay, or if you are quite a new-comer, you can easily set your
+ neighbor a-going by questions about surroundings. Generally
+ there is some acquaintance between most of the people staying
+ in a house, as hosts make up their parties with the view of
+ accommodating persons wishing to meet others whom they like.
+ Young men will thus frequently get a good-natured hostess to
+ ask some young lady whose society they especially affect, and
+ thus country-houses become proverbially adapted for
+ match-making.</p>
+
+ <p>There are few houses now-a-days in which the gentlemen
+ linger in the dining-room long after the ladies have left it.
+ Habits of hard drinking are now almost entirely confined to
+ young men in the army and the lower classes. The evenings are
+ spent chiefly in conversation: sometimes a rubber of whist is
+ made up, or, if there are a number of young people, there is
+ dancing.</p>
+
+ <p>A rather surprising step which occasioned something of a
+ scandalous sensation in the social world was resorted to some
+ years ago at a country-house in Devonshire. Two or three fast
+ young ladies, finding the evening somewhat heavy, and lamenting
+ a dearth of dancing men, rang the bell, and in five minutes the
+ lady of the house, who was in another room, was aghast at
+ seeing them whirling round in their Jeames's arms. It was
+ understood that the ringleader in this enterprise, the daughter
+ of an Irish earl, was not likely to be asked to repeat her
+ visit.</p>
+
+ <p>About eleven wine and water and biscuits are brought into
+ the drawing-room, and a few minutes later the ladies retire.
+ The wine and water, with the addition of other stimulants, are
+ then transferred to the billiard- and smoking-rooms, to which
+ the gentlemen adjourn so soon as they have changed their black
+ coats for dressing-gowns or lounging suits, in which great
+ latitude is given to the caprice of individual fancy.</p>
+
+ <p>The sittings in these apartments are protracted until any
+ hour, as the servants usually go to bed when they have provided
+ every one with his flat candle-stick&mdash;that emblem of
+ gentility which always so prominently recurred to the mind of
+ Mrs. Micawber when recalling the happy days when she "lived at
+ home with papa and mamma." In some fast houses pretty high play
+ takes place at such times.</p>
+
+ <p>It not unfrequently happens that the master of the house
+ takes but a very limited share in the recreations of his
+ guests, being much engrossed by the various avocations which
+ fall to the lot of a country proprietor. After breakfast in the
+ morning he will make it his business to see that each gentleman
+ is provided with such recreation as he likes for the day. This
+ man will shoot, that one will fish; Brown will like to have a
+ horse and go over to see some London friends who are staying
+ ten miles off; Jones has heaps of letters which must be written
+ in the morning, but will ride with the ladies in the afternoon;
+ and when all these arrangements are completed the squire will
+ drive off with his old confidential groom in the dog-cart, with
+ that fast-trotting bay, to attend the county meeting in the
+ nearest cathedral town or dispense justice from the bench at
+ Pottleton; and when eight o'clock brings all together at dinner
+ an agreeable diversity is given to conversation by each man's
+ varied experiences during the day.</p>
+
+ <p>Of course some houses are desperately dull, whilst others
+ are always agreeable. Haddo House, during the lifetime of Lord
+ Aberdeen, the prime minister, had an exceptional reputation for
+ the former quality. It was said to be the most silent house in
+ England; and silence in this instance was regarded as quite the
+ reverse of golden. The family scarcely ever spoke, and the
+ guest, finding that his efforts brought no response, became
+ alarmed at the echoes of his own voice. Lord Aberdeen and his
+ son, Lord Haddo&mdash;an amiable but weak and eccentric man,
+ father of the young earl who dropped his title and was drowned
+ whilst working as mate of a merchantman&mdash;did not get on
+ well together, and saw very little of each other for some
+ years. At length a reconciliation was effected, and the son was
+ invited to Haddo. Anxious to be pleasant and conciliatory, he
+ faltered out admiringly, "The place looks nice, the trees are
+ very green." "Did you expect to see 'em blue, then?" was the
+ encouraging paternal rejoinder.</p>
+
+ <p>The degree of luxury in many of these great houses is less
+ remarkable than its completeness. Everything is in keeping,
+ thus presenting a remarkable contrast to most of our rich men's
+ attempts at the same. The dinner, cooked by a <i>cordon
+ bleu</i> of the cuisine<a id="footnotetag3"
+ name="footnotetag3"></a><a href="#footnote3"><sup>3</sup></a>&mdash;whose
+ resources in the way of "hot plates" and other accessories
+ for furnishing a superlative dinner are unrivaled&mdash;is
+ often served on glittering plate, or china almost equally
+ valuable, by men six feet high, of splendid figure, and
+ dressed with the most scrupulous neatness and cleanliness.
+ Gloves are never worn by servants in first-rate English
+ houses, but they carry a tiny napkin in their hands which
+ they place between their fingers and the plates. Nearly all
+ country gentlemen are hospitable, and it very rarely happens
+ that guests are not staying in the house. A county ball or
+ some other such gathering fills it from garret to
+ cellar.</p>
+
+ <p>The best guest-rooms are always reserved for the married:
+ bachelors are stowed away comparatively "anywhere." In winter
+ fires are always lit in the bedrooms about five o'clock, so
+ that they may be warm at dressing-time; and shortly before the
+ dressing-bell rings the servant deputed to attend upon a guest
+ who does not bring a valet with him goes to his room, lays out
+ his evening-toilette, puts shirt, socks, etc. to air before the
+ fire, places a capacious pitcher of boiling water on the
+ washing-stand, and having lit the candles, drawn the easy-chair
+ to the fire, just ready on provocation to burst into a blaze,
+ lights the wax candles on the dressing-table and withdraws.</p>
+
+ <p>In winter the guest is asked whether he likes a fire to get
+ up by, and in that event a housemaid enters early with as
+ little noise as possible and lights it. On rising in the
+ morning you find all your clothes carefully brushed and put in
+ order, and every appliance for ample ablutions at hand.</p>
+
+ <p>A guest gives the servant who attends him a tip of from a
+ dollar and a quarter to five dollars, according to the length
+ of his stay. If he shoots, a couple of sovereigns for a week's
+ sport is a usual fee to a keeper. Some people give absurdly
+ large sums, but the habit of giving them has long been on the
+ decline. The keeper supplies powder and shot, and sends in an
+ account for them. Immense expense is involved in these shooting
+ establishments. The late Sir Richard Sutton, a great celebrity
+ in the sporting world, who had the finest shooting in England,
+ and therefore probably in the world, used to say that every
+ pheasant he killed cost him a guinea. On some estates the sale
+ of the game is in some degree a set-off to the cost of
+ maintaining it, just as the sale of the fruit decreases the
+ cost of pineries, etc. Nothing but the fact that the possession
+ of land becomes more and more vested in those who regard it as
+ luxury could have enabled this sacrifice of farming to sport to
+ continue so long. It is the source of continual complaint and
+ resentment on the part of the farmers, who are only pacified by
+ allowance being made to them out of their rent for damage done
+ by game.</p>
+
+ <p>The expense of keeping up large places becomes heavier every
+ year, owing to the constantly-increasing rates of wages, etc.,
+ and in some cases imposes a grievous burden, eating heavily
+ into income and leaving men with thousands of acres very poor
+ balances at their bankers to meet the Christmas bills. Those
+ who have large families to provide for, and get seriously
+ behindhand, usually shut up or let their places&mdash;which
+ latter is easily done if they be near London or in a good
+ shooting country&mdash;and recoup on the Continent; but of late
+ years prices there have risen so enormously that this plan of
+ restoring the equilibrium between income and expenditure is far
+ less satisfactory than it was forty years ago. The encumbrances
+ on many estates are very heavy. A nobleman who twenty years ago
+ succeeded to an entailed estate, with a house almost gutted,
+ through having had an execution put in it, and a heavy
+ debt&mdash;some of which, though not legally bound to
+ liquidate, he thought it his duty to settle&mdash;acted in a
+ very spirited manner which few of his order have the courage to
+ imitate. He dropped his title, went abroad and lived for some
+ years on about three thousand dollars a year. He has now paid
+ off all his encumbrances, and has a clear income, steadily
+ increasing, of a hundred thousand dollars a year. In another
+ case a gentleman accomplished a similar feat by living in a
+ corner of his vast mansion and maintaining only a couple of
+ servants.</p>
+
+ <p>In Ireland, owing to the lower rates of wages and far
+ greater&mdash;in the remoter parts&mdash;cheapness of
+ provisions, large places can be maintained at considerably less
+ cost, but they are usually far less well kept, partly owing to
+ their being on an absurdly large scale as compared with the
+ means of the proprietors, and partly from the slovenly habits
+ of the country. And in some cases people who could afford it
+ will not spend the money. There are, however, notable
+ exceptions. Powerscourt in Wicklow, the seat of Viscount
+ Powerscourt, and Woodstock in Kilkenny, the beautiful demesne
+ of Mr. Tighe, are probably in as perfect order as any seats in
+ England. A countryman was sent over to the latter one day with
+ a message from another county. "Well, Jerry," said the master
+ on his return, "what did you think of Woodstock?" "Shure, your
+ honor," was the reply, "I niver seed such a power of girls
+ a-swaping up the leaves."</p>
+
+ <p>Country-house life in Ireland and Scotland is almost
+ identical with that in England, except that, in the former
+ especially, there is generally less money. Scotland has of late
+ years become so much the fashion, land has risen so enormously
+ in value, and properties are so very large, that some of the
+ establishments, such as those at Drumlanrig, Dunrobin, Gordon
+ Castle and Floors, the seats respectively of the dukes of
+ Buccleuch, Sutherland, Richmond and Roxburghe, are on a
+ princely scale. The number of wealthy squires is far fewer than
+ in England. It is a curious feature in the Scottish character
+ that notwithstanding the radical politics of the
+ country&mdash;for scarcely a Conservative is returned by
+ it&mdash;the people cling fondly to primogeniture and their
+ great lords, who, probably to a far greater extent than in
+ England, hold the soil. The duke of Sutherland possesses nearly
+ the whole of the county from which he derives his title, whilst
+ the duke of Buccleuch owns the greater part of four.</p>
+
+ <p>Horses are such a very expensive item that a large stable is
+ seldom found unless there is a very large income, for otherwise
+ the rest of the establishment must be cut down to a low figure.
+ Hunting millionaires keep from ten to twenty, or even thirty,
+ hacks and hunters, besides four or five carriage-horses. Three
+ or four riding-horses, three carriage-horses and a pony or two
+ is about the usual number in the stable of a country gentleman
+ with from five to six thousand pounds a year. The stable-staff
+ would be coachman, groom and two helpers. The number of
+ servants in country-houses varies from seven or eight to
+ eighty, but probably there are not ten houses in the country
+ where it reaches so high a figure as the last: from fifteen to
+ twenty would be a common number.</p>
+
+ <p>There are many popular bachelors and old maids who live
+ about half the year in the country-houses of their friends. A
+ gentleman of this sort will have his chambers in London and his
+ valet, whilst the lady will have her lodgings and maid. In
+ London they will live cheaply and comfortably, he at his club
+ and dining out with rich friends, she in her snug little room
+ and passing half her time in friends' houses. There is not the
+ slightest surrender of independence about these people. They
+ would not stay a day in a house which they did not like, but
+ their pleasant manners and company make them acceptable, and
+ friends are charmed to have them.</p>
+
+ <p>One of the special recommendations of a great country-house
+ is that you need not see too much of any one. There is no
+ necessary meeting except at meals&mdash;in many houses then
+ even only at dinner&mdash;and in the evening. Many sit a great
+ deal in their own rooms if they have writing or work to do;
+ some will be in the billiard-room, others in the library,
+ others in the drawing-room: the host's great friend will be
+ with him in his own private room, whilst the hostess's will
+ pass most of the time in that lady's
+ boudoir.<a id="footnotetag4"
+ name="footnotetag4"></a><a href="#footnote4"><sup>4</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>In some respects railroads have had a very injurious effect
+ on the sociability of English country life. They have rendered
+ people in great houses too apt to draw their supplies of
+ society exclusively from town. English trains run so fast that
+ this can even be done in places quite remote from London. The
+ journey from London to Rugby, for instance, eighty miles, is
+ almost invariably accomplished in two hours. Leaving at five in
+ the afternoon, a man reaches that station at 7.10: his friend's
+ well-appointed dog-cart is there to meet him, and that
+ exquisitely neat young groom, with his immaculate buckskins and
+ boots in which you may see yourself, will make the thoroughbred
+ do the four miles to the hall in time to enable you to dress
+ for dinner by 7.45. Returning on Tuesday morning&mdash;and all
+ the lines are most accommodating about return tickets&mdash;the
+ barrister, guardsman, government clerk can easily be at his
+ post in town by eleven o'clock. Thus the actual "country
+ people" get to be held rather cheap, and come off badly,
+ because Londoners, being more in the way of hearing, seeing and
+ observing what is going on in society, are naturally more
+ congenial to fine people in country-houses who live in the
+ metropolis half the year.</p>
+
+ <p>It is evident from the following amusing squib, which
+ appeared in one of the Annuals for 1832, how far more dependent
+ the country gentleman was upon his country neighbors in those
+ days, when only idle men could run down from town:</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. J., having frequently witnessed with regret country
+ gentlemen, in their country-houses, reduced to the dullness of
+ a domestic circle, and nearly led to commit suicide in the
+ month of November, or, what is more melancholy, to invite the
+ ancient and neighboring families of the Tags, the Rags and the
+ Bobtails, has opened an office in Spring Gardens for the
+ purpose of furnishing country gentlemen in their country-houses
+ with company and guests on the most moderate terms. It will
+ appear from the catalogue that Mr. J. has a choice and elegant
+ assortment of six hundred and seventeen guests, ready to start
+ at a moment's warning to any country gentleman at any house.
+ Among them will be found three Scotch peers, several ditto
+ Irish, fifteen decayed baronets, eight yellow admirals,
+ forty-seven major-generals on half pay (who narrate the whole
+ Peninsular War), twenty-seven dowagers, one hundred and
+ eighty-seven old maids on small annuities, and several
+ unbeneficed clergymen, who play a little on the fiddle. All the
+ above play at cards, and usually with success if partners. No
+ objection to cards on Sunday evenings or rainy mornings. The
+ country gentleman to allow the guests four feeds a day, and to
+ produce claret if a Scotch or Irish peer be present."</p>
+
+ <p>A country village very often has no inhabitants except the
+ parson holding the rank of gentry. The majority of ladies in
+ moderate or narrow circumstances live in county-towns, such as
+ Exeter, Salisbury, etc., or in watering-places, which abound
+ and are of all degrees of fashion and expense. County-town and
+ watering-place society is a thing <i>per se</i>, and has very
+ little to do with "county" society, which means that of the
+ landed gentry living in their country-houses. Thus, noblemen
+ and gentlemen within a radius of five miles of such
+ watering-places as Bath, Tonbridge Wells and Weymouth would not
+ have a dozen visiting acquaintances resident in those
+ towns.</p>
+
+ <p>To get into "county" society is by no means easy to persons
+ without advantages of position or connection, even with ample
+ means, and to the wealthy manufacturer or merchant is often a
+ business of years. The upper class of Englishmen, and more
+ especially women, are accustomed to find throughout their
+ acquaintance an almost identical style and set of manners.
+ Anything which differs from this they are apt to regard as
+ "ungentlemanlike or unladylike," and shun accordingly. The
+ dislike to traders and manufacturers, which is very strong in
+ those counties, such as Cheshire and Warwickshire, which
+ environ great commercial centres, arises not from the folly of
+ thinking commerce a low occupation, but because the county
+ gentry have different tastes, habits and modes of thought from
+ men who have worked their way up from the counting-room, and do
+ not, as the phrase goes, "get on" with them, any more than a
+ Wall street broker ordinarily gets on with a well-read,
+ accomplished member of the Bar.</p>
+
+ <p>A result of this is that a large number of wealthy
+ commercial men, in despair of ever entering the charmed circle
+ of county society, take up their abode in or near the
+ fashionable watering-places, where, after the manner of those
+ at our own Newport, they build palaces in paddocks, have acres
+ of glass, rear the most marvelous of pines and peaches, and
+ have model farms which cost them thousands of pounds a year. To
+ this class is owing in a great degree the extraordinary
+ increase of Leamington, Torquay, Tonbridge Wells,
+ etc.&mdash;places which have made the fortunes of the lucky
+ people who chanced to own them.</p>
+
+ <p>English ladies, as a rule, take a great deal of interest in
+ the poor around them, and really know a great deal of them. The
+ village near the hall is almost always well attended to, but it
+ unfortunately happens that outlying properties sometimes come
+ off far less well. The classes which see nothing of each other
+ in English rural life are the wives and daughters of the gentry
+ and those of the wealthier farmers and tradesmen: between these
+ sections a huge gulf intervenes, which has not as yet been in
+ the least degree bridged over. In former days very great people
+ used to have once or twice in the year what were called "public
+ days," when it was open house for all who chose to come, with a
+ sort of tacit understanding that none below the class of
+ substantial yeomen or tradesmen would make their appearance.
+ This custom has now fallen into disuse, but was maintained to
+ the last by the Hon. Doctor Vernon-Harcourt, who was for more
+ than half a century archbishop of York, and is yet retained by
+ Earl Fitzwilliam at Wentworth House, his princely seat in
+ Yorkshire. There, once or twice a year, a great gathering takes
+ place. Dinner is provided for hundreds of guests, and care is
+ taken to place a member of the family at every table to do his
+ or her part toward dispensing hospitality to high and low.</p>
+
+ <p>During the summer and early autumn croquet and archery offer
+ good excuses for bringing young people together, and reunions
+ of this kind palliate the miseries of those who cannot afford
+ to partake of the expensive gayeties of the London season. The
+ archery meetings are often exceedingly pretty f&ecirc;tes.
+ Somtimes they are held in grounds specially devoted to the
+ purpose, as is the case at St. Leonard's, near Hastings, where
+ the archery-ground will well repay a visit. The shooting takes
+ place in a deep and vast excavation covered with the smoothest
+ turf, and from the high ground above is a glorious view of the
+ old castle of Hastings and the ocean. In Devonshire these
+ meetings have an exceptional interest from the fact that they
+ are held in the park of Powderham Castle, the ancestral seat of
+ the celebrated family of Courtenay. All the county flocks to
+ them, some persons coming fifty miles for this purpose. Apropos
+ of one of these meetings, we shall venture to interpolate an
+ anecdote which deserves to be recorded for the sublimity of
+ impudence which it displays. The railway from London to
+ Plymouth skirts the park of Powderham, running so close beside
+ it that each train sends a herd of deer scampering down the
+ velvety glades. One afternoon a bouncing young lady, who
+ belonged to a family which had lately emerged from the class of
+ yeoman into that of gentry, and whose "manners had not the
+ repose which stamps the caste of Vere de Vere," found herself
+ in a carriage with two fashionably-attired persons of her own
+ sex. As the train ran by the park, one of these latter
+ exclaimed to her companion, "Oh look, there's Powderham! Don't
+ you remember that archery-party we went to there two years
+ ago?" "To be sure," was the rejoinder. "I'm not likely to
+ forget it, there were some such queer people. Who were those
+ vulgarians whom we thought so particularly objectionable? I
+ can't remember." "Oh, H&mdash;&mdash;: H&mdash;&mdash; of
+ P&mdash;&mdash;! That was the name." Upon this the other young
+ lady in the carriage bounced to her feet with the words, "Allow
+ me to tell you, madam, that I am Miss H&mdash;&mdash; of
+ P&mdash;&mdash;!" Neither of those she addressed deigned to
+ utter a word in reply to this announcement, nor did it appear
+ in the least to disconcert them. One slowly drew out a gold
+ double eye-glass, leisurely surveyed Miss H&mdash;&mdash; of
+ P&mdash;&mdash; from head to foot, and then proceeded to talk
+ to her companion in French. Perhaps the best part of the joke
+ was that Miss H&mdash;&mdash; made a round of visits in the
+ course of the week, and detailed the disgusting treatment to
+ which she had been subjected to a numerous acquaintance, who,
+ it is needless to say, appeared during the narration as
+ indignant and sympathetic as she could have wished, but who are
+ declared by some ill-natured persons to have been precisely
+ those who in secret chuckled over the insult with the greatest
+ glee.</p>
+
+ <p>English gentlemen experience an almost painful sensation as
+ they journey through our land and observe the utter
+ indifference of its wealthier classes to the charms of such a
+ magnificent country. "Pearls before swine," they say in their
+ hearts. "God made the country and man made the town." "Yes, and
+ how obviously the American prefers the work of man to the work
+ of the Almighty!" These and similar reflections no doubt fill
+ the minds of many a thoughtful English traveler as the train
+ speeds over hill and dale, field and forest. What sites are
+ here! he thinks. What a perfect park might be made out of that
+ wild ground! what cover-shooting there ought to be in that
+ woodland! what fishing and boating on that lake! And then he
+ groans in spirit as the cars enter a forest where tree leans
+ against tree, and neglect reigns on all sides, and he thinks of
+ the glorious oaks and beeches so carefully cared for in his own
+ country, where trees and flowery are loved and petted as much
+ as dogs and horses. And if anything can increase the contempt
+ he feels for those who "don't care a rap" for country and
+ country life, it is a visit to such resorts as Newport and
+ Saratoga. There he finds men whose only notion of country life
+ is what he would hold to be utterly destitute of all its
+ ingredients. They build palaces in paddocks, take actually no
+ exercise, play at cards for three hours in the forenoon, dine,
+ and then drive out "just like ladies," we heard a young Oxonian
+ exclaim&mdash;"got up" in the style that an Englishman adopts
+ only in Hyde Park or Piccadilly.</p>
+
+ <p>When an American went to stay with Lord Palmerston at
+ Broadlands, the great minister ordered horses for a ride in the
+ delicious glades of the New Forest. When they came to the door
+ his guest was obliged to confess himself no horseman. The
+ premier, with ready courtesy, said, "Oh, then, we'll walk: it's
+ all the same to me;" but it wasn't quite the same. The incident
+ was just one of those which separate the Englishman of a
+ certain rank from the American.</p>
+
+ <p>There is of course a certain class of Americans, more
+ especially among the <i>jeunesse dor&eacute;e</i> of New York,
+ who greatly affect sport: they "run" horses and shoot pigeons,
+ but these are not persons who commend themselves to real
+ gentlemen, English or American. They belong to the bad style of
+ "fast men," and are as thoroughly distasteful to a Devonshire
+ or Cheshire squire as to one who merits "the grand old
+ name"&mdash;which they conspicuously defame&mdash;in their own
+ country.</p>
+
+ <p>The English country-loving gentleman to whom we have been
+ referring is, for the most part, of a widely different
+ mould&mdash;a man of first-rate education, frequently of high
+ attainments, and often one whose ends and aims in life are for
+ far higher things than pleasure, even of the most innocent
+ kind, but who, when he takes it, derives it chiefly from the
+ country. Many of this kind will instantly occur to those
+ acquainted with English worthies: to mention two&mdash;John
+ Evelyn and Sir Fowell Buxton.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">REGINALD WYNFORD.</p><a name="H_4_0012"
+ id="H_4_0012"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h2>THE FOREST OF ARDEN.</h2>
+
+ <p>A girl of seventeen&mdash;a girl with a "missish" name, with
+ a "missish" face as well, soft skin, bright eyes, dark hair,
+ medium height and a certain amount of coquetry in her attire.
+ This completes the "visible" of Nellie Archer. And the
+ invisible? With an exterior such as this, what thoughts or
+ ideas are possible within? Surely none worth the trouble of
+ searching after. It is a case of the rind being the better part
+ of the fruit, the shell excelling the kernel; and with a slight
+ effort we can imagine her acquirements. Some scraps of
+ geography, mixed up with the topography of an embroidery
+ pattern; some grammar, of much use in parsing the imperfect
+ phrases of celebrated authors, to the neglect of her own; some
+ romanticism, finding expression in the arrangement of a spray
+ of artificial flowers on a spring bonnet; some idea of duty,
+ resulting in the manufacture of sweet cake or "seeing after"
+ the dessert for dinner; and a conception of "woman's mission"
+ gained from Tennyson&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Oh teach the orphan-boy to read,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Or teach the orphan-girl to sew.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>No! no! no! not so fast, please. In spite of Nellie's name,
+ of her face, of her attire, that little head is filled quite
+ otherwise. It is not her fault that this is so: is it her
+ misfortune? But to give the history of this being entire, it is
+ necessary to begin seventeen years back, at the very beginning
+ of her life, for in our human nature, as in the inanimate
+ world, a phenomenon is better understood when we know its
+ producing causes.</p>
+
+ <p>Nellie's father was a business-man of a type common in
+ America&mdash;one whose affairs led him here, there and
+ everywhere. Never quiet while awake, and scarcely at rest
+ during slumber, he resembled Bedreddin Hassan in frequently
+ going to sleep in one town, to awake in another far distant,
+ but without the benighted Oriental's surprise at the transfer,
+ the afrit who performed this prodigy being a steam-engine, and
+ the magician it obeyed the human mind.</p>
+
+ <p>In these rapid peregrinations it would not have been easy
+ for Mr. Archer to carry an infant with him; so, when his wife
+ died and left Nellie to his sole care at six months old, he
+ speedily cast about in his mind to rid himself of the
+ encumbrance.</p>
+
+ <p>Having heard that country air is good for children, he sent
+ the little one to the interior, and quite admired himself for
+ giving her such an advantage: then, too, the house in the city
+ could be sold.</p>
+
+ <p>But to whom did he entrust his child? For a while this had
+ been the great difficulty. In vain he thought over the years he
+ had lived, to find a friend: he had been too busy to make
+ friends. For an honest person he had traversed the world too
+ hurriedly to perceive the deeper, better part of mankind; he
+ had floated on the surface with the scum and froth, and could
+ recall no one whom he could trust. At last, away back in the
+ years of his childhood, he saw a face&mdash;that of a young but
+ motherly Irishwoman, who had lived in his father's family as a
+ faithful servant, and had been a fond partisan of his in his
+ fickle troubles when a boy.</p>
+
+ <p>He sought and found her in his need. She had married, borne
+ children and grown old: her offspring, after much struggling
+ and little help from the parent birds, had learned to fly
+ alone, and had left the home-nest to try their own fortunes. It
+ was not hard for Mr. Archer to persuade Nurse Bridget and her
+ husband to inhabit his house in the country and take charge of
+ the baby. In a short time the arrangements were complete, and
+ the three were installed in comfort, for the busy man did not
+ grudge money.</p>
+
+ <p>If in the long years that followed a thought of the
+ neglected little one did at times reproach him, he dismissed it
+ with the resolution of doing something for her when she should
+ be grown up; but at what date this event was to take place, or
+ what it was that he intended to do, he did not definitely
+ settle.</p>
+
+ <p>The mansion in the country was an old rambling house, in
+ which there were enough deserted rooms to furnish half a dozen
+ ghosts with desirable lodgings, without inconvenience to the
+ living dwellers. The front approach was through an avenue of
+ hemlocks, dark and untrimmed. Under the closed windows lay a
+ tangled garden, where flowers grew rank, shadowed by high ash
+ and leafy oak, outposts of the forest behind&mdash;a forest
+ jealous of cultivation, stealthily drawing nearer each year,
+ and threatening to reconquer its own.</p>
+
+ <p>There was an unused well in a corner that looked like the
+ habitation of a fairy&mdash;of a good fairy, I am sure, because
+ the grass grew greenest and best about the worn curb, and the
+ tender mosses and little plants that could not support the heat
+ in summer found a refuge within its cool circle and flourished
+ there.</p>
+
+ <p>On the other side of the house, and dividing it from level
+ fields, were the kitchen-garden and orchard. In springtime you
+ might have imagined the latter to be a grove of singing trees,
+ bearing song for fruit: in autumn, had you seen it when the sun
+ was low, glinting through leaves and gilding apples and stem,
+ you would have been reminded of the garden of the
+ Hesperides.</p>
+
+ <p>Below the fields lay a broad river&mdash;in summer, languid
+ and clear; in winter, turbid and full. The child often wondered
+ (as soon as she could wonder) if, when it was lying so tranquil
+ under the summer clouds, it was thinking of the frolic it would
+ have with the great blocks of ice in the winter; whether it
+ loved best the rush and struggle of the floods or the quiet of
+ low water; and, above all, whither it was going.</p>
+
+ <p>The homely faces and bent, ungainly forms of the old nurse
+ and her husband harmonized well with the mellow gloom about
+ them; and the infant Nellie completed the scene, like the spot
+ of sunlight in the foreground of a picture by Rembrandt.</p>
+
+ <p>Now, Nellie inherited her father's active disposition, and,
+ left to her own amusement, her occupations were many and
+ various. At three years of age she was turned loose in the
+ orchard, with three blind puppies in lieu of toys. Day by day
+ she augmented her store, until she had two kittens, one little
+ white pig with a curly tail, half a dozen soft piepies, one
+ kid, and many inanimate articles, such as broken bottles,
+ dishes, looking-glass and gay bits of calico. When the little
+ thing became sleepy she would toddle through the long grass to
+ a corner, whence the river could be heard fretting against its
+ banks, and lie there: she said the water sang to her. Finding
+ that this was her favorite spot, the old nurse placed there a
+ bright quilt for her to rest on, and in case she should awake
+ hungry there stood a tin of milk hard by. This was all the
+ attention she received, unless the fairy of the well took her
+ under her protection, but for that I cannot vouch. Sometimes
+ the puppies drank her milk before she awoke; then she went
+ contentedly and ate green apples or ripe cherries. Thus she
+ lived and grew.</p>
+
+ <p>By the time Nellie was seven she had seen whole generations
+ of pets pass away. It was wonderful what knowledge she gained
+ in this golden orchard. She knew that piepies became
+ chickens&mdash;that they were killed and eaten; so death came
+ into her world. She knew that the kid grew into a big goat, and
+ became very wicked, for he ran at her one day, throwing her to
+ the ground and hurting her severely; so sin came into her
+ world. She saw innate depravity exemplified in the conduct of
+ her innocent white pig, that would take to puddles and filth in
+ spite of her gentle endeavors to restrain its wayward impulses.
+ Her puppies too bit each other, would quarrel over a bone,
+ growl and get generally unmanageable. None of her animals
+ fulfilled the promise of their youth, and her care was returned
+ with base ingratitude. Even the little wrens bickered with the
+ blue-birds, and showed their selfishness and jealousy in
+ chasing them from the crumbs she impartially spread for all in
+ common.</p>
+
+ <p>So at seven she was a wise little woman, and said to her
+ nurse one day, "I do not care for pets any more: they all grow
+ up nasty."</p>
+
+ <p>Was Solomon's "All is vanity" truer?</p>
+
+ <p>With so much experience Nellie felt old, for life is not
+ counted by years alone: it is the loss of hope, the mistrust of
+ appearance, the vanishing of illusion, that brings age. A
+ hopeful heart is young at seventy, and youth is past when hope
+ is dead. But, in spite of all, hope was not dead in the heart
+ of the little maid, and though deceived she was quite ready to
+ be deceived a second time, as was Solomon, and as we are
+ all.</p>
+
+ <p>It was now that the girl began to be fond of flowers. She
+ made herself a bed for them in a sunny corner of the
+ kitchen-garden, and transplanted daisy roots and
+ spring-beauties, with other wood- and field-plants as they
+ blossomed. She watched the ferns unroll their worm-like fronds,
+ made plays with the nodding violets, and ornamented her head
+ with dandelion curls. This was indeed a happy summer. Her
+ rambles were unlimited, and each day she was rewarded by new
+ discoveries and delightful secrets&mdash;how the May-apple is
+ good to eat, that sassafras root makes tea, that birch bark is
+ very like candy, though not so sweet, and slippery elm a
+ feast.</p>
+
+ <p>Her new playmates were as lovely and perfect as she could
+ desire. <i>They</i> did not "grow up nasty," but in the autumn,
+ alas! they died.</p>
+
+ <p>One day at the end of the Indian summer, after having
+ wandered for hours searching for her favorites, she found them
+ all withered. The trees also looked forlorn, shivering in the
+ chill air, with scarce a leaf to cover them: the wind moaned,
+ and the sky was gray instead of the bright summer blue. The
+ little one, tired and disappointed, touched by this mighty
+ lesson of decay, threw herself on a friendly bank and wept.</p>
+
+ <p>It is true the beautiful face of Nature had grown sad each
+ winter, and her flowers and lovely things had yearly passed
+ away, but Nellie had not then loved them.</p>
+
+ <p>Here she was found by a boy rosy-cheeked and bright, who all
+ his life had been loved and caressed to the same extent that
+ Nellie had been neglected. He lived beyond the forest, and had
+ come this afternoon to look for walnuts. Seeing the girl
+ unhappy, he essayed some of the blandishing arts his mother had
+ often lavished on him, speaking to her in a kindly tone and
+ asking her why she cried.</p>
+
+ <p>The child looked up at the sound of this new voice, and her
+ astonishment stopped her tears. After gazing at him for some
+ time with her eyes wide open, she remarked, wonderingly, "You
+ are little, like me."</p>
+
+ <p>"I am not very small," replied the boy, straightening
+ himself.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, but you <i>are</i> young and little," she insisted.</p>
+
+ <p>"I am young, but not little. Come stand up beside me. See!
+ you don't more than reach my shoulder."</p>
+
+ <p>"Shall you ever get bigger?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Of course I shall."</p>
+
+ <p>"Shall you grow up nasty?" she continued, trying to bring
+ her stock of experience to bear on this new phenomenon.</p>
+
+ <p>"No, I sha'n't!" he answered very decidedly.</p>
+
+ <p>"Shall you die?"</p>
+
+ <p>"No, not until I am old, old, old."</p>
+
+ <p>"I am very glad: I will take you for a pet, All my little
+ animals get nasty, and my flowers have died, but I don't care,
+ now that you have come: I think I shall like you best."</p>
+
+ <p>"But I won't be your pet," said the boy, offended.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why not?" she asked, looking at him beseechingly. "I should
+ be very good to you;" and she smoothed his sleeve with her
+ brown hand as if it were the fur of one of her late
+ darlings.</p>
+
+ <p>"Who are you?" he demanded inquisitively.</p>
+
+ <p>"I am myself," she innocently replied.</p>
+
+ <p>"What is your name?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I am Nellie. Have you a name?" she eagerly went on. "If you
+ haven't, I'll give you a pretty one. Let me see: I will call
+ you&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"You need not trouble yourself, thank you: I have a name of
+ my own, Miss Nellie. I am Danby Overbeck."</p>
+
+ <p>"Dan&mdash;by&mdash;o&mdash;ver&mdash;beck!" she repeated
+ slowly. "Why, you have an awful long name, Beck, for such a
+ little fellow."</p>
+
+ <p>"I am not little, and I will not have you call me Beck: that
+ is no name."</p>
+
+ <p>"I forgot all but the last. Don't get nasty, please;" and
+ she patted his arm soothingly. "What does your nurse call
+ you?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I am no baby to have a nurse," he said disdainfully.</p>
+
+ <p>"You have no nurse? Poor thing! What do you do? who feeds
+ you?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I feed myself."</p>
+
+ <p>"Where do you live," she asked, looking about curiously, as
+ if she thought he had some kind of a nest near at hand.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, far away&mdash;at the other side of the woods."</p>
+
+ <p>"Won't you come and live with me? Do!"</p>
+
+ <p>"No indeed, gypsy: I must go home. See, the sun is almost
+ down. You had better go too: your mother will be anxious."</p>
+
+ <p>"I have no mother, and my flowers are all dead. I wish you
+ would be my pet&mdash;I wish you would come with me;" and her
+ lip trembled.</p>
+
+ <p>"My gracious, child! what would the old lady at home say?
+ Why, there would be an awful row."</p>
+
+ <p>"Never mind, come," she answered coaxingly, rubbing her head
+ against his sleeve like a kitten. "Come, I will love you so
+ much."</p>
+
+ <p>"You go home," he said, patting her head, "and I will come
+ again some day, and will bring you flowers."</p>
+
+ <p>"The flowers are all dead," she replied, shaking her
+ head.</p>
+
+ <p>"I can make some grow. Go now, run away: let me see you
+ off."</p>
+
+ <p>She looked for a moment at this superior being, who could
+ make flowers grow and could live without the care of a nurse,
+ and then, obeying the stronger intelligence, she trotted off
+ toward home.</p>
+
+ <p>And now life contained new pleasure for Nellie, for the boy
+ was large-hearted and kind, coming almost daily to take her
+ with him on his excursions. Indeed, he was as lonely as the
+ child, companions being difficult to find in that
+ out-of-the-way neighborhood, and the odd little thing amused
+ him. She would trudge bravely by his side when he went to fish,
+ or carry his bag when he went gunning; and his promise of
+ flowers was redeemed with gifts from the conservatory, which
+ enhanced her opinion of this divinity, seeing that they were
+ even more beautiful than those of her own fields. Often, when
+ tired of sport, Danby would read to her, sitting in the shade
+ of forest trees, stories of pirates and robbers or of wonderful
+ adventures: these were the afternoons she enjoyed the most.</p>
+
+ <p>One day, seeing her lips grow bright and her eyes dark from
+ her intense interest in the story, he offered her the book as
+ he was preparing to go, saying, "Take it home, Nellie, and read
+ it."</p>
+
+ <p>She took the volume in her hand eagerly, looked at the page
+ a little while, a puzzled expression gradually passing over her
+ face, until finally she turned to him open-eyed and
+ disappointed, saying simply, "I can't."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh try!"</p>
+
+ <p>"How shall I try?"</p>
+
+ <p>"It begins <i>there</i>: now go on, it is easy.
+ <i>There</i>" he repeated, pointing to the word, "go on," he
+ added impatiently.</p>
+
+ <p>"Where shall I go?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Why read, Stupid! Look at it."</p>
+
+ <p>She bent over and gazed earnestly where the end of his
+ finger touched the book. "I look and look," she said, shaking
+ her head, "but I do not see the pretty stories that you do.
+ They seem quite gone away, and nothing is left but little
+ crooked marks."</p>
+
+ <p>"I do believe you can't read."</p>
+
+ <p>"I do believe it too," said Nellie.</p>
+
+ <p>"But you must try; such a big girl as you are getting to
+ be!"</p>
+
+ <p>"I try and I look, but it don't come to me."</p>
+
+ <p>"You must learn."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes."</p>
+
+ <p>"Do you intend to do it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Why should I? You can read to me."</p>
+
+ <p>"You will never know anything," exclaimed the boy severely.
+ "How do you spend your time in the morning, when I am not
+ here?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I do nothing."</p>
+
+ <p>"Nothing?"</p>
+
+ <p>"That is, I wait until you come," in an explanatory
+ tone.</p>
+
+ <p>"What do you do while you are waiting?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I think about you, and wonder how soon you will be here;
+ and I walk about, or lie on the grass and look at the
+ clouds."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, did I ever hear of such an idle girl? I shall not
+ come again if you don't learn to read." Nellie was not much
+ given to laughter or tears. She had lived too much alone for
+ such outward appeals for sympathy. Why laugh when there is no
+ one near to smile in return? Why weep when there is no one to
+ give comfort? She only regarded him with a world of reproach in
+ her large eyes.</p>
+
+ <p>"Nellie," he said, in reply to her eyes, "you ought to learn
+ to read, and you <i>must</i>. Did no one ever try to teach
+ you?"</p>
+
+ <p>She shook her head.</p>
+
+ <p>"Have you no books?"</p>
+
+ <p>Again a negative shake.</p>
+
+ <p>"Just come along with me to the house. I'll see about this
+ thing: it must be stopped." And Danby rose and walked off with
+ a determined air, while the girl, abashed and wondering,
+ followed him. When they arrived he plunged into the subject at
+ once: "Nurse Bridget, can you read?"</p>
+
+ <p>"An' I raly don't know, as I niver tried."</p>
+
+ <p>"Fiddlesticks! Of course Maurice is too blind, and very
+ likely he never tried either. Are there no books in the
+ house?"</p>
+
+ <p>"An' there is, then&mdash;a whole room full of them, Master
+ Danby. We are not people of no larnin' here, I can tell you.
+ There is big books, an' little books, an' some awful purty
+ books, an' some," she added doubtfully, "as is not so
+ purty."</p>
+
+ <p>"You know a great deal about books!" said the boy
+ sarcastically.</p>
+
+ <p>"An' sure I do. Haven't I dusted them once ivery year since
+ I came to this blessed place? And tired enough they made me,
+ too. I ain't likely to forgit them."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, let us see them."</p>
+
+ <p>"Sure they're locked."</p>
+
+ <p>"Open them," said the impatient boy.</p>
+
+ <p>"Do open them," added Nellie timidly.</p>
+
+ <p>But it required much coaxing to accomplish their design, and
+ after nurse did consent time was lost in looking for the keys,
+ which were at last found under a china bowl in the cupboard.
+ Then the old woman led the way with much importance, opening
+ door after door of the unused part of the house, until she came
+ to the library. It was a large, sober-looking room, with worn
+ furniture and carpet, but rich in literature, and even art, for
+ several fine pictures hung on the walls. The ancestor from whom
+ the house had descended must have been a learned man in his
+ day, and a wise, for he had gathered about him treasures. Danby
+ shouted with delight, and Nellie's eyes sparkled as she saw his
+ pleasure.</p>
+
+ <p>"Open all the windows, nurse, please, and then leave us.
+ Why, Nellie, there is enough learning here to make you the most
+ wonderful woman in the world! Do you think you can get all
+ these books into your head?" he asked mischievously, "because
+ that is what I expect of you. We will take a big one to begin
+ with." The girl looked on while he, with mock ceremony, took
+ down the largest volume within reach and laid it open on a
+ reading-desk near. "Now sit;" and he drew a chair for her
+ before the open book, and another for himself. "It is nice big
+ print. Do you see this word?" and he pointed to one of the
+ first at the top of the page.</p>
+
+ <p>She nodded her head gravely.</p>
+
+ <p>"It is <i>love</i>: say it."</p>
+
+ <p>She repeated the word after him.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now find it all over the page whereever it occurs."</p>
+
+ <p>With some mistakes she finally succeeded in recognizing the
+ word again.</p>
+
+ <p>"Don't you forget it."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes."</p>
+
+ <p>"No, you must <i>not</i>."</p>
+
+ <p>"I mean I won't."</p>
+
+ <p>"All right! Here is another: it is called <i>the</i>. Now
+ find it."</p>
+
+ <p>Many times she went through the same process. In his pride
+ of teaching Danby did not let his pupil flag. When he was going
+ she asked timidly, "Shall you come again?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Of course I shall, Ignoramus, but don't you forget your
+ lesson."</p>
+
+ <p>"No, no," she answered brightening. "I will think of it all
+ the time I am asleep."</p>
+
+ <p>"That is a good girl," he said patronizingly, and bade her
+ good-bye.</p>
+
+ <p>It was thus she learned to read, not remarkably well, but
+ well enough to content Danby, which was sufficient to content
+ Nellie also; and the ambitious boy was not satisfied until she
+ could write as well.</p>
+
+ <p>An end came to this peaceful life when the youth left home
+ for college. The girl's eyes seemed to grow larger from intense
+ gazing at him during the last few weeks that preceded his
+ departure, but that was her only expression of feeling. The
+ morning after he left, the nurse, not finding her appear at her
+ usual time, went to her chamber to look for her. She lay on the
+ bed, as she had been lying all the night, sleepless, with pale
+ face and red lips. Nurse asked her what was the matter.</p>
+
+ <p>"Nothing," was the reply.</p>
+
+ <p>"Come get up, Beauty," coaxed the nurse.</p>
+
+ <p>But Nellie turned her face to the wall and did not answer.
+ She lay thus for a week, scarcely eating or sleeping, sick in
+ mind and body, struggling with a grief that she hardly knew was
+ grief. At the end of that time she tottered from the bed, and,
+ clothing herself with difficulty, crept to the library.</p>
+
+ <p>The instinct that sends a sick animal to the plant that will
+ cure it seemed to teach Nellie where to find comfort. Danby was
+ gone, but memory remained, and the place where he had been was
+ to her made holy and possessed healing power, as does the
+ shrine of a saint for a believer. Her shrine was the
+ reading-desk, and the chair on which he had sat during those
+ happy lessons. To make all complete, she lifted the heavy book
+ from the shelf and opened it at the page from which she had
+ first learned. She put herself in his chair and caressed the
+ words with her thin hand, her fingers trembling over the place
+ that his had touched, then dropping her head on the desk where
+ his arm had lain, she smiling slept.</p>
+
+ <p>She awoke with the nurse looking down on her, saying,
+ "Beauty, you are better."</p>
+
+ <p>And so she was: she drank the broth and ate the bread and
+ grapes that had been brought her, and from that day grew
+ stronger. But the shadow in her eyes was deeper now, and the
+ veins in her temples were bluer, as if the blood had throbbed
+ and pained there. Every morning found her at her post: she had
+ no need to roam the woods and fields now&mdash;her world lay
+ within her. It was sad for one so young to live on memory.</p>
+
+ <p>For many days her page and these few words were sufficient
+ to content her, and to recall them one after another, as Danby
+ had taught, was her only occupation. But by and by the words
+ themselves began to interest her, then the context, and finally
+ the sense dawned upon her&mdash;dawned not less surely that it
+ came slowly, and that she was now and then compelled to stop
+ and think out a word.</p>
+
+ <p>And what did she learn? Near the top of the large page the
+ first word, "love." It ended a sentence and stood conspicuous,
+ which was the reason it had caught the eye of the eager boy
+ when he began to teach. What did it mean? What went before?
+ What after? It was a long time before she asked herself these
+ questions, for her understanding had not formed the habit of
+ being curious. Previously her eyes alone had sight, now her
+ intellect commenced seeing. What was the web of which this word
+ was the woof, knitting together, underlying, now appearing, now
+ hidden, but always there? She turned the leaves and counted
+ where it recurred again and again, like a bird repeating one
+ sweet note, of which it never tires. Then the larger type in
+ the middle of each page drew her attention: she read, <i>As You
+ Like It</i>. "What do I like? This story is perhaps as I like
+ it. I wonder what it is about? I don't care now for pirates and
+ robbers: I liked them when <i>he</i> read to me, but not now."
+ Her thoughts then wandered off to Danby, and she read no more
+ that day.</p>
+
+ <p>However, Nellie had plenty of time before her, and when her
+ thinking was ended she would return to her text. I do not know
+ how long a time it required for her to connect the sentence
+ that followed the word "love;" but it became clear to her
+ finally, just as a difficult puzzle will sometimes resolve
+ itself as you are idly regarding it. And this is what she saw:
+ "Love! But it cannot be sounded: my affection hath an unknown
+ bottom, like the bay of Portugal." The phrase struck her as if
+ it was her own, and for the first time in her life she blushed.
+ She did not know much about the bay of Portugal, it is true,
+ but she understood the rest. From that time forth the book
+ possessed a strange interest for her. Much that she did not
+ comprehend she passed by. Often for several days she would not
+ find a passage that pleased her, but when such a one was
+ discovered her slow perusal of it and long dwelling on it gave
+ a beauty and power to the sentiment that more expert students
+ might have lost. I cannot describe the almost feverish effect
+ upon her of that poetical quartette beginning with&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ Good shepherd, tell this youth what 'tis to love.
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>How she hung over it, smiled at it, brightening into delight
+ at the echo of her own feelings! In the raillery of Rosalind
+ her heart found words to speak; and her sense and wit were
+ awakened by the sarcasm of the same character. "Pray you, no
+ more of this: 'tis like the howling of Irish wolves against the
+ moon," came like a healthy tonic after a week of ecstasy spent
+ over the preceding lines.</p>
+
+ <p>Her mind grew in such companionship. She lived no more
+ alone: she had found friends who sympathized with her. Smiles
+ and tears became frequent on her face, making it more
+ beautiful. <i>As You Like It</i> was just as she liked it. The
+ forest of Arden was her forest. Rosalind's banished father was
+ her father: that busy man she had never seen. With the book for
+ interpreter she fell in love with her world over again. Sunset
+ and dawn possessed new charms; the little flowers seemed
+ dignified; moonlight and fairy-land unveiled their mysteries;
+ nothing was forgotten. It appeared as if all the knowledge of
+ the world was contained in those magic pages, and the
+ master-key to this treasure, the dominant of this harmony, was
+ <i>love</i>&mdash;the word that Danby had taught her. The word?
+ The feeling as well, and with the feeling&mdash;<i>all</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>Circling from this passion as from a pole-star, all those
+ great constellations of thought revolved. With Lear's madness
+ was Cordelia's affection; with the inhumanity of Shylock was
+ Jessica's trust; with the Moor's jealousy was Desdemona's
+ devotion. The sweet and bitter of life, religion, poetry and
+ philosophy, ambition, revenge and superstition, controlled,
+ created or destroyed by that little word. And <i>how</i> they
+ loved&mdash;Perdita, Juliet, Miranda&mdash;quickly and
+ entirely, without shame, as she had loved Danby&mdash;as buds
+ bloom and birds warble. Oh it was sweet, sweet, sweet! Amid
+ friends like these she became gay, moved briskly, grew rosy and
+ sang. This was her favorite song, to a melody she had caught
+ from the river:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i6">Under the greenwood tree</p>
+
+ <p class="i6">Who loves to lie with me,</p>
+
+ <p class="i6">And turn his merry note</p>
+
+ <p class="i6">Unto the sweet bird's throat,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Come hither, come hither, come
+ hither:</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">Here shall he see</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">No enemy</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">But winter and rough weather.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Four years passed by&mdash;not all spent with one book,
+ however. Nellie's desire for study grew with what it fed on.
+ This book opened the way for many. Reading led to reflection;
+ reflection, to observation; observation, to Nature; and thus in
+ an endless round.</p>
+
+ <p>About this time her busy father remembered he possessed a
+ "baby," laid away somewhere, like an old parchment, and he
+ concluded he would "look her up." His surprise was great when
+ he saw the child a woman&mdash;still greater when he observed
+ her self-possession, her intelligence, and a certain quaint way
+ she had of expressing herself that was charming in connection
+ with her fresh young face. She was neither diffident nor
+ awkward, knowing too little of the world to fear, and having
+ naturally that simplicity of manner which touches nearly upon
+ high breeding. But Mr. Archer being one of those men who think
+ that "beauty should go beautifully," her toilette shocked him.
+ Under the influence of her presence he felt that he had
+ neglected her. The whole house reproached him: the few rooms
+ that had been furnished were dilapidated and worn.</p>
+
+ <p>"I did not know things looked so badly down here," he said
+ apologetically. "I am sure I must have had everything properly
+ arranged when Nurse Bridget came. Your cradle was comfortable,
+ was it not?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I scarcely remember," answered his daughter demurely.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh! ah! yes! It is some time ago, I believe?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Seventeen years."</p>
+
+ <p>"Y-e-s: I had forgotten."</p>
+
+ <p>He had an idea, this man of a hundred schemes, that his
+ "baby" was laughing at him, and, singularly enough, it raised
+ her in his estimation. He even asked her to come and live with
+ him in the city, but she refused, and he did not insist.</p>
+
+ <p>Then he set about making a change, which was soon
+ accomplished. He sent for furniture and carpets, and cleared
+ the rubbish from without and within. Under his decided orders a
+ complete outfit "suitable for his daughter" soon arrived, and
+ with it a maid. Nellie, whose ideas of maids were taken from
+ Lucetta, was much disappointed in the actual being, and the
+ modern Lucetta was also disappointed when she saw the "howling
+ wilderness" to which she had been inveigled; so the two parted
+ speedily. But Mr. Archer remained: he was one of those men who
+ do things thoroughly which they have once undertaken. When he
+ was satisfied with Nellie's appearance he took her to call on
+ all the neighboring families within reach.</p>
+
+ <p>Among others, they went to see Mrs. Overbeck, Danby's
+ mother, whom Mr. Archer had known in his youth. Nellie wore her
+ brave trappings bravely, and acted her part nicely until Mrs.
+ Overbeck gave her a motherly kiss at parting, when she grew
+ pale and trembled. Why should she? Her hostess thought it was
+ from the heat, and insisted on her taking a glass of wine.</p>
+
+ <p>In the autumn of this year Danby graduated and returned
+ home. Nellie had not seen him during all this interval: he had
+ spent his vacations abroad, and had become quite a traveled
+ man. While she retained her affection for him unchanged, he
+ scarcely remembered the funny little girl who had been so
+ devoted to him in the years gone by. A few days after he
+ arrived, his mother, in giving him the local news, mentioned
+ the charming acquaintance she had made of a young lady who
+ lived in the neighborhood. On hearing her name the young man
+ exclaimed, "Why, that must be Nellie!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Do you know her?" asked his mother in surprise.</p>
+
+ <p>"Of course I do, and many a jolly time I have had with her.
+ Odd little thing, ain't she?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I should not call her odd," remarked his mother.</p>
+
+ <p>"You do not know her as I do."</p>
+
+ <p>"Perhaps not. I suppose you will go with me when I return
+ her visit."</p>
+
+ <p>"Certainly I will&mdash;just in for that sort of thing. A
+ man feels the need of some relaxation after a four years' bore,
+ and there is nothing like the society of the weaker sex to give
+ the mind repose."</p>
+
+ <p>"Shocking boy!" said the fond mother with a smile.</p>
+
+ <p>In a short time the projected call was made.</p>
+
+ <p>"You will frighten her with all that finery, my handsome
+ mother," remarked Danby as they walked to the carriage.</p>
+
+ <p>"I think she will survive it, but I shall not answer for the
+ effect of those brilliant kids of yours."</p>
+
+ <p>"The feminine eye is caught by display," said her son
+ sententiously.</p>
+
+ <p>They chatted as they drove rapidly through the forest to the
+ old house, entered the front gate and rolled up the broad
+ avenue.</p>
+
+ <p>"I had no idea the place looked so well," remarked Danby,
+ <i>en connaisseur</i>, as they approached. "I always entered by
+ the back way;" and he gave his moustache a final twirl.</p>
+
+ <p>After a loud knock from a vigorous hand the door was opened
+ by a small servant, much resembling Nellie some four years
+ before. Danby was going to speak to her, but recalling the time
+ that had elapsed, he knew it could not be she. All within was
+ altered. Three rooms <i>en suite</i>, the last of which was the
+ library, had been carefully refurnished. He looked about him.
+ Could this be the place in which he had passed so many days?
+ But he forgot all in the figure that advanced to receive them.
+ With a pretty grace she gave her hand to his mother and
+ welcomed "Mr. Overbeck." How she talked&mdash;talked like a
+ babbling brook! It was now his turn to open big eyes and be
+ silent. He tried to recall the girl he had left. Vain endeavor!
+ This bright creature, grave and gay, silent but ready,
+ respectful yet confident, how could he follow her? The visit
+ came to an end, but was repeated again and again by Danby, and
+ each time with new astonishment, new delight. She had the
+ coquetry of a dozen women, yet her eyes looked so true. She was
+ a perfect elf for pranks and jokes, yet demure as a nun. When
+ he tried to awe her with his learning, she was saucy; if he was
+ serious, she was gay; if he wished to teach, she rebelled. She
+ was self-willed as a changeling, refractory yet gentle,
+ seditious but just,&mdash;only waiting to strike her colors and
+ proclaim him conqueror; but this he did not know, for she kept
+ well hid in her heart what "woman's fear" she had. She was all
+ her favorite heroines in turn, with herself added to the
+ galaxy.</p>
+
+ <p>One day he penetrated into the library, notwithstanding some
+ very serious efforts on her part to prevent him: by this time
+ he would occasionally assert himself. The furniture there was
+ not much altered. A few worn things had been replaced, but the
+ room looked so much the same that the scene of that first
+ reading-lesson came vividly to his mind. He turned to the side
+ where the desk had stood. It was still there, with the two
+ chairs before it, and on it was the book. She would not for the
+ world have had it moved, but it was, as it were, glorified. Mr.
+ Archer had wished "these old things cleared away," but Nellie
+ had besought him so earnestly that he allowed them to stay,
+ stipulating, however, that they should be upholstered anew. To
+ this she assented, saying, "Send me the best of everything and
+ <i>I</i> will cover them&mdash;the very best, mind;" and her
+ father, willing to please her, did as she desired.</p>
+
+ <p>So the old desk became smart in brocade and gold-lace, the
+ book received a cushion all bullion and embroidery, and the
+ chairs emulated the splendor. It required a poet or a girl in
+ love to clothe a fancy so beautifully, and Nellie was both. It
+ was her shrine: why should she not adorn it?</p>
+
+ <p>I cannot follow the process of thought in Danby's mind as he
+ looked at this and at Nellie&mdash;Nellie blushing with the
+ sudden guiltiness that even the discovery of a harmless action
+ will bring when we wish to conceal it. Sometimes a moment
+ reveals much.</p>
+
+ <p>"Nellie"&mdash;it was the first time he had called her so
+ since his return&mdash;"I must give you a reading-lesson: come,
+ sit here."</p>
+
+ <p>Mechanically she obeyed him, all the rebel fading away: she
+ looked like the Nellie of other days. She felt she had laid
+ bare her soul, but in proportion as her confusion overcame her
+ did he become decided. It is the slaves that make tyrants, it
+ is said.</p>
+
+ <p>Under the impulse of his hand the book opened at the
+ well-worn page.</p>
+
+ <p>"Read!"</p>
+
+ <p>For a little while she sat with downcast eyes. Well she knew
+ the passage to which he was pointing: "Love! But it cannot be
+ sounded: my affection hath an unknown bottom, like the bay of
+ Portugal."</p>
+
+ <p>The sentence seemed to dance and grow till it covered the
+ page&mdash;grow till in her sight it assumed the size of a
+ placard, and then it took life and became her
+ accuser&mdash;told in big letters the story of her devotion to
+ the mocking boy beside her.</p>
+
+ <p>"There is good advice on the preceding page," he whispered
+ smiling. "Orlando says he would kiss before he spoke: may
+ I?"</p>
+
+ <p>She started up and looked at his triumphant face a moment,
+ her mouth quivering, her eyes full of tears. "How can
+ you&mdash;" she began.</p>
+
+ <p>But before she could finish he was by her side: "Because I
+ love you&mdash;love you, all that the book says, and a thousand
+ times more. Because if you love me we will live our own
+ romance, and I doubt if we cannot make our old woods as
+ romantic as the forest of Arden. Will you not say," he asked
+ tenderly, "that there will be at least one pair of true lovers
+ there?"</p>
+
+ <p>I could not hear Nellie's answer: her head was so near
+ his&mdash;on his shoulder, in fact&mdash;that she whispered it
+ in his ear. But a moment after, pushing him from her with the
+ old mischief sparkling from her eyes, she said, "'Til frown and
+ be perverse, and say thee nay, so thou wilt woo,'" and looked a
+ saucy challenge in his face.</p>
+
+ <p>"Naughty sprite!" he exclaimed, catching her in his arms and
+ shutting her mouth with kisses.</p>
+
+ <p>It was not long after, perhaps a year, that a happy bride
+ and groom might have been seen walking up the hemlock avenue
+ arm in arm.</p>
+
+ <p>"Do you remember," she asked, smiling thoughtfully&mdash;"do
+ you remember the time I begged you to come home with me and be
+ my pet?"</p>
+
+ <p>The young husband leaned down and said something the
+ narrator did not catch, but from the expression of his face it
+ must have been very spoony: with a bride such as that charming
+ Nellie, how could he help it?</p>
+
+ <p>Yes, she had brought him home. Mr. Archer had given the
+ house with its broad acres as a dowry to his daughter, and
+ Nellie had desired that the honeymoon should be spent in her
+ "forest of Arden."</p>
+
+ <p class="author">ITA ANIOL PROKOP.</p><a name="H_4_0013"
+ id="H_4_0013"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h2>JACK, THE REGULAR.</h2>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">In the Bergen winter night, when the
+ hickory fire is roaring,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Flickering streams of ruddy light on the
+ folk before it pouring&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">When the apples pass around, and the
+ cider follows after,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And the well-worn jest is crowned by the
+ hearers' hearty laughter&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">When the cat is purring there, and the
+ dog beside her dozing,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And within his easy-chair sits the
+ grandsire old, reposing,&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Then they tell the story true to the
+ children, hushed and eager,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">How the two Van Valens slew, on a time,
+ the Tory leaguer,</p>
+
+ <p class="i20">Jack, the Regular.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Near a hundred years ago, when the
+ maddest of the Georges</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Sent his troops to scatter woe on our
+ hills and in our gorges,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Less we hated, less we feared, those he
+ sent here to invade us</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Than the neighbors with us reared who
+ opposed us or betrayed us;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And amid those loyal knaves who rejoiced
+ in our disasters,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">As became the willing slaves of the worst
+ of royal masters,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Stood John Berry, and he said that a
+ regular commission</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Set him at his comrades' head; so we
+ called him, in derision,</p>
+
+ <p class="i20">"Jack, the Regular."</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">When he heard it&mdash;"Let them fling!
+ Let the traitors make them merry</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">With the fact my gracious king deigns to
+ make me Captain Berry.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">I will scourge them for the sneer, for
+ the venom that they carry;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">I will shake their hearts with fear as
+ the land around I harry:</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">They shall find the midnight raid waking
+ them from fitful slumbers;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">They shall find the ball and blade daily
+ thinning out their numbers:</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Barn in ashes, cattle slain, hearth on
+ which there glows no ember,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Neatless plough and horseless wain; thus
+ the rebels shall remember</p>
+
+ <p class="i20">Jack, the Regular!"</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Well he kept his promise then with a
+ fierce, relentless daring,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Fire to rooftrees, death to men, through
+ the Bergen valleys bearing:</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">In the midnight deep and dark came his
+ vengeance darker, deeper&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">At the watch-dog's sudden bark woke in
+ terror every sleeper;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Till at length the farmers brown, wasting
+ time no more on tillage,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Swore those ruffians of the Crown, fiends
+ of murder, fire and pillage,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Should be chased by every path to the
+ dens where they had banded,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And no prayers should soften wrath when
+ they caught the bloody-handed</p>
+
+ <p class="i20">Jack, the Regular.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">One by one they slew his men: still the
+ chief their chase evaded.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">He had vanished from their ken, by the
+ Fiend or Fortune aided&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Either fled to Powles Hoek, where the
+ Briton yet commanded,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Or his stamping-ground forsook, waiting
+ till the hunt disbanded;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">So they checked pursuit at length, and
+ returned to toil securely:</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">It was useless wasting strength on a
+ purpose baffled surely.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">But the two Van Valens swore, in a
+ patriotic rapture,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">_They_ would never give it o'er till
+ they'd either kill or capture</p>
+
+ <p class="i20">Jack, the Regular.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Long they hunted through the wood, long
+ they slept upon the hillside;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">In the forest sought their food, drank
+ when thirsty at the rill-side;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">No exposure counted hard&mdash;theirs was
+ hunting border-fashion:</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">They grew bearded like the pard, and
+ their chase became a passion:</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Even friends esteemed them mad, said
+ their minds were out of balance,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Mourned the cruel fate and sad fallen on
+ the poor Van Valens;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">But they answered to it all, "Only wait
+ our loud view-holloa</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">When the prey shall to us fall, for to
+ death we mean to follow</p>
+
+ <p class="i20">Jack, the Regular."</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Hunted they from Tenavlieon to where the
+ Hudson presses</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">To the base of traprocks high; through
+ Moonachie's damp recesses;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Down as far as Bergen Hill; by the Ramapo
+ and Drochy,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Overproek and Pellum Kill&mdash;meadows
+ flat and hilltops rocky&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Till at last the brothers stood where the
+ road from New Barbadoes,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">At the English Neighborhood, slants
+ toward the Palisadoes;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Still to find the prey they sought left
+ no sign for hunter eager:</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Followed steady, not yet caught, was the
+ skulking, fox-like leaguer</p>
+
+ <p class="i20">Jack, the Regular.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Who are they that yonder creep by those
+ bleak rocks in the distance,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Like the figures born in sleep, called by
+ slumber to existence?&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Tories doubtless from below, from the
+ Hoek, sent out for spying.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">"No! the foremost is our foe&mdash;he so
+ long before us flying!</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Now he spies us! see him start! wave his
+ kerchief like a banner!</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Lay his left hand on his heart in a
+ proud, insulting manner.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Well he knows that distant spot's past
+ our ball, his low scorn flinging.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">If you cannot feel the shot, you shall
+ hear the firelock's ringing,</p>
+
+ <p class="i20">Jack, the Regular!"</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Ha! he falls! An ambuscade? 'Twas
+ impossible to strike him!</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Are there Tories in the glade? Such a
+ trick is very like him.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">See! his comrade by him kneels, turning
+ him in terror over,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Then takes nimbly to his heels. Have they
+ really slain the rover?</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">It is worth some risk to know; so, with
+ firelocks poised and ready,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Up the sloping hills they go, with a
+ quick lookout and steady.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Dead! The random shot had struck, to the
+ heart had pierced the Tory&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Vengeance seconded by luck! Lies there,
+ cold and stiff and gory,</p>
+
+ <p class="i20">Jack, the Regular.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">"Jack, the Regular, is dead! Honor to the
+ man who slew him!"</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">So the Bergen farmers said as they
+ crowded round to view him;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">For the wretch that lay there slain had
+ with wickedness unbending</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">To their roofs brought fiery rain, to
+ their kinsfolk woeful ending.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Not a mother but had prest, in a sudden
+ pang of fearing,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Sobbing darlings to her breast when his
+ name had smote her hearing;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Not a wife that did not feel terror when
+ the words were uttered;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Not a man but chilled to steel when the
+ hated sounds he muttered&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i20">Jack, the Regular.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Bloody in his work was he, in his purpose
+ iron-hearted&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Gentle pity could not be when the
+ pitiless had parted.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">So, the corse in wagon thrown, with no
+ decent cover o'er it&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Jeers its funeral rites alone&mdash;into
+ Hackensack they bore it,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">'Mid the clanging of the bells in the old
+ Brick Church's steeple,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And the hooting and the yells of the
+ gladdened, maddened people.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Some they rode and some they ran by the
+ wagon where it rumbled,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Scoffing at the lifeless man, all elate
+ that death had humbled</p>
+
+ <p class="i20">Jack, the Regular.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Thus within the winter night, when the
+ hickory fire is roaring,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Flickering streams of ruddy light on the
+ folk before it pouring&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">When the apples pass around, and the
+ cider follows after,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And the well-worn jest is crowned by the
+ hearers' hearty laughter&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">When the cat is purring there, and the
+ dog beside her dozing,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And within his easy-chair sits the
+ grandsire old, reposing,&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Then they tell the story true to the
+ children, hushed and eager,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">the two Van Valens slew, on a time, the
+ Tory leaguer,</p>
+
+ <p class="i20">Jack, the Regular.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p class="center">THOMAS DUNN ENGLISH.</p><a name="H_4_0014"
+ id="H_4_0014"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h2>OBSERVATIONS AND ADVENTURES IN SUBMARINE DIVING.</h2>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ [Greek: &mdash;liphon eponumon te reuma kai
+ petraerephae autoktit' antra.]
+
+ <p class="i10">&#198;SCHYLUS: <i>Prometheus Bound</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Did you ever pause before a calm, bright little pool in the
+ woods, and look steadily at the picture it presents, without
+ feeling as if you had peeped into another world? Every outline
+ is preserved, every tint is freshened and purified, in the
+ cool, glimmering reflection. There is a grace and a softness in
+ the prismatic lymph that give a new form and color to the
+ common and familiar objects it has printed in its still,
+ pellucid depths. Every little basin of clear water by the
+ roadside is a magic mirror, and transforms all that it
+ encloses. There is a vastness of depth, too, in that concave
+ hemisphere, through which the vision sinks like a falling star,
+ that excites and fills the imagination. What it shows is only a
+ shadow, but all things seen are mere shadows painted on the
+ retina, and you have, at such times, a realistic sense of the
+ beautiful and bold imagery which calls a favorite fountain of
+ the East the Eye of the Desert.</p>
+
+ <p>The alluring softness of this mimic world increases to
+ sublimity when, instead of some rocky basin, dripping with
+ mossy emeralds and coral berries, you look upon the deep
+ crystalline sea. Each mates to its kind. This does not gather
+ its imagery from gray, mossy rock or pendent leaf or flower,
+ but draws into its enfolding arms the wide vault of the
+ cerulean sky. The richness of the majestic azure is deepened by
+ that magnificent marriage. The pale blue is darkened to violet.
+ Far through the ever-varying surface of the curious gelatinous
+ liquid breaks the phosphorescence, sprinkled into innumerable
+ lights and cross-lights. As you look upon those endless
+ pastures thought is quickened with the conception of their
+ innumerable phases of vitality. The floating weed, whose meshes
+ measure the spaces of continents and archipelagoes, is
+ everywhere instinct with animal and vegetable life. The builder
+ coral, glimmering in its softer parts with delicate hues and
+ tints, throws up its stony barrier through a thousand miles of
+ length and a third as much in breadth, fringing the continents
+ with bays and sounds and atoll islands like fairy rings of the
+ sea. Animate flowers&mdash;sea-nettles, sea anemones,
+ plumularia, campanularia, hydropores, confervae, oscillatoria,
+ bryozoa&mdash;people the great waters. Sea-urchins, star-fish,
+ sea-eggs, combative gymnoti, polypes, struggle and thrive with
+ ever-renewing change of color; gelatinous worms that shine like
+ stars cling to every weed; glimmering animalcules,
+ phosphorescent medusae, the very deep itself is vivid with
+ sparkle and corruscation of electric fire. So through every
+ scale, from the zoophyte to the warm-blooded whale, the sea
+ teems with life, out of which fewer links have been dropped
+ than from sub-a&euml;rial life. It is a matter for curious
+ speculation that the missing species belong not to the lower
+ subsidiary genera, as in terrene animals, but to the highest
+ types of marine life. In the quarries of Lyme Regis, among the
+ accumulations of a sea of the Liassic period, lay the huge
+ skeleton of the Ichthyosaurus, a warm-blooded marine existence,
+ with huge saucer eyes of singular telescopic power, that
+ gleamed radiant "with the eyelids of the morning," "by whose
+ neesings alight doth shine"&mdash;the true leviathan of Job. In
+ the same extinct sea is found the skeleton of the Plesiosaurus,
+ a marine lizard of equal size, and warm-blooded, whose
+ swan-like neck and body graced the serene seas of the
+ pre-adamite world. Another was that of the Pterodactyl, the
+ antique aragon, a winged fish. The task of sustaining these
+ existences was too great for old Ocean, and the monsters
+ dropped from the upper end of the chain into the encrusting
+ mud, the petrified symbols of failure. So one day man may drop
+ into the limbo of vanities, among the abandoned tools in the
+ Creator's workshop.</p>
+
+ <p>But, however high or low the degree in the scale, one
+ distinguishing feature marks the vital creation in vegetable or
+ animal&mdash;an intelligence capable of adjusting itself to the
+ elements about it, and electing its food. The sunflower, even,
+ does not follow the sun by a mechanical law, but, growing by a
+ fair, bright sheet of water, looks as constantly at that
+ shining surface for the beloved light as ever did the fabled
+ Greek boy at his own image in the fountain. The tendrils of the
+ vine seek and choose their own support, and the thirsty
+ spongioles of the root find the nourishing veins of water.
+ Growth, says a naturalist, is the conscious motion of vegetable
+ life. But this theory of kinship, imperfect in the plant,
+ becomes plain and distinct in the animate creation. However far
+ removed, the wild dolphin at play and the painted bird in the
+ air are cousins of man, with a responsive chord of sympathy
+ connecting them.</p>
+
+ <p>It is this feeling that sends an exhilarating thrill through
+ the submarine explorer when a school of porpoises frisk by with
+ undulating grace, the marine type of a group of frolicking
+ children. It is the instinctive perception that it is a pure
+ enjoyment to the fish, the healthy glow and laugh of submarine
+ existence. But for that sense of sympathetic nature the
+ flying-fish, reeling porpoise and dolphin would be no more to
+ him than the skipping shuttle in a weaver's loom, the dull
+ impetus of senseless machinery. Self-generated motion is the
+ outward and visible sign of vitality&mdash;its wanton exercise
+ the symbol and expression of enjoyment. The poor philosopher
+ who distinguished humanity as singular in the exhibition of
+ humor had surely never heard a mocking-bird sing, watched a
+ roguish crow or admired a school of fish.</p>
+
+ <p>This keen appreciation of a kindred life in the sea has
+ thrown its charm over the poetry and religion of all races.
+ Ocean us leaves the o'erarching floods and rocky grottoes at
+ the call of bound Prometheus; Cyrene, with her nymphs, sits in
+ the cool Peneus, where comes Aristaeus mourning for his stolen
+ bees; the Druid washed his hedge-hyssop in the sacred water,
+ and priestesses lived on coral reefs visited by remote lovers
+ in their sundown seas; Schiller's diver goes into the purpling
+ deep and sees the Sea-Horror reaching out its hundred arms; the
+ beautiful Undine is the vivid poetry of the sea. Every fountain
+ has its guardian saint or nymph, and to this day not only the
+ German peasant and benighted English boor thrill at the sight
+ of some nymph-guarded well, but the New Mexican Indian offers
+ his rude pottery in propitiation of the animate existence, the
+ deity of the purling spring.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>"Der Taucher," for all the rhythm and music that clothes his
+ luckless plunge, was but a caitiff knight to some of our
+ submarine adventurers. A diver during the bay-fight in Mobile
+ harbor had reason to apprehend a more desperate encounter. A
+ huge cuttle-fish, the marine monster of Pliny and Victor Hugo,
+ had been seen in the water. His tough, sinuous, spidery arms,
+ five fathoms long, wavered visibly in the blue transparent
+ gulf,</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Und schaudernd dacht ich's&mdash;da
+ kroch's heran,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Regte hundert Gelenke zugleich,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Will schnappen nach mir.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>A harpoon was driven into the leathery, pulpy body of the
+ monster, but with no other effect than the sudden snapping of
+ the inch line like thread. It was subsequent to this that, as
+ the diver stayed his steps in the unsteady current, his staff
+ was seized below. The water was murky with the river-silt above
+ the salt brine, and he could see nothing, but after an effort
+ the staff was rescued or released. Curious to know what it was,
+ he probed again, and the stick was wrenched from his hand. With
+ a thrill he recognized in such power the monster of the sea,
+ the devil-fish. He returned anxious, doubtful, but resolute.
+ Few like to be driven from a duty by brute force. He armed
+ himself, and descended to renew the hazardous encounter in the
+ gloomy solitude of the sea-bottom. I would I had the wit to
+ describe that tournament beneath the sea; the stab, thrust,
+ curvet, plunge&mdash;the conquest and capture of the unknown
+ combatant. A special chance preserves the mediaeval character
+ of the contest, saving it from the sulphurous associations of
+ modern warfare that might be suggested by the name of
+ devil-fish. No: the antagonist wore a coat-of-mail and arms of
+ proof, as became a good knight of the sea, and was besides
+ succulent, digestible&mdash;a veritable prize for the
+ conqueror. It was a monstrous crab.</p>
+
+ <p>The constant encounter of strange and unforeseen perils
+ enables the professional diver to meet them with the same
+ coolness with which ordinary and familiar dangers are
+ confronted on land. On one occasion a party of such men were
+ driven out into the Gulf by a fierce "norther," were tossed
+ about like chips for three days in the vexed element, scant of
+ food, their compass out of order, and the horizon darkened with
+ prevailing storm. At another time a party wandered out in the
+ shallows of one of the keys that fringe the Gulf coast. They
+ amused themselves with wading into the water, broken into
+ dazzling brilliance. A few sharks were seen occasionally, which
+ gradually and unobserved increased to, a squadron. The waders
+ meanwhile continued their sport until the evening waned away.
+ Far over the dusk violet Night spread her vaporous shadows:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">The blinding mist came up and hid the
+ land,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And round and round the land,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And o'er and o'er the land,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">As far as eye could see.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>At last they turned their steps homeward, crossing the
+ little sandy key, between which and the beach lay a channel
+ shoulder-deep, its translucent waves now glimmering with
+ phosphorescence. But here they were met by an unexpected
+ obstacle. The fleet of sharks, with a strategical cunning
+ worthy of admiration, had flanked the little island, and now in
+ the deeper water formed in ranks and squadrons, and, with their
+ great goggle eyes like port-fires burning, lay ready to dispute
+ the passage. Armed with such weapons as they could clutch, the
+ men dashed into the water with paeans and shouts and the broken
+ pitchers of fallen Jericho. The violet phosphorescence lighted
+ them on their way, and tracked with luminous curve and star
+ every move of the enemy. The gashed water at every stroke of
+ club or swish of tail or fin bled in blue and red fire, as if
+ the very sea was wounded. The enemy's line of battle was broken
+ and scattered, but not until more than one of the assailants
+ had looked point-blank into the angry eyes of a shark and
+ beaten it off with actual blows. It was the Thermopylae of
+ sharkdom, with numbers reversed&mdash;a Red Sea passage
+ resonant with psalms of victory.</p>
+
+ <p>There are novel difficulties as well as dangers to be
+ encountered. The native courage of the man must be tempered,
+ ground and polished. On land it is the massing of numbers that
+ accomplishes the result&mdash;the accumulation of vital forces
+ and intelligence upon the objective point. The innumerable
+ threads of individual enterprise, like the twist of a Manton
+ barrel, give the toughest tensile power. Under the sea,
+ however, it is often the strength of the single thread, the wit
+ of the individual pitted against the solid impregnability of
+ the elements, the <i>vis inertiae</i> of the sea. It looks as
+ if uneducated Nature built her rude fastnesses and rocky
+ battlements with a special I view to resistance, making the
+ fickle and I unstable her strongest barricade. An example of
+ the skill and address necessary to conquer obstacles of the
+ latter kind was illustrated in Mobile Bay. There lay about a
+ sunken vessel an impenetrable mail of quicksand. It became
+ necessary to sink piles into this material. The obstacle does
+ not lie in its fickle, unstable character, but its elastic
+ tension. It swallows a nail or a beam by slow, serpent-like
+ deglutition. It is hungry, insatiable, impenetrable. Try to
+ force it, to drive down a pile by direct force: it resists. The
+ mallet is struck back by reverberating elasticity with an equal
+ force, and the huge pointed stake rebounds. Brute force beats
+ and beats in vain. The fickle sand will not be driven&mdash;no,
+ not an inch.</p>
+
+ <p>Wit comes in where weight breaks down. A force-pump, a
+ common old-style fire-engine, was rigged up, the nozzle and
+ hose bound to a huge pile,</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i10">to equal which the tallest pine</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Hewn on Norwegian hills, to be the
+ mast</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Of some great ammiral, were but a
+ wand.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The pump was set to work. The water tore through the
+ nostril-pipe, boring a hole with such rapidity that the tall
+ beam dropped into the socket with startling suddenness. Still
+ breathing torrents, the pipe was withdrawn: the clutching sand
+ seized, grappled the stake. It is cemented in.</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">You may break, you may shatter the
+ <i>stake</i>, if you will,</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>but&mdash;you can never pull it out.</p>
+
+ <p>Perhaps the most singular and venturesome exploit ever
+ performed in submarine diving was that of searching the sunken
+ monitor Milwaukee during the bay-fight in Mobile harbor. This
+ sea-going fortress was a huge double-turreted monitor, with a
+ ponderous, crushing projectile force in her. Her battery of
+ four fifteen-inch guns, and the tough, insensible solidity of
+ her huge wrought-iron turrets and heavy plated hulk, burdened
+ the sleepy waters of the bay. Upon a time she braced her iron
+ jacket about her, girded her huge sides with fifteen-inch
+ pistolry, and went rolling her clumsy volume down the bay to
+ mash Fort Taylor to rubbish and d&eacute;bacle. The sea
+ staggered under her ponderous gliding and groaned about her
+ massive bulk as she wended her awkward course toward the
+ bay-shore over against the fort. She sighted her blunderbusses,
+ and, rolling, grunting, wheezing in her revolving towers like a
+ Falstaff ill at ease, spat her gobbets of flame and death. The
+ poor little water-spaniel fort ran down to the shore and barked
+ at her of course. <i>Cui bono</i> or <i>malo?</i> Why, like
+ Job's mates, fill its poor belly with the east wind, or try to
+ draw out leviathan with a hook, or his tongue with a cord thou
+ lettest down? Yet who treads of the fight between invulnerable
+ Achilles and heroic Hector, and admires Achilles? The admiral
+ of the American fleet, sick of the premature pother, signaled
+ the lazy solidity to return. The loathly monster, slowly, like
+ a bull-dog wrenched from his victim, rolled snarling, lazily,
+ leisurely down the bay, not obeying and yet not disobeying the
+ signal.</p>
+
+ <p>All along the sunny coast, like flowers springing up in a
+ battle-field, were rows of little white cottages, tenanted by
+ women and children&mdash;love, life and peace in the midst of
+ ruin and sudden death. At the offending spectacle of homely
+ peace among its enemies the unglutted monster eased its huge
+ wrath. Tumbling and bursting among the poor little pasteboard
+ shells of cottages, where children played and women gossiped of
+ the war, and prayed for its end, no matter how, fell the huge
+ globes and cones of murder. Shrieks and cries, slain babes and
+ wounded women on shore; surly, half-mutinous officers and crew
+ on that iron hulk, shocked at the fell work they were set to
+ do; and the glimmer and wash of the bay-water below&mdash;that
+ sweet, tranquil, half-transparent liquid, with idle weeds and
+ chips upon it, empty crates and boxes of dead merchandise,
+ sacked of their life and substance by the war, as one might
+ swallow an oyster; the soft veils of shadowy ships and the
+ distant city spires; umbrageous fires and slips of shining sand
+ all mirrored in the soft and quiet sea, while this devilish
+ pother went on. There is a buoy adrift! No, it is a sodden
+ cask, perhaps of spoiling meat, while the people in the town
+ yonder are starving; and still the huge iron, gluttonous
+ monster bursts its foam of blood and death, while the surly
+ crew curse and think of mothers and babes at home. Better to
+ look at the bay, the idle, pleasing summer water, with chips
+ and corks and weeds upon it; better to look at the bubbling
+ cask yonder&mdash;much better, captain, if you only knew it!
+ But the reluctant, heavy iron turret groans and wheezes on its
+ pivotal round, and it will be a minute or half a minute before
+ the throated hell speaks again. But it <i>will</i> speak:
+ machinery is fatally accurate to time and place. Can nothing
+ stay it, or stop the trembling of those bursting iron spheres
+ among yon pretty print-like homes? No: look at the buoy,
+ wish-wash, rolling lazily, bobbing in the water, a lazy, idle
+ cask, with nothing in the world to do on this day of busy
+ mischief. What hands coopered it in the new West? what farmer
+ filled it? There is the grunting of swine, lowing of cattle, in
+ the look of the staves. But the turret groans and wheezes and
+ goes around, whether you look at it or not. What cottage this
+ time? The soft lap-lap of the water goes on, and the tedious
+ cask gets nearer: it will slide by the counter. You have a
+ curious interest in that. No: it grates under the bow;
+ it&mdash;Thunder and wreck and ruin! Has the bay burst open and
+ swallowed us? The huge, invulnerable iron monster&mdash;not
+ invulnerable after all&mdash;has met its master in the idle
+ cask. It is blind, imprisoned Samson pulling down the pillars
+ of the temple. The tough iron plates at the bow are rent and
+ torn and twisted like wet paper. A terrible hole is gashed in
+ the hull. The monster wobbles, rolls, gasps, and drinks huge
+ gulps of water like a wounded man&mdash;desperately wounded,
+ and dying in his thirsty veins and arteries. The swallowed
+ torrent rushes aft, hissing and quenching the fires; beats
+ against the stern, and comes forward with the rush of that
+ repulse to meet the incoming wave. Into the boats, the
+ water&mdash;anywhere but here. She reels again and groans; and
+ then, as a desperate hero dies, she slopes her huge warlike
+ beak at the hostile water and rushes to her own ruin with a
+ surge and convulsion. The victorious sea sweeps over it and
+ hides it, laughing at her work. She will keep it safely. That
+ is the unsung epic of the Milwaukee, without which I should
+ have little to say of the submarine diving during the
+ bay-fight.</p>
+
+ <p>The harbor of Mobile is shaped like a rude Innuit boot. At
+ the top, Tensaw and Mobile Rivers, in their deltas, make,
+ respectively, two and three looplike bands, like the straps.
+ The toe is Bonsecour Bay, pointing east. The heel rests on
+ Dauphin Island, while the main channel flows into the hollow of
+ the foot between Fort Morgan and Dauphin Island. In the
+ north-west angle, obscured by the foliage, lay the devoted
+ city, suffering no less from artificial famine, made
+ unnecessarily, than the ligatures that stopped the vital
+ current of trade. Tons of meat were found putrefying while the
+ citizens, and even the garrison, had been starving on scanty
+ rations. Food could be purchased, but at exorbitant rates, and
+ the medium of exchange, Confederate notes, all gone to water
+ and waste paper. The true story of the Lost Cause has yet to be
+ written. North of Mobile, in the Trans-Mississippi department,
+ thousands whose every throb was devoted to the enterprise,
+ welcomed the Northern invaders, not as destroyers of a hope
+ already dead by the act of a few entrusted with its defence,
+ but as something better than the anarchy that was not Southern
+ independence or anything else human.</p>
+
+ <p>Such were the condition, period and place&mdash;the people
+ crushed between the upper and nether millstones of two hostile
+ and contending civilizations&mdash;when native thrift evoked a
+ new element, that set in sharp contrast the heroism of life and
+ the heroism of death, the courage that incurs danger to save
+ against the courage that accepts danger to destroy. The work
+ was the saving of the valuable arms&mdash;costing the
+ government thirty thousand dollars per gun&mdash;and the
+ machinery of the sunken Milwaukee.<a id="footnotetag5"
+ name="footnotetag5"></a><a href="#footnote5"><sup>5</sup></a>
+ By a curious circumstance this party of divers was composed
+ partly, if not principally or entirely, of mechanics and
+ engineers who were exempt from military service under the
+ economic laws of the Confederacy, yet who in heart and soul
+ sympathized with the rebellion. They had worked to save for
+ the South: now they were to work and save for the North. It
+ was a service of superadded danger. All the peril incurred
+ from missile weapons was increased by the hidden danger of
+ the secret under-sea and the presence of the terrible
+ torpedoes. These floated everywhere, in all innocent,
+ unsuspicious shapes. One monster, made of boiler iron, a
+ huge cross, is popularly believed to be still hidden in the
+ bay. The person possessing the chart wherein the masked
+ battery's place was set down is said to have destroyed it
+ and fled. Let us hope, however, that this is an error.</p>
+
+ <p>Keep in mind, in reading this account, the contrasted
+ picture of peace in Nature and war in man&mdash;the calm blue
+ sky; the soft hazy outlines of woods and bay-shore dropping
+ their soft veils in the water; the cottages, suggesting
+ industry and love; the distant city; the delicate and graceful
+ spars of the Hartford; the busy despatch-steamers plying to and
+ fro; the bursting forts and huge ugly monitors; the starry
+ arches of flying shells by night and flying cloud by day; the
+ soft lap of the water; the sensuous, sweet beauty of that
+ latitude of eternal spring; and the soft dark violet of the
+ outer sea, glassing itself in calm or broken into millioned
+ frets of blue, red and starry fire; the danger above and the
+ danger below; the dark mysterious caverns of the sea, rich with
+ coral grots and grove and abounding marine life; the
+ impenetrable gloom of the ship's hold, whose unimaginable
+ darkness and labyrinthine intricacy of machinery set obstacles
+ at every turn and move and step; the darkness; the fury; the
+ hues and shape, all that art can make or Nature fashion, gild
+ or color wrought into one grand tablature of splendor and
+ magnificence. War and peaceful industry met there in novel
+ rivalry, and each claimed its privileges. The captain of the
+ Search said to the officers, while crowding his men behind the
+ turret, with sly, dry humor, "Come, you are all <i>paid</i> to
+ be shot at: my men are not."</p>
+
+ <p>More than once the accuracy of the enemy's fire drove the
+ little party to shelter. Though the diver was shielded by the
+ impenetrable fickle element that gave Achilles invulnerability,
+ the air-pump above was exposed, and thus the diver might be
+ slain by indirection. There lay Achilles' heel, the exposed
+ vulnerable part that Mother Thetis's baptism neglected.</p>
+
+ <p>The work below was arduous: the hulk crowded with the
+ entangling machinery of sixteen engines, cuddies, ports, spars,
+ levers, hatches, stancheons, floating trunks, bibulous boxes
+ heavy with drink, and the awful, mysterious gloom of the water,
+ which is not night or darkness, but the absence of any ray to
+ touch the sensitive optic nerve. The sense of touch the only
+ reliance, and the life-line his guide.</p>
+
+ <p>But the peril incurred can be better understood through an
+ illustrative example of a perilous adventure and a poor return.
+ Officers and men of the unfortunate monitor asked for the
+ rescue of their property, allowing a stipulated sum in lieu of
+ salvage. Among these was a petty officer, anxious for the
+ recovery of his chest. It involved peculiar hazards, since it
+ carried the diver below the familiar turret-chamber, through
+ the <i>inextricabilis error</i> of entangling machinery in the
+ engine-room, groping among floating and sunken objects, into a
+ remote state-room, the Acheron of the cavernous hold. He was to
+ find by touch a seaman's chest; handle it in that thickening
+ gloom; carry it, push it, move it through that labyrinthine
+ obscurity to a point from which it could be raised. To add
+ immeasurably to the intricacy of this undertaking, there was
+ the need of carrying his life-line and air-hose through all
+ that entanglement and obscurity. Three times in that horror of
+ thick darkness like wool the line tangled in the web of
+ machinery, and three times he had, by tedious endeavor, to
+ follow it up, find the knot and release it. Then the door of
+ the little state-room, the throat of exit, was shut to, and
+ around and around the dense chamber he groped as if in a dream,
+ and could find no vent. All was alike&mdash;a smooth, slimy
+ wall, glutinous with that gelatinous liquid, the sea-water. The
+ tangled line became a blind guide and fruitful source of error;
+ the hours were ebbing away, drowning life and vital air in that
+ horrible watery pit;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Aut hoc inclusi ligno occultantur
+ Achivi,</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>or, a worse enemy than the subtle Greek's, death from the
+ suspended air-current. Speed, nimbleness, strength and activity
+ were worthless: with tedious fingers he must follow the
+ life-line, find its entanglements and slowly loosen them,
+ carefully taking up the slack, and so follow the straightened
+ cord to the door. Then the chest: he must not forget that.
+ Slowly he heaves and pushes, now at this, now at the life-line
+ hitching on knob, handle, lever or projecting peg&mdash;on
+ anything or nothing in that maze of machinery; by involution
+ and evolution, like the unknown quantity in a cubic equation,
+ through all the twists, turns, assumptions and substitutions,
+ and always with that unmanageable, indivisible coefficient the
+ box, until he reaches the upper air.</p>
+
+ <p>In Aesop's fable, when the crane claimed the reward of the
+ wolf for using his long neck and bill as a forceps in
+ extracting a bone from the latter's oesophagus, Lupus suggests
+ that for the crane to have had his head down in the lupine
+ throat and <i>not</i> get it snapped off was reward enough for
+ any reasonable fowl. The petty officer was sufficiently learned
+ in the Lyceum to administer a like return. The stipulated
+ salvage was never paid or offered.<a id="footnotetag6"
+ name="footnotetag6"></a><a href="#footnote6"><sup>6</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>The monitors had small square hatches or man-ports let into
+ the deck, admitting one person conveniently.</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Hinc via, Tartanii quae fert Acherontis
+ ad undas.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>A swinging ladder, whose foot was clear of the floor, led
+ down into the recesses. A diver, having completed his task,
+ ascended the treacherous staircase to escape, and found the
+ hatch blocked up. A floating chest or box had drifted into the
+ opening, and, fitting closely, had firmly corked the man up in
+ that dungeon, tight as a fly in a bottle. From his doubtful
+ perch on the ladder he endeavored to push the obstacle from its
+ insertion. Two or more equal difficulties made this impossible.
+ The box had no handle, and it was slippery with the ooze and
+ mucus of the sea. The leverage of pushing only wedged it faster
+ in the orifice. The inconstant ladder swayed from it as a
+ fulcrum. Again and again by art and endeavor and angle of push
+ he essayed, and the ladder made sport of it. It was deadly
+ sport, that swing and seesaw on the slippery rungs in the
+ immeasurable loneliness of the silent, shrouded cabin. It was
+ no rush of air, sending life tingling in the blood made
+ brilliant with carmine of oxidation, but the dense, mephitic
+ sough of the thick wool of water. He descended and sat upon the
+ floor to think. Feasible methods had failed, and the sands of
+ his life were running out like the old physician's. Now to try
+ the impracticable. There are heaps of wisdom in the wrong way
+ sometimes, which, I suppose, is the reason some of us like it.
+ The box was out of his reach, choked in the gullet of that
+ life-hole. No spring or leap from floor or ladder could reach
+ its slippery side or bear it from its fixture. The sea had
+ caught him prowling in its mysteries, and blocked him up, as
+ cruel lords of ancient days walled up the intruder on their
+ domestic privacy. Wit after brute force: man and Nature were
+ pitted against each other in the uncongenial gloom&mdash;life
+ the stake.</p>
+
+ <p>He groped about his prison, glutinous with infusoriae and
+ the oily consistence of the sea. Here a nail, there a block or
+ lever, shaped out mentally by the touch, theorized, studied
+ upon and thrown down. Now a hatchet, monkey-wrench,
+ monkey's-tail, or gliding fish or wriggling eel, companions of
+ his imprisonment. At last the cold touch of iron: the hand
+ encloses and lifts it; its weight betrays its length; he feels
+ it to the end&mdash;blunt, square, useless. He tries the other
+ end&mdash;an edge or spike. That will do. Standing under the
+ hatch, guided by the ladder to the position, and with a strong
+ swinging, upward blow, the new tool is driven into the soft,
+ fibrous and adhesive pine bottom of the box. On the principle
+ on which your butler's practiced elbow draws the twisted screw
+ sunk into the cobwebbed seal of your '48 port, he uncorks
+ himself. The box pulled out of the hatch, the sea-gods threw up
+ the sponge, that zoophyte being handy.</p>
+
+ <p>These few incidents, strung together at random, and
+ embracing only limited experiences out of many in one
+ enterprise, are illustrative, in their variety and character,
+ of this hardy pursuit, and the fascination of danger which is
+ the school of native hardihood. But they give the reader a very
+ imperfect idea of the nature and appearance of the new element
+ into which man has pushed his industry. The havoc and spoil,
+ the continued danger and contention, darken the gloom of the
+ submarine world as a flash of lightning leaves blacker the
+ shadow of the night and storm.</p>
+
+ <p>The first invention to promote subaqueous search was the
+ diving-bell, a clumsy vessel which isolates the diver. It is
+ embarrassing, if not dangerous, where there is a strong current
+ or if it rests upon a slant deck. It limits the vision, and in
+ one instance it is supposed the wretched diver was taken from
+ the bell by a shark. It permits an assistant, however, and a
+ bold diver will plunge from the deck above and ascend in the
+ vessel, to the invariable surprise of his companion. An example
+ of one of its perils, settling in the mud, occurred, I think,
+ in the port of New York. A party of amateurs, supported by
+ champagne flasks and a reporter, went down. The bell settled
+ and stuck like a boy's sucker. One of the party proposed
+ shaking or rocking the bell, and doing so, the water was forced
+ under and the bell lifted from the ooze.</p>
+
+ <p>But a descent in submarine armor is the true way to visit
+ the world under water. The first sensation in descending is the
+ sudden bursting roar of furious, Niagarac cascades in the ears.
+ It thunders and booms upon the startled nerve with the rush and
+ storm of an avalanche. The sense quivers with it. But it is not
+ air shaken by reflected blows: it is the cascades driven into
+ the enclosing helmet by the force-pump. As the flexile hose has
+ to be stiffly distended to bear an aqueous gravity of
+ twenty-five to fifty pounds to the square inch, the force of
+ the current can be estimated. The tympanum of the ear yields to
+ the fierce external pressure. The brain feels and multiplies
+ the intolerable tension as if the interior was clamped in a
+ vice, and that tumultuous, thunderous torrent pours on.
+ Involuntarily the mouth opens: the air rushes in the Eustachian
+ tube, and with sudden velocity strikes the intruded tension of
+ the drum, which snaps back to its normal state with a sharp,
+ pistol-like crack. The strain is momently relieved to be
+ renewed again, and again relieved by the same attending
+ salutes.</p>
+
+ <p>In your curious dress you must appear monstrous, even to
+ that marine world, familiar with abnormal creations. The whale
+ looks from eyes on the top of his head; the flat-fish, sole,
+ halibut have both eyes on the same side; and certain Crustacea
+ place the organ on a foot-stalk, as if one were to hold up his
+ eye in his hand to include a wider horizon. But the monster
+ which the fish now sees differs from all these. It has four
+ great goggle eyes arranged symmetrically around its head.
+ Peering through these plate-glass optics, the diver sees the
+ curious, strange beauty of the world around him, not as the
+ bather sees it, blurred and indistinct, but in the calm
+ splendor of its own thallassphere. The first thought is one of
+ unspeakable admiration of the miraculous beauty of everything
+ around him&mdash;a glory and a splendor of refraction,
+ interference and reflection that puts to shame the Arabian
+ story of the kingdom of the Blue Fish. Above him is that pure
+ golden canopy with its rare glimmering
+ lustrousness&mdash;something like the soft, dewy effulgence
+ that comes with sun-breaks through showery afternoons. The soft
+ delicacy of that pure straw-yellow that prevails everywhere is
+ crossed and lighted by tints and glimmering hues of accidental
+ and complementary color indescribably elegant. The floor of the
+ sea rises like a golden carpet in gentle incline to the
+ surface; but this incline, experience soon teaches, is an
+ ocular deception, the effect of refraction, such as a tumbler
+ of water and a spoon can exhibit in petty. It is perhaps the
+ first observable warning that you are in a new medium, and that
+ your familiar friend, the light, comes to you altered in its
+ nature; and it is as well to remember this and "make a note on
+ it."</p>
+
+ <p>Raising your eyes to the horizontal and looking straight
+ forward, a new and beautiful wealth of color is developed. It
+ is at first a delicate blue, as if an accidental color of the
+ prevailing yellow. But soon it deepens into a rich violet. You
+ feel as if you had never before appreciated the loveliness of
+ that rich tint. As your eye dwells upon it the rich lustrous
+ violet darkens to indigo, and sinking into deeper hues becomes
+ a majestic threat of color. It is ominous, vivid
+ blue-black&mdash;solid, adamantine, a crystal wall of amethyst.
+ It is all around you. You are cased, dungeoned in the solid
+ masonry of the waters. It is beauty indeed, but the sombre and
+ awful beauty of the night and storm. The eye turns for relief
+ and reassurance to the paly-golden lustrous roof, and watches
+ that tender penciling which brightens every object it touches.
+ The hull of the sunken ship, lying slant and open to the sun,
+ has been long enough submerged to be crusted with barnacles,
+ hydropores, crustacea and the labored constructions of the
+ microscopic existences and vegetation that fill the sea. The
+ song of Ariel becomes vivid and realistic in its rich
+ word-power:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Full fathom five thy father lies;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Of his bones are coral made;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Those are pearls that were his eyes:</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Nothing of him that doth fade</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">But doth suffer a sea-change</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Into something rich and strange.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The transfiguration of familiar objects is indeed curious
+ and wonderful. The hulk, once gaudy with paint and gilding, has
+ come under the skill of the lapidary and sea-artist. It is
+ crusted with emerald and flossy mosses, and glimmers with
+ diamond, jacinth, ruby, topaz, sapphire and gold. Every
+ jewel-shape in leaf, spore, coral or plume, lying on a greenish
+ crystalline ground, is fringed with a soft radiance of silver
+ fire, and every point is tipped in minute ciliate flames of
+ faint steely purple. It is spotted with soft velvety black
+ wherever a shadow falls, that mingles and varies the wonderful
+ display of color. It is brilliant, vivid, changeable with the
+ interferences of light from the fluctuating surface above,
+ which transmogrifies everything&mdash;touches the coarsest
+ objects with its pencil, and they become radiant and spiritual.
+ A pile of brick, dumped carelessly on the deck, has become a
+ huge hill of crystal jewelry, lively with brilliant prismatic
+ radiance. Where the light falls on the steps of the staircase
+ it shows a ladder of silver crusted with emeralds. The
+ round-house, spars, masts, every spot where a peak or angle
+ catches the light, have flushed into liquid, jeweled beauty;
+ and each point, a prism and mirror, catches, multiplies and
+ reflects the other splendor. A rainbow, a fleecy mist over the
+ lake, made prismal by the sunlight, a bunch of sub-aqueous
+ moss, a soap-bubble, are all examples in our daily experience
+ of that transforming power of water in the display of color.
+ The prevailing tone is that soft, golden effulgence which, like
+ the grace of a cheerful and loving heart, blends all into one
+ harmonious whole.</p>
+
+ <p>But observation warns the spectator of the delusive
+ character of all that splendor of color. He lifts a box from
+ the ooze: he appears to have uncorked the world. The hold is a
+ bottomless chasm. Every indentation, every acclivity that casts
+ a shadow, gives the impression of that soundless depth. The
+ bottom of the sea seems loopholed with cavities that pierce the
+ solid globe and the dark abysses of space beyond. The diver is
+ surrounded by pitfalls, real and imaginary. There is no
+ graduation. The shallow concave of a hand-basin is as the
+ shadow of the bottomless well.</p>
+
+ <p>If the exploration takes place in the delta of a great
+ river, the light is affected by the various densities of the
+ double refracting media. At the proper depth one can see
+ clearly the line where these two meet, clean cut and as sharply
+ defined as the bottom of a green glass tumbler through the pure
+ water it contains. The salt brine or gelatinous sea-water sinks
+ weighted to the bottom, and over it flows the fresh
+ river-water. If the latter is darkened with sediment, it
+ obscures the silent depths with a heavy, gloomy cloud. In
+ seasons of freshet this becomes a total darkness.</p>
+
+ <p>But even on a bright, sunshiny day, under clear water, the
+ shadow of any object in the sea is unlike any shade in the
+ upper atmosphere. It draws a black curtain over everything
+ under it, completely obscuring it. Nor is this peculiarity lost
+ when the explorer enters the shadow; but, as one looking into a
+ tunnel from without can see nothing therein, though the open
+ country beyond is plainly visible, so, standing in that
+ submarine shadow, all around is dark, though beyond the sable
+ curtain of the shadow the view is clear. Apply this optical
+ fact to the ghastly story of a diver's alleged experience in
+ the cabin of a sunken ship. It is narrated that there was
+ revealed to his appalled sight the spectacle of the drowned
+ passengers in various attitudes of alarm or devotion when the
+ dreadful suffocation came. The story is told with great effect
+ and power, but unless a voltaic lantern is included in the
+ stage furniture, the ghastly tableaux must sink into the limbo
+ of incredibilities.</p>
+
+ <p>The cabin of a sunken vessel is dark beyond any supernal
+ conception of darkness. Even a cabin window does not alter this
+ law, though it may be itself visible, with objects on its
+ surface, as in a child's magic-lantern. As the rays of light
+ pass through an object flatwise, like the blade of a knife
+ through the leaves of a book, and may be admitted through
+ another of like character in the plane of the first, so a ray
+ of light can penetrate with deflection through air and water.
+ But becoming polarized, the interposition of a third medium
+ ordinarily transparent will stop it altogether. Hence the
+ plate-glass window under water admits no light into the
+ interior of a cabin. The distrust of sight grows with the
+ diver's experience. The eye brings its habit of estimating
+ proportion and distance from an attenuated atmosphere into
+ another and denser medium, and the seer is continually deceived
+ by the change. He hesitates, halts, and is observant of the
+ pitfalls about him. A gang-plank slightly above the surface of
+ the deck is bordered, where its shadow falls, by dismal
+ trenches. There is a range of hills crossing the deck before
+ him. As he approaches he estimates the difficulty of the
+ ascent. At its apparent foot he reaches to clamber the steep
+ sides, and the sierra is still a step beyond his reach. Drawing
+ still nearer, he prepares to crawl up; his hand touches the
+ top; it is less than shoulder-high.</p>
+
+ <p>But perhaps the strongest illustration of the differing
+ densities of these two media is furnished by an attempt to
+ drive a nail under water. By an absolute law such an effort, if
+ guided by sight independent of calculation, must fail. Habit
+ and experience, tested in atmospheric light, will control the
+ muscles, and direct the blow at the very point where the
+ nail-head is not. For this reason the ingenious expedient of a
+ voltaic lantern under water has proved to be impracticable. It
+ is not the light alone which is wanted, but that sweet familiar
+ atmosphere through which we are habituated to look. The
+ submarine diver learns to rely wholly on the truer sense of
+ touch, and guided by that he engages in tasks requiring labor
+ and skill with the easy assurance of a blind man in the crowded
+ street.</p>
+
+ <p>The conveyance of sound through the inelastic medium of
+ water is so difficult that it has been called the world of
+ silence. This is only comparatively true. The fish has an
+ auditory cavity, which, though simple in itself, certifies the
+ ordinary conviction of sound, but it is dull and imperfect; and
+ perhaps all marine creatures have other means of communication.
+ There is an instance, however, of musical sounds produced by
+ marine animals, which seems to show an appreciation of harmony.
+ In one of the lakes of Ceylon, Sir Emerson Tennent heard soft
+ musical sounds, like the first faint notes of the aeolian harp
+ or the faint vibrations of a wineglass when its rim is rubbed
+ by a wet finger. This curious harmony is supposed to be
+ produced by a species of testaceous mollusk. A similar
+ intonation is heard at times along the Florida coast.</p>
+
+ <p>Interesting as this may be, as indicating an appreciation of
+ that systematic order in arrangement which in music is harmony,
+ it does not alter the fact that to the ears of the diver, save
+ the cascade of the air through the life-hose, it is a sea of
+ silence. No shout or spoken word reaches him. Even a
+ cannon-shot comes to him dull and muffled, or if distant it is
+ unheard. But a sharp, quick sound, that appears to break the
+ air, like ice, into sharp radii, can be heard, especially if
+ struck against anything on the water. The sound of driving a
+ nail on the ship above, for example, or a sharp tap on the
+ diving-bell below, is distinctly and reciprocally audible.
+ Conversation below the surface by ordinary methods is out of
+ the question, but it can be sustained by placing the metal
+ helmets of the interlocutors together, thus providing a medium
+ of conveyance.</p>
+
+ <p>The effort to clothe with intelligence subaqueous life must
+ have been greatly strengthened among primitive nations by the
+ musical sounds to which I have referred. Those mysterious
+ breathings were associated with a human will, and gave
+ forebodings from their very sweetness. Everywhere they are
+ associated with a passionate or pathetic mystery, and the
+ widely-spread area over which their island home is portrayed as
+ existing strengthens the conclusion that the strange music of
+ the sea belongs not to Ceylon or Florida or the Mediterranean
+ alone. It affords us another instance, by that common enjoyment
+ of sweet sounds, of the chain of sympathy between all
+ intelligent creatures, and better prepares us for familiar
+ acquaintance with the beings which people the sea. We have
+ prejudices and preconceived ideas to get rid of, whose strength
+ has crystallized into aphorisms. "Cold as a fish" and
+ "fish-eyed" are ordinary expressions. Then the touch of a fish,
+ cold, slippery, serpent-like, causes an involuntary
+ shrinking.</p>
+
+ <p>But the submarine diver has a new revelation of piscine
+ character and beauty, and perhaps can better understand the
+ enticings of a siren or fantastic Lurlei than the classical
+ scholar. In the flush of aureal light tinging their pearly
+ glimmering armor are the radiant, graceful, frolicsome
+ inhabitants of the sea. The glutinous or oily exudation that
+ covers them is a brilliant varnish. Their lustrous colors,
+ variety of crystalline tints and beautiful markings and spots,
+ attract the eye of the artist even in the fish-market; but when
+ glowing with full life, lively, nimble, playful, surely the
+ most graceful living creatures of earth, air or sea, the soul
+ must be blind indeed that can look upon them unmoved.</p>
+
+ <p>The dull optic seen glazing in the death-throes upon the
+ market-stall, with coarse vulgar surroundings, becomes, in its
+ native element, full of intelligence and light. In even the
+ smaller fry the round orb glitters like a diamond star. One
+ cannot see the fish without seeing its eye. It is positive,
+ persistent, prevalent, the whole animate existence expressed in
+ it. As far as the fish can be seen its eye is visible. The
+ glimmer of scales, the grace of perfect motion, the rare golden
+ pavilion with its jeweled floor and heavy violet curtains,
+ complete a scene whose harmony of color, radiance and animal
+ life is perfect. The minnow and sun-perch are the pages of the
+ tourney on the cloth of gold. There is a fearless familiarity
+ in these playful little things, a social, frank intimacy with
+ their novel visitor, that astonishes while it pleases. They
+ crowd about him, curiously touch him, and regard all his
+ movements with a frank, lively interest. Nor are the larger
+ fish shy. The sheeps-head, red and black groper, sea-trout and
+ other, familiar fish of the sportsman, receive him with frank
+ bonhommie or fearless curiosity. In their large round beautiful
+ eyes the diver reads evidence of intelligence and curious
+ wonder that sometimes startles him with its entirely human
+ expression. There is a look of interest mixed with curiosity,
+ leading to the irresistible conclusion of a kindred nature. No
+ faithful hound or pet doe could express a franker interest in
+ its eyes. Curiosity, which I take to be expressly destructive
+ of the now-exploded theory of instinct, is expressed not only
+ by the eye, but by the movements. As in man there is an eager
+ passion to handle that which is novel, so these curious
+ denizens of the sea are persistent in their efforts to touch
+ the diver. An instance of this occurred, attended with
+ disagreeable results to one of the parties, and that not the
+ fish. The Eve of this investigation was a large catfish. These
+ fish are the true rovers of the water. They have a large round
+ black eye, full of intelligence and fire: their warlike spines
+ and gaff-topsails give them the true buccaneer build. One of
+ these, while the diver was engaged, incited by its fearless
+ curiosity, slipped up and touched him with its cold nose. The
+ man involuntarily threw back his hand, and the soft palm
+ striking the sharp gaff, it was driven into the flesh. There
+ was an instant's struggle before the fish wrenched itself loose
+ from the bleeding member, and then it only swung off a little,
+ staring with its bold black eyes at the intruder, as if it
+ wished to stay for further question. It is hard to translate
+ the expression of that look of curious wonder and surprise
+ without appearing to exaggerate, but the impression produced
+ was that if the fish did not speak to him, it was from no lack
+ of intelligent emotions to be expressed in language.</p>
+
+ <p>A prolonged stay in one place gave a diver an opportunity to
+ test this intelligence further, and to observe the trustful
+ familiarity of this variety of marine life. He was continually
+ surrounded at his work by a school of gropers, averaging a foot
+ in length. An accident having identified one of them, he
+ observed it was a daily visitor. After the first curiosity the
+ gropers apparently settled into the belief that the novel
+ monster was harmless and clumsy, but useful in assisting them
+ to their food. The species feed on Crustacea and marine worms,
+ which shelter under rocks, mosses and sunken objects at the
+ sea-bottom. In raising anything out of the ooze a dozen of
+ these fish would thrust their heads into the hollow for their
+ food before the diver's hand was removed. They would follow him
+ about, eyeing his motions, dashing in advance or around in
+ sport, and evidently with a liking for their new-found friend.
+ Pleased with such an unexpected familiarity, the man would
+ bring them food and feed them from his hand, as one feeds a
+ flock of chickens. The resemblance, in their familiarity and
+ some of their ways, to poultry was, in fact, very striking. As
+ a little chick will sometimes seize a large crumb and scurry
+ off, followed by the flock, so a fish would sometimes snatch a
+ morsel and fly, followed by the school. If he dropped it or
+ stopped to enjoy his <i>bonne bouche</i>, his mates would be
+ upon him. Sometimes two would get the same morsel, and there
+ would be a trial of strength, accompanied with much flash and
+ glitter of shining scales. But no matter how called off, their
+ interest and curiosity remained with the diver. They would
+ return, pushing their noses about him, caressingly in
+ appearance if not intent, and bob into the treasures of worm
+ and shell-fish his labor exposed. He became convinced that they
+ were sportive, indulging in dash and play for the fun of it,
+ rather than for any grosser object to be attained.</p>
+
+ <p>This curious intimacy was continued for weeks: the fish,
+ unless driven away by some rover of prey of their kind, were in
+ regular attendance during his hours of work. Perhaps the
+ solitude and silence of that curious submarine world
+ strengthened the impression of recognition and intimacy, but by
+ every criterion we usually accept in terrestrial creation these
+ little creatures had an interest and a friendly feeling for one
+ who furnished them food, and who was always careful to avoid
+ injuring them or giving them any unnecessary alarm. He could
+ not, of course, take up a fish in his hand, any more than a
+ chicken will submit to handling; but as to the comparative
+ tameness of the two, the fish is more approachable than the
+ chicken. That they knew and expected the diver at the usual
+ hour was a conclusion impossible to deny, as also that they
+ grew into familiarity with him, and were actuated by an
+ intelligent recognition of his service to them. It would be
+ hard to convince this gentleman that a school of fish cannot be
+ as readily and completely tamed as a flock of chickens.</p>
+
+ <p>Why not? The fear of man is no instinctive feeling in the
+ invertebrate creation. The pioneer who penetrates into the
+ uninhabited wilds of our Western frontier finds bird and beast
+ fearless and familiar. Man's cruelty is a lesson of experience.
+ The timid and fearful of the lower creation belong to creatures
+ of prey. The shark, for example, is as cowardly as the
+ wolf.</p>
+
+ <p>I thought to speak of other marine creations with which the
+ diver grows acquainted, finding in them only a repetition of
+ the same degree of life he has seen in the upper world. But let
+ it be enough to state the conclusion&mdash;as yet only an
+ impression, and perhaps never to be more&mdash;that in marine
+ existence there is to be found the counterpart always of some
+ animate existence on earth, invertebrate or radiate, in
+ corresponding animals or insects, between whose habits and
+ modes of existence strong analogies are found. The shrimps that
+ hang in clusters on your hand under the water are but winged
+ insects of the air in another frame that have annoyed you on
+ the land.</p>
+
+ <p>Let me dismiss the subject with the brief account of a diver
+ caught in a trap.</p>
+
+ <p>In the passion of blind destruction that followed and
+ attended the breaking out of hostilities between the North and
+ the South, as a child breaks his rival's playthings, the
+ barbarism of war destroyed the useful improvements of
+ civilization. Among the things destroyed by this iconoclastic
+ fury was the valuable dry-dock in Pensacola Bay. It was burned
+ to the water's edge, and sunk. A company was subsequently
+ organized to rescue the wreck, and in the course of the
+ submarine labor occurred the incident to which I refer.</p>
+
+ <p>The dry-dock was built in compartments, to ensure it against
+ sinking, but the ingenuity which was to keep it above water now
+ served effectually to keep it down. Each one of these small
+ water-tight compartments held the vessel fast to the bottom, as
+ Gulliver was bound by innumerable threads to the ground of
+ Lilliput. It was necessary to break severally into the lower
+ side of each of these chambers, and allow the water to flow
+ evenly in all. The interior of the hull was checkered by these
+ boxes. Huge beams and cross-ties intersected each other at
+ right angles, forming the frame for this honeycombed interior,
+ pigeon-holed like a merchant's desk. It was necessary to tear
+ off the skin and penetrate from one to the other in order to
+ effect this.</p>
+
+ <p>It was a difficult and tedious job under water. The net of
+ intersecting beams lay so close together that the passage
+ between was exceedingly narrow and compressed, barely admitting
+ the diver's body. The pens, so framed by intersecting beams,
+ were narrowed and straitened, embarrassing attempts at labor in
+ them, which the cold, slippery, serpent-like touch of the
+ sea-water was not likely to make pleasanter. It folded the
+ shuddering body in its coils, and a most ancient and fish-like
+ smell did not improve the situation. The toil was multiplied by
+ the innumerable pigeon-holes, as if they fitted into one
+ another like a Chinese puzzle, with the unlucky diver in the
+ middle box. It was a nightmare of the sea, the furniture of a
+ dream solidified in woody fibre.</p>
+
+ <p>Into one of these crowding holes the diver crawled. There
+ was the tedious work of tearing off the casing to occupy an
+ hour or more, and when it was accomplished he endeavored to
+ back out of his situation. He was stopped fast and tight in his
+ regression. The arrangement of the armor about the head and
+ shoulders, making a cone whose apex was the helmet, prevented
+ his exit. It was like the barb of a harpoon, and caught him
+ fast in the wood. Such a danger is not sudden in its
+ revelation. There is at first only a feeling of impatience at
+ the embarrassment, a disposition to "tear things." In vain
+ attempts at doubling and other gymnastic feats the diver wasted
+ several hours, until his companions above became alarmed at the
+ delay. They renewed and increased their labors at the
+ force-pump, and the impetuous torrent came surging about the
+ diver's ears. It served to complete his danger. It sprung the
+ trap in which he lay enclosed. The inflated armor swelled and
+ filled up the crowded spaces. It stiffened out the casing of
+ the helmet to equal the burden of fifty pounds to the square
+ inch, and made it as hard as iron. He was caught like the
+ gluttonous fox. The bulky volume of included air made exit
+ impossible. It was no longer a labyrinth as before, where
+ freedom of motion incited courage: he was in the fetters of
+ wind and water, bound fast to the floor of his dungeon den. He
+ signaled for the pump to stop. It was the only alternative. He
+ might die without that life-giving air, but he would certainly
+ die if its volume was not reduced. The cock at the back of the
+ helmet for discharging the vessel was out of his reach. The
+ invention never contemplated a case in which the diver would
+ perish from the presence of air.</p>
+
+ <p>As the armor worn was made tight at the sleeves with elastic
+ wristbands, his remedy was to insert his fingers under it, and
+ slowly and tediously allow the bubbling air to escape. In this
+ he persevered steadily, encouraged by the prospect of escape.
+ The way was long and difficult, but release certain with the
+ reduction of that huge bulk.</p>
+
+ <p>But a new and subtler danger attacked him&mdash;the very wit
+ of Nature brought to bear upon his force and ingenuity. It was
+ as if the mysterious sirens of the sea saw in that intellectual
+ force the real strength of their prisoner, and sought to steal
+ it from him while they lulled him to indifference. Inhaling and
+ reinhaling the reduced volume of air, it became carbonized and
+ foul, not with the warning of sudden oppression, but</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Sly as April melts to May,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And May slips into June.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The senses, intoxicated by the new companion sent them by
+ the lungs, began to sport with it, as ignorant children with a
+ loaded shell, forgetful of duty and the critical condition of
+ the man. They began to wander in vagaries and delusions. A soft
+ chime of distant bells rang in his ears with the sweet sleepy
+ service of a Sabbath afternoon; the sound of hymns and the
+ organ mingled with the melody and the chant of the sirens of
+ the sea.</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">There is sweet music here that softer
+ falls</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Than petals from blown roses on the
+ grass,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Or night-dew on still waters, between
+ walls</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Of shadowy granite in a gleaming
+ pass&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Music that gentler on the spirit lies</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Than tired eyelids upon tired eyes.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Here are cool mosses deep,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And through the moss the ivies creep,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And in the stream the long-leaved flowers
+ weep,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And from the craggy ledge the poppy hangs
+ in sleep.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The sensuous beauty, the infinite luxury of repose sung by
+ the poet, filled and steeped his senses. The desire to sleep
+ was intoxicating, delicious, irresistible; and with it ran
+ delicious, restful thrills through all his limbs, the narcotism
+ of the blood. It was partly, no doubt, the effect of inhaling
+ that pernicious air; partly that hibernation of the bear which
+ in the freezing man precedes dissolution; and possibly more
+ than that, something more than any mere physical
+ cause&mdash;life perhaps preparing to lay this tired body down,
+ its future usefulness destroyed.</p>
+
+ <p>This delicious enervation had to be constantly resisted and
+ dominated by a superior will. One more strenuous effort to
+ relieve that straitened garrison, to release that imprisoned
+ and fettered body, and then, if that failed, an unconditional
+ surrender to the armies of eternal steep. But it did not fail.
+ That constant, persevering tugging of the fingers at the
+ wristbands, pursued mechanically in that strange condition of
+ pleasing stupor, had reduced the exaggerated distensions of the
+ bulbous head-gear. A stout, energetic push set the diver free,
+ and he was drawn to the surface dazed, drowsy, and only half
+ conscious of the peril undergone. But with the rush of fresh,
+ untainted air to the lungs came an emotion of gratitude to the
+ Giver of life and the full consciousness of escape.</p>
+
+ <p>And this sums up my sketch illustrative of the peculiar
+ character of marine life, and the hazards of submarine
+ adventure, hitherto known to few, for&mdash;well, for
+ <i>divers</i> reasons.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">WILL WALLACE HARNEY.</p><a name="H_4_0015"
+ id="H_4_0015"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h2>CONFIDENTIAL.</h2>
+
+ <p>My ear has ever been considered public property for private
+ usage. I cannot call to mind the time when I was not somebody's
+ confidante, the business beginning as far back as the winter I
+ ran down to Aunt Rally's to receive my birthday-party of sweet
+ or bitter sixteen, as will appear.</p>
+
+ <p>Ralph Romer was the first to spread the news of my arrival
+ in the village among the girls of my own age. Ralph Romer it
+ was who had braved the dangers of "brier and brake" to find the
+ bright holly berries with which Aunt Hally had decorated the
+ cheery little parlor for the occasion; and it was with Ralph
+ Romer I danced the oftenest on that famous night.</p>
+
+ <p>"Wouldn't I just step out on the porch a short little
+ minute," he whispered as he came around in the rear of Aunt
+ Hally to bid me good-night, ending the whisper, according to
+ the style of all boy-lovers, "I've got something to tell
+ you."</p>
+
+ <p>The door stood open and conveniently near, and I suppose I
+ wanted to see how high the snow had drifted since dark; and, a
+ better reason still, I couldn't afford to let Ralph take my
+ hand off with him; and so I had to go out on the porch just
+ long enough to get it back, while he said: "Ettie Moore says
+ she loves me, and we are going to correspond when I go back to
+ college; and as you know all lovers and their sweethearts must
+ have a confidante to smuggle letters and valentines across the
+ lines, we have both chosen you for ours. Oh, I was so afraid
+ you wouldn't come!"</p>
+
+ <p>I found the snow had drifted&mdash;-well, I don't believe I
+ knew how many inches.</p>
+
+ <p>I have not promised a recital of all my auricular
+ experiences. Enough to say, that in time I settled down into
+ the conviction that it was my special mission to be the
+ receptacle of other people's secrets; and they seemed
+ determined to convince me that they thought so too.</p>
+
+ <p>So, when Mr. Tennent Tremont happened along and became a
+ candidate for auricular favors, like a tradesman who has gained
+ the self-sustaining ground which has made him indifferent as to
+ custom-seeking, I could afford to be entirely independent about
+ giving a previous promise to keep his secrets for him; and so,
+ dear reader, they are as much yours as mine.</p>
+
+ <p>When my brother introduced him into our family circle we
+ took him to be a Northern college-chum, met with during his
+ just-returned-from-trip to Washington; for it was in those days
+ when Southern hospitality was as much appreciated as it was
+ liberally bestowed. It was a good time for a modest stranger to
+ come among new faces. We were in the flutter and bustle which a
+ wedding in the family makes, and it gave him an opportunity to
+ get used to us, and left us none to observe him unpleasantly
+ much.</p>
+
+ <p>But when the wedding was over, and I had made up my week of
+ lost sleep, and he and my brother had kept themselves out of
+ the way on a camp-hunt, for my mother to do up her week of
+ house-cleaning,&mdash;it is here that our story proper
+ begins.</p>
+
+ <p>As we were leaving the breakfast-table one morning my
+ brother caught my dress-sleeve, and, dropping in the rear of
+ Mr. Tennent Tremont, allowed him to find the verandah: "Really,
+ sis, I don't think you are doing the clever thing, quite."</p>
+
+ <p>"How?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, in not helping me to entertain my friend."</p>
+
+ <p>"Getting tired of him?"</p>
+
+ <p>"No, he isn't one of that kind; but, to tell the truth, I am
+ too busy just now to give him the whole of my time."</p>
+
+ <p>"Too busy turning your own cakes. Yes, I see."</p>
+
+ <p>"Which is no more than my sister is doing; which reminds me
+ to say that J.B. will call this morning, he desired me to
+ inform you. But, dear sis, we must not be so absorbed in our
+ own love-matters as to give my friend only a moiety of our
+ attention, for, poor fellow! he has one of his own."</p>
+
+ <p>"So I am to bore him for the sake of relieving you? Is that
+ my role?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Now stop! He simply wants a lady confidante."</p>
+
+ <p>I broke away from my brother's hold, and ran up to my room
+ to see if all was right for my expected caller, giving my right
+ ear a pull, by way of saying to that victimized organ, "You are
+ needed."</p>
+
+ <p>And what think you I did next? Got out my
+ embroidery-material bag, and put it in order for action at a
+ moment's warning. I was prepared for a reasonable amount of
+ martyrdom pertaining to my profession, but I was always an
+ economist of time, and not another unemployed hour would I
+ yield to the selfish demands of my forthcoming job.</p>
+
+ <p>The next day was one of November drizzle, the house
+ confinement of which, my adroit brother declared, could only be
+ mitigated by my presence in the sitting-room until the improved
+ state of the weather allowed their escape from it.</p>
+
+ <p>I was in the habit of appropriating such weather to my
+ piano, and I had not touched it for a month. Whether Mr.
+ Tennent Tremont's nerves were in a sound state or not, I was
+ determined to practice until twelve. But when he came in from
+ the library and assisted me in opening the instrument, I was
+ obliged to ask him what he would have. They were my first
+ direct words to him, our three weeks' guest.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, 'Summer Night' is a favorite," he said.</p>
+
+ <p>I gave him the song, and then executed the long variations;
+ then, dropping my tired hands in my lap, inquired whether he
+ liked vocal or instrumental best.</p>
+
+ <p>"Not any more of either, just now, thanking you kindly for
+ what you have given me," he said. "Have you ever been a
+ confidante, Miss &mdash;&mdash;?"</p>
+
+ <p>"That is my vocation, Mr. Tremont," I replied, grasping my
+ bag.</p>
+
+ <p>"Which? your embroidery or&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Both combined," I tried to say pleasantly, "as on this
+ occasion. I am at Mr. Tremont's service;" and I threaded my
+ tapestry-needle.</p>
+
+ <p>Without a prefatory word he began: "Years before your young
+ heart was awakened to 'the sweetest joy, the wildest woe,' I
+ loved."</p>
+
+ <p>"And single yet!" I exclaimed as I let my hands drop and
+ glanced up at his brown hair, to see if all those years had
+ left their silver footprints there.</p>
+
+ <p>"And single yet," he repeated slowly, "and still worshiping
+ at the same shrine; and to no other will I ever bow until this
+ head is silvered o'er, and this strong arm palsied with the
+ infirmities of age&mdash;if a long life is indeed to be
+ mine."</p>
+
+ <p>His ardor startled me, but I managed to stitch away
+ composedly, and he went on:</p>
+
+ <p>"I know it is in the highest degree selfish to inflict on
+ you a recital of what may not interest you; but I have tried to
+ keep my secret buried from human eyes, from all but
+ <i>hers</i>, and you are now the only being on earth to whom I
+ have ever <i>said</i>, 'I love.' As intimate as I have been
+ with your brother, if he knows it, it is by his penetration,
+ for no word of acknowledgment has ever passed my lips before.
+ May I go on?" he asked.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh yes," I answered, taken by surprise. "I suppose so. It
+ is a relief to talk, and to listen, I have told you, is my
+ vocation."</p>
+
+ <p>"How long can you listen?" he questioned in delighted
+ eagerness.</p>
+
+ <p>I fancied he would have to be allowanced, and I held up my
+ paper pattern before me: "This bouquet of flowers is to be
+ transferred. I will give you all the time it will take to do
+ it. Remember, the catastrophe must be reached by that time.
+ Some one else will probably want my ear."</p>
+
+ <p>"But," said he, "listening is not the only duty of a
+ confidante: you must aid me by your counsel. Only a woman may
+ say how a woman may be won."</p>
+
+ <p>"You have my sympathies, Mr. Tremont, on the score of your
+ being a very dear brother's friend. I know nothing of
+ her&mdash;next to nothing of you. I can neither counsel nor aid
+ you."</p>
+
+ <p>"That brother is familiar with every page of my outward
+ life-history. It was in our family he spent his vacation, while
+ you and your father were traveling in Europe."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, then, that will do about yourself. Now about
+ her?"</p>
+
+ <p>The door-bell was rung: the waiter announced&mdash;well, my
+ obliging brother has already given enough of his
+ name&mdash;"Mr. J.B." My confessor withdrew.</p>
+
+ <p>The next morning, as I was bringing the freshened
+ flower-vases into the sitting-room, he brought me my bag,
+ saying, "Now about her."</p>
+
+ <p>I opened the piano, repeated his favorite, kept my seat and
+ cultivated my roses vigorously.</p>
+
+ <p>"Miss &mdash;&mdash; ," he began, "I would not knowingly
+ give pain to a human creature. Yesterday, when your visitor
+ found me by your side, I observed a frown on his face. I detest
+ obtrusiveness, but if there is anything in the relation in
+ which you stand to each other which will make my attentions
+ objectionable to either of you, they shall cease this moment.
+ You are at perfect liberty to repeat to him every word I have
+ said to you."</p>
+
+ <p>"I thank you sincerely for your considerateness," I said. "I
+ am under no obligations of the kind to him or any other
+ gentleman."</p>
+
+ <p>He introduced his topic by saying: "I am glad that I shall
+ have to say little more of myself. Oh, what a strange joy it is
+ to be able to speak unreservedly of her, and of the long
+ pent-up hopes and fears of the past years! And now, if you will
+ assist me in interpreting her conduct toward me&mdash;if you
+ will inspire me with even faint hope of success&mdash;if you
+ will advise me as you would a brother how to
+ proceed,&mdash;gratitude will be too weak a word for my feeling
+ toward you for the remainder of my life."</p>
+
+ <p>"I have not yet sufficient light on her part of the affair
+ to aid you by advice," I answered. "In these slowly-developing
+ love-affairs there is usually but one great hindering cause. Do
+ you know," I said, laughing as much as I dared, looking into
+ his woebegone face, "that you have not told me what has passed
+ between you?"</p>
+
+ <p>His moment or two of death silence made me almost regret my
+ last words.</p>
+
+ <p>"In the first of our acquaintance I was ever tortured by her
+ indifference. My first attentions were quietly received, never
+ encouraged. Then came the still more torturing fear&mdash;agony
+ let me call it&mdash;lest she was pre-engaged. Thank God! that
+ burden was lifted from my poor heart, but only, it seemed, to
+ make room for the very one of all in the catalogue of causes by
+ which a lover's hope dies beyond the possibility of a
+ resurrection. It is the rock&mdash;no, I fear the placid waters
+ of friendship into which my freighted bark is now
+ drifting&mdash;which may lie between it and the bright isle of
+ love, the safe harbor" (he shuddered), "not the blissful
+ possession."</p>
+
+ <p>Reader, the roses were not growing under my needle: my
+ sympathies were at last fully enlisted.</p>
+
+ <p>"You have well said," I answered. "Friendship is the 'nine
+ notch' in which a lover makes 'no count' in the game of hearts.
+ But steer bravely past these dark gulfs of despair. Have you
+ ever had recourse to jealousy in your desperation?" I
+ queried.</p>
+
+ <p>"I scorn such a base ally. Your brother can tell you I am
+ here partly because I would avoid increasing an affection in
+ another which I cannot return."</p>
+
+ <p>"Does she know of that?" I asked, not at all prepared in my
+ own mind to yield the potency of the ally in my sincere desire
+ to aid him by this test of a woman's affection.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes: I have no reason, however, for thinking that the fact
+ has raised her estimate of the article," he said, making a poor
+ attempt to smile.</p>
+
+ <p>I felt ashamed of my suggestion, and said quickly, "You
+ correspond, of course: how are her letters?" Now I was sure of
+ my safest clue in finding her out.</p>
+
+ <p>"It was through the medium of her letters that I first
+ obtained my knowledge of her mind, her temperament, her
+ disposition, her admirable domestic virtues; for they were
+ written without reserve. They excited my highest admiration;
+ they stimulated my desire to know more of her; but they contain
+ no word of love for me."</p>
+
+ <p>His want of boldness almost excited my contempt. My skill
+ was baffled on every side, and, not caring much to conceal my
+ impatience, I said, "You have asked me to advise you as I would
+ my brother. She is cold and selfish: give her up."</p>
+
+ <p>"Give her up!" he said with measured and emphatic
+ slowness&mdash;"give her up, when I have sought her beneath
+ every clime on which the sun shines&mdash;not for months, but
+ for years? Give her up, when her presence gives me all I have
+ ever known of happiness? Give her up!" and he leaned his head
+ on the back of his chair and closed his eyes.</p>
+
+ <p>I had imagined him gifted with wonderful self-control, but
+ when I looked up from my work all color had faded from his
+ cheeks, the lips seemed ready to yield the little blood left
+ there by the clinch of the white-teeth upon them, while every
+ muscle of the face quivered with spasmodic effort to control
+ emotion. When the eyes were opened and fixed on the ceiling, I
+ saw no trace in them of anger, revenge, or even of wounded
+ pride. They were full of tears, ready to gush in one last
+ flood-tide of feeling over a subdued, chastened, but breaking
+ heart.</p>
+
+ <p>It was very evident that my treatment was not adding much
+ comfort to my patient, however salutary it might prove in the
+ end. I knew of his intention to leave the next day: there was
+ little time left me to aid him, and I had come to regard the
+ unknown woman's mysterious nature or strategic warfare as
+ pitted against my superior penetration. That he might be
+ victorious she must be vanquished. <i>She</i> was, then, my
+ antagonist.</p>
+
+ <p>The deepening twilight was producing chilliness. I flooded
+ the room with brilliant light, stirred the grate into glowing
+ warmth, and invited him to a seat near the fire.</p>
+
+ <p>"You will not leave me, will you? This may be&mdash;<i>it
+ will be</i>&mdash;my last demand on you as a confidante. How is
+ the bouquet progressing?" he asked.</p>
+
+ <p>"See," I said, holding my embroidery up before me: "we must
+ hurry. I have but one more tendril to add."</p>
+
+ <p>"Tendrils are clinging things, like hope, are they not?" he
+ said pensively.</p>
+
+ <p>But sentimentalizing was not the business of the hour, and I
+ intimated as much to him. "Yes," I replied, "but hope must now
+ give place to effort. I see you are not going to take my
+ 'give-her-up' advice."</p>
+
+ <p>"No&mdash;only from her who has the right to give it."</p>
+
+ <p>I now considered my patient out of danger.</p>
+
+ <p>"Then why do you torture yourself longer with doubts?
+ Perhaps your irresolution has caused a want of confidence in
+ the strength of your affection. At least give her an
+ opportunity to define her true position toward you. Beard the
+ lions of indifference and friendship in their dens, and do not
+ yield to unmanly cowardice. Strange that I have given you the
+ counsel last which should have been given first! But do not, I
+ beseech you, lose any time in seeking her. Assure her of your
+ long and unwavering devotion. Constancy is the most valued word
+ in a true woman's vocabulary. You have staked too much
+ happiness to lose: you <i>must</i> win."</p>
+
+ <p>"And if I lose," he said&mdash;holding up something before
+ him which I took to be a picture, though it was in the shape of
+ a heart&mdash;"and if I lose, then perish all of earth to me.
+ But leave me only this, and should I hold you thus, and gaze on
+ what I have first and last and only loved until this perishable
+ material on which I have placed you turn to dust, still will
+ you be graven on a heart whose deathless love can know no
+ death; for a thing so holy as the love I bear you was not made
+ to die."</p>
+
+ <p>My work&mdash;now my completed work&mdash;dropped beneath my
+ fingers, for the last stitch was taken.</p>
+
+ <p>If I could not prevent his self-torture, he should not, at
+ least, torture me longer; and snatching the thing from his
+ grasp, I exclaimed as I closed my hands over it, "Now, before I
+ return it, you must, you <i>shall</i>, promise me that you will
+ take the last advice I gave you; or will you allow me to look
+ at it, and then unseal the silent lips and give you the
+ prophetic little 'yes' or 'no' which a professed physiognomist
+ like your confidante can always read in the eye?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I would rather you did the last," he said; and I rose,
+ leaned my elbow on the corner of the mantel nearest the
+ gaslight, rested my head on my empty hand, so as to shade my
+ eyes from the intensity of the brilliant burner near me, and
+ with the awe creeping over me with which the old astrologers
+ read the horoscope of the midnight stars, I looked, and
+ saw&mdash;only a wonderfully faithful copy of the portrait
+ hanging just over me, of which Mr. Tennent Tremont's confidante
+ was the original. I threw it from me, and burst into tears. He
+ stood quite near me. I thought I hated him, but my obtuse,
+ blundering, idiotic self more than him. I waved my hand in
+ token either of his silence or withdrawal, for in all my life
+ long I, with a whole dictionary in my mind of abusive epithets,
+ was never more at a loss for a word. My token was unheeded.</p>
+
+ <p>He only murmured softly,</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">"I had never seen thee weeping:</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">I cannot leave thee now.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>When you snatched my picture from me a moment ago I saw a
+ glistening tear of sympathy in your eye; but what are
+ these?"</p>
+
+ <p>"So cruel! so ungenerous! so unfair!" I said, still pressing
+ my hands tightly over my eyes. "How can I ever forgive
+ you?"</p>
+
+ <p>With softer murmur than the last he repeated the words,</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">"'Tis sweet to let the pardoned in."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>"Astounding presumption that!" I said, now giving him the
+ benefit of my full gaze&mdash;"to speak of pardon before making
+ a confession of your guilt! But before I give you time even for
+ that, the remaining mysteries which still hang around your tale
+ of woe shall be cleared up. Please to inform the court how the
+ original of your purloined sketch could have been the object of
+ years of devotion, when it has been only four weeks to-day
+ since you laid your mortal eyes on her?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah! you may well say mortal; but you know the soul too has
+ its visual organs. I saw and loved and worshiped my ideal in
+ those years, and sought her too&mdash;how
+ unceasingly!&mdash;and I said,</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Only for the real will I with the ideal
+ part:</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Another shall not even tempt my
+ heart.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>When I saw her just four weeks since, I knew her,</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">And my heart responded as, with unseen
+ wings,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">An angel touched its unswept strings,</p>
+
+ <p class="i6">And whispers in its song,</p>
+
+ <p class="i6">Where hast thou strayed so long?"</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>But the avenging demon of curiosity was not to be exorcised
+ by sentimental evasion: "Those letters, sir, of which you
+ spoke, <i>they</i> must have been of a real, tangible
+ form&mdash;not a part of the mythical phantasmagoria of your
+ idealistic vision."</p>
+
+ <p>He laughed as a light-hearted child would, but knitted his
+ brow with a perplexed air as he said, "Why don't the British
+ government send a woman to find the source of the Nile? I must
+ thank your unsophisticated brother's pride in his sister's
+ epistolary accomplishments for my privilege of perusal. What
+ next?"</p>
+
+ <p>I thought a moment. Before, I had fifty other queries to
+ propound, but now as I looked into the glowing anthracite
+ before me which gave us those pleasant Reveries, they very
+ naturally all resolved themselves into explained mysteries
+ without his aid.</p>
+
+ <p>He insists that the "prophetic little yes or no" never
+ came.</p>
+
+ <p>Upon my honor, dear reader, as a confidante, I still think
+ it the most unfair procedure which ever "disgraced the annals
+ of civilized warfare;" but I shall have abundant opportunity
+ for revenge, for we are to make the journey of life
+ together.</p><a name="H_4_0016"
+ id="H_4_0016"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h2>GLIMPSES OF JOHN CHINAMAN.</h2>
+
+ <p>When John Marshall picked up the first golden nugget in
+ California, a call was sounded for the gathering of an immense
+ gold-seeking army made up of many nationalities; and among the
+ rest China sent a battalion some fifty thousand strong.</p>
+
+ <p>John Chinaman has remained with us ever since, despised and
+ abused, being neither a co-worshiper nor a co-sympathizer in
+ aught save the getting of gold. In dress, custom and language
+ his is still a nationality as distinct from ours as are the
+ waters of the Gulf Stream from those of the ocean.</p>
+
+ <p>It is possible that this may be but the second migration of
+ Tartars to the American shore. It is possible that the North
+ American Indian and the Chinaman may be identical in origin and
+ race. Close observers find among the aboriginal tribes resident
+ far up on the north-west American coast peculiar habits and
+ customs, having closely-allied types among the Chinese. The
+ features of the Aleuts, the natives of the Aleutian Islands,
+ are said to approximate closely to those of the Mongolians. The
+ unvarying long black hair, variously-shaded brown skin,
+ beardless face and shaven head are points, natural and
+ artificial, common to the Indian and Mongolian. There is a hint
+ of common custom between the Indian scalplock and Chinese
+ cue.</p>
+
+ <p>"John" has been a thorough gleaner of the mines. The
+ "superior race" allowed him to make no valuable discoveries. He
+ could buy their half-worked-out placers. The "river-bed" they
+ sold him when its chances of yielding were deemed desperate.
+ When the golden fruitage of the banks was reduced to a dollar
+ per day, they became "China diggings." But wherever "John"
+ settled he worked steadily, patiently and systematically, no
+ matter whether his ten or twelve hours' labor brought fifty
+ cents or fifty dollars; for his industry is of an untiring
+ mechanical character. In the earlier and flusher days of
+ California's gold-harvest the white man worked spasmodically.
+ He was ever leaving the five-dollar diggings in hand for the
+ fifty- or hundred-dollar-per-day claims afar off in some
+ imaginary bush. These golden rumors were always on the wing.
+ The country was but half explored, and many localities were
+ rich in mystery. The white vanguard pushed north, south and
+ east, frequently enduring privation and suffering. "John," in
+ comparative comfort, trotted patiently after, carrying his
+ snugly made-up bundle of provisions and blankets at one end of
+ a bamboo pole, his pick, shovel, pan and rocker at the other,
+ to work over the leavings. The leavings sometimes turned out
+ more gold than "new ground," much to the chagrin of the
+ impatient Caucasian. But John, according to his own testimony,
+ never owned a rich claim. Ask him how much it yielded per day,
+ and he would tell you, "sometimes four, sometimes six bittee"
+ (four or six shillings). He had many inducements for
+ prevarication. Nearly every white man's hand was against him.
+ If he found a bit of rich ground, "jumpers" were ready to drive
+ him from it: Mexicans waylaid him and robbed him of his dust.
+ In remote localities he enclosed his camp by strong stockades:
+ even these were sometimes forced and carried at night by bands
+ of desperadoes. Lastly came the foreign miner's tax-collector,
+ with his demand of four dollars monthly per man for the
+ privilege of digging gold. There were hundreds and thousands of
+ other foreign laborers in the mines&mdash;English, German,
+ French, Italian and Portuguese&mdash;but they paid little or
+ none of this tax, for they might soon be entitled to a vote,
+ and the tax-collector was appointed by the sheriff of the
+ county, and the sheriff, like other officials, craved a
+ re-election. But John was never to be a voter, and so he
+ shouldered the whole of this load, and when he could not pay,
+ the official beat him and took away his tools. John often
+ fought this persecutor by strategy. In localities where no
+ white men would betray him he signalized his coming from afar.
+ From the crags of Red Mountain on the Tuolumne River I have
+ often seen the white flag waved as the dreaded collector came
+ down the steep trail to collect his monthly dues. That signal
+ or a puff of smoke told the Chinese for miles along the
+ river-valley to conceal themselves from the "license-man."
+ Rockers, picks and shovels were hastily thrust into clumps of
+ chapparal, and their owners clambered up the hillsides into
+ artificial caves or leafy coverts. Out of companies of fifty
+ the collector finds but twenty men at work. These pay their
+ tax, the official rides on down the river, the hidden thirty
+ Mongolians emerge from cover; and more than once has a keen
+ collector "doubled on them" by coming back unexpectedly and
+ detecting the entire gang on their claim.</p>
+
+ <p>John has been invaluable to the California demagogue,
+ furnishing for him a sop of hatred and prejudice to throw
+ before "enlightened constituencies." It needs but to mention
+ the "filthy Chinaman" to provoke an angry roar from the
+ mass-meeting. Yet the Chinaman is not entirely filthy. He
+ washes his entire person every day when practicable; he loves
+ clean clothes; his kitchen-utensils will bear inspection. When
+ the smallpox raged so severely in San Francisco a few years
+ since, there were very few deaths among his race. But John
+ <i>is</i> not nice about his house. He seems to have none of
+ our ideas concerning home comfort. Smoke has no terror for him;
+ soap he keeps entirely for his clothes and person; floor-and
+ wall-washing are things never hinted at; and the refuse of his
+ table is scarcely thrown out of doors. Privacy is not one of
+ his luxuries&mdash;he wants a house full: where there is room
+ for a bunk, there is room for a man. An anthill, a beehive, a
+ rabbit-warren are his models of domestic comfort: what is
+ stinted room for two Americans is spaciousness for a dozen
+ Chinese. Go into one of their cabins at night, and you are in
+ an oven full of opium- and lamp-smoke. Recumbent forms are
+ dimly seen lying on bunks above and below. The chattering is
+ incessant. Stay there ten minutes, and as your eye becomes
+ accustomed to the smoke you will dimly see blue bundles lying
+ on shelves aloft. Anon the bundles stir, talk and puff smoke.
+ Above is a loft six feet square: a ladder brings it in
+ communication with the ground floor. Mongolians are ever coming
+ down, but the gabble of tongues above shows that a host is
+ still left. Like an omnibus, a Chinese house is never full. Nor
+ is it ever quiet. At all hours of the night may be heard their
+ talk and the clatter of their wooden shoes. A Chinaman does not
+ retire like an American, intending to make a serious business
+ of his night's sleeping. He merely "lops down" half dressed,
+ and is ready to arise at the least call of business or
+ pleasure.</p>
+
+ <p>While at work in his claim his fire is always kindled near
+ by, and over it a tea-pot. This is his beverage every half
+ hour. His tea must be hot, strong and without milk or sugar. He
+ also consumes a terrible mixture sold him by white traders,
+ called indiscriminately brandy, gin or whisky, yet an
+ intoxicated Chinaman is the rarest of rare sights. Rice he can
+ cook elegantly, every grain being steamed to its utmost degree
+ of distension. Soup he makes of no other meat than pork. The
+ poorest among his hordes must have a chicken or duck for his
+ holiday. He eats it merely parboiled. He will eat dog also,
+ providing it is not long past maturity.</p>
+
+ <p>The Chinese grocery-stores are museums to the American.
+ There are strange dried roots, strange dried fish, strange
+ dried land and marine plants, ducks and chickens, split,
+ pressed thin and smoked; dried shellfish; cakes newly made,
+ yellow, glutinous and fatty, stamped with tea-box characters;
+ and great earthen jars filled with rottenness. I speak
+ correctly if perhaps too forcibly, for when those imposing jars
+ are opened to serve a customer with some manner of vegetable
+ cut in long strips, the native-born American finds it expedient
+ to hold his nose. American storekeepers in the mines deal
+ largely in Chinese goods. They know the Mongolian names of the
+ articles inquired for, but of their character, their
+ composition, how they are cooked or how eaten, they can give no
+ information. It is heathenish "truck," by whose sale they make
+ a profit. Only that and nothing more.</p>
+
+ <p>A Chinese miner's house is generally a conglomeration of old
+ boards, mats, brush, canvas and stones. Rusty sheets of tin
+ sometimes help to form the edifice. Anything lying about loose
+ in the neighborhood is certain in time to form a part of the
+ Mongolian mansion.</p>
+
+ <p>When the white man abandons mining-ground he often leaves
+ behind very serviceable frame houses. John comes along to glean
+ the gold left by the Caucasian. He builds a cluster of
+ shapeless huts. The deserted white man's house gradually
+ disappears. A clapboard is gone, and then another, and finally
+ all. The skeleton of the frame remains: months pass away; piece
+ by piece the joists disappear; some morning they are found
+ tumbled in a heap, and at last nothing is left save the cellar
+ and chimneys. Meantime, John's clusters of huts swell their
+ rude proportions, but you must examine them narrowly to detect
+ any traces of your vanished house, for he revels in smoke, and
+ everything about him is soon colored to a hue much resembling
+ his own brownish-yellow countenance. Thus he picks the
+ domiciliary skeleton bare, and then carries off the bones. He
+ is a quiet but skillful plunderer. John No. 1 on his way home
+ from his mining-claim rips off a board; John No. 2 next day
+ drags it a few yards from the house. John No. 3 a week
+ afterward drags it home. In this manner the dissolution of your
+ house is protracted for months. In this manner he distributes
+ the responsibility of the theft over his entire community. I
+ have seen a large boarding-house disappear in this way, and
+ when the owner, after a year's absence, revisited the spot to
+ look after his property, he found his real estate reduced to a
+ cellar.</p>
+
+ <p>John himself is a sort of museum in his character and
+ habits. We must be pardoned for giving details of these,
+ mingled promiscuously, rather after the museum style. His New
+ Year comes in February. For the Chinaman of limited means it
+ lasts a week, for the wealthy it may endure three. His
+ consumption of fire-crackers during that period is immense. He
+ burns strings a yard in length suspended from poles over his
+ balconies. The uproar and sputtering consequent on this
+ festivity in the Chinese quarter at San Francisco is
+ tremendous. The city authorities limit this Celestial
+ Pandemonium to a week.</p>
+
+ <p>He does not forsake the amusement of kite-flying even when
+ arrived at maturity. His artistic imitations of birds and
+ dragons float over our housetops. To these are often affixed
+ contrivances for producing hollow, mournful, buzzing sounds,
+ mystifying whole neighborhoods. His game of shuttlecock is to
+ keep a cork, one end being stuck with feathers, flying in the
+ air as long as possible, the impelling member being the foot,
+ the players standing in a circle and numbering from four to
+ twenty. Some show great dexterity in kicking with the heel. His
+ vocal music to our ears seems a monotonous caterwaul. His
+ violin has but one string: his execution is merely a modified
+ species of saw-filing.</p>
+
+ <p>He loves to gamble, especially in lotteries. He is a
+ diligent student of his own comfort. Traveling on foot during a
+ hot day, he protects himself with an umbrella and refreshes
+ himself with a fan. In place of prosaic signs on his
+ store-fronts, he often inscribes quotations from his favorite
+ authors.</p>
+
+ <p>He is a lover of flowers. His balconies and window-sills are
+ often thickly packed with shrubs and creepers in pots. He is
+ not a speedy and taciturn eater. His tea-table talks are full
+ of noisy jollity, and are often prolonged far into the
+ night.</p>
+
+ <p>He is a lover of the drama. A single play sometimes requires
+ months for representation, being, like a serial story,
+ "continued" night after night. He never dances. There is no
+ melody in the Mongolian foot. Dancing he regards as a species
+ of Caucasian insanity.</p>
+
+ <p>To make an oath binding he must swear by the head of a cock
+ cut off before him in open court. Chinese testimony is not
+ admissible in American courts. It is a legal California axiom
+ that a Chinaman cannot speak the truth. But cases have occurred
+ wherein, he being an eye-witness, the desire to hear what he
+ <i>might</i> tell as to what he had seen has proved stronger
+ than the prejudice against him; and the more effectually to
+ clinch the chances of his telling the truth, the above, his
+ national form of oath, has been resorted to. He has among us
+ some secret government of his own. Before his secret tribunals
+ more than one Mongolian has been hurried in Star-Chamber
+ fashion, and never seen afterward. The nature of the offences
+ thus visited by secret and bloody punishment is scarcely known
+ to Americans. He has two chief deities&mdash;a god and a devil.
+ Most of his prayers are offered to his devil. His god, he says,
+ being good and well-disposed, it is not necessary to propitiate
+ him. But his devil is ugly, and must be won over by offering
+ and petition. Once a year, wherever collected in any number, he
+ builds a flimsy sort of temple, decorates it with ornaments of
+ tinsel, lays piles of fruit, meats and sugared delicacies on an
+ altar, keeps up night and day a steady crash of gongs, and
+ installs therein some great, uncouth wooden idols. When this
+ period of worship is over the "josh-house" disappears, and the
+ idols are unceremoniously stowed away among other useless
+ lumber.</p>
+
+ <p>He shaves with an instrument resembling a butcher's cleaver
+ in miniature. Nature generally denies him beard, so he shaves
+ what a sailor would term the fore and after part of his head.
+ He reaps his hirsute crop dry, using no lather. His cue is
+ pieced out by silken braid, so interwoven as gradually to taper
+ into a slim tassel, something like a Missouri mule-driver's
+ "black snake" whip-lash. To lose this cue is to lose caste and
+ standing among his fellows. No misfortune for him can be
+ greater.</p>
+
+ <p>Coarse cowhide boots are the only articles of American wear
+ that he favors. He inclines to buy the largest sizes, thinking
+ he thereby gets the most for his money, and when his No. 7 feet
+ wobble and chafe in No. 12 boots he complains that they "fit
+ too much."</p>
+
+ <p>He cultivates the vegetables of his native land in
+ California. They are curiosities like himself. One resembles
+ our string-bean, but is circular in shape and from two to three
+ feet in length. It is not in the least stringy, breaks off
+ short and crisp, boils tender very quickly and affords
+ excellent eating. He is a very careful cultivator, and will
+ spend hours picking off dead leaves and insects from the young
+ plants. When he finds a dead cat, rat, dog or chicken, he
+ throws it into a small vat of water, allows it to decompose,
+ and sprinkles the liquid fertilizer thus obtained over his
+ plantation. Watermelon and pumpkin seeds are for him dessert
+ delicacies. He consumes his garden products about half cooked
+ in an American culinary point of view, merely wilting them by
+ an immersion in boiling water.</p>
+
+ <p>There are about fifteen English words to be learned by a
+ Chinaman on arriving in California, and no more. With these he
+ expresses all his wants, and with this limited stock you must
+ learn to convey all that is needful to him. The practice thus
+ forced upon one in employing a Chinese servant is useful in
+ preventing a circumlocutory habit of speech. Many of our
+ letters the Mongolian mouth has no capacity for sounding.
+ <i>R</i> he invariably sounds like <i>l</i>, so that the word
+ "rice" he pronounces "lice"&mdash;a bit of information which
+ may prevent an unpleasant apprehension when you come to employ
+ a Chinese cook. He rejects the English personal pronoun I, and
+ uses the possessive "my" in its place; thus, "My go home," in
+ place of "I go home."</p>
+
+ <p>When he buries a countryman he throws from the hearse into
+ the air handfuls of brown tissue-paper slips, punctured with
+ Chinese characters. Sometimes, at his burial-processions, he
+ gives a small piece of money to every person met on the road.
+ Over the grave he beats gongs and sets off packs of
+ fire-crackers. On it he leaves cooked meats, drink, delicacies
+ and lighted wax tapers. Eventually the bones are disinterred
+ and shipped to his native land. In the remotest
+ mining-districts of California are found Chinese graves thus
+ opened and emptied of their inmates. I have in one instance
+ seen him, so far as he was permitted, render some of these
+ funeral honors to an American. The deceased had gained this
+ honor by treating the Chinese as though they were partners in
+ our common humanity. "Missa Tom," as he was termed by them,
+ they knew they could trust. He acquired among them a reputation
+ as the one righteous American in their California Gomorrah.
+ Chinamen would come to him from distant localities, that he
+ might overlook their bills of sale and other documents used in
+ business intercourse with the white man. Their need of such, an
+ honest adviser was great. The descendants of the Pilgrim
+ Fathers often took advantage of their ignorance of the English
+ language, written or spoken. "Missa Tom" suddenly died. I had
+ occasion to visit his farm a few days after his death, and on
+ the first night of my stay there saw the array of meats, fruit,
+ wine and burning tapers on a table in front of the house, which
+ his Chinese friends told me was intended as an offering to
+ "Missa Tom's" spirit.</p>
+
+ <p>We will dive for a moment into a Chinese wash-cellar. "John"
+ does three-fourths of the washing of California. His lavatories
+ are on every street. "Hip Tee, Washing and Ironing," says the
+ sign, evidently the first production of an amateur in
+ lettering. Two doors above is the establishment of Tong
+ Wash&mdash;two below, that of Hi Sing. Hip Tee and five
+ assistants are busy ironing. The odor is a trinity of steam,
+ damp clothes and opium. More Mongolian tongues are heard from
+ smoky recesses in the rear. As we enter, Hip Tee is blowing a
+ shower of moisture from his mouth, "very like a whale." This is
+ his method of dampening the linen preparatory to ironing. It is
+ a skilled performance. The fluid leaves his lips as fine as
+ mist. If we are on business we leave our bundles, and in return
+ receive a ticket covered with hieroglyphics. These indicate the
+ kind and number of the garments left to be cleansed, and some
+ distinguishing mark (supposing this to be our first patronage
+ of Hip Tee) by which we may be again identified. It may be by a
+ pug nose, a hare lip, red hair, no hair or squint eyes. They
+ never ask one's name, for they can neither pronounce nor write
+ it when it is given. The ticket is an unintelligible tracery of
+ lines, curves, dots and dashes, made by a brush dipped in India
+ ink on a shred of flimsy Chinese paper. It may teem with abuse
+ and ridicule, but you must pocket all that, and produce it on
+ calling again, or your shirts and collars go into the Chinese
+ Circumlocution Wash-house Office. It is very difficult getting
+ one's clothes back if the ticket be lost&mdash;very. Hip Tee
+ now dabs a duplicate of your ticket in a long book, and all is
+ over. You will call on Saturday night for your linen. You do
+ so. There is apparently the same cellar, the same smell of
+ steam, damp clothes and opium, the same sputter of sprinkling
+ water, and apparently the same Hip Tee and assistants with
+ brown shaven foreheads and long cues hanging straight down
+ behind or coiled in snake-like fashion about their craniums.
+ You present your ticket. Hip Tee examines it and shakes his
+ head. "No good&mdash;oder man," he says, and points up the
+ street. You are now perplexed and somewhat alarmed. You say:
+ "John, I want my clothes. I left them here last Monday. You
+ gave me that ticket." "No," replies Hip Tee very decidedly,
+ "oder man;" and again he waves his arm upward. Then you are
+ wroth. You abuse, expostulate, entreat, and talk a great deal
+ of English, and some of it very strong English, which Hip Tee
+ does not understand; and Hip Tee talks a great deal of Chinese,
+ and perhaps strong Chinese, which you do not understand. You
+ commence sentences in broken Chinese and terminate them in
+ unbroken English. Hip Tee commences sentences in broken English
+ and terminates them in pure Chinese, from a like inability to
+ express his indignation in a foreign tongue. "What for you no
+ go oder man? No my ticket&mdash;tung sung lung, ya hip
+ kee&mdash;<i>ping!"</i> he cries; and all this time the
+ assistants are industriously ironing and spouting mist, and
+ leisurely making remarks in their sing-song unintelligibility
+ which you feel have uncomplimentary reference to yourself.
+ Suddenly a light breaks upon you. This is not Hip Tee's cellar,
+ this is not Hip Tee. It is the establishment of Hi Sing. This
+ is Hi Sing himself who for the last half hour has been
+ endeavoring with his stock of fifteen English words to make you
+ understand that you are in the wrong house. But these Chinese,
+ as to faces and their wash-houses, and all the paraphernalia of
+ their wash-houses, are so much alike that this is an easy
+ mistake to make. You find the lavatory of Hip Tee, who
+ pronounces the hieroglyphics all correct, and delivers you your
+ lost and found shirts clean, with half the buttons broken, and
+ the bosoms pounded, scrubbed and frayed into an irregular sort
+ of embroidery.</p>
+
+ <p>"He can only dig, cook and wash," said the American miner
+ contemptuously years ago: "he can't work rock." To work rock in
+ mining parlance is to be skillful in boring Earth's stony husk
+ after mineral. It is to be proficient in sledging, drilling and
+ blasting. The Chinaman seemed to have no aptitude for this
+ labor. He was content to use his pick and shovel in the
+ gravel-banks: metallic veins of gold, silver or copper he left
+ entirely to the white man.</p>
+
+ <p>Yet it was a great mistake to suppose he could not "work
+ rock," or do anything else required of him. John is a most apt
+ and intelligent labor-machine. Show him once your tactics in
+ any operation, and ever after he imitates them as accurately as
+ does the parrot its memorized sentences. So when the Pacific
+ Railroad was being bored through the hard granite of the
+ Sierras it was John who handled the drill and sledge as well as
+ the white laborer. He was hurled by thousands on that immense
+ work, and it was the tawny hand of China that hewed out
+ hundreds of miles for the transcontinental pathway. Nor is this
+ all. He is crowding into one avenue of employment after another
+ in California. He fills our woolen- and silk-mills; he makes
+ slippers and binds shoes; he is skilled in the use of the
+ sewing-machine; cellar after cellar in San Francisco is filled
+ with these Celestial brownies rolling cigars; his fishing-nets
+ are in every bay and inlet; he is employed in scores of the
+ lesser establishments for preserving fruit, grinding salt,
+ making matches, etc. He would quickly jump into the places of
+ the carpenter, mason and blacksmith were he allowed, for there
+ are numbers of them whose knowledge of these and other trades
+ is sufficient at least to render them useful as assistants. He
+ is handy on shipboard: the Panama steamers carry Chinese
+ foremast hands. He is preferred as a house-servant: the Chinese
+ boy of fourteen or sixteen learns quickly to cook and wash in
+ American fashion. He is neat in person, can be easily ruled,
+ does not set up an independent sovereignty in the kitchen, has
+ no followers, will not outshine his mistress in attire; and,
+ although not perfect, yet affords a refreshing change from our
+ Milesian tyrants of the roast and wash-tub. But when you catch
+ this Celestial domestic treasure, be sure that the first
+ culinary operations performed for his instruction are correctly
+ manipulated, for his imitativeness is of a cast-iron rigidity.
+ Once in the mould, it can only with great difficulty be
+ altered. Burn your toast or your pudding, and he is apt to
+ regard the accident as the rule.</p>
+
+ <p>The young Chinese, especially in San Francisco, are anxious
+ to acquire an English education. They may not attend the public
+ schools. A few years since certain Chinese mission-schools were
+ established by the joint efforts of several religious
+ denominations. Young ladies and gentlemen volunteered their
+ services on Sunday to teach these Chinese children to read.
+ They make eager, apt and docile pupils. Great is their pride on
+ mastering a few lines of English text. They become much
+ attached to their teachers, and it is possible, if the vote of
+ the latter were taken, it would evidence more liking for their
+ yellow, long-cued pupils than for any class of white children.
+ But while so assiduous to learn, it is rather doubtful whether
+ much real religious impression is made upon them. It is
+ possible that their home-training negatives that.</p>
+
+ <p>We have spoken entirely of the Chinaman. What of the
+ Chinawoman in America? In California the word "Chinawoman" is
+ synonymous with what is most vile and disgusting. Few, very
+ few, of a respectable class are in the State. The slums of
+ London and New York are as respectable thoroughfares compared
+ with the rows of "China alleys" in the heart of San Francisco.
+ These can hardly be termed "abandoned women." They have had no
+ sense of virtue, propriety or decency to abandon. They are
+ ignorant of the disgrace of their calling: if the term may be
+ allowed, they pursue it innocently. Many are scarcely more than
+ children. They are mere commodities, being by their own
+ countrymen bought in China, shipped and consigned to factors in
+ California, and there sold for a term of years.</p>
+
+ <p>The Chinaman has bitter enemies in San Francisco: they
+ thirst to annihilate him. He is accustomed to blows and
+ brickbats; he is legitimate game for rowdies, both grown and
+ juvenile; and children supposed to be better trained can scarce
+ resist the temptation of snatching at his pig-tail as he passes
+ through their groups in front of the public schools. Even on
+ Sundays nice little boys coming from Sabbath-school, with their
+ catechisms tucked under their jackets, and texts enjoining
+ mercy and gentleness fresh upon their lips, will sometimes
+ salute the benighted heathen as he passes by with a volley of
+ stones. If he turns on his small assailants, he is apt to meet
+ larger ones. Men are not wanting, ready and panting, to take up
+ the quarrel thus wantonly commenced by the offspring of the
+ "superior race." There are hundreds of families, who came over
+ the sea to seek in America the comfort and prosperity denied
+ them in the land of their birth, whose children from earliest
+ infancy are inculcated with the sentiment that the Chinaman is
+ a dog, a pest and a curse. On the occasion of William H.
+ Seward's visit to a San Francisco theatre, two Chinese
+ merchants were hissed and hooted by the gallery mob from a box
+ which they had ventured to occupy. This assumption of style and
+ exclusiveness proved very offensive to the shirt-sleeved,
+ upper-tier representatives of the "superior race," who had
+ assembled in large numbers to catch a glimpse of one of the
+ black man's great champions. Ethiopia could have sat in that
+ box in perfect safety, but China in such a place was the red
+ rag rousing the ire of the Democratic bull. John has a story of
+ his own to carry back home from a Christian land.</p>
+
+ <p>For this prejudice and hostility there are provocative
+ causes, although they may not be urged in extenuation. The
+ Chinaman is a dangerous competitor for the white laborer; and
+ when the latter, with other and smaller mouths to feed, once
+ gets the idea implanted in his mind that the bread is being
+ taken from them by what he deems a semi-human heathen, whose
+ beliefs, habits, appearance and customs are distasteful to him,
+ there are all the conditions ready for a state of mind toward
+ the almond-eyed Oriental which leans far away from brotherly
+ love.</p>
+
+ <p>Brotherly love sometimes depends on circumstances. "Am I not
+ a man and brother?" cries John from his native shore.
+ "Certainly," we respond. Pass round the hat&mdash;let us take
+ up a contribution for the conversion of the poor heathen. The
+ coins clink thickly in the bottom of the charitable chapeau. We
+ return home, feeling ourselves raised an inch higher
+ heavenward.</p>
+
+ <p>"Am I not a man and brother?" cries John in our midst,
+ digging our gold, setting up opposition laundries and wheeling
+ sand at half a dollar per day less wages. "No. Get out, ye
+ long-tailed baste! An' wad ye put me on a livil with
+ that&mdash;that baboon?" Pass round the hat. The coins mass
+ themselves more thickly than ever. For what? To buy muskets,
+ powder and ball. Wherefore? Wait! More than once has the
+ demagogue cried, "Drive them into the sea!"</p>
+
+ <p class="author">PRENTICE MULFORD.</p><a name="H_4_0017"
+ id="H_4_0017"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h2>A WINTER REVERIE.</h2>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">We stood amid the rustling gloom
+ alone</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">That night, while from the blue plains
+ overhead,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">With golden kisses thickly overblown,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">A shooting star into the darkness
+ sped.</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">"'Twas like Persephone, who ran," we
+ said,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">"Away from Love." The grass sprang round
+ our feet,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The purple lilacs in the dusk smelled
+ sweet,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And the black demon of the train sped
+ by,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Rousing the still air with his long, loud
+ cry.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">The slender rim of a young rising
+ moon</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Hung in the west as you leaned on the
+ bar</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And spun a thread of some sweet April
+ tune,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">And wished a wish and named the falling
+ star.</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">We heard a brook trill in the fields
+ afar;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The air wrapped round us that entrancing
+ fold</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Of vanishing sweet stuff that mortal
+ hold</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Can never grasp&mdash;the mist of
+ dreams&mdash;as down</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The street we went in that fair foreign
+ town.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">I might have whispered of my love that
+ night,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">But something wrapped you as a shield
+ around,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And held me back: your quiver of
+ affright,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Your startled movement at some sudden
+ sound&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">A night-bird rustling on the leafy
+ ground&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Your hushed and tremulous whisper of
+ alarm,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Your beating heart pressed close against
+ my arm,&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">All, all were sweet; and yet _my_ heart
+ beat true,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Nor shrined one wish I might not breathe
+ to you.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">So when we parted little had been
+ said:</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">I left you standing just within the
+ door,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">With the dim moonlight streaming on your
+ head</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">And rippling softly on the checkered
+ floor.</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">I can remember even the dress you
+ wore&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Some dainty white Swiss stuff that
+ floated round</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Your supple form and trailed upon the
+ ground,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">While bands of coral bound each slender
+ wrist,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Studded with one great purple
+ amethyst.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <hr />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">My story is not much&mdash;is
+ it?&mdash;to tell:</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">It seems a wandering line of music,
+ faint,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Whose sweet pathetic measures rise and
+ swell,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Then, strangled, fall with curious
+ restraint.</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">'Tis like the pictures that the artists
+ paint,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">With shadows forward thrown into the
+ light</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">From the real figures hidden out of
+ sight.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And is not life crossed in this strange,
+ sad way</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">With dreams whose shadows lengthen day by
+ day?</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">But you, dear heart&mdash;sweet heart
+ loved all these years&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Will recognize the passion of the
+ strain:</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Who eats the lotos-flower of Love with
+ tears,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Will know the rapture of that numb, vague
+ pain</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Which thrills the heart and stirs the
+ languid brain.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">All day amid the toiling throng we
+ strive,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">While in our heart these sacred, sweet
+ loves thrive,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And in choice hours we show them, white
+ and cool</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Like lilies floating on a troubled
+ pool.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p class="center">MILLIE W. CARPENTER.</p><a name="H_4_0018"
+ id="H_4_0018"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h2>"PASSPORTS, GENTLEMEN!"</h2>
+
+ <p>The close of July, 1870, found our party tarrying for a few
+ days at Geneva. We had left home with the intention of "doing"
+ Europe in less than four months. June and July were already
+ gone, but in that time, traveling as only Americans can, Great
+ Britain, Belgium, the Rhine country and portions of Switzerland
+ had been visited and admired. We were now pausing for a few
+ days to take breath and prepare for yet wider flights. Our
+ proposed route from Geneva would lead us through Northern
+ Germany, returning by way of Paris to London and Liverpool.</p>
+
+ <p>We had intentionally left Paris for the last, hoping that
+ the Communist disturbances would be completely quieted before
+ September. At this time their forces had been recently routed,
+ and the Versailles troops were occupying the capital. The
+ leaders of the Commune were scattered in every direction, and,
+ if newspaper accounts were to be believed, were being captured
+ in every city of France. Especially was this true of the
+ custom-house upon the Swiss frontier, where report said that
+ more than one leading Communist had been stopped by the
+ lynx-eyed officials, who would accept no substitute for the
+ signed and countersigned passport, and hold no parley until
+ such a passport had been presented.</p>
+
+ <p>In view of these facts, the American minister in Paris had
+ issued a circular letter to citizens of the United States
+ traveling abroad, requesting them to see that their passports
+ had the official vis&eacute; before attempting to enter France,
+ thus saving themselves and friends a large amount of
+ unnecessary trouble and delay. Nothing was said of those who
+ might think proper to attempt an entrance <i>without</i> a
+ passport, such temerity being in official eyes beyond all
+ advice or protection. Influenced by this letter and several
+ facts which had come under our notice proving the uncertainty
+ of all things, and especially of travel in France, we saw that
+ our passports were made officially correct.</p>
+
+ <p>While at Geneva our party separated for a few days. My
+ friends proposed making an expedition up the lake, while I
+ arranged to spend a day and night at Aix-les-Bains, a small
+ town in the south of France. My object in visiting it was not
+ to enjoy the sulphur-baths for which it is famous, but to see
+ some friends who were spending the summer there. I had written,
+ telling them to expect me by the five o'clock train on
+ Wednesday afternoon. As my stay was to be so brief, I left my
+ valise at the hotel in Geneva, and found myself now, for the
+ first time, separated from that trusty sable friend which had
+ until this hour been my constant companion by day and
+ night.</p>
+
+ <p>The train was just leaving the station when a lady sitting
+ opposite to me, with her back to the locomotive, asked, in
+ French, if I would be willing to change seats. Catching her
+ meaning rather by her gestures than words, I inquired in
+ English if she would like my seat, and found by her reply that
+ I was traveling with an English lady.</p>
+
+ <p>I should here explain that although I had studied the French
+ language as part of my education, I found it impossible to
+ speak French with any fluency or understand it when spoken. My
+ newly-made friend, however (for friend she proved herself),
+ spoke French and English with equal fluency.</p>
+
+ <p>In the process of comparing notes (so familiar to all
+ travelers) mention was made of the recent war and the unwonted
+ strictness and severity of the custom-house officials. In an
+ instant my hand was upon my pocket-book, only to find that I
+ had neglected to take my passport from my valise.</p>
+
+ <p>The embarrassment of the situation flashed upon me, and my
+ troubled countenance revealed to my companion that something
+ unusual had occurred. I answered her inquiring look by saying
+ that I had left my passport in Geneva. Her immediate sympathy
+ was only equaled by her evident alarm. She said there was but
+ one thing to be done&mdash;return instantly for it. I fully
+ agreed with her, but found, to my dismay, upon consulting a
+ guide-book, that our train was an express, which did not stop
+ before reaching Belgarde, the frontier-town.</p>
+
+ <p>I would willingly have pulled the bell-rope had there been
+ any, and stopped the train at any cost, but it was impossible,
+ and nothing remained but to sit quietly while I was
+ relentlessly hurried into the very jaws of the French
+ officials. The misery of the situation was aggravated by the
+ fact that I could not command enough French to explain how I
+ came to be traveling without a passport. As a last resort, I
+ applied to my friend, begging her to explain to the officer at
+ the custom-house that I was a citizen of the United States, and
+ had left my passport in Geneva. This she readily promised to
+ do, although I could see that she had but little faith in the
+ result. After a ride of an hour, during which my reflections
+ were none of the pleasantest, we arrived at Belgarde. Here the
+ doors of the railway carriages were thrown open, and we were
+ politely requested to alight. We stepped out upon a platform
+ swarming with fierce gendarmes, whom I regarded attentively,
+ wondering which of them was destined to become my protector.
+ From the platform we were ushered into a large room
+ communicating by a narrow passage with a second room, into
+ which our baggage was being carried. One by one my
+ fellow-passengers approached the narrow and (to me) gloomy
+ passage and presented their passports. These were closely
+ scanned by the officer in charge, handed to an assistant to be
+ countersigned, and the holder, all being right, was passed into
+ the second room. Our turn soon came, and, accompanied by the
+ English lady, I approached my fate.</p>
+
+ <p>Her passport was declared to be official, and handing it
+ back the officer looked inquiringly at me. My friend then began
+ her explanation. As I stood attentively regarding the officer's
+ face, I could see his puzzled look change into one of
+ comprehension, and then of amusement. To her inquiry he replied
+ that there would be no objection under the circumstances to my
+ returning to Geneva and procuring my passport. Encouraged by
+ the favorable turn my fortunes had taken, I asked, through my
+ friend, if it would be possible for me to go on without a
+ passport. An instantaneous change passed over his countenance,
+ and, shrugging his shoulders, he replied that it was
+ impossible: there was a second custom-house at Culoz, where I
+ should certainly be stopped, forced to explain how I had passed
+ Belgarde, and severely punished for attempting to enter without
+ a passport. I did not, however, wait for him to finish his
+ angry harangue, but passed on to the second room, where I was
+ soon joined by my interpreting friend, who explained to me in
+ full what I had already learned from the officer's countenance
+ and gesture. She thought that I was fortunate in escaping so
+ easily, and advised an immediate return to Geneva. I again
+ consulted my guide-book, and found that there was no return
+ train for several hours, and consequently that I should arrive
+ in Geneva too late to start for Aix-les-Bains that night. This
+ would necessitate waiting until Thursday, and perhaps force me
+ to give up the trip, for our seats were engaged in the Chamouni
+ coach for Friday morning. I imagined my friends in vain
+ awaiting my arrival at Aix, and the smiles of our party when
+ they found me in Geneva upon their return from the lake. But,
+ more than all, the possibility of not reaching Aix at all
+ troubled me, for I was very anxious to see my friends there,
+ and had written home that I intended to see them.</p>
+
+ <p>I found by my guide-book that our train reached Culoz before
+ the Geneva return train; so on the instant I formed the
+ desperate resolve of running the blockade at Belgarde, and if I
+ found it impossible to pass the custom-house at Culoz,
+ <i>there</i> to take the return train for Geneva. I walked to
+ the platform as if merely accompanying my friend, stood for a
+ moment at the door of the carriage conversing with her, and
+ then, as the train started for Culoz, quickly stepped in and
+ shut the door. Her dismay was really pitiable: had I not been
+ somewhat troubled in mind myself, I should have laughed
+ outright. She saw nothing before me but certain destruction,
+ and I am free to confess that the prospect of a telegram
+ flashing over the wires at that moment from Belgarde to Culoz
+ was not reassuring. The die, however, had been cast, and now
+ nothing remained but to endure in silence the interminable hour
+ which must elapse ere we should reach Culoz. There we were to
+ change cars, the Geneva train going on to Paris, while we took
+ the train on the opposite platform for Aix-les-Bains. This
+ necessitated passing through the d&eacute;p&ocirc;t, and
+ passing through the d&eacute;p&ocirc;t was passing through the
+ custom-house. As our train stopped in front of the fatal door,
+ and one by one the passengers filed into it and were lost to
+ sight, I seemed to see written above the door, "All hope
+ abandon, ye who enter here!" It was simply rushing into the
+ jaws of fate: there was not the slightest possibility of my
+ being able to pass through that depot unchallenged. I should be
+ carried on to Paris if I remained in the train; I should be
+ arrested if I remained on the platform; I was discovered if I
+ entered the custom-house. Eagerly I glanced around for some
+ means of escape. Every instant the number of passengers on the
+ platform was decreasing, the danger of discovery rapidly
+ increasing.</p>
+
+ <p>I had feared lest some benevolent French officer, anxious
+ for my safety, would be found waiting to assist me in
+ alighting: I was thankful to find that I should be allowed to
+ assist myself, and that no one paid any particular attention to
+ me. As I stood there hesitating what course to pursue, and
+ feeling how much easier my mind at this moment would be were I
+ waiting on the Belgarde platform, I noticed a door standing
+ open a few steps to the left. Without any further hesitation I
+ walked directly in, to find myself in a railroad restaurant. It
+ proved to be a tower of refuge.</p>
+
+ <p>No one had noticed me. There were other passengers in the
+ room, waiting for the Paris train; so, joining myself to them,
+ I remained there until the custom-house doors were closed and
+ the guards had left the platform. The question now arose, How
+ should I reach the opposite platform? The train might start at
+ any moment: the only legitimate passage was closed. I knew that
+ the attempt would be fraught with danger, yet I felt that it
+ was now too late to draw back. If I remained any length of time
+ in the restaurant, I should be suspected and discovered; and as
+ I thought of that moment a terrific scene arose before my mind
+ in which an excited French official thundered at me in his
+ choicest French, while I stood silent, unable to explain who I
+ was, how I came there, whither I was going; I imagined myself
+ being searched for treasonable documents and none being found;
+ I seemed to see my captors consulting how they could best
+ compel me to tell what I knew. These scenes and others of like
+ nature entertained me while I waited for the coast&mdash;or
+ rather platform&mdash;to be cleared. When at length all the
+ immediate guards were gone, I started out to find my way, if
+ possible, to the train for Aix. I have read of travelers
+ cutting their way through trackless forests, of ice-bound
+ mariners anxiously seeking the North-west passage, and, worse
+ than all, of luckless countrymen wandering bewildered through
+ the streets of Boston; but I am confident that no traveler,
+ mariner or countryman ever sought his way with more
+ circumspection and diligence than I in my search for a passage
+ between those two platforms.</p>
+
+ <p>As I glanced cautiously up and down I saw a door standing
+ open at some little distance. Around that door all my hopes
+ were immediately centred. It might lead directly to the
+ custom-house; it might be the entrance to the barracks of the
+ guards; it might be&mdash;I knew not what; but it might afford
+ a passage to the other platform.</p>
+
+ <p>I walked quickly to the door, glanced in, saw no one and
+ entered. The room was a baggage-room, and at that moment
+ unoccupied. It instantly occurred to me that a baggage-room
+ <i>ought</i> to open on both platforms. I felt as though I
+ could have shouted "Eureka!" and I am confident that the joy of
+ Archimedes as he rushed through the streets of Syracuse was no
+ greater than mine as I felt that I had so unexpectedly
+ discovered the passage I was seeking. Passing through this
+ room, I found myself in a second, like the former unoccupied.
+ It had occurred to me that all the doors might be closed, and
+ the thought had considerably abated my rejoicing; but no! I saw
+ a door which stood invitingly open.</p>
+
+ <p>No guards were stationed on the platform; so I stepped out,
+ and before me stood the train for Aix, into which my
+ fellow-passengers were entering, some of them still holding
+ their passports in their hands. Taking my seat in one of the
+ carriages, in a few moments the train started and I was on my
+ way to Aix. The relief was unspeakably great. An instant before
+ it seemed as if nothing short of a miracle could save me from a
+ French guard-house, and now, by the simplest combination of
+ circumstances, in which a restaurant and baggage-room bore an
+ important part, I had passed unchallenged. I remember that I
+ enjoyed the scenery and views along the route from Culoz to Aix
+ more than while passing from Belgarde to Culoz.</p>
+
+ <p>My friends were found expecting me upon my arrival, and
+ joined in congratulating me upon my happy escape. A night and
+ day were passed very pleasantly, and then arose the question of
+ return.</p>
+
+ <p>I suggested telegraphing to Geneva for my passport, but that
+ was vetoed, and it was decided that I should return as I had
+ come&mdash;passportless. I confess that the attempt seemed
+ somewhat hazardous. If it was dangerous to attempt an entrance
+ into France, how much more so to attempt an exit, especially
+ when the custom-house force had been doubled with the sole
+ object that all possibility of escape might be precluded, and
+ that any one passing Culoz might be stopped at Belgarde! It was
+ urged, however, that our seats had been engaged in the
+ diligence for Friday morning, and to send for the passport
+ would consume considerable time&mdash;would certainly delay the
+ party until Saturday, and perhaps until Monday, which delay
+ would seriously affect all their plans, time being so limited
+ and so many places remaining to be visited. I had passed once,
+ why not again? Influenced by these facts, and thinking what a
+ triumph it would be once more to baffle French vigilance, I
+ determined to attempt the return. There was a train leaving Aix
+ about eight P.M., reaching Geneva at eleven: it was decided
+ that I should take this train. I had arranged a vague plan of
+ action, although I expected to depend rather upon the
+ suggestion of the moment.</p>
+
+ <p>It was quite dark when we reached Culoz. As the train
+ arrived at the platform, and we were obliged again to change
+ cars, I thought of the friendly restaurant; but no! the
+ restaurant was closed, and moreover a company of gendarmes was
+ present to see that every one entered the door leading to the
+ custom-house. There was no room for hesitation or delay. I
+ entered under protest, but still I entered.</p>
+
+ <p>In a moment I perceived the desperate situation. The room
+ had two doors&mdash;one opening upon the platform from which we
+ had just come, and now guarded by an officer; the other leading
+ to the opposite platform, and there stood the custom-house
+ officer receiving and inspecting the passports. It was indeed
+ Scylla and Charybdis. If I attempted to pass the officer
+ without a passport, I was undone; if I remained until all the
+ other passengers had passed out, I was undone. For an instant I
+ felt as if I had better give up the unequal contest. The forces
+ of the enemy were too many for me. I saw that I had been
+ captured: why fight against Fate? A moment's reflection,
+ however, restored my courage. It was evident that one thing
+ alone remained to be done: that was to find my way out of the
+ door by which I had just entered, as speedily as possible. But
+ there stood the guard.</p>
+
+ <p>The train by which we had come was still before the
+ platform: an idea suggested itself. Acting as if I had left
+ some article in the train, I stepped hurriedly up to the guard,
+ who, catching my meaning, made way for me without a word. Once
+ upon the platform, I resolved never again to enter that door
+ except as a prisoner. The guard followed me with his eyes for a
+ moment, and then, seeing me open one of the carriage doors,
+ turned back to his post. As soon as I perceived that I was no
+ longer watched I glided off in the opposite direction under the
+ shadows of the platform. I was looking for a certain door which
+ I remembered well as a friend in need. I knew not in which
+ direction it lay, nor could I have recognized it if shut; but
+ hardly had I gone ten steps when the same door stood open
+ before me. It was the act of an instant to spring through it,
+ out of sight of the guard. Why this door and baggage-room
+ should have been left thus open and unguarded when such evident
+ and scrutinizing care was taken in every other quarter, I have
+ to this day been unable to understand. But for that fact I
+ should have found it utterly impossible to pass that
+ custom-house going or coming.</p>
+
+ <p>Once in the baggage-room, the way was familiar, and, passing
+ into the second room, I found the door open as on the day
+ previous, and in a moment stood undiscovered upon the platform.
+ Entering the waiting train, I was soon on the way to
+ Belgarde.</p>
+
+ <p>My only thought during the ride was, What shall I do when we
+ arrive at Belgarde? I expected to see the doors thrown open as
+ before, and hear again the polite invitation to enter the
+ custom-house. Was it not certain detection to refuse? was it
+ not equally dangerous to obey? The officer at Belgarde had seen
+ me the day before, and warned me not to go to Culoz. What
+ reception would he give me when he saw me attempting to return?
+ Or it might be he would not remember me, and then in the
+ darkness and confusion I should surely be taken for an escaping
+ Communist. That I had passed Culoz was no comfort when I
+ remembered that this would only aggravate my guilt in their
+ eyes.</p>
+
+ <p>The case did indeed seem desperate. Willingly would I have
+ jumped out and walked the entire distance to Geneva, if I might
+ only thus escape that terrible custom-house, which every moment
+ loomed up more terrifically. At length this troubled hour was
+ passed: we had arrived at Belgarde, and the moment for action
+ had come. I had determined to avoid the custom-house at all
+ hazards. When the doors were thrown open I expected to alight,
+ but not to enter. My plan was to find some sheltering door, or
+ even corner, where I could remain until the others had
+ presented their passports and were beginning to return, then
+ join them and take my seat as before. The d&eacute;p&ocirc;t at
+ Belgarde was brilliantly lighted, and the gendarmes pacing to
+ and fro in the gaslight seemed not only to have increased in
+ numbers, but to have acquired an additional ferocity since the
+ day previous.</p>
+
+ <p>As I looked but my spirit sank within me. I could only brace
+ myself for the coming crisis. For several moments nothing was
+ said or done. The doors remained shut, and no one seemed at all
+ concerned about our presence. Each minute appeared an hour as I
+ sat there awaiting my fate. The suspense was becoming too
+ great: I felt that my stock of self-possession was entirely
+ deserting me. At length I began to hope that they were
+ satisfied with the examination at Culoz, and would allow us to
+ pass unchallenged. Just at that moment, as hope was dawning
+ into certainty, the door opened and the custom-house officer
+ entered with a polite bow, while a body of gendarmes drew up
+ behind him upon the platform. He uttered two French words, and
+ I needed no interpreter to tell me that they were "Passports,
+ gentlemen!"</p>
+
+ <p>I shuddered as I saw him standing so near, within reach of
+ my arm. There were six persons besides myself in the carriage,
+ and I was occupying a seat beside the door farthest from the
+ platform. Any one who has seen a European railway-carriage will
+ understand me when I say that I sat next to the right-hand
+ door, while he had entered by the left. One by one the
+ passports were handed up to him until he held six in his
+ hand.</p>
+
+ <p>With the rest of the passengers I had taken out my
+ pocket-book and searched as if for my passport, but had handed
+ none to him, and now I sat awaiting developments. I saw that he
+ would read the six passports, and then turn to me for the
+ seventh.</p>
+
+ <p>The desperate thought flashed upon me of opening the door
+ and escaping into the darkness. The carriage itself was so
+ dimly lighted that I could barely see the face of my opposite
+ neighbor, and I therefore hoped to be able to slip out without
+ any one perceiving it. The attempt was desperate, but so was
+ the situation. The officer was buried in the passports, holding
+ them near his face to catch the dim light. The door was
+ fastened upon the outside, and so, watching him, I leaned far
+ out of the window until I was able to reach the catch and
+ unfasten the door. A slight push, and it swung noiselessly
+ open. I glanced at the officer: he was intently reading the
+ <i>last</i> passport. I had placed one foot upon the outside
+ step, and was about to glide out into the darkness, when he
+ laid the paper down and looked directly at me.</p>
+
+ <p>It would have been madness to attempt an escape with his
+ eyes upon me; so, assuming as nonchalant a look as my present
+ feelings would allow, I answered his inquiring glance with one
+ of confident assurance.</p>
+
+ <p>He saw my nonchalant expression. He saw the open pocket-book
+ in my hand. He had <i>not</i> counted the number of passports.
+ All the passengers were settling themselves to sleep. It must
+ be all right; so, with a polite "Bon soir, messieurs!" he bowed
+ and left the carriage. My sensation of relief may be better
+ imagined than described. Hardly had he left our carriage when
+ we heard the sound of voices and hurrying feet upon the
+ platform, and looking out saw some unfortunate individual
+ carried off under guard. I trembled as I thought how narrowly I
+ had escaped his fate. In a few moments, however, we were safely
+ on our way to Geneva, and as we sped on into the darkness,
+ while congratulating myself upon my fortunate escape, I firmly
+ resolved to be better prepared for the emergency the next time
+ I should hear those memorable words, "Passports,
+ gentlemen!"</p>
+
+ <p class="author">A.H.</p><a name="H_4_0019"
+ id="H_4_0019"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h2>OUR MONTHLY GOSSIP.</h2><a name="H_4_0027"
+ id="H_4_0027"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h3>THE CORNWALLIS FAMILY.</h3>
+
+ <p>The death was lately announced of two of the last
+ survivors&mdash;only one of the name is now left&mdash;of a
+ family whose chief played a very conspicuous, and for himself
+ unfortunate, part in this country a century ago&mdash;the
+ marquis Cornwallis. His only son, who married a daughter of the
+ celebrated match-making duchess of Gordon, left no male issue,
+ but five daughters. Two of them, the countess of St.
+ Germans&mdash;wife of the earl who accompanied the prince of
+ Wales on his visit here&mdash;and Lady Braybrook, died some
+ years ago; and recently Lady Mary Ross, whose husband edited
+ the correspondence of the first marquis, and Lady Louisa, who
+ never married, have also gone to their graves.</p>
+
+ <p>The family of Cornwallis is very ancient, and can point to
+ many distinguished members. Its ancestral seat is at Brome, in
+ Suffolk. This is a fine old mansion, and the hall, which is
+ very lofty and open to the roof, is an excellent specimen of
+ the work of other days. The chapel contains capital oak
+ carving. In the village church there are monuments worth notice
+ of the family.</p>
+
+ <p>Following the fate of so many other places, Brome passed
+ after the death of the second marquis to a <i>novus homo</i>,
+ one Matthias Kerrison, who, having begun life as a carpenter,
+ contrived in various ways to acquire a colossal fortune. His
+ son rose to distinction in the army, obtained a seat in
+ Parliament, which he held for thirty years, and was created a
+ baronet.</p>
+
+ <p>He left at his death a son and three daughters. The former,
+ long married, is childless. The sisters are respectively the
+ wives of Earl Stanhope, the well-known historian; Lord
+ Henniker, a wealthy Suffolk proprietor; and Lord Bateman. It is
+ understood that under the late baronet's will the son of the
+ last will, in the event of the present baronet dying childless,
+ succeed to the property. It will thus be observed that Brome,
+ after having been for four centuries in one family, is destined
+ to change hands repeatedly in a few years.</p>
+
+ <p>When the second Marquis Cornwallis died sonless, the
+ marquisate became extinct, but the earldom passed to his first
+ cousin. This nobleman, by no means an able or admirable person,
+ married twice. By his first marriage he had a daughter, who
+ married Charles Wykeham-Martin, Esq., M.P., whose father, by a
+ concatenation of chances, became the owner of Leeds Castle,
+ near Maidstone, in Kent&mdash;a splendid moated baronial pile,
+ dating from the thirteenth century, but added to and improved
+ in admirable taste. Leeds was formerly the property of the
+ Fairfax family, whose chief, the present lord, resides near
+ Washington. It came to them from the once famous family of
+ Colepepper.</p>
+
+ <p>Earl Cornwallis married a second time late in life, and had
+ an only daughter, Lady Julia. From that time his one idea
+ seemed to be to accumulate for this child, and accordingly at
+ his death she was the greatest heiress in England, her long
+ minority serving to add immensely to her father's hoards. Of
+ course, when the time approached for her entering society under
+ the chaperonage of her cousins, the marquis's daughters,
+ speculation was very rife in the London world as to whom she
+ would marry, and many a mamma of high degree cast sheep's eyes
+ at the heiress, and thought how charmingly her accumulations
+ would serve to clear the encumbrances on certain acres. But
+ they were not kept long in suspense. One night during the
+ London season, when the ladies Cornwallis gave a grand ball, a
+ damper was cast over the proceedings, so far at least as
+ aspirants to the heiress's money-bags were concerned, by the
+ announcement of her engagement. Said a lady to a gentleman in
+ the course of that evening, "Most extraordinary! There seem to
+ be no men in the room to-night." "Why, of course not," was the
+ rejoinder, "after this fatal news." Lady Julia's choice fell
+ upon a young officer in the Guards, Viscount Holmesdale, eldest
+ son of Earl Amherst. Lord Holmesdale was unexceptionable in
+ point of position, but his pecuniary position was such as to
+ make one hundred and fifty thousand dollars a year a very
+ agreeable addition to his income. It may, however, be a
+ satisfaction to those less richly endowed with this world's
+ goods than Lady Holmesdale to reflect that being an heiress
+ generally proves rather the reverse of a passport to
+ matrimonial bliss; and by all accounts she is no exception to
+ the usual fate in this respect. We can't have everything in
+ this world.</p>
+
+ <p>Lady Holmesdale's property was tied up by her old father
+ (whose whole thoughts were given to this end, and who was in
+ the habit of carrying his will on his person) to such a degree
+ that in the event of her death her husband can only derive a
+ very slight benefit from his wife's property beyond the
+ insurances which may have been effected on her life. She is
+ childless, and has very precarious health. Her principal seat
+ is Linton Park, near Maidstone, Kent, in which county she is
+ the largest landowner. In the event of her dying without issue,
+ her estates pass to the son of Major Fiennes Cornwallis, who
+ was second son of the late Mr. Wykeham-Martin by Lady
+ Holmesdale's elder half-sister.</p>
+
+ <p>A cousin of Lady Holmesdale, Miss Cornwallis, the last
+ representative of a third branch, died some years ago. This
+ lady, who possessed rare literary and social acquirements,
+ bequeathed her property to Major Wykeham-Martin, who thereupon
+ changed his name to Cornwallis. The major, a gallant officer,
+ one of those of whom Tennyson says,</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Into the jaws of death</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Rode the six hundred,</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>only survived the Balaklava charge to die a few years later
+ through an accident in the hunting-field. "A fine, modest young
+ officer," was Thackeray's verdict about him, when, after dinner
+ at "Tom Phinn's," a noted bachelor barrister of eminence whose
+ little dinners were not the least agreeable in London, the
+ story of that famous ride had been coaxed out of the young
+ <i>militaire</i>, who, if left to himself, would never have let
+ you have a notion that he had seen such splendid service. The
+ only Cornwallis now left is Lady Elizabeth, granddaughter of
+ the first marquis.</p><a name="H_4_0020"
+ id="H_4_0020"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h3>NOVELTIES IN ETHNOLOGY.</h3>
+
+ <p>Two savants of high reputation have lately undertaken to
+ seek out the origin of that German race which has just put
+ itself at the head of military Europe. One is Wilhelm
+ Oberm&uuml;ller, a German ethnologist, member of the Vienna
+ Geographical Society, whose startling theory nevertheless is
+ that the Germans are the direct descendants of Cain! The other
+ scholar, M. Quatrefages, a man of still greater reputation,
+ devotes himself to a proposition almost as
+ extraordinary&mdash;namely, that the Prussian pedigree is Finn
+ and Slav, with only a small pinch of Teuton, and hence, in an
+ ethnographical view, is anti-German!</p>
+
+ <p>That M. Quatrefages should maintain such a postulate, his
+ patriotism if not his scientific reputation might lead us to
+ expect; but that Oberm&uuml;ller should be so eager to trace
+ German origin back to the first murderer is rather more
+ suprising. Oberm&uuml;ller's work embraces in its general scope
+ the origin of all European nations, but the most striking part
+ is that relating to Germany. He holds that, from the remotest
+ era, the Celto-Aryan race, starting from the plain of Tartary,
+ the probable cradle of mankind, split into two great
+ branches&mdash;one the Oriental Aryans, and the other the
+ Western Aryans, or Celts. The former&mdash;who, as he proceeds
+ to show, were no other than the descendants of
+ Cain&mdash;betook themselves to China, which land they found
+ inhabited by the Mongolians, another great primordial race; and
+ we are told that the Mongolians are indicated when mention is
+ made in Scripture of Cain's marriage in the land of Nod. The
+ intermixture of Cainists and Mongolians produced the Turks,
+ while the pure Cainist tribes formed the German people, under
+ the name of Swabians (Chinese, <i>Siampi</i>), Goths
+ (<i>Yeuten</i> in Chinese) and Ases (<i>Sachsons</i>). Such, in
+ brief, is the curious theory of Oberm&uuml;ller.</p>
+
+ <p>The question next arises, How is it that we find the Germans
+ transplanted from the Hoang-Ho to the Rhine? We are told that,
+ being driven out of China by the Turks, they poured into the
+ European countries which the Celts or Western Aryans had
+ already occupied. These latter had in the mean time gone out
+ from the Asiatic cradle of the race, and following the course
+ of the Indus to Hindostan and Persia, had, under the name of
+ Chaldeans, overrun Armenia, Syria, Arabia, Egypt and North
+ Africa, which latter they found inhabited by certain negro
+ races, whereas in Egypt they discovered red-skins or
+ Atlantides; which latter, by the way, form also our own
+ aborigines. The intermixture of the Celts with these primitive
+ races just named produced the Jews and Semitic people. At the
+ time of the Celtic invasion Western Europe and Northern Africa
+ were occupied by the race of the Atlantides, while the
+ Mongolians, including also the Lapps, Finns and Huns, peopled
+ the north of Europe and of Asia. The Celts pushed in between
+ these two races, and only very much later the German people,
+ driven out of China by the Turks, as we have said, arrived in
+ Europe.</p>
+
+ <p>When, therefore, did these Cainist invasions of Germany take
+ place? Oberm&uuml;ller says that the date must have been toward
+ the epoch of the Roman conquests. Gallia was then inhabited in
+ the south by the primitive Atlantid race of Ligurians and by
+ the Greek colony of Massilia; in the centre by the Gaelags
+ (Celts) or Gauls, who, pouring northward from Spain, had
+ conquered it fifteen hundred years before the Christian era;
+ and in the north by the Belgic Cimbrians, who had come from
+ Germany, and who were designated under the name of Germans
+ (<i>Ghermann</i>) or border-men, and who, though called
+ <i>Germani</i> by Caesar and Tacitus, were yet not of the
+ Cainist stock, but Celts. However, these Germans, whom the
+ Romans encountered to their cost on the Rhine and Danube, were
+ of the genuine Oriental Cainist stock, and these, after
+ centuries of fierce struggle, they failed to conquer, though
+ the Celts of Britain, Gaul and Spain, as well as all the old
+ empires of the East, had fallen an easy prey to their
+ victorious eagles.</p>
+
+ <p>It only remains to add that this invasion of Germany by
+ Cain's progeny was accomplished in three streams. The Ases
+ (Sachsons) directed themselves to the Elbe and Danube, and
+ thence to the north; the Suevi, or Swabians, chose the centre
+ and south of Germany; while the Goths did not rest till they
+ had overrun Italy, Southern France and Spain. But each of these
+ three main streams was composed of many tribes, whom the old
+ writers catalogue without system, mixing both Celtic and
+ Teutonic tribes under the general name of Germans; and it is
+ only in modern days that the careless enumeration of the
+ classic writers has been rejected, and a more scientific method
+ substituted. It will be seen, in fine, that in the main
+ Oberm&uuml;ller does not differ from accepted theories in
+ German ethnology, which have long carefully dissevered the
+ Celts from the Teutons, and assigned to each tribe with
+ approximate accuracy its earliest fixed abode in Europe. It is
+ the tracing back of the German race proper to the first-born of
+ Adam, according to scriptural genealogy, which makes this
+ theory curious and amusing.</p>
+
+ <p>To the work of M. Quatrefages we have only space to devote a
+ paragraph. Originally contributed to the <i>Revue des Deux
+ Mondes</i>, it bears the marks in its inferences, if not in its
+ facts, of being composed for an audience of sympathizing
+ countrymen, rather than for the world of science at large. M.
+ Quatrefages says that the first dwellers in Prussia were Finns,
+ who founded the stock, and were in turn overpowered by the
+ Slavs, who imposed their language and customs on the whole of
+ the Baltic region. The consequent mixture of Finns and Slavs
+ created a population wholly un-German; and what dash of genuine
+ Germanism Prussia now has was subsequently acquired in the
+ persons of sundry traders from Bremen, followed by a class of
+ roving nobility, who entered the half-civilized country with
+ their retainers in quest of spoils. Besides these elements,
+ Prussia, like England and America, received in modern times an
+ influx of French Huguenots; which M. Quatrefages naturally
+ considers a piece of great good fortune for Prussia. Briefly,
+ then, the French savant regards Prussia as German only in her
+ nobility and upper-middle classes, while the substratum of
+ population is a composition of Slav and Finn, and hence
+ thoroughly anti-German. As, according to the old saying, if you
+ scratch a Russian you will find a Tartar beneath, so, according
+ to M. Ouatrefages, we may suppose that scraping a Prussian
+ would disclose a Finn. The political inferences which he draws
+ are very fanciful. He traces shadowy analogies between the
+ tactics of Von Moltke's veterans and the warlike customs of the
+ ancient Slavs, and suggests that the basic origin of the
+ Prussian population may lead it to cultivate a Russian alliance
+ rather than an Austrian, forgetting, apparently, that by his
+ own admission the ruling-classes of Prussia are German in
+ origin, ideas and sympathies.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">L.S.</p><a name="H_4_0021"
+ id="H_4_0021"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h3>THE STEAM-WHISTLE.</h3>
+
+ <p>While Mr. Ruskin was lately bewailing the bell-ringing
+ propensity of mankind, the English Parliament and several
+ American legislatures, city or State, were assaulting the
+ greater nuisance of the steam-whistle, and trying to substitute
+ bell-ringing for it. Mr. Ruskin's particular grievance was,
+ that his own nerves were <i>crisp&eacute;</i> by the incessant
+ ding-dong of the church-bells of Florence summoning the devout
+ to prayer, but he generalized his wrath. Possibly, he would
+ have been less sensitive and fastidious regarding the musical
+ carillons of the Italian city were he wont to dwell within
+ ear-shot of an American factory or railroad-station. Not that
+ Mr. Ruskin fails to appreciate&mdash;or, rather, to
+ depreciate&mdash;railways in their connection with Italian
+ landscapes; for, besides his series of complaints regarding the
+ Florence bells, he denounces the railway from Rome to Naples,
+ and the railway-tunnels under Monts Cenis and St. Gothard, and
+ the railway-bridge leading into Venice, as enemies of the
+ beautiful and picturesque in Nature. But it is the locomotive,
+ independent of the shriek, that is his abomination; whereas a
+ man less sensitive to sights, and (if possible) more sensitive
+ to sounds, might pardon the cutting up of the landscape were
+ his ear-drum spared from splitting.</p>
+
+ <p>Emerson asks, "What is so odious as noise?" But a
+ <i>Saturday Reviewer</i> once devoted an elaborate essay to the
+ eulogy of unmitigated noise, or rather to the keen enjoyment of
+ it by children. People with enviable nerves and unenviable
+ tastes often enjoy sounds in the ratio of their lack of
+ melody&mdash;say, such everyday thoroughfare music as the slap
+ and bang of coach-wheels on the cobble-stones; the creaking of
+ street-cars round a sharp curve, like Milton's infernal doors
+ "grating harsh thunder;" the squeaking falsettos of the cries
+ by old-clothes' men, itinerant glaziers, fishmongers,
+ fruiterers, tinkers and what not; the yells of rival coachmen
+ at the railway-stations, giving one an idea of Bedlam; the
+ street-fiddlers and violinists with horribly untuned
+ instruments; the Italian open-air singers hoarsely shouting,
+ "Shoo Fly" or "Viva Garibaldi! viva l'Italia!" the gongs beaten
+ on steamboats and by hotel-runners at stations on the arrival
+ of trains; the unearthly squeals and shrieks of new "musical
+ instruments" sold cheap by street-peddlers; the horrible
+ noise-producers which boys invent for the torture of nervous
+ people&mdash;such, for example, as this present season's, which
+ is happily styled "the devil's fiddle," or "the chicken-box,"
+ whose simplest form is an emptied tomato-can, with a string
+ passed through the end and pulled with the rosined fingers.
+ Now, that a man may be pleased with a rattle, even if it be
+ only a car-rattle, is conceivable, but it is hard to understand
+ how he can retain a relish for the squeal of a
+ locomotive-whistle. The practice of summoning workmen to
+ factories by this shrill monitor, of using it to announce the
+ dinner-hour, the hour of resuming work after the nooning, and
+ the hour of quitting work for the night, ought to be abolished
+ everywhere. There is not the faintest excuse for it, because
+ clocks and bells will do the same work exactly as well. On the
+ other hand, the whistle causes perpetual irritation to the
+ nervous, feeble and sick, and frequent cases of horses running
+ away with fright at the sudden shriek, smashing property or
+ destroying life.</p>
+
+ <p>Let us give moral aid and comfort to the campaign,
+ Cisatlantic and Transatlantic, against the steam-whistle. In
+ the local councils of Philadelphia, Camden and other cities it
+ has been well opened in our country; in the House of Commons
+ has been introduced a bill providing that "no person shall use
+ or employ in any manufactory or any other place any
+ steam-whistle or steam-trumpet for the purpose of summoning or
+ dismissing workmen or persons employed, without the sanction of
+ the sanitary authorities." They call this whistle, by the way,
+ it would seem, the "American devil," for the Manchester
+ <i>Examiner</i> congratulates its readers that the "American
+ devil" has been taken by the throat, and ere long his yells
+ will be heard no more.</p>
+
+ <p>John Leech, it is said, was actually driven from house to
+ house in a vain effort to escape the nuisance of
+ organ-grinders, whom he has immortalized in Punch by many
+ exquisite sketches, showing that they know "the vally of peace
+ and quietness." Some of his friends declare that this nuisance
+ so worked on his nerves that he may be said to have died of
+ organ-grinders. Holmes has immortalized the same guild of
+ wandering minstrels as a sort of "crusaders sent from infernal
+ clime to dock the ears of melody and break the legs of time."
+ And yet the hand-organ, so often the subject of municipal
+ legislation, is dulcet music compared with the steam-whistle,
+ even when the latter instrument takes its most ambitiously
+ artistic form of the "Calliope."</p><a name="H_4_0022"
+ id="H_4_0022"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h3>SIAMESE NEWS.</h3>
+
+ <p>Letters recently received from Bangkok, Siam, bearing date
+ July 25, 1872, give the following interesting items.</p>
+
+ <p>His Majesty has just appointed an English tutor to his royal
+ brothers, associating with them some of the sons of the higher
+ nobles to the number of twenty. This certainly indicates
+ progress in liberal and enlarged views in a land where hitherto
+ no noble, however exalted his rank or worthy his character, was
+ considered a fit associate for the princes of the royal family,
+ who have always been trained to hold themselves entirely aloof
+ from those about them. The young king now on the throne has
+ changed all this, and says he wishes not only that his brothers
+ shall have the advantage of studying with others of their own
+ age, but that they should thus learn to know their people
+ better, and by mingling with them freely in their studies and
+ sports acquire more liberal views of men and things than their
+ ancestors had. He insists that his young brothers and their
+ classmates shall stand on precisely the same footing, and each
+ be treated by the teacher according to his merits. The king
+ intends to appoint yet other teachers in his family for both
+ boys and girls; and though perhaps the time may not yet have
+ come, it is certainly not far distant, when Siam will sustain
+ high schools and colleges, both literary and scientific.</p>
+
+ <p>The religious aspect of the nation is somewhat less
+ promising. Though the royal edict gives protection to all
+ religions, and permits every man to choose for himself in
+ matters of conscience, it can scarcely be said that the two
+ kings take any real interest in Christianity. They think less
+ of Booddhism, its mystic creed and imposing ceremonies, and
+ have made very many changes in the form of worship; but,
+ apparently, they are no more Christians than were their
+ respective fathers, the late first and second kings. They treat
+ Christianity with outward respect, because they esteem it
+ decorous to do so; and the same is true of the regent and prime
+ minister; but none of them even profess any real regard for the
+ worship of the true God. The concessions made thus far indicate
+ progress in civilization, not in piety; and while the kings and
+ their subjects are assuredly loosing their grasp on Booddhism,
+ they are not reaching out to lay hold on Christianity. It seems
+ rather as if the whole nation were swaying off into the frigid
+ regions of skepticism, and, influenced by the example of many
+ unworthy representatives of Christian countries, they live only
+ for the luxuries and laxities of the present life. Priestly
+ robes are much less frequently seen on the river and in the
+ streets than formerly; and many of the clergy no longer reside
+ at the temples, but with their families in their own houses;
+ thus relinquishing even the pretence of celibacy, which has
+ hitherto been one of the very strongest points of Booddhism,
+ giving it an appearance of sanctity and a hold on the
+ affections of the people that nothing else can do. With this
+ rapidly-increasing renunciation of priestly celibacy and the
+ daily-diminishing ranks of the clergy, Booddhism, the mammoth
+ religion of the world, seems tottering to ruin, and even the
+ present generation may see its utter demolition, at least so
+ far as Siam is concerned. Services at the temples are now held
+ in imitation of English morning and evening prayers; a moral
+ essay is read, at which the body-guards of the kings and the
+ government officers are generally required to be present, and
+ the remainder of the day they are excused from duty, instead of
+ being kept, as formerly, Sundays and week-days, in almost
+ perpetual attendance on His Majesty.</p>
+
+ <p>The supreme king is now in his twentieth year, and will take
+ the reins of government this year. He is tall and slight in
+ person, gentlemanlike in manners, perfectly well bred, and
+ always courteous to strangers, though even more modest and
+ unassuming than was his father, the priest-king, whose praises
+ are still fresh in every heart. His Majesty speaks English
+ quite creditably, wears the English dress most of the time, and
+ keeps himself well informed as to matters and things generally.
+ His reign, thus far, promises well for himself and his
+ kingdom.</p>
+
+ <p>The second king, still called King <i>George Washington</i>,
+ is now about thirty, and a most noble specimen of the courtly
+ Oriental gentleman. His tall, compact figure is admirably
+ developed both for strength and beauty, his face is full and
+ pleasing, and his head finely formed. He is affable in manner,
+ converses readily in English, and is fond of Europeans and
+ their customs. He keeps his father's palace and steamboats in
+ excellent condition, and his body-guard under thorough drill.
+ On a recent visit of the American steamer Moreton he came out
+ on the battlements of his palace, and after watching her
+ progress for some time, he signaled her to lay to, which she
+ did just opposite his palace. He immediately went aboard, and
+ remained for an hour or so, chatting merrily with both ladies
+ and gentlemen, while the steamer puffed up the river a few
+ miles, and then returned for His Majesty to disembark at his
+ own palace. King George occasionally wears the <i>full</i>
+ English dress, either civil or military, but generally only the
+ hat, coat, linen and shoes, with the Siamese
+ <i>p&agrave;h-n&ucirc;ng</i> in lieu of pantaloons. The regent,
+ the minister of foreign affairs and many of the princes and
+ nobles have adopted this mongrel costume, and, to a greater or
+ less extent, our language, manner of living and forms of
+ etiquette. Visitors to the kings now sit on chairs, instead of
+ crouching on cushions before the throne, as formerly; while
+ native princes and ministers of state no longer prostrate
+ themselves with their faces in the dust in the royal presence,
+ but stand at the foot of the throne while holding an audience
+ with their Majesties, each being allowed full opportunity to
+ state his case or present any petition he may desire. The
+ sovereigns are no longer unknown, mysterious personages, whose
+ features their people have never been permitted to look upon;
+ but they may be seen any fine day taking their drives in their
+ own coaches or phaetons, and lifting their hats to passing
+ friends. Nor do they on ordinary occasions deem it necessary to
+ be surrounded by armed soldiers for protection, but go where
+ they list, with only their liveried coachmen and footmen, and
+ perhaps a single companion or secretary inside.</p>
+
+ <p>The city itself has correspondingly improved. Within the
+ walls have just been completed two new streets, meeting at
+ right angles near the mayor's office, where is a public park of
+ circular form very handsomely laid out. The streets radiating
+ from this centre are broad, and lined with new brick houses of
+ two stories and tiled roofs. These are mostly private
+ dwellings, uniformly built; and with their broad sidewalks and
+ shade trees of luxuriant tropical growth present a very
+ picturesque appearance. One wide street, commencing at the
+ royal palace, extends six or seven miles through the city,
+ reaching the river near a little village called Pak-lat-bon.
+ This is the fashionable <i>drive</i>, where may be seen not
+ only their Majesties, the regent, the prime minister and other
+ high dignitaries lounging in stately equipages drawn by two or
+ four prancing steeds, but many private citizens of different
+ nations in their light pony-carriages, palanquins, etc.,
+ instead of the invariable barges and <i>sampans</i> of a few
+ years ago, when the river was the "Broadway" of the city and
+ the canals its cross-streets. Steamers of various dimensions
+ now busily ply the river: the kings own several, which they use
+ for pleasure-boats; eight or ten are fitted up as war-steamers,
+ and others are packets to Singapore, China and elsewhere,
+ carrying passengers and merchandise.</p>
+
+ <p>The regent, <i>Pra-Nai-Wai,</i> is a sedate, dignified,
+ courteous gentleman of sixty-five, who walks erect with firm
+ step and manly form, and with mental and physical powers still
+ unimpaired. His half-brother, who filled the post of minister
+ of foreign affairs at the commencement of the present reign,
+ died blind some little time back, after twice paying ten
+ thousand dollars to a Dutch oculist from Batavia to operate on
+ his eyes for cataract. His successor, the present minister, is
+ one of the finest specimens of a Siamese gentleman in the
+ country. He was first a provincial governor; then went on a
+ special embassy to England; last year attended the supreme king
+ on his visit to Singapore and Batavia; and recently accompanied
+ him again to India, whence the royal party have but just
+ returned. The regal convoy consisted of five or six
+ war-steamers, and His Majesty, besides his own officers, was
+ escorted also by the English consul at Bangkok, the
+ harbor-master and several European officers in the Siamese
+ service. The royal tourist visited Rangoon, Calcutta, Madras,
+ Bombay, Allahabad and Ceylon; and entered with great gusto into
+ the spirit of his travels, seeing everything, asking questions
+ and taking notes as he passed from point to point. The regent,
+ in conjunction with the second king, held the reins of
+ government during the absence of the first king; and in truth
+ the regent has for the most part governed the country since the
+ death of the late king, in 1868, the young heir being then but
+ fifteen years of age. The regent is decidedly a favorite with
+ both kings and people, and his rule has been popular and
+ prosperous.</p><a name="H_4_0023"
+ id="H_4_0023"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h3>MADISON AS A TEMPERANCE MAN.</h3>
+
+ <p>Many years ago, when the temperance movement began in
+ Virginia, ex-President Madison lent the weight of his influence
+ to the cause. Case-bottles and decanters disappeared from the
+ sideboard at Montpelier&mdash;wine was no longer dispensed to
+ the many visitors at that hospitable mansion. Nor was this all.
+ Harvest began, but the customary barrel of whisky was not
+ purchased, and the song of the scythemen in the wheatfield
+ languished. In lieu of whisky, there was a beverage most
+ innocuous, unstimulating and unpalatable to the army of dusky
+ laborers.</p>
+
+ <p>The following morning, Mr. Madison called in his head-man to
+ make the usual inquiry, "Nelson, how comes on the crop?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Po'ly, Mars' Jeems&mdash;monsus po'ly."</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, what's the matter?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Things is seyus."</p>
+
+ <p>"What do you mean by serious?"</p>
+
+ <p>"We gwine los' dat crap."</p>
+
+ <p>"Lose the crop! Why should we lose it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"'Cause dat ar crap ar heap too big a crap to be gethered
+ 'thout whisky. 'Lasses-and-water nuver gethered no crap sence
+ de woil' war' made, ner 'taint gwine to."</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Madison succumbed: the whisky was procured, the "crap"
+ was "gethered," case-bottles and decanters reappeared, and the
+ ancient order was restored at Montpelier, never again to be
+ disturbed.</p>
+
+ <h2><a name="H_NOTE"
+ id="H_NOTE"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> NOTES.</h2>
+
+ <p>Amidst the recent hurly-burly of politics in France,
+ involving the fate of the Thiers government, if not of the
+ republic itself, a minor grievance of the artists has probably
+ been little noticed by the general public. Yet a grievance it
+ was, and one which caused men of taste and sentiment to cry out
+ loudly. The threatened act of vandalism against which they
+ protested was a proposal to fell part of the Forest of
+ Fontainebleau. The castle and forest have long belonged to the
+ state, but why the woods should now be cut down by the
+ government is not clear. The motive is probably to turn the
+ fine timber into cash, though a Paris wit, in pretended despair
+ of other explanation, jokingly alleged, at the time of Prince
+ Napoleon's late expulsion from France, that the government was
+ afraid the prince, taking refuge in its dense recesses, might
+ there conceal himself (<i>&agrave; la</i> Charles II., we
+ presume) in one of its venerable oaks. At any rate, it was
+ arranged to level a part of the timber, and on hearing of this
+ threatened mutilation of a favorite resort the French artists
+ rallied to beg M. Thiers, like the character in General
+ Morris's ballad, to "spare those trees." And well may they
+ petition, for the forest contains nearly thirty-five thousand
+ acres, abounding in beautiful and picturesque scenery. It can
+ boast finer trees than any other French forest, while its
+ meadows, lawns and cliffs furnish specimens of almost every
+ plant and flower to be found in France. Now, when we add that
+ its views are exceedingly varied, its rocks, ravines, plateaus
+ and thickets each offering some entirely different and
+ admirable study to the landscape-painters who frequent it in
+ great numbers during the spring and autumn months (for it is
+ only fourteen or fifteen leagues out of Paris, on the high road
+ to Lyons), we have shown reason enough for the consentaneous
+ action on the part of the men and women of the brush and
+ pencil.</p>
+
+ <p>The traveled reader will hardly need to be told that good
+ judges consider the forest and castle to compose the finest
+ domain in France. But there are also numberless historic
+ reminiscences intertwined with Fontainebleau. And, by the way,
+ it was originally known as the For&ecirc;t de Bierre, until
+ some thirsty huntsmen, who found its spring deliciously
+ refreshing, rebaptized it as Fontaine Belle Eau. Such, at
+ least, is the old story. The first founding of a royal
+ residence there dates at least as far back as the twelfth
+ century, and possibly much farther, while the present
+ ch&acirc;teau was begun by Francis I. in the sixteenth. So many
+ famous historic events, indeed, have taken place within the
+ precincts of the forest that the committee of "Protection
+ Artistique" is pardonable in claiming that "Fontainebleau
+ Forest ought to be ranked with those national historic
+ monuments which must at all hazards be preserved for the
+ admiration of artists and tourists," as well as of patriotic
+ Frenchmen. What illustrations shall we select from among the
+ events connected with it, about which a thousand volumes of
+ history, poetry, art, science and romance have been composed?
+ At Fontainebleau, Charles V. was royally feasted by Francis;
+ there the Edict of Nantes was revoked; there Cond&eacute; died;
+ there the decree of divorce between Napoleon and Josephine was
+ pronounced; and there the emperor afterward signed his own
+ abdication. It is true that nobody proposes to demolish the
+ castle, and that is the historic centre; but the petitioners
+ claim that it is difficult and dangerous to attempt to divide
+ the domain into historic and non-historic, artistic and
+ non-artistic parts, with a view to its mutilation. There is
+ ground for hoping that a favorable response will be given to
+ the eloquent appeal of the artists and amateurs.</p>
+
+ <p>The vanity of Victor Hugo, though always "Olympian," perhaps
+ never mounted to a sublimer height than in the reply he sent to
+ M. Catulle Mendes on receiving from him the news of Gautier's
+ death. It contained but half a dozen lines, yet found space to
+ declare, "Of the men of 1830, <i>I alone am left</i>. It is now
+ my turn." The profound egotism of "<i>il ne reste plus que
+ moi</i>" could not escape being vigorously lashed by V. Hugo's
+ old comrades of the quill, dating back with him to 1830, and
+ now so loftily ignored. "See, even in his epistles of
+ condolence," they cry, "the omnipresent <i>moi</i> of Hugo must
+ appear, to overshadow everything else!" One indignant writer
+ declares the poet to be a mere walking personal pronoun.
+ Another humorously pities those still extant contemporaries of
+ 1830 who, after having for forty years dedicated their songs
+ and romances and dramas to Hugo, now learn from the selfsame
+ maw which has greedily gulped their praises that they
+ themselves do not exist, never did exist. One man of genius
+ slyly writes: "Some of us veterans will find ourselves
+ embarrassed&mdash;Michelet, G. Sand, Janin, Sandeau <i>et un
+ pen moi</i>. Is it possible that we died a long time ago, one
+ after the other, without knowing it? Was it a delusion on our
+ part to fancy ourselves existing, or was our existence only a
+ bad dream?" But to Victor Hugo even these complaints will
+ perhaps seem to smoke like fresh incense on the altar of
+ self-adulation which this great genius keeps ever lighted.</p>
+
+ <p>The reader may remember the story of that non-committal
+ editor who during the late canvass, desiring to propitiate all
+ his subscribers of both parties, hoisted the ticket of
+ "Gr&mdash;&mdash; and &mdash;&mdash;n" at the top of his
+ column, thus giving those who took the paper their choice of
+ interpretations between "Grant and Wilson" and "Grceley and
+ Brown." A story turning on the same style of point (and
+ probably quite as apocryphal, though the author labels it
+ "<i>historique</i>") is told of an army officers' mess in
+ France. A brother-soldier from a neighboring detachment having
+ come in, and a <i>champenoise</i> having been uncorked in his
+ honor, "Gentlemen," said the guest, raising his glass, "I am
+ about to propose a toast at once patriotic and political." A
+ chorus of hasty ejaculations and of murmurs at once greeted
+ him. "Yes, gentlemen," coolly proceeded the orator, "I drink to
+ a thing which&mdash;an object that&mdash;Bah! I will out with
+ it at once. It begins with an <i>R</i> and ends with an
+ <i>e</i>."</p>
+
+ <p>"Capital!" whispers a young lieutenant of Bordeaux
+ promotion. "He proposes the <i>Republique</i>, without
+ offending the old fogies by saying the word."</p>
+
+ <p>"Nonsense! He means the <i>Radicale</i>," replies the other,
+ an old captain from Cassel.</p>
+
+ <p>"Upon my word," says a third as he lifts his glass, "our
+ friend must mean <i>la Royaute</i>."</p>
+
+ <p>"I see!" cries a one-legged veteran of Froschweiler: "we
+ drink to <i>la Revanche</i>."</p>
+
+ <p>In fact, the whole party drank the toast heartily, each
+ interpreting it to his liking.</p>
+
+ <p>In the hands of a Swift even so trivial an incident might be
+ made to point a moral on the facility with which alike in
+ theology and politics&mdash;from Athanasian Creed to Cincinnati
+ or Philadelphia Platform&mdash;men comfortably interpret to
+ their own diverse likings some doctrine that "begins with an
+ <i>R</i> and ends with an <i>e</i>," and swallow it with great
+ unanimity and enthusiasm.</p>
+
+ <p>Possibly the death of Mr. Greeley, after a prolonged
+ delirium induced in part by political excitement, may add for
+ Americans some fresh interest to the theory of a paper which
+ just previous to that pathetic event M. Lunier had read before
+ the Paris Academy of Medicine. The author confessed his
+ statistics to be incomplete, but regarded them as ample for the
+ decisive formulation of the proposition that great political
+ crises tend to increase the number of cases of mental
+ alienation. The leading point of his elaborate argument appears
+ to be the classification of fresh cases of insanity developed
+ since the beginning of the late French war. The strongest
+ comparison is one indicating an excess of seven per cent, in
+ the number of such cases, proportioned to the population in the
+ departments conquered and occupied by the Germans, over those
+ which they did not invade. Finally, M. Lunier reckons the cases
+ of mental alienation induced by the late political and military
+ events in France at from twelve hundred to fifteen hundred.
+ Politics without war may, it is considered, produce the same
+ results&mdash;results not at all surprising, of course, except
+ as to their extent. As to this last, if M. Lunier's figures and
+ deductions be correct, the mental strain of exciting politics
+ is even more destructive than has been generally supposed.</p>
+
+ <h2><a name="H_4_0025"
+ id="H_4_0025"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> LITERATURE OF THE
+ DAY.</h2>
+
+ <p>Gareth and Lynette. By Alfred Tennyson, D.C.L.,
+ Poet-Laureate. Boston: J.R. Osgood &amp; Co.</p>
+
+ <p>"With this poem the author concludes the Idyls of the King."
+ The occasion is a tempting one to review the long series of
+ Arthurian lays written by Tennyson, from the <i>Mort d'
+ Arthur</i>, and the pretty song about Lancelot and Guinevere,
+ and the first casting of "Elaine's" legend in the form of
+ <i>The Lady of Shallot</i>, down to the present tale, flung
+ like a capricious field flower into a wreath complete enough
+ without it. The poet's first adventure into the
+ subject&mdash;the mysterious, shadowy and elevated performance
+ called the <i>Mort d' Arthur</i>&mdash;will probably be always
+ thought the best. Tennyson, when he wrote it, was just trying
+ the peculiarities of his style: he was testing the quality of
+ his cadences, the ring of his long sententious lines repeated
+ continually as refrains, and the trustworthiness of his artful,
+ much-sacrificing simplicity. He put as it were a spot or two of
+ pigment on the end of his painting-knife, and held it up into
+ the air of the vaporous traditions of the Round Table. It stood
+ the test, it had the color; but the artist, uncertain of his
+ style, his public and his own liking, made a number of other
+ tentatives before he could decide to go on in the manner he
+ commenced with. He tried the <i>Guinevere</i>, laughing and
+ galloping in its ballad-movement; he tried the <i>Shallot</i>,
+ with a triple rhyme and a short positive refrain, like a bell
+ rung in an incantation, and brought up every minute by a finger
+ pressed upon the edge. Either of these three&mdash;although the
+ metre of the first was the only one endurable by the ear in the
+ case of a long series of poems&mdash;either of these had, it
+ may be positively said, a general tone more suitable to the
+ ancient feeling, and more consistent with the duty of a modern
+ poet arranging for new ears the legends collected by Sir Thomas
+ Malory, than the general tone of the present Idyls. Those first
+ experiments, charged like a full sponge with the essence and
+ volume of primitive legend, went to their purpose without
+ retrospection or vacillation: each short tale, whether it
+ laughed or moaned, promulgated itself like an oracle. The
+ teller seemed to have been listening to the voice of Fate, and
+ whether, Guinevere swayed the bridle-rein, or Elaine's web flew
+ out and floated wide, or Lancelot sang tirra-lirra by the
+ river, it was asserted with the positiveness of a Hebrew
+ chronicle, which we do not question because it is history. But
+ we hardly have such an illusion in reading the late Idyls. We
+ seem to be in the presence of a constructor who arranges
+ things, of a moralist turning ancient stories with a latent
+ purpose of decorum, of an official Englishman looking about for
+ old confirmations of modern sociology, of a salaried laureate
+ inventing a prototype of Prince Albert. The singleness of a
+ story-teller who has convinced himself that he tells a true
+ story is gone. That this diversion into the region of didactics
+ is accompanied, on our poet's part, with every ingenuity of
+ ornament, and every grace of a style which people have learned
+ to like and which he has made his own, need not be said. The
+ Tennysonian beauties are all there. The work takes its place in
+ literature, obscuring the Arthurian work of Dryden, as Milton's
+ achievement of <i>Paradise Lost</i> obscured the Italian work
+ on the same subject which preceded it. The story is told, and
+ the things of the Round Table can hardly be related again in
+ English, any more than the tale of Troy could be sung again in
+ Greek after the poem of Homer. But beauties do not necessarily
+ compose into perfect Beauty, and the achievement of a task
+ neatly done does not prevent the eye from wandering over the
+ work to see if the material has been used to the best
+ advantage. So, the reader who has allowed himself to rest long
+ in the simple magic evoked by Malory or in the Celtic air of
+ Villemarque's legends, will be fain to ask whether a man of
+ Tennyson's force could not have given to his century a
+ recasting which would have satisfied primitive credulity as
+ well as modern subtility. There is an antique bronze at Naples
+ that has been cleaned and set up in a splendid museum, and
+ perhaps looks more graceful than ever; but the pipe that used
+ to lead to the lips, and the passage that used to communicate
+ with the priest-chamber, are gone, and nothing can compensate
+ for them: it used to be a form and a voice, and now it is
+ nothing but a form.</p>
+
+ <p>We have just observed that in our opinion the first essays
+ made by the Laureate with his Arthurian material had the best
+ ring, or at least had some excellences lost to the later work.
+ <i>Gareth and Lynette</i>, however, by its fluency and
+ simplicity, and by not being overcharged with meaning, seems to
+ part company with some of this overweighted later performance,
+ and to attempt a recovery of the directness and spring of the
+ start. It is, however, far behind all of them in a momentous
+ particular; for in narrating <i>them</i>, the poet, while able
+ to keep up his immediate connection with the source of
+ tradition, and to narrate with the directness of belief, had
+ still some undercurrent of thought which he meant to convey,
+ and which he succeeded in keeping track of: Arthur and
+ Guinevere, in the little song, ride along like primeval beings
+ of the world&mdash;the situation seems the type of all
+ seduction; the Lady of Shallot is not alone the recluse who
+ sees life in a mirror, she is the cloistered Middle Age itself,
+ and when her mirror breaks we feel that a thousand glasses are
+ bursting, a thousand webs are parting, and that the times are
+ coming eye to eye with the actual. In those younger days,
+ Tennyson, possessed with a subject, and as it were floating in
+ it, could pour out a legend with the credulity of a child and
+ the clear convincing insight of a teacher: when he came in
+ mature life to apply himself to the rounded work, he had more
+ of a disposition to teach, and less of that imaginative reach
+ which is like belief; and <i>now</i> he is telling a story
+ again for the sake of the story, but without the deeper
+ meaning. Lynette is a supercilious damsel who asks redress of
+ the knights of the Round Table: Gareth, a male Cinderella,
+ starts from the kitchen to defend her, and after conquering her
+ prejudices by his bravery, assumes his place as a disguised
+ prince. It is a plain little comedy, not much in Tennyson's
+ line: there are places where he tries to imitate the artless
+ disconnected speech of youth; and here, as with the little
+ nun's babble in <i>Guinevere</i>, and with some other passages
+ of factitious simplicity, the poet makes rather queer work:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Gold? said I gold?&mdash;ay then, why he,
+ or she,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Or whosoe'er it was, or half the
+ world,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Had ventured&mdash;<i>had</i> the thing I
+ spake of been</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Mere gold&mdash;but this was all of that
+ true steel</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Whereof they forged the brand
+ Excalibur,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And lightnings played about it in the
+ storm, etc.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>It may be questioned whether hap-hazard talk ever, in any
+ age of human speech, took a form like that, though it is just
+ like Tennyson in many a weary part of his poetry. The blank
+ verse, for its part, is broken with all the old skill, and
+ there are lines of beautiful license, like this:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Camelot, a city of shadowy palaces,</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>or strengthened with the extra quantity, like this:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Stay, felon knight, I avenge me for my
+ friend!</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>or imitating the motion described, as these:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">The hoof of his horse slept in the
+ stream, the stream</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Descended, and the Sun was washed
+ away;</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>but occasionally the effort to give variety leads into mere
+ puzzles and disagreeable fractures of metre, such as the
+ following quatrain:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Courteous or bestial from the moment,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Such as have nor law nor king; and three
+ of these</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Proud in their fantasy, call themselves
+ the Day,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Morning-Star, and Noon-Sun, and
+ Evening-Star.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The first line in this quotation, if it be not a misprint of
+ the American edition, can only be brought to any kind of rule
+ by accenting each polysyllable on the last, and is not, when
+ even that is done, a pleasant piece of caprice. There are
+ plenty of phrases that shock the attention sufficiently to keep
+ it from stagnating on the smooth surface of the verse; such
+ are&mdash;"ever-highering eagle-circles," "there were none but
+ few goodlier than he," "tipt with trenchant steel," and the
+ expression, already famous, of "tip-tilted" for Lynette's nose;
+ to which may be added the object of Gareth's attention,
+ mentioned in the third line of the poem, when he "stared at the
+ <i>spate</i>." But in the matter of descriptive power we do not
+ know that the Laureate has succeeded better for a long time
+ past in his touches of landscape-painting: the pictures of
+ halls, castles, rivers and woods are all felicitous. For
+ example, this in five lines, where the travelers saw</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Bowl-shaped, through tops of many
+ thousand pines,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">A gloomy-gladed hollow slowly sink</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">To westward; in the deeps whereof a
+ mere,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Round as the red eye of an eagle-owl,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Under the half-dead sunset glared; and
+ cries</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Ascended.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Or this simple and beautiful sketch of crescent
+ moonlight:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i12">Silent the silent field</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">They traversed. Arthur's harp tho'
+ summer-wan,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">In counter motion to the clouds,
+ allured</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The glance of Gareth dreaming on his
+ liege.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">A star shot.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>It is still, perfect, and utterly simple sketches like
+ these, thrown off in the repose of power, that form the best
+ setting for a heroic or poetical action: what better device was
+ ever invented, even by Tennyson himself, for striking just the
+ right note in the reader's mind while thinking of a noble
+ primitive knight, than that in another Idyl, where Lancelot
+ went along, looking at a star, "<i>and wondered what it
+ was"?</i> Of a more imaginative kind of beauty are the
+ descriptions of the walls of rock near Castle Dangerous, decked
+ by the hermit with tinted bas-reliefs, and the fine one of
+ Camelot, looking as if "built by fairy kings," with its city
+ gate surmounted by the figures of the three mystic queens, "the
+ friends of Arthur," and decked upon the keystone with the image
+ of the Lady, whose form is set in ripples of stone and crossed
+ by mystic fish, while her drapery weeps from her sides as water
+ flowing away. The most charming part of the character-painting
+ is where the shrewish Lynette, as her estimate of the
+ scullion-knight gradually rises in view of his mighty deeds,
+ evinces her kindlier mood, not directly in speech, but by
+ catches of love-songs breaking out of the midst of her scornful
+ gibes: this is a very subtle and suitable and poetical way of
+ eliciting the under-workings of the damsel's mind, and it is
+ continued through five or six pages in an interrupted carol,
+ until at last the maiden, wholly won, bids him ride by her
+ side, and finishes her lay:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">O trefoil, sparkling on the rainy
+ plain,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">O rainbow, with three colors after
+ rain,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Shine sweetly: thrice my love hath smiled
+ on me.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The allegory by which Gareth's four opponents are made to
+ form a sort of stumbling succession representing Morn, Noon,
+ Evening, and Night or Death, is hardly worth the introduction,
+ but it is not insisted upon: the last of these knights,
+ besieging Castle Perilous in a skull helmet, and clamoring for
+ marriage with Lynette's sister Lyonors, turns out to be a
+ large-sized, fresh-faced and foolish boy, who issues from the
+ skull "as a flower new blown," and fatuously explains that his
+ brothers have dressed him out in burlesque and deposited him as
+ a bugbear at the gate. This is not very salutary allegorizing,
+ but it is soon over, and the poem closed, leaving a pleasant
+ perfume in the reader's mind of chivalry, errantry and the
+ delicious days before the invention of civilization.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>Handbook of the History of Philosophy. By Dr. Albert
+ Schwegler. Translated arid annotated by James Hutchison
+ Stirling, LL.D. New York: Putnam.</p>
+
+ <p>Spinoza teaches that "substance is God;" but, says Mr.
+ Matthew Arnold, "propositions about substance pass by mankind
+ at large like the idle wind, which mankind at large regards
+ not: it will not even listen to a word about these
+ propositions, unless it first learns what their author was
+ driving at with them, and finds that this object of his is one
+ with which it sympathizes." There is no way of getting the
+ multitude to listen to Spinoza's <i>Ethics</i> or Plato's
+ <i>Dialectics</i> but something is gained when a man of science
+ like Dr. Schwegler happens to possess the gift of fluent and
+ easy statement, and can pour into a work like the present,
+ which is the expansion of a hasty encyclopaedia article, the
+ vivacity of current speech, and the impulse which gives unity
+ to a long history while it excludes crabbed digressions. It
+ happens that the American world received the first translation
+ of Schwegler's <i>History</i> <i>of Philosophy</i>; and it may
+ be asked, What need have Americans of a subsequent version by a
+ Scotch doctor of laws? The answer is, that Mr. Seelye's earlier
+ rendering was taken from a first edition, and that the present
+ one includes the variations made in five editions which have
+ now been issued. Even on British ground the work thus
+ translated has reached three editions, and the multitude of
+ "mankind at large," hearing of these repeated editions in
+ Edinburgh and of twenty thousand copies sold in Germany, may
+ begin to prick up its ears, and to think that this is one of
+ the easily-read philosophies of modern times, of which Taine
+ and Michelet have the secret. It is not so: abstractions stated
+ with scientific precision in their elliptic slang or
+ technicality are not and cannot be made easy reading: the
+ strong hands of condensation which Schwegler pressed down upon
+ the material he controlled so perfectly have not left it
+ lighter or more digestible. The reader of this manual, for
+ instance, will be invited to consider the Eleatic argumentation
+ that nothing exists but Identity, "which is the be&euml;nt, and
+ that Difference, the non-be&euml;nt, does not exist; and
+ therefore that he must not only not go on talking about
+ difference, but that he must not allude to difference as being
+ anything but the non-be&euml;nt; for if he casts about for a
+ synonym, and arrives at the notion that he may say non-existent
+ for non-be&euml;nt, he is abjectly wrong, for be&euml;nt does
+ not mean existent, and non-be&euml;nt non-existent, but it must
+ be considered that the be&euml;nt is strictly the non-existent,
+ and the existent the non-be&euml;nt." Such are the amenities of
+ expression into which an eloquent metaphysician, trying his
+ best to speak popularly, is led. Yet the book is readable to
+ that orderly application of the mind which such studies exact,
+ and is the firmest and strictest guide now speaking our English
+ tongue. Its steady attention to the business in hand, from the
+ pre-Socratic philosphies down through the great age of the
+ Greek revival, to Germany and Hegel at last, is most sustained
+ and admirable. Indeed, few thinkers of Anglo-Saxon birth are
+ able even to praise such a book as it deserves. The only real
+ impediment to its acceptance by scholars of our race is that
+ its attention to modern philosophy is rather partial, the
+ French and the Germans getting most of the story, and English
+ philosophers like Locke and Hume receiving scant attention,
+ while Paley is not recognized. This class of omissions is
+ attended to by the Scotch translator in a mass of annotations
+ which lead him into a broad and interesting view of British
+ philosophy, in the course of which he has some severe
+ reflections on the ignorance of Mr. Lewes and Mr. Mill. On
+ account of these valuable notes, and also for the alterations
+ made by Schwegler himself, we feel that we must invite American
+ scholars possessing the Seelye translation to replace it or
+ accompany it by this present version, which is a cheap and
+ compassable volume.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>Joseph Noirel's Revenge. By Victor Cherbuliez. Translated
+ from the French by Wm. F. West, A. M. New York: Holt &amp;
+ Williams.</p>
+
+ <p>M. Victor Cherbuliez belongs to a Genevese family long and
+ honorably connected with literature in the capacity of
+ publishers both at Paris and Geneva. It is in the latter town
+ and the adjacent region that the scene of the present
+ story&mdash;the first, we believe, of the author's works which
+ has found its way into English&mdash;is laid; and much of its
+ charm is derived from the local coloring with which many of the
+ characters and incidents are invested. Even the quiet home-life
+ of so beautiful and renowned a place cannot but be tinted by
+ reflections from the incomparable beauties of its surroundings,
+ and from the grand and vivid passages of its singularly
+ picturesque history. The subordinate figures on the canvas have
+ accordingly an interest greater than what arises from their
+ commonplace individualities and their meagre part in the
+ action&mdash;like barndoor fowls pecking and clucking beside
+ larger bipeds in a walled yard steeped in sunlight. But the
+ sunlight which gives a delicious warmth and brightness to the
+ earlier chapters of the novel is soon succeeded by gloom and
+ tempest. The interest is more and more concentrated on the few
+ principal persons; and the action, which at the outset promised
+ to be light and amusing, with merely so much of tenderness and
+ pathos as may belong to the higher comedy, becomes by degrees
+ deeply tragical, and ends in a catastrophe which is saved from
+ being horrible and revolting only by the shadows that forecast
+ and the softening strains that attend it. In point of
+ construction and skillful handling the story is as effective as
+ French art alone could have made it, while it has an
+ under-meaning rendered all the more suggestive by being left to
+ find its way into the reader's reflections without any obvious
+ prompting. The heroine, sole child of a prosperous bourgeois
+ couple, stands between two lovers&mdash;one the last relic of a
+ noble Burgundian family; the other a workman with socialist
+ tendencies. Marguerite Mirion is invested with all the
+ fascination which beauty of face, simplicity of mind, purity of
+ soul, sweetness of disposition and joyousness of spirit can
+ impart. Yet she is, and feels herself to be, entirely
+ <i>bourgeoise,</i> longing for no ideal heights, worldly or
+ spiritual, ready for all ordinary duties, content with simple
+ and innocent pleasures, rinding in the life, the thoughts, the
+ occupations and enjoyments of her class all that is needed to
+ make the current of her life run smoothly and to satisfy the
+ cravings of her bright but gentle nature. It is in simple
+ obedience to the will of her parents that she marries Count
+ Roger d'Ornis, and is carried from her happy home at
+ Mon-Plaisir to a dilapidated castle in the Jura, where there
+ are no smiling faces or loving hearts to make her
+ welcome&mdash;where, on the contrary, she meets only with
+ haughty, spiteful or morose looks and a chilling and gloomy
+ atmosphere. It is from sheer necessity that she accepts the aid
+ of Joseph Noirel, her father's head-workman, whose ardent
+ spirit, quickened by the consciousness of talent, but rendered
+ morbid by the slights which his birth and position have
+ entailed, has been plunged into blackest night by the loss of
+ the single star that had illumined its firmament. Count Roger
+ is not wholly devoid of honor and generosity; but he has no
+ true appreciation of his wife, and will sacrifice her without
+ remorse to save his own reputation. Joseph, on the other hand,
+ is ready to dare all things to protect her from harm; but he
+ cannot forego the reward which entails upon her a deeper
+ misery. It is Marguerite alone who, in the terrible struggle of
+ fate and of clashing interests and desires, rises to the height
+ of absolute self-abnegation; and this not through any sudden
+ development of qualities or intuitions foreign to her previous
+ modes of thought, but by the simple application of these to the
+ hard and complicated problems which have suddenly confronted
+ her. Herein lies the novelty of the conception and the lesson
+ which the author has apparently intended to convey. See, he
+ seems to say, how the bourgeois nature, equally scorned by the
+ classes above and below it as the embodiment of vulgar ease and
+ selfishness, contains precisely the elements of true heroism
+ which are wanting alike in those who set conventional rules
+ above moral laws and in those who revolt against all
+ restrictions. The book is thus an apology for a class which is
+ no favorite with poets or romancers; but, as we have said, the
+ design is only to be inferred from the story, and may easily
+ pass unnoticed, at least with American readers. The character
+ of Noirel is powerfully drawn, but it is less original than
+ that of the heroine, belonging, for example, to the same type
+ as the hero of <i>Le Rouge et le Noir</i>&mdash;"ce Robespierre
+ de village," as Sainte-Beuve, we believe, calls him.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>Homes and Hospitals; or, Two Phases of Woman's Work, as
+ exhibited in the Labors of Amy Button and Agnes E. Jones.
+ Boston: American Tract Society; New York: Hurd &amp;
+ Houghton.</p>
+
+ <p>Doubtless we should not, though most of us do, feel a
+ tenderness for the Dorcas who proves to be a lady of culture
+ and distinction, rather different from the careless respect we
+ accord to the Dorcas who has large feet and hands, and
+ mismanages her <i>h</i>'s. In this elegant little book "Amy" is
+ the descendant of influential patrons and patronesses, and
+ "Agnes" is the lovely saint whom Miss Nightingale calls "Una,"
+ though her high-bred purity and lowly self-dedication rather
+ recall the character of Elizabeth of Hungary. Agnes, in Crook
+ lane and Abbot's street, encounters old paupers who have
+ already enjoyed the bounty of her ancestress's (Dame Dutton)
+ legacy. When she becomes interested in the old Indian
+ campaigner, Miles, she is able to procure his admission to
+ Chelsea through the influence of "my brother, Colonel Dutton."
+ She lightens her watches by reading Manzoni's novel, <i>I
+ Promessi Sposi,</i> she quotes Lord Bacon, and compares the
+ hospital-nurses to the witches in <i>Macbeth</i>. These mental
+ and social graces do not, perhaps, assist the practical part of
+ her ministrations, but they undoubtedly chasten the influence
+ of her ministrations on her own character. It is as a purist
+ and an aristocrat of the best kind that Miss Dutton forms
+ within her own mind this resolution: "If the details of evil
+ are unavoidably brought under your eye, let not your thoughts
+ rest upon them a moment longer than is absolutely needful.
+ Dismiss them with a vigorous effort as soon as you have done
+ your best to apply a remedy: commit the matter into higher
+ Hands, then turn to your book, your music, your wood-carving,
+ your pet recreation, whatever it is. This is one way, at least,
+ of keeping the mind elastic and pure." And with the discretion
+ of rare breeding she carries into the haunts of vice and
+ miserable intrigue the Italian byword: <i>Orecchie spalancate,
+ e bocca stretta</i>. A similar elevation, but also a sense that
+ responsibility to her caste requires the most tender humility,
+ may be found in "Una." When about to associate with coarse
+ hired London nurses at St. Thomas's Hospital, she asks herself,
+ "Are you more above those with whom you will have to mix than
+ our Saviour was in every thought and sensitive refinement?" It
+ was by such self-teaching that these high-spirited girls made
+ their life-toil redound to their own purification, as it did to
+ the cause of humanity. The purpose served by binding in one
+ volume the district experiences of Miss Dutton and the hospital
+ record of Miss Jones is that of indicating to the average young
+ lady of our period a diversity of ways in which she may serve
+ our Master and His poor. With "Amy" she may retain her
+ connection with society, and adorn her home and her circle, all
+ the while that she reads the Litany with the decayed governess
+ or <i>Golden Deeds</i> to the dying burglar. With "Agnes" she
+ may plunge into more heroic self-abnegation. Leaving the fair
+ attractions of the world as utterly as the diver leaves the
+ foam and surface of the sea, she may grope for moral pearls in
+ the workhouse of Liverpool or train for her sombre avocation in
+ the asylum at Kaiserwerth. Such absolute dedication will
+ probably have some effect on her "tone" as a lady. She can no
+ longer keep up with the current interests of society. Instead
+ of Shakespeare and Italian literature, which we have seen
+ coloring the career of the district visitor, her life will take
+ on a sort of submarine pallor. The sordid surroundings will
+ press too close for any gleam from the outer world to
+ penetrate. The things of interest will be the wretched things
+ of pauperdom and hospital service&mdash;the slight improvement
+ of Gaffer, the spiritual needs of Gammer, the harsh tyranny of
+ upper nurses. "To-day when out walking," says the brave young
+ lady, as superintendent of a boys' hospital, "I could only keep
+ from crying by running races with my boys." The effect of a
+ training so rigid&mdash;training which sometimes includes
+ stove-blacking and floor-washing&mdash;is to try the pure
+ metal, to eject the merely ornamental young lady whose nature
+ is dross, and to consolidate the valuable nature that is
+ sterling. Miss Agnes, plunged in hard practical work, and
+ unconsciously acquiring a little workmen's slang, gives the
+ final judgment on the utility of such discipline: "Without a
+ regular hard London training I should have been nowhere." Both
+ the saints of the century are now dead, and these memoirs
+ conserve the perfume of their lives.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>Songs from the Old Dramatists. Collected and Edited by Abby
+ Sage Richardson, New York: Hurd &amp; Houghton.</p>
+
+ <p>Any anthology of old English lyrics is a treasure if one can
+ depend upon the correctness of printing and punctuating. Mrs.
+ Richardson has found a quantity of rather recondite ones, and
+ most of the favorites are given too. Only to read her long
+ index of first lines is to catch a succession of dainty fancies
+ and of exquisite rhythms, arranged when the language was
+ crystallizing into beauty under the fanning wings of song. That
+ some of our pet jewels are omitted was to be expected. The
+ compiler does not find space for Rochester's most
+ sincere-seeming stanzas, beginning, "I cannot change as others
+ do"&mdash;among the sweetest and most lyrical utterances which
+ could set the stay-imprisoned hearts of Charles II.'s beauties
+ to bounding with a touch of emotion. Perhaps Rochester was not
+ exactly a dramatist, though that point is wisely strained in
+ other cases. We do not get the "Nay, dearest, think me not
+ unkind," nor do we get the "To all you ladies now on land,"
+ though sailors' lyrics, among the finest legacies of the time
+ when gallant England ruled the waves, are not wanting. We have
+ Sir Charles Sedley's</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">"Love still hath something of the sea</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">From which his mother rose,"</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>and the siren's song, fit for the loveliest of Parthenopes,
+ from Browne's <i>Masque of the Inner Temple</i>, beginning,</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">"Steer, hither steer your winged
+ pines,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">All beaten mariners!"&mdash;</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>songs which severally repeat the fatigue of the sea or that
+ daring energy of its Elizabethan followers which by a false
+ etymology we term chivalrous. We do not find the superb lunacy
+ of "Mad Tom of Bedlam" in the catch beginning, "I know more
+ than Apollo," but we have something almost as spirited, where
+ John Ford sings, in <i>The Sun's Darling</i>,</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">"The dogs have the stag in chase!</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">'Tis a sport to content a king.</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">So-ho! ho! through the skies</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">How the proud bird flies,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And swooping, kills with a grace!</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Now the deer falls! hark! how they
+ ring."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>For what is pensive and retrospective in tone we are given a
+ song of "The Aged Courtier," which once in a pageant touched
+ the finer consciousness of Queen Elizabeth. The unemployed
+ warrior, whose "helmet now shall make a hive for bees," treats
+ the virgin sovereign as his saint and divinity, promising,</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">"And when he saddest sits in holy
+ cell,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">He'll teach his swains this carol for a
+ song:</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Blest be the hearts that wish my
+ sovereign well!</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Cursed be the souls that think her any
+ wrong!</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Goddess! allow this aged man his
+ right</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">To be your beadsman now, that was your
+ knight."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The feudal feeling can hardly be more beautifully
+ expressed.</p>
+
+ <p>From the devotion that was low and lifelong we may turn to
+ the devotion that was loud and fleeting. The love-songs are
+ many and well picked: one is the madrigal from Thomas Lodge's
+ <i>Eitphues' Golden Legacy,</i> which "he wrote," he says, "on
+ the ocean, when every line was wet with a surge, and every
+ humorous passion counterchecked with a storm;" and which (the
+ madrigal) had the good fortune to suggest and name
+ Shakespeare's archest character, Rosalind. We cannot dwell upon
+ this perfumed chaplet of love-ditties. Mrs. Richardson is here
+ doubtless in her element, but she does not always lighten
+ counsel with the wisdom of her words; for instance, when, in
+ Beaumont and Fletcher's "Beauty clear and fair," she makes an
+ attempted emendation in the lines&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">"Where to live near,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">And planted there,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Is still to live and still live new;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Where to gain a favor is</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">More than light perpetual bliss;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Oh make me live by serving you."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>On this the editress says: "I have always been inclined to
+ believe that this line should read: 'More than <i>life</i>,
+ perpetual bliss.'" The image here, where the whole figure is
+ taken from flowers, is of being planted and growing in the glow
+ of the mistress's beauty, whose favor is more fructifying than
+ the sun, and to which he immediately begs to be recalled, "back
+ again, to this <i>light</i>." To say that living anywhere is
+ "more than life" is a forced bombastic notion not in the way of
+ Beaumont and Fletcher, but coming later, and rather
+ characteristic of Poe, with his rant about</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i10">"that infinity with which my wife</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Was dearer to my soul than its
+ soul-life."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Mrs. Richardson's notes, in fact, contradict the impression
+ of thoroughness which her selecting, we are glad to say, leaves
+ on the mind. She is aware that the "Ode to Melancholy" in
+ <i>The Nice Valour</i> begins in the same way as Milton's
+ "Pensieroso," but she does not seem to know that the latter is
+ also closely imitated from Burton's poem in his <i>Anatomy of
+ Melancholy</i>. And she quotes John Still's "Jolly Good Ale and
+ Old" as a "panegyric on old sack," sack being sweet wine.</p>
+
+ <p>The publishers have done their part, and made of these drops
+ of oozed gold what is called "an elegant trifle" for the
+ holidays. Mr. John La Farge, a very "advanced" sort of artist
+ and illustrator, has furnished some embellishments which will
+ be better liked by people of broad culture, and especially by
+ enthusiasts for Japanese art, than they will be by ordinary
+ Christmas-shoppers, though the frontispiece to "Songs of
+ Fairies," representing Psyche floating among water-lilies, is
+ beautiful enough and obvious enough for anybody.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <a name="H_4_0028"
+ id="H_4_0028"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h3><i>Books Received</i>.</h3>
+
+ <p>A Concordance to the Constitution of the United States of
+ America. By Charles W. Stearns, M.D. New York: Mason, Baker
+ &amp; Pratt.</p>
+
+ <p>The Standard: A Collection of Sacred and Secular Music. By
+ L.O. Emerson and H. R. Palmer. Boston: Oliver Ditson &amp;
+ Co.</p>
+
+ <p>Gems of Strauss: A Collection of Dance Music for the Piano.
+ By Johann Strauss. Boston: Oliver Ditson &amp; Co.</p>
+
+ <p>The Greeks of To-Day. By Charles K. Tuckerman. New York:
+ G.P. Putnam &amp; Sons.</p>
+
+ <p>The Eustace Diamonds. By Anthony Trollope. New York: Harper
+ &amp; Brothers.</p>
+
+ <p>How to Paint. By F.B. Gardner. New York: Samuel R. Wells.
+ How to Paint. By F.B. Gardner. New York: Samuel R. Wells.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1"
+ name="footnote1"></a> <b>Footnote 1</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag1">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>The latter contains, among other relics of a balustrade
+ which protected and adorned the platform of the temple, the
+ exquisitely graceful torso of Victory untying her sandals,
+ of which casts are to be seen in most of the museums of
+ Europe.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote2"
+ name="footnote2"></a> <b>Footnote 2</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag2">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>Among the figures of this bas-relief, twelve are
+ recognized by their lofty stature and sitting posture as
+ those of divinities. One group is represented in the
+ engraving.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote3"
+ name="footnote3"></a> <b>Footnote 3</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag3">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>Frenchmen say that the best English dinners are now the
+ best in the world, because they combine the finest French
+ <i>entr&eacute;es</i> and <i>entremets</i> with
+ <i>pi&egrave;ces de r&eacute;sistance</i> of unrivaled
+ excellence.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote4"
+ name="footnote4"></a> <b>Footnote 4</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag4">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>Perhaps the most charming idea of a country-house was
+ that conceived by Mr. Mathew of Thomastown--a huge mansion
+ still extant, now the property of the count de Jarnac, to
+ whom it descended. This gentleman, who was an ancestor of
+ the celebrated Temperance leader, probably had as much
+ claret drunk in his house as any one in his country; which
+ is saying a good deal.</p>
+
+ <p>He had an income which would be equivalent to one
+ hundred and twenty-five thousand dollars a year in our
+ money, and for several years traveled abroad and spent very
+ little. On his return with an ample sum of ready money, he
+ carried into execution a long-cherished scheme of country
+ life.</p>
+
+ <p>He arranged his immense mansion after the fashion of an
+ inn. The guests arrived, were shown to their rooms, and
+ treated as though they were in the most perfectly-appointed
+ hotel. They ordered dinner when they pleased, dined
+ together or alone as suited them, hunted, shot, played
+ billiards, cards, etc. at will, and kept their own horses.
+ There was a regular bar, where drinks of the finest quality
+ were always served. The host never appeared in that
+ character: he was just like any other gentleman in the
+ house.</p>
+
+ <p>The only difference from a hotel lay in the choice
+ character of the company, and the fact that not a farthing
+ might be disbursed. The servants were all paid extra, with
+ the strict understanding that they did not accept a
+ farthing, and that any dereliction from this rule would be
+ punished by instant dismissal.</p>
+
+ <p>Unlike most Irish establishments, especially at that
+ date (about the middle of the last century), this was
+ managed with the greatest order, method and economy.</p>
+
+ <p>Among the notable guests was Dean Swift, whose
+ astonishment at the magnitude of the place, with the lights
+ in hundreds of windows at night, is mentioned by Dr.
+ Sheridan.</p>
+
+ <p>It is pleasant to add in this connection that the count
+ and countess de Jarnac worthily sustain the high character
+ earned a century since by their remarkable ancestor, who
+ was one of the best and most benevolent men of his day.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote5"
+ name="footnote5"></a> <b>Footnote 5</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag5">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>The Milwaukee was sunk nearly due east of the city: the
+ Osage, Tecumseh, several despatch-boats and steamers,
+ besides the three monitors, were sunk by torpedoes in the
+ bay.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote6"
+ name="footnote6"></a> <b>Footnote 6</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag6">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>It was a warrant-officer of the Milwaukee: I do not wish
+ to be more definite; but the money (fifty dollars) may be
+ sent to the editor of this Magazine, who will forward it to
+ the diver.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <hr />
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13636 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #13636 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/13636)
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Lippincott's Magazine Of Popular Literature
+And Science, No. 23, February, 1873, Vol. XI., by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Lippincott's Magazine Of Popular Literature And Science, No. 23, February, 1873, Vol. XI.
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: October 5, 2004 [EBook #13636]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LIPPINCOTT'S MAGAZINE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Patricia Bennett, Sandra Brown and
+the PG Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LIPPINCOTT'S MAGAZINE
+
+OF
+
+_POPULAR LITERATURE AND SCIENCE_.
+
+
+
+
+FEBRUARY, 1873.
+
+Vol. XI., No. 23.
+
+
+
+
+TABLE OF CONTENTS
+
+
+SEARCHING FOR THE QUININE-PLANT IN PERU.
+ Concluding Paper.
+
+A GLANCE AT THE SITE AND ANTIQUITIES OF ATHENS By J.L.T. PHILLIPS.
+
+COMMONPLACE By CONSTANCE FENIMORE WOOLSON.
+
+PROBATIONER LEONHARD; OR, THREE NIGHTS IN THE HAPPY VALLEY
+ By CAROLINE CHESEBRO.
+
+ Chapter IV.--The Test--With Mental Reservations.
+
+ Chapter V.--Sister Benigna.
+
+ Chapter VI.--The Men Of Spenersberg.
+
+ Chapter VII.--The Book.
+
+ Chapter VIII.--Conference Meeting.
+
+ Chapter IX.--Will The Architect Have Employment?
+
+COUNTRY-HOUSE LIFE IN ENGLAND By REGINALD WYNFORD.
+
+THE FOREST OF ARDEN By ITA ANIOL PROKOP.
+
+JACK, THE REGULAR By THOMAS DUNN ENGLISH.
+
+OBSERVATIONS AND ADVENTURES IN SUBMARINE DIVING By WILL WALLACE HARNEY.
+
+CONFIDENTIAL.
+
+GLIMPSES OF JOHN CHINAMAN By PRENTICE MULFORD.
+
+A WINTER REVERIE By MILLIE W. CARPENTER.
+
+"PASSPORTS, GENTLEMEN!" By A.H.
+
+OUR MONTHLY GOSSIP.
+
+ The Cornwallis Family.
+
+ Novelties In Ethnology.
+
+ The Steam-whistle.
+
+ Siamese News.
+
+ Madison As A Temperance Man.
+
+NOTES.
+
+LITERATURE OF THE DAY.
+
+Books Received.
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+The Cones of Patabamba.
+
+"Pepe Garcia, Who Marched Ahead, Announced the Print Of A South
+ American Tiger."
+
+"Napoleon-like, They Washed Their Dirty Linen in The Family"
+
+"Aragon and his Men Fell Upon the Deserters Without Mercy."
+
+"They Greeted These Indian Relics As Crusoe Did The Footprints of the
+ Savages."
+
+"Another Savage Had Found a Pair of Linen Pantaloons."
+
+View of the Acropolis and The Columns Of The Temple Of Jupiter Olympus.
+
+Theatre of Dionysus (Bacchus).
+
+Victory Untying Her Sandals.
+
+Temple of Victory.
+
+The Parthenon.
+
+Bas Relief of the Gods (Frieze Of The Parthenon).
+
+Porch of the Caryatides.
+
+Monument of Lysicrates.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SEARCHING FOR THE QUININE-PLANT IN PERU.
+
+CONCLUDING PAPER.
+
+
+Early on a brilliant morning, with baggage repacked, and the lessening
+amount of provisions more firmly strapped on the shoulders of the
+Indians, the explorers left their pleasant site on the banks of the
+Maniri. The repose allowed to the bulk of the party during the absence
+of their Bolivian companions had been wholesome and refreshing. The
+success of the bark-hunters in their search for cinchonas had cheered
+all hearts, and the luxurious supper of dried mutton and chuno
+arranged for them on their return gave a reminiscence of splendor to
+the thatched hut on the banks of the stream. This edifice, the last of
+civilized construction they expected to see, had the effect of a home
+in the wilderness. The bivouac there had been enjoyed with a sentiment
+of tranquil carelessness. Little did the travelers think that savage
+eyes had been peeping through the forest upon their fancied security,
+and that the wild people of the valleys who were to work them all
+kinds of mischief were upon their track from this station forth.
+
+The enormous fire kindled for breakfast mingled with the stain of
+sunrise to cast a glow upon their departure. Across the vale of the
+Cconi, as though a pair of sturdy porters had arisen to celebrate
+their leavetaking, the cones of Patabamba caught the first rays of
+the sun and held them aloft like hospitable torches. These huge forms,
+soldered together at the waist like Chang and Eng, and clothed with
+shaggy woods up to the top, had been the guardian watchers over their
+days in the ajoupa at Maniri. The sun just rising empurpled their
+double cones, while the base and the surrounding landscape were washed
+with the neutral tints of twilight.
+
+After passing the narrow affluent after which the camping-ground of
+Maniri was named, the party pursued the course of the Cconi through
+a more level tract of country. The stones and precipices became more
+rare, but in revenge the sandy banks soon began to reflect a heat that
+was hardly bearable. As the implacable sun neared its zenith the party
+walked with bent heads and blinded eyes, now dashing through great
+plains of bamboos, now following the hatchets of the peons through
+thickets of heated shrubbery.
+
+Whenever the country became more wooded in its character, the
+bark-hunters, whose quest obliged them to stray in short flights
+around the wings of the column, redoubled their mazes. The careless
+air of these Bolivian retrievers, their voluntary doublings through
+the most difficult jungles, and their easy way of walking over
+everything with their noses in the air, proved well their indifference
+to the obstacles which were almost insurmountable to the rest.
+
+[Illustration: THE CONES OF PATABAMBA.]
+
+Nothing could be more singular and interesting than to see them
+consulting one by one the indications scattered around them, and
+deciding on their probabilities or promises. Where the height and
+thickness of the foliage prevented them from seeing the sky, or
+even the shade of the surrounding green, they walked bent toward the
+ground, stirring up the rubbish, and choosing among the dead foliage
+certain leaves, of which they carefully examined the two sides and the
+stem. When by accident they found themselves near enough to speak to
+each other--a rare chance, for each peon undertook a separate line of
+search--they asked their friends, showing the leaves they had found,
+whether their discoveries appertained to the neighboring trees or
+whether the wind had brought the pieces from a distance. This kind
+of investigation, pursued by men who had prowled through forests
+all their lives, might seem slightly puerile if the reader does
+not understand that it is often difficult, or even impossible, to
+recognize the growing tree by its bark, covered as it is from base
+to branches with parasitic vegetation of every sort. In those forests
+whatever has a stout stem is used without scruple by the bignonias and
+air-plants, which race over the trunk, plant their root-claws in the
+cracks, leap over the whole tree at a single jet, or strangle it with
+multiplied knots, all the while adorning it with a superb mantle of
+leaves and blossoms. This is a difficulty which the most experienced
+_cascarilleros_ are not able to overcome. As an instance, the history
+is cited of a _practico_ or speculator who led an exploration for
+these trees in the valley of Apolobamba. After having caused to be
+felled, barked, measured, dried and trimmed all the cinchonas of one
+of those natural thickets called _manchas_--an operation which had
+occupied four months--he was about to abandon the spot and pursue
+the exploration elsewhere, when accident led him to discover, in
+the enormous trunk buried in creepers against which he had built his
+cabin, a _Cinchona nitida_, the forefather of all the trees he had
+stripped.
+
+In this kind of search the caravan pursued the borders of the
+river, sometimes on this side and sometimes on that, now passing the
+two-headed mountain Camanti, now sighting the tufted peak of Basiri,
+now crossing the torrent called the Garote. In the latter, where
+the dam and hydraulic works of an old Spanish gold-hunter were still
+visible in a state of ruin, the sacred golden thirst of Colonel Perez
+once more attacked him. Two or three pins' heads of the insane metal
+were actually unearthed by the colonel and displayed in a pie-dish;
+but the business of the party was one which made even the finding of
+gold insignificant, and they pursued their way.
+
+The flanks of these mountains, however, were really of importance to
+the botanical motive of the expedition. Along the side of the Camanti,
+where the yellow Garote leaked downward in a rocky ravine, the
+Bolivians were again successful. They brought to Marcoy specimens of
+half a dozen cinchonas, for him to sketch, analyze and decorate with
+Latin names. The colors of two or three of these barks promised
+well, but the pearl of the collection was a specimen of the genuine
+_Calisaya_, with its silver-gray envelope and leaf ribbed with
+carmine. This proud discovery was a boon for science and for commerce.
+It threw a new light upon the geographical locality of the most
+precious species of cinchona. It was incontestably the plant, and
+the Bolivians appeared amazed rather than pleased to have discovered
+outside of their own country a kind of bark proper only to Bolivia,
+and hardly known to overpass the northern extremity of the valley of
+Apolobamba. This discovery would rehabilitate, in the European market,
+the quinine-plants of Lower Peru, heretofore considered as inferior to
+those of Upper Peru and Bolivia. The latter country has for some time
+secured the most favorable reputation for its barks--a reputation
+ably sustained by the efforts of the company De la Paz, to whom the
+government has long granted a monopoly. This reputation is based on
+the abundance in that country of two species, the _Cinchona calisaya_
+and _Boliviana,_ the best known and most valued in the market. But
+for two valuable cinchonas possessed by Bolivia, Peru can show twenty,
+many of them excellent in quality, and awaiting only the enterprise of
+the government and the natural exhaustion of the forests to the south.
+
+This magnificent bit of luck, the finding of the calisaya, awakened
+in the susceptible bosom of Mr. Marcoy an ardent desire to explore
+for himself the site of its discovery. But Eusebio, the chief of the
+cascarilleros, assuming a mysterious and warning expression, informed
+the traveler that the place was quite inaccessible for a white man,
+and that he had risked his own neck a score of times in descending the
+ravine which separated the route from the hillside where the fortunate
+plants were growing. He promised, however, to point out the locality
+from afar, and to show, by a certain changeable gloss proper to the
+leaf, the precise stratum of the calisaya amongst the belts of the
+forest. This promise he forgot to execute more particularly, but it
+appeared that the locality would never be excessively hard to find,
+marked as it was by Nature with the gigantic finger-post of Mount
+Camanti. Placing, then, in security these precious specimens among
+their baggage, the explorers continued their advance along the valley.
+
+The footing was level and easy. Rocks and precipices were left behind,
+and were displaced by a soft, slippery sort of sand, where from space
+to space were planted, like so many oases in a desert, clumps of giant
+reeds. By a strange but natural caprice these beds of rustling verdure
+were cut in an infinity of well-defined geometric forms. Seen from an
+eminence and at a distance, this arrangement gave a singular effect.
+In the midst of these native garden-beds were cut distinct and narrow
+alleys, where the drifting sands were packed like artificial paths.
+It is unnecessary to add that the soft footways, notwithstanding
+their advertisement of verdure and shade, proved to be of African
+temperature.
+
+The last hours of daylight surprised the travelers among the
+labyrinths of these strange gardens. A suitable spot was chosen for
+the halt. As the porters were preparing to throw down their packs,
+Pepe Garcia, who marched ahead, announced the print of a South
+American tiger. The first care of the Indians, on hearing this news,
+was to send forth a horrible cry and to throng around the marks. The
+footprints disappeared at the thickest part of the jungle. After
+an examination of the traces, which resembled a large trefoil, they
+precipitated themselves on the interpreter-in-chief, representing
+how impossible it was to camp out in the neighborhood of the dreaded
+animal. But Pepe Garcia, accustomed as he was by profession to try his
+strength with the ferocious bear and the wily boar, was not the man to
+be afraid of a tiger, even of a genuine tiger from Bengal. To prove
+to the porters how slight was the estimation he placed on the supposed
+enemy, and also to drill them in the case of similar rencounters, he
+pushed the whole troop pellmell into the thickest part of the reeds,
+with the surly order to cut down the canes for sheds. Drawing his own
+knife, he slashed right and left among the stems, which the Indians,
+trembling with fear, were obliged to make into sheaves on the spot and
+transport to the beach selected for the bivouac. Double rows of these
+_arundos_, driven into the sand, formed the partitions of the cabins,
+for which their interwoven leaves made an appropriate thatch. The
+green halls with matted vaults were picturesque enough; each peon,
+seeing how easily they were constructed, chose to have a house for
+himself; and the Tiger's Beach quickly presented the appearance of a
+camp disposed in a long straight line, of which the timorous Indians
+occupied the extremity nearest the river.
+
+No "tiger" appeared to justify the apprehensions of the porters; but
+what was lacking to their fears from beasts with four feet was made
+up to them by beasts with wings. The night closed in dry and serene.
+Since leaving Maniri, whether because of the broadening of the valley,
+the rarity of the water-courses or the decreasing altitude of the
+hills, the adventurers had been little troubled with fogs at night.
+The fauna of the region, too, had offered nothing of an alarming
+complexion, except the footprints of the tiger in question: an
+occasional tapir or peccary from the woods, and otters and fish from
+the streams, had attracted the shots of the party, but merely as
+welcome additions to their game-bags, not as food for their fears.
+To-night, however, the veritable bugbear of the tropical forest paid
+them a visit, and left a real souvenir of his presence. As the Indian
+servants stretched themselves out in slumber under the bright stars
+and in the partial shelter of their ajoupas, a bat of the vampire
+species, attracted by the emanations of their bodies, came sailing
+over them, and emboldened by the silence reigning everywhere, selected
+a victim for attack. Hovering over the fellow's exposed foot, he bit
+the great toe, and fanning his prey in the traditional yet inevitable
+manner by the natural movement of his wings, he gorged himself with
+blood without disturbing the mozo. The latter, on awakening in the
+morning, observed a slight swelling in the perforated part, and on
+examination discovered a round hole large enough to admit a pea.
+Without rising, the man summoned his companions, who formed a group
+around him for the purpose of furnishing a certain natural remedy in
+the shape of a secretion which each one drew out of his ears. With
+this the patient made himself a plaster for his wound, and appeared to
+think but little of it. Questioned as to his sensations by the white
+travelers, who found themselves a good deal more disturbed with the
+idea of the vampire than they had been by any indications of tigers or
+wild-boars, the fellow explained that he had felt no sensation, unless
+it might have been an agreeable coolness of his sand-baked feet.
+The incident seemed so disagreeable and so likely of recurrence
+that Colonel Perez ever afterward slept with his feet rolled up in a
+variety of fantastic draperies, while Mr. Marcoy for several nights
+retained his boots.
+
+[Illustration: "PEPE GARCIA, WHO MARCHED AHEAD, ANNOUNCED THE PRINT OF
+A SOUTH AMERICAN TIGER."--P. 132.]
+
+The path along the river-sands would have been voluntarily followed by
+all the more irresponsible portion of the party, notwithstanding the
+blinding heats, on account of its smoother footing. The cascarilleros,
+however, objected that its tufts of canes and passifloras offered no
+promise for their researches. A compromise was effected. The porters,
+under the command of Juan of Aragon, were allowed to follow the shore,
+and were armed with a supply of fish-hooks to induce them to add from
+time to time to the alarmingly diminished supply of provisions. The
+grandees of the party followed the Bolivians, whose specialty entitled
+them to control practically the direction of the route, and plunged
+into the woods to botanize, to explore and to search for game.
+A system of conversation by means of shouts and pistol-shots was
+established between the two divisions. The next night proved the
+wisdom of this bifurcation. The united booty of earth, air and water,
+under the form of a squirrel, a pair of toucans and a variety of fish,
+afforded a meal which the porters described as _comida opipara_ or
+a sumptuous festival. Lulled and comforted by the sensation which a
+contented stomach wafts toward the brain, the explorers, after
+washing their hands and rinsing their mouths at the riverside, betook
+themselves to a cheerful repose _sub jove_, the locality offering no
+reeds of the articulated species with which to construct a shelter.
+
+The party, then, betook themselves to slumber with unusual
+contentment, repeating the splendid supper in their dreams, with the
+addition of every famous wine that Oporto and Rheims could dispense,
+when they were awakened by a sudden and terrible storm. A waterspout
+stooped over the forest and sucked up a mass of crackling branches.
+The camp-fire hissed and went out in a fume of smoke. A continuity of
+thunder, far off at first, but approaching nearer and nearer, kept up
+a constant and increasing fusillade, to whose reports was soon added
+the voice of the Cconi, lashed in its bed and bellowing like the sea.
+The surprising tumult went on in a _crescendo_. The hardly-interrupted
+charges of the lightning gave to the eye a strange vision of flying
+woods and soaring branches. Startled, trembling and sitting bolt
+upright, the adventurers asked if their last hour were come. The rain
+undertook to answer in spinning down upon their heads drops that were
+like bullets, and which for some time were taken for hail. Fearing to
+be maimed or blinded as they sat, the party crowded together, placing
+themselves back to back; and, unable to lay their heads under their
+wings like the birds, sheltered them upon their knees under the
+protection of their crossed arms. The fearful deluge of heated shot
+lasted until morning. Then, as if in laughter, the sun came radiantly
+out, the landscape readjusted its disheveled beauties, and the ground,
+covered with boughs distributed by the whirlwind, greedily drank in
+the waters from heaven. Soon there remained nothing of the memorable
+tempest but the diamonds falling in measured cadence from the
+refreshed and stiffened leaves.
+
+Up to sunrise the unfortunates rested stoically silent, their knees in
+their mouths, and receiving the visitation like a group of statuary.
+The rain ceasing with the same promptitude with which it had risen,
+they raised their heads and looked each other in the face, like the
+enemies over the fire in Byron's _Dream_. Each countenance was blue,
+and decorated with long flat locks of adhesive hair. The teeth of the
+whole party were chattering like a concert of castanets. The sun, like
+a practical joker, laughed ironically at the general picture.
+
+The first hours of morning were consecrated to a general examination
+of the stores, especially the precious specimens of cinchona. Bundles
+were restrapped, the damp provisions laid out in the sun, and the
+clothing of the party, even to the most intimate garment, was taken
+down to the river to be refreshed and furbished up. A common disaster
+had created a common cause amongst the whole troop, and with one
+accord everybody--peons, mozos, interpreters, bark-strippers and
+gentlemen--set in motion a grand cleaning-up day. Napoleon-like, they
+washed their dirty linen in the family. Whoever had seen the strangers
+coming and going from the beach to the woods, clothed in most
+abbreviated fashion, and seeming as familiar to the uniform as if they
+had always worn it under the charitable mantle of the woods, would
+have taken them for a savage tribe in the midst of its encampment. It
+is probable they were so seen.
+
+Thanks to the intense heat of the sun-shine, the garments and baggage
+of the expedition were quickly dried. The first were donned, the last
+was loaded on the porters, and the line of march was taken up. Up to
+noon the road lay along the blazing sands under a sun of fire. All the
+members of the party felt fresh and hardy after the involuntary bath,
+except one of the Indians, who was affected with a kind of ophthalmia.
+This attack, which Mr. Marcoy attributed partly to the glare, partly
+to the wet, and partly to a singular hobby peculiar to the individual
+of sleeping with his eyes wide open, was of no long duration. The pain
+which he complained of disappeared with a few hours of exercise and
+with the determination he showed in staring straight at the god of
+day, who, as if in memory of the worship formerly extended toward him
+in the country, deigned to serve as oculist for the sufferer. A little
+before sunset halt was made for the night-camp in the centre of a
+beach protected by clumps of reeds in three quarters of the wind. The
+Indian porters, despatched for fish and firewood, returned suddenly
+with a frightened mien to say that they had fallen into the midst of
+a camp of savages. The white men quickly rejoined them at the spot
+indicated, where they found a single hut in ruins, made of reeds which
+appeared to have been cut for the construction some fortnight before,
+and strewn with fire-brands, banana skins and the tail of a large
+fish. Pepe Garcia, consulted on these indications, explained that it
+was in reality the camping-place of some of the savage Siriniris, but
+that the narrowness of the hut seemed to indicate that not more than
+two of the Indians, probably a man and woman, had resided there during
+a short fishing-excursion.
+
+This discovery cast a shade over the countenances of the porters.
+After having collected the provisions necessary for a slender supper,
+they drew apart, and, while cooking was going on, began to converse
+with each other in a low voice. No notice was taken of their behavior,
+however, though it would have required little imagination to guess
+the subject of their parliament. The tired eyes of the explorers were
+already closed, while their ears, more alert, could hear the confused
+murmur proceeding from the Indians' quarter, where the disposition
+seemed to be to prolong the watch indefinitely.
+
+[Illustration: "NAPOLEON-LIKE, THEY WASHED THEIR DIRTY LINEN IN THE
+FAMILY"--P. 135.]
+
+The dark hours filed past, and jocund day, according to Shakespeare
+and Romeo, stood tiptoe on the mountain-tops of Camanti and Basiri,
+when the travelers were awakened by a fierce and terrible cry. Lifting
+their heads in astonishment, they perceived the faithful Pepe Garcia,
+his face disfigured with rage, and his fist shaking vigorously in the
+direction of the Indians, who sat lowering and sullen in their places.
+Aragon and the cascarilleros, collected around the chief interpreter,
+far from trying to calm his anger, appeared to feed it by their
+suggestions. An explanation of the scene was demanded. Eight of the
+bearers, it appeared, had deserted, leaving to their comrades the
+pleasure of watching over the packages of cinchona, but assuming for
+their part the charge of a good fraction of the provisions, which
+they had disappeared with for the relief of their fellow-porters.
+This copious bleeding of the larder drew from Colonel Perez a terrible
+oath, and occasioned a more vivid sentiment in the entrails of Marcoy
+than the defection of the men. If the evil was grand, the remedy was
+correspondingly difficult. Indolent or mercurial at pleasure, the
+Indians had doubtless threaded the woods with winged feet, and were
+now far away. Mr. Marcoy proposed therefore to continue the march
+without them, but to set down a heavy account of bastinadoes to their
+credit when they should turn up again at Marcapata. This proposition,
+as it erred on the side of mercy, was unanimously rejected, and a
+scouting-party was ordered in pursuit, consisting of the bark-hunters
+and Juan of Aragon, to whom for the occasion Pepe Garcia confided his
+remarkable fowling-piece.
+
+[Illustration: "ARAGON AND HIS MEN FELL UPON THE DESERTERS WITHOUT
+MERCY."--P. 138.]
+
+In the afternoon the extemporized police reappeared. The fugitives had
+been found tranquilly sitting on the banks of the river, distending
+their abdomens with the stolen preserves and chocolate. Aragon and his
+men fell upon the deserters without mercy. The former, battering away
+at them with the stock of his gun, and the latter, exercising upon
+their shoulders whatever they possessed in the way of lassoes,
+axe-handles and sabre-blades, maintained the argument effectually for
+some time in this way, and did not descend to questions until muscular
+fatigue caused them to desist. The catechism subsequently put to the
+porters elicited the reply, from the spokesman of the recusants,
+that they were tired of being afraid of the wild Indians; that they
+objected to marching into the dens of tigers; that, perceiving their
+rations diminished from day to day, they had imagined the time not far
+distant when the same would be withdrawn altogether. It was curious,
+as it seemed to Marcoy when the argument was rehearsed to him
+presently, that the fellows made no complaint of being footsore,
+overcharged with burdens or conducted into paths too difficult for
+them. A lurking admiration for the vigor with which, after all, they
+played their crushing part of beasts of burden, procured them immunity
+from further punishment after their return. Their bivouacs were simply
+watched on the succeeding nights by Bolivian sentinels.
+
+After a few minutes allowed the strayed sheep to rub their bruises,
+the march was continued. The afternoon afforded a succession of the
+same sandy riverbanks, dressed with reeds, false maize, calceolarias
+and purple passion-flowers, and yielding for sole booty a brace of
+wild black ducks, and an opossum holding in her pouch five saucy and
+scolding little ones. The natural civet employed as a cosmetic by this
+animal forbade the notion of using it for food, and it was thrown with
+its family into the river, after being deprived of its glossy skin.
+
+As evening approached, and as all eyes were exploring the banks for a
+suitable camping-ground, a spacious and even beach was fixed upon as
+offering all the requisite conveniences. It was agreed to halt there.
+Attaining the locality, however, they were amazed to find all the
+traces of a previous occupation. Several sheds, formed of bamboo
+hurdles set up against the ground with sticks, like traps, were
+grouped together. Under each was a hearth, a simple excavation,
+two feet across and a few inches deep, and filled with ashes. A few
+arrows, feathers and rude pieces of pottery were scattered around.
+They greeted these Indian relics as Crusoe did the footprints of the
+savages. Nor was it more reassuring to observe, among other callers
+like themselves who had left their visiting-cards at the doors since
+the departure of the proprietors, the sign-manual of jaguars and
+tapirs, whose footprints were plainly visible on the gravel.
+
+A close examination was made of every detail pertaining to the huts
+and their accessories, and the interpreters were asked if it would be
+prudent to encamp in a spot thus leased in advance. Pepe Garcia and
+Aragon were of opinion that it would be better to pass the night
+there, assuring their employers that there would be no danger in
+sleeping among the teraphim of the savages, provided that nothing was
+touched or displaced. Their motion was promptly adopted, to the great
+discomfiture of the porters, who were poised on one foot ready for
+flight. A salute of five shots was fired, with a vague intention
+of giving any listeners the highest possible opinion of the white
+explorers as a military power. An enormous fire was kindled, sentinels
+were posted, and the party turned in, taking care, however, during the
+whole night to close but one eye at a time.
+
+[Illustration: "THEY GREETED THESE INDIAN RELICS AS CRUSOE DID THE
+FOOTPRINTS OF THE SAVAGES."--P. 138.]
+
+Day commenced to blush, when all ears were assaulted by a concerted
+howl, proceeding from behind a bed of canes on the other side of the
+river. "_Alerta! los Chunchos!_" cried the sentinel. The three words
+produced a startling effect: the porters sprang up like frightened
+deer; Mr. Marcoy grasped a sheaf of pencils and a box of water-colors
+with a warlike air, and the colonel's lips were crisped into a
+singular smile, indicative of lively emotions. Hardly were the
+travelers clothed and armed when the reeds parted with a rattling
+noise, and three nude Indians, sepia-colored and crowned with tufts of
+hair like horses' tails, leaped out like jacks-in-the-box. At sight of
+the party standing to receive them they redoubled their clamor, then,
+flourishing their arms and legs and turning continually round, they
+gradually revolved into the presence of the explorers. They selected
+as chiefs and sachems of the party such as bore weapons, being the
+colonel, Marcoy and the two interpreters. These they clasped in a
+warm, fulsome embrace: they were smeared from head to foot with rocoa
+(crude arnotta), and their passage through the river having dissolved
+this pigment, they printed themselves off, in this act of amity, upon
+the persons and clothing of their hosts. While the white men, with a
+very bad grace, were cleaning off these tokens of natural affection,
+the new-comers went on to present their civilities all around. Two of
+the porters they recognized at once, with their eagle eyesight, from
+having relieved them of their shirts while the latter were working
+out some penalty at the governor's farm of Sausipata, and proceeded to
+claim a warm acquaintance on that basis; but the bearers, with equally
+lively memories of the affront, responded simply with a frown and the
+epithet of _Sua-sua_--double thief.
+
+Pepe Garcia undertook a colloquy, and Aragon, not to be behindhand,
+flashed a few words across the conversation, right and left as it
+were, his expressions appearing to be in a different tongue from those
+used by the chief interpreter, and both utterly without perceptible
+resemblance to the rolling consonants and gutturals of the savages.
+Marcoy imbibed a strong impression that the only terms understood in
+common were the words of Spanish with which the palaver was thickly
+interlarded. This was the first time the interpreters were put on
+their mettle in a strictly professional sense, and the test was not
+altogether triumphant. However, by a careful raising of the voice
+in all difficult passages, and a wild, expressive pantomime, an
+understanding was arrived at.
+
+The visitors belonged to the tribe of Siriniris, inhabiting the space
+comprised between the valleys of Ocongate and Ollachea, and extending
+eastwardly as far as the twelfth degree. They lived at peace with
+their neighbors, the Huat-chipayris and the Pukiris. For several days
+the reports of the Christian guns (_tasa-tasa_) had advertised them
+of the presence of white men in the valley, and, curious to judge of
+their numbers, they had approached. They had formed a cunning escort
+to the party, always faithful but never seen, since the encampment
+at Maniri: every camping-ground since that particular bivouac they
+faithfully described. They were, of course, in particular and direful
+need of _sirutas_ and _bambas_ (knives and hatchets), but their fears
+of the _tasa-tasa_, or guns, was still stronger than their desires,
+and their courage had not, until they saw the strangers domiciled as
+guests in their own habitations, attained the firmness and consistency
+necessary for a personal approach. The three dancing ambassadors were
+ministers plenipotentiary on the part of their tribe, located in a
+bamboo metropolis five miles off.
+
+The white men could not well avoid laying down their _tasa-tasa_ and
+disbursing _sirutas_ and _bambas_. The savages, after this triumph
+of diplomacy, suddenly turned, and, thrusting their fingers in their
+mouths, emitted a shrill note, which had the effect of enchanting the
+forest of rushes across the river, and causing it to give birth to a
+whole ballet of naked coryphei. Nine men, seven women and three dogs
+composed the spectacle, of which the masculine part, the human and
+the canine, proceeded to swim the stream and fraternize with the
+strangers. The women rested on the bank like river-nymphs: their
+costume was somewhat less prudish than that of the men, the coat of
+rocoa being confined to their faces, which were further decorated with
+joints of reed thrust through the nose and ears. A glance of curiosity
+darted across the water by the colonel was surprised in its flight by
+the ambassadors, who addressed a hasty word or two to their ladies:
+the latter, with one quick and cat-like gesture, whipped off each a
+branch of the nearest foliage, and were dressed in a single instant.
+
+To reward all these vociferous mendicants with the invaluable cutlery
+was hardly prudent. Seeing the hesitation of their visitors, the
+savages adopted other tactics. Hurling themselves across the river,
+they quickly reappeared, armed with all the temptations they could
+think of to induce the strangers to barter. The scene of these savages
+coming to market was a picturesque one. Entering the water, provided
+with their objects of exchange, which they held high above their
+heads, and swimming with the right arm only, they began to cut the
+river diagonally. The lifting of the waves and the dash of spray
+almost concealed the file of dusky heads. Nothing could be plainly
+seen but the left arms, standing out of the water as stiff and
+inflexible as so many bars of bronze, relieved against the silvery
+brightness of the water. These advancing arms were adorned with the
+material of traffic--bird-skins of variegated colors, bows and arrows,
+and live tamed parrots standing upon perches of bamboo. The white
+spectators could not but admire the native vigor, elegance and
+promptitude of their motions as they rose from the water like Tritons,
+and, throwing their treasures down in a heap, bounded forward to give
+their visitors the conventional signals of friendship. A rapid
+bargain was concluded, in which the sylvan booty of the wild men (not
+forgetting the prudent exaction of their weapons) was entirely made
+over to the custody of the explorers in exchange for a few Birmingham
+knives worth fourpence each.
+
+However curious and amicable might be their new relations with the
+savages, the party were desirous to put an end to them as soon as
+possible. Pepe Garcia announced that the pale chiefs, wishing to
+resume their march, were about to separate from them. This decision
+appeared to be unpleasant or distressful in their estimation, and
+they tried to reverse it by all sorts of arguments. No answer being
+volunteered, they shouted to their women to await them, and betook
+themselves to walking with the party. One of the three ambassadors, a
+graceful rogue of twenty-five, marked all over with rocoa and lote,
+so as to earn for himself the nickname of "the Panther," gamboled
+and caracoled in front of the procession as if to give it an
+entertainment. His two comrades had garroted with their arms the neck
+of the chief interpreter: another held Juan of Aragon by the skirt of
+his blouse, and regulated his steps by those of the youth. This accord
+of barbarism and civilization had in it something decidedly graceful,
+and rather pathetic: if ever the language natural to man was found,
+the medium in circulation before our sickly machinery of speech came
+to be invented, it was in this concert of persuasive action and tender
+cooing notes. The main body of the Siriniris marched pellmell along
+with the porters, whom this vicinage made exceedingly uncomfortable,
+and who were perspiring in great drops.
+
+At the commencement of a wood the whites embraced the occasion to take
+formal leave of their new acquaintances. As they endeavored to turn
+their backs upon them they were at once surrounded by the whole band,
+crying and gesticulating, and opposing their departure with a sort of
+determined playfulness.
+
+At the same time a word often repeated, the word _Huatinmio_, began to
+enter largely into their conversation, and piqued the curiosity of
+the historiographer. Marcoy begged the interpreter to procure him the
+explanation of this perpetual shibboleth. Half by signs, half in the
+polyglot jargon which he had been employing with the Siriniris, Garcia
+managed to understand that the word in question was the name of their
+village, situated at a small distance and in a direction which they
+indicated. In this retreat, they said, no inhabitants remained but
+women, children and old men, the rest of the braves being absent on
+a chase. They proposed a visit to their capital, where the strangers,
+they said, honored and cherished by the tribe, might pass many
+enviable days.
+
+The proposed excursion, which would cause a loss of considerable time
+and a deflection from the intended route, was declined in courteous
+terms by Marcoy through the interpretation of Pepe Garcia. Among
+civilized folk this urbane refusal would have sufficed, but the
+savages, taking such a reply as a challenge to verbal warfare,
+returned to the charge with increased tenacity. It were hard to say
+what natural logic they put in practice or what sylvan persuasions
+they wrought by, but their peculiar mode of stroking the white men's
+backs with their hands, and the softer and still softer inflections
+which they introduced into their voices, would have melted hearts of
+marble. In brief, the civilized portion adopted the more weakly part
+and allowed themselves to be led by the savage portion.
+
+The colonel and Pepe Garcia were still more easily persuaded than Mr.
+Marcoy, and only awaited his adhesion. When it was finally announced
+the Siriniris renewed their gambols and uttered shouts of delight.
+They then took the head of the excursion. A singularity in their
+guides, which quickly attracted the notice of the explorers, was the
+perfect indifference with which they took either the clearings or the
+thickets in their path. Where the strangers were afraid of tearing
+their garments, these unprotected savages had no care whatever for
+their skins. It is true that their ingenuity in gliding through the
+labyrinth resembled magic. However the forest might bristle with
+undergrowth, they never thought of breaking down obstacles or of
+cutting them, as the equally practiced Bolivians did, with a knife.
+They contented themselves with putting aside with one hand the tufts
+of foliage as if they had been curtains or draperies, and that with an
+easy decision of gesture and an elegance of attitude which are hardly
+found outside of certain natural tribes.
+
+The city of Huatinmio proved to be a group of seven large sheds
+perched among plaintains and bananas, divided into stalls, and
+affording shelter for a hundred individuals. The most sordid
+destitution--if ignorance of comfort can be called
+destitution--reigned everywhere around. The women were especially
+hideous, and on receipt of presents of small bells and large needles
+became additionally disagreeable in their antics of gratitude. The
+bells were quickly inserted in their ears, and soon the whole village
+was in tintinnabulation.
+
+A night was passed in the hospitality of these barbarians, who vacated
+their largest cabin for their guests. A repast was served, consisting
+of stewed monkey: no salt was used in the cookery, but on the other
+hand a dose of pimento was thrown in, which brought tears to the eyes
+of the strangers and made them run to the water-jar as if to save
+their lives. The evening was spent in a general conversation with the
+Siriniris, who were completely mystified by the form and properties of
+a candle which Mr. Marcoy drew from his baggage and ignited. The wild
+men passed it from hand to hand, examining it, and singeing themselves
+in turn. Still another marvel was the sheet of paper on which the
+artist essayed a portrait of one of his hosts. The finished sketch
+did not appear to attract them at all, or to raise in their minds
+the faintest association with the human form, but the texture and
+whiteness of the sheet excited their lively admiration, and they
+passed it from one to another with many exclamations of wonder.
+Meantime, a number of questions were suggested and proposed through
+the interpreter.
+
+The formality of marriage among the Siriniris was found to be quite
+unknown; the most rudimentary idea of divine worship could not be
+discovered; the treatment of the aged was shown to be contemptuous
+and neglectful in the extreme; and the lines of demarcation with the
+beasts seemed to be but feebly traced. Finally, Mr. Marcoy begged the
+interpreter to propound the delicate inquiry whether, among the viands
+with which they nourished or had formerly nourished themselves, human
+flesh had found a place. Garcia hesitated, and at first declined
+to push the interrogation, but after some persuasion consented. The
+Siriniris were not in the least shocked at the question, and answered
+that the flesh of man, especially in infancy, was a delicious food,
+far better than the monkey, the tapir or the peccary; that their
+nation, in the days of its power, frequently used it at the great
+feasts; but that the difficulty of procuring such a rarity had
+increased until they were now forced to strike it from their bill of
+fare.
+
+The night passed without disturbance, and the next day's parting was
+accompanied by reiterated requests for a repetition of the visit. The
+Panther, who since their arrival had oppressed the travelers with a
+multitude of officious attentions, escorted them into the woods, and
+there took leave of them with a gesture of his hand, relieving their
+eyes of his slippery, snake-like robe of spots. A knife from their
+stores, slung round his neck like a locket, smote his breast at each
+step as he danced backward, and a couple of large fish-hooks glanced
+in his ears.
+
+With a feeling of relief and satisfied curiosity the exploring party
+left behind them the traces of these children of Nature, and returned
+toward the river. The cascarilleros, all for their business,
+had regretted the waste of time, and now betook themselves to an
+examination of the woods with all their energy. After several hours
+of march their efforts were crowned with success. Eusebio presently
+rejoined his employers, showing leaves and berries of the _Cinchona
+scrobiculata_ and _pubescens_: the peons, on their side, had
+discovered isolated specimens of the _Calisaya_, which, joined with
+those found on Mount Camanti, indicated an extended belt of that
+precious species. This was not the best. A veritable treasure which
+they had unearthed, worth all the others put together, was a line of
+those violet cinchonas which the native exporters call _Cascarilla
+morada_, and the botanists _Cinchona Boliviana_. The trees of this
+kind were grouped in threes and fours, and extended for half a mile.
+This repeated proof that the most valuable of all the cinchonas,
+together with nearly every one of the others, were to be discovered
+in a small radius along the valley of the Cconi, filled the explorers
+with triumph, and demonstrated beyond a doubt the sagacity of Don
+Santo Domingo in organizing the expedition.
+
+The purpose and intention of the journey was now abundantly fulfilled.
+Had the travelers rested satisfied with the liberal indications they
+had found, and consented to place themselves between the haunts of
+the savages and the abodes of civilization, with a tendency and
+determination toward the latter, they might have returned with safety
+as with glory. The estimate made by Eusebio, however, of the trend or
+direction of the calisaya groves, induced him to forsake the bed of
+the Cconi, and strike south-eastwardly, so as to cross the Ollachea
+and the Ayapata.
+
+"But the mountains are disappearing," hazarded Mr. Marcoy. "Will not
+the cinchonas disappear with them?"
+
+"Oh," answered the majordomo, like a pedagogue to a confident
+school-boy, "the señor knows better how to put ink or color on a sheet
+of paper than how to judge of these things. The plain, the _campo
+llano_, is far enough to the east. Before we should see the
+disappearance of the mountains, we should have to cross as many hills
+and ravines as we have left behind us."
+
+"What do you think of doing, then?" naturally demanded Marcoy, who had
+long since begun to feel that the expedition had but one chief, and
+that was the sepia-colored cascarillero from Bolivia,
+
+"Everything and nothing," answered Eusebio.
+
+These enigmas always carry the day. The apparatus of march was
+once more set in motion toward the adjacent water-sheds. After a
+considerable journey--rewarded, it must be said, with a succession of
+cinchona discoveries--they halted near a clearing in the forest, where
+large heaps of stones and pebbles, arranged in semicircles, attracted
+their attention. The cascarilleros explained this appearance as due
+to former arrangements for gold-washing in an old river-bed, the San
+Gavan or the Ayapata, that had now changed its locality.
+
+While examining the unusual appearance an abominable clamor burst from
+the woods around, and a band of Siriniris appeared, led by a lusty
+ruffian crowned with oriole feathers, whom the travelers recognized as
+having been among their previous acquaintances.
+
+The encounter was very disagreeable, but the strangers determined to
+make the best of it. The manner of this band of Indians was somewhat
+different from that of the others. They brought nothing for barter,
+and had an indescribably coarse and hardy style of behavior.
+
+The travelers determined to buy a little information, if nothing
+better, with their knives and fish-hooks. Garcia was accordingly
+instructed to demand the meaning of the heaps and causeways of stones.
+The savages laughed at first, but finally informed the visitors that
+the constructions which puzzled them so had been made by people of
+their own race many years ago, for the purpose of gathering gold from
+the river which used to run along there, but which now flowed seven
+miles off.
+
+This information was dear to the historic instinct of Marcoy. He
+spoke, by his usual proxy, to the Indian of the oriole, commanding him
+not to begin every explanation by laughing, as he had been doing, but
+to answer intelligently, promising a reward of several knives. The
+savage exchanged a rapid glance with his fellows, and then he and they
+stood up as stiff and mute as the trees. Marcoy then asked him if he
+had never heard his father or his grandfather speak of the great city
+of San Gavan, built hereabouts formerly by the Spanish chevaliers, and
+which the Caranga and Suchimani Indians from the Inambari River had
+destroyed by fire.
+
+The evident recognition of this legend by the savages, and their
+rapid exchange among themselves of the words _sacapa huayris Ipaños_,
+induced Marcoy to ask if they could guide them to the site of the
+former city. They answered that a day's march would be sufficient, and
+pointed with their arms in the direction of north-north-west.
+
+The temptation to see the place whose golden renown, after having made
+the tour of the American continent, had reached Spain and the world at
+large, was too strong to be resisted. Colonel Perez, besides the magic
+attraction which the mention of gold had for him, felt his national
+pride touched by the idea of a place where his compatriots had added
+such magnificence to the Spanish name, and gained so many ingots of
+gold by paddling in the streams. The cascarilleros were delighted to
+extend their journey, in hopes of yet larger discoveries. As for the
+porters, since the manifestations of the savages they clung to the
+party with as much anxiety as they had ever shown to escape from it.
+
+In 1767 the city of San Gavan, remaining intact amid the ruin of all
+its neighbors, was the sole disburser of the riches of the Caravaya
+Valley. The gold-dust, collected throughout the whole territory on a
+government monopoly, was brought thither upon the backs of Indians,
+melted into ingots, and distributed to Lima and the world at large.
+On the night of the 15th and 16th of December in that year the
+wealthy city was fired by the Carangas and the Suchimanis, and all the
+inhabitants slain with arrows or clubs. The first lords of the soil
+had resumed their rights.
+
+When the news of the event was brought to Lima, the viceroy of
+the period, Antonio Amat, swore on a piece of the true cross to
+exterminate every Indian in Peru. It is to the persuasions of his
+favorite, Mariquita Gallegas, that the preservation of the native
+tribes from a bloody extirpation is due. This woman, _La Perichola_,
+whose caricatured likeness we see in the most agreeable of Offenbach's
+operas, and whose deeds of mercy and edifying end in a convent entitle
+her to some charitable consideration, persuaded her royal lover to
+operate on the natives with missionaries and teachers rather than with
+fire and sword. Antonio Amat yielded, and the Indians have survived.
+
+[Illustration: "ANOTHER SAVAGE HAD FOUND A PAIR OF LINEN
+PANTALOONS."--P. 146.]
+
+Let no traveler go to South America and cross the Andes with the idea
+of unearthing a Nineveh or a Babylon on the site of San Gavan. The
+emissaries of Don Santo Domingo were quickly standing, among the
+grinning and amused Indians, on the locality of the Golden Depot of
+San Gavan. But Nature had thoroughly reclaimed her own, and the place,
+indicated again and again by the savages with absolute unanimity,
+showed nothing but mounds of fern and moss under canopies of forest
+trees.
+
+A day's rest and a sketch or two were consecrated by Marcoy to this
+historic spot, the grave of a civilization. It had been well if he
+had restrained his feelings of romance, and betaken himself with his
+companions to the homeward track.
+
+As the explorers were breakfasting in the morning on a squirrel and
+a couple of birds shot among the vanished streets of San Gavan, a
+disagreeable incident supervened. The wild Indians had disappeared
+over-night. But now, seemingly born instantaneously from the trees, a
+throng of Siriniris burst upon the scene, rushing up to the travelers,
+straining them repeatedly in a rude embrace, then leaving them, then
+assaulting them again, and accompanying every contact with the eternal
+cry, _Siruta inta menea_--"Give me a knife." Each member of the troop
+had now six savages at his heels, and they were not those of the day
+before, but a new and rougher band. The chiefs of the party rushed
+together and brandished their muskets. This forced the savages
+to retire, but gave to the rencounter that hostile air which, in
+consideration of the disparity of numbers, ought at all hazards to
+have been avoided. The wild men quickly formed a circle around the
+artillery. The latter, fearing for their porters and the precious
+baggage, leaped through this circle and joined their servants, making
+believe to cock their fire-arms. Upon this the Indians, half afraid of
+the guns, vanished into the woods, first picking up whatever clothing
+and utensils they could lay their hands on. In an instant they were
+showing these trophies to their rightful owners from a safe distance,
+laughing as if they would split their sides. One of the naked rascals
+had seized a flannel undershirt of the colonel's, which was drying
+on a branch. His efforts to introduce his great feet into the
+sleeves were excruciating. Another savage had found a pair of linen
+pantaloons, which he was endeavoring to put on like a coat, appearing
+much embarrassed with the posterior portion, which completely masked
+his face. Aragon had seen a young reprobate of his own age make off
+with a pair of socks of his property. Detecting the rogue half hidden
+by a tree, the mozo made a sortie, seized the Indian, and by a
+violent shake brought the property out of his mouth, where it had been
+concealed as in a natural pocket.
+
+The travelers immediately threw themselves into marching order and
+took up their line of route. The savages followed. At the first
+obstacle, a mass of matted trees, they easily rejoined the party of
+whites.
+
+Then, for the first time, the idea of their power seemed to strike
+them, and they precipitated themselves upon the porters, who took to
+flight, rolling from under their packs like animals of burden. In a
+moment every article of baggage, every knife and weapon, was seized,
+and the red-skins, singing and howling, were making off through the
+woods. Among them was now seen the Siriniri with orioles' feathers,
+who must have guided them to their prey.
+
+The expedition was pillaged, and pillaged as a joke. The thieves were
+heard laughing as they scampered off like deer through the woods.
+
+It was hard to realize at once the gravity of the misfortune. No one
+was hurt, no one was insulted. But provisions, clothing, articles of
+exchange and weapons were all gone, except such arms and ammunition as
+the travelers carried on their persons. A collection of cinchonas was
+in possession of one of the Bolivians, though it represented but
+a fraction of the species discovered. The besiegers, however, had
+disappeared, and a westerly march was taken up. Good time was made
+that day, and a heavy night's sleep was the consequence. With the
+morning light came the well-remembered and hateful cry, and the little
+army found itself surrounded by a throng of merry naked demons, among
+whom were some who had not profited by the distribution of the spoils.
+At the magic word _siruta_ all these new-comers rushed in a mass upon
+the white men. Marcoy managed to slip his fine ivory-handled machete
+within his trowser leg, but every other cutting tool disappeared as if
+by magic from the possession of the explorers. The shooting-utensils
+the savages, believing them haunted, would not touch. Then, half
+irritated at the exhaustion of the booty, the amiable children of
+Nature burst out into open derision. The artists of the tribe, filling
+their palms with rocoa, and moistening the same with saliva, went up
+to their late patrons and began to decorate their faces. The latter,
+judging patience their best policy, sat in silence while the delicate
+fancy of the savages expended itself in arabesques and flourishes.
+Perez and Aragon had their eyes surrounded with red spectacles. The
+face of Marcoy, covered with a heavy beard, only allowed room for
+a "W" on the forehead, and Pepe Garcia was quit for a set of
+interfacings like a checkerboard. Having thus signed their marks upon
+their visitors, the aborigines retired, catching up here and there
+a stray ball of cord or a strip of beef, saluting with the hand, and
+vanishing into the woods with the repeated compliment, _Eminiki_--"I
+am off."
+
+The victims rested motionless for fifteen minutes: then pellmell,
+through the thickest of the brush and down the steepest of the hill,
+blotted out under gigantic ferns and covered by umbrageous vines,
+stealing along water-courses and skirting the sides of the mountains,
+they rushed precipitately westward.
+
+Two months after the priest of Marcapata had dismissed with his
+benediction the party of confident and enthusiastic explorers, he
+received again his strayed flock, but this time in rags, armed with
+ammunitionless guns and one poor knife, wasted by hunger, baked by the
+sun, and tattooed like Polynesians by the briers and insects. The
+good man could not repress a tear. "Ah, my son," said he as he clasped
+Marcoy's hand, "see what it costs to go hunting the cascarilla in the
+land of the infidels!"
+
+The explorations started by Don Juan Sanz de Santo Domingo came to
+profitable result, but not to his advantage. Three weeks after the
+pioneers arrived again in Cuzco, Don Juan started another expedition,
+on a much larger scale, to accomplish the working of the cinchona
+valleys, under charge of the same Bolivians, who could make like a bee
+for every tree they had discovered. A detachment of soldiers was
+to protect the party, and the working force was more than double.
+Finally, the night before the intended start, the Bolivian
+cascarilleros, with their examinador, disappeared together. It is
+probable that Don Juan's scheme, nursed, according to custom, with too
+much publicity, had attracted the attention of the merchants of Cuzco,
+who had found it profitable to buy off the bark-searchers for their
+own interest.
+
+The crash of this immense enterprise was too much for Don Juan.
+Threatened with creditors, Jews, _escribanos_ and the police, he
+retired to a silver-mine he was opening in the province of Abancay.
+This mine, in successful operation, he depended on for satisfying his
+creditors. He found it choked up, destroyed with a blast of powder by
+some enemy. Unable to bear the disappointment, Don Juan blew out his
+brains in the office belonging to his mine. A month afterward, Don
+Eugenic Mendoza y Jara, the bishop of Cuzco, sent a couple of Indians
+for the body, with instructions to throw it into a ditch: the men
+attached a rope to the feet and dragged it to a ravine, where dogs and
+vultures disposed of the unhallowed remains.
+
+
+
+
+A GLANCE AT THE SITE AND ANTIQUITIES OF ATHENS.
+
+
+The day is a happy one to the student-traveler from the Western World
+in which he first looks upon the lovely plain of Athens. Rounding the
+point where Hymettus thrusts his huge length into the sea, the long,
+featureless mountain-wall of Southern Attica suddenly breaks down, and
+gives place to a broad expanse of fertile, and well-cultivated soil,
+sloping gently back with ever-narrowing bounds until it reaches the
+foot-hills of lofty Pentelicus. The wooded heights of Parnes enclose
+it on the north, while bald Hymettus rears an impassable barrier along
+the south. In front of the gently recurved shore stretch the smooth
+waters of the Gulf of Salamis, while beyond rises range upon range of
+lofty mountain-peaks with strikingly varied outline, terminating on
+the one hand in the towering cone of Egina, and on the other in
+the pyramidal, fir-clad summit of Cithaeron. Upon the plain, at the
+distance of three or four miles from the sea, are several small rocky
+hills of picturesque appearance, isolated and seemingly independent,
+but really parts of a low range parallel to Hymettus. Upon one of the
+most considerable of these, whose precipitous sides make it a natural
+fortress, stood the Acropolis, and upon the group of lesser heights
+around and in the valleys between clustered the dwellings of ancient
+Athens.
+
+[Illustration: VIEW OF THE ACROPOLIS AND THE COLUMNS OF THE TEMPLE OF
+JUPITER OLYMPUS.]
+
+It was a fitting site for the capital of a people keenly sensitive to
+beauty, and destined to become the leaders of the world in matters
+of taste, especially in the important department of the Fine Arts.
+Nowhere are there more charming contrasts of mountain, sea and
+plain--nowhere a more perfect harmony of picturesque effect. The sea
+is not a dreary waste of waters without bounds, but a smiling gulf
+mirroring its mountain-walls and winding about embosomed isles, yet
+ever broadening as it recedes, and suggesting the mighty flood beyond
+from which it springs. The plain is not an illimitable expanse over
+which the weary eye ranges in vain in quest of some resting-place, but
+is so small as to be embraced in its whole contour in a single view,
+while its separate features--the broad, dense belt of olives which
+marks the bed of its principal stream, the ancient Cephissus, the
+vineyards, the grain-fields and the sunny hillside pastures--are made
+to produce their full impression. The mountains are not near enough to
+be obtrusive, much less oppressive; neither are they so distant as to
+be indistinct or to seem insignificant. Seen through the clear air,
+their naked summits are so sharply defined and so individual in
+appearance as to seem almost like sculptured forms chiseled out of the
+hard rock.
+
+The city which rose upon this favored spot was worthy of its
+surroundings. The home of a free and enterprising race endowed with
+rare gifts of intellect and sensibility, and ever on the alert for
+improvement, it became the nurse of letters and of arts, while the
+luxury begotten of prosperity awakened a taste for adornment, and
+the wealth acquired by an extended commerce furnished the means of
+gratifying it. The age of Pericles was the period of the highest
+national development. At that time were reared the celebrated
+structures in honor of the virgin-goddess who was the patron of
+Athens--the Parthenon, the Propylaea, the Erechtheum--which crowned
+the Acropolis, and were the glory of the city as they were the
+masterpieces of Grecian architecture. During the preceding half
+century many works of utility and of splendor had been constructed,
+and the city now became renowned not only in Greece, but throughout
+the ancient world, for the magnificence of its public buildings.
+Thucydides, writing about this time, says that should Athens be
+destroyed, posterity would infer from its ruins that the city had
+been twice as populous as it actually was. Demosthenes speaks of
+the strangers who came to visit its attractions. But the changes of
+twenty-three centuries have passed upon this splendor--a sad story
+of violence and neglect--and the queenly city has long been in the
+condition of ruin imagined by Thucydides. Still, the spell of her
+influence is not broken, and the charm which once drew so many
+visitors to her shrines still acts powerfully on the hearts of
+scholars in all lands, who, having looked up to her poets, orators
+and philosophers as teachers and loved them as friends, long to visit
+their haunts, to stand where they stood, to behold the scenes which
+they were wont to view, and to gaze upon what may remain of the great
+works of art upon which their admiration was bestowed.
+
+So the student-pilgrim from the Western World with native ardor
+strains his sight to catch the first glimpse of the Athenian plain and
+city. He is fresh from his studies, and familiar with what books teach
+of the geography of Greece and the topography of Athens. He needs
+not to be informed which mountain-range is Parnes, and which
+Pentelicus--which island is Salamis, and which Egina. Yet much of what
+he sees is a revelation to him. The mountains are higher, more varied
+and more beautiful than he had supposed, Lycabettus and the Acropolis
+more imposing, Pentelicus farther away, and the plain larger, the gulf
+narrower, and Egina nearer and more mountainous, than he had fancied.
+He is astonished at the smallness of the harbor at Peiraeus, having
+insensibly formed his conception of its size from the notices of the
+mighty fleets which sailed from it in the palmy days when Athens was
+mistress of the seas. He is not prepared to see the southern shore
+of Salamis so near to the Peiraeus, though it explains the close
+connection between that island and Athens, and throws some light upon
+the great naval defeat of the Persians. In short, while every object
+is recognized as it presents itself, yet a more correct conception is
+formed of its relative position and aspect from a single glance of the
+eye than had been acquired from books during years of study.
+
+Arrived at the city, his experience is the same. He needs no guide to
+conduct him to its antiquities, nor cicerone to explain in bad
+French or worse English their names and history. Still, unexpected
+appearances present themselves not unfrequently. Hastening toward the
+Acropolis, he will first inspect the remains of the great theatre of
+Dionysus, so familiar to him as the place where, in the presence
+of all the people and many strangers, were acted the plays of his
+favorite poets, Eschylus and Sophocles, and where they won many
+prizes. Hurrying over the eastern brow of the hill, he comes suddenly
+upon the spot, enters at the summit, as many an Athenian did in the
+olden time, and is smitten with amazement at the first glance, and led
+to question whether this be indeed the site of the ancient theatre. He
+finds, it is true, the topmost seats cut in the solid rock, row above
+row, stripped now of their marble lining and weather-worn, but yet the
+genuine ancient seats of the upper tier. These he expected to find.
+But whence are those fresh seats which fill the lower part of the
+hollow, arranged as neatly as if intended for immediate use? and
+whence the massive stage beyond? He bethinks himself that he has
+heard of recent excavations under the patronage of the government, and
+closer inspection shows that these are actually the lower seats of the
+theatre in the time of the emperor Hadrian, whose favorite residence
+was Athens, and who did so much to embellish the city. The front seats
+consist of massive stone chairs, each inscribed with the name of its
+occupant, generally the priestess of some one of the numerous gods
+worshiped by that people so given to idolatry. In the centre of the
+second row is an elevated throne inscribed with the name of Hadrian.
+The stage is seen to be the ancient Greek stage enlarged to the
+Roman size to suit the demands of a later style of theatrical
+representation.
+
+[Illustration: THEATRE OF DIONYSUS (BACCHUS).]
+
+After looking in vain for the seat occupied by the priestess of the
+Unknown God, our traveler passes on and enters with a beating heart
+the charmed precincts of the Acropolis itself. The Propylaea, which he
+has been accustomed to regard too exclusively as a mere entrance-gate
+to the glories beyond, impresses him with its size and grandeur, and
+the little temple of Victory by its side with its elegance.[A] But
+the steepness of the ascent perplexes him. It seems impracticable for
+horses, yet he knows by unexceptionable testimony that the Athenian
+youth prided themselves upon driving their matched steeds in the great
+Panathenaic procession which once every four years wound up the hill,
+bearing the sacred peplus to the temple of the goddess. A closer
+examination reveals the transverse creases of the pavement designed
+to give a footing to the beasts, as well as the marks of the
+chariot-wheels. Nevertheless, the ascent (and much more the descent)
+must have been a perilous undertaking, unless the teams were better
+broken than the various accounts of chariot-races furnished by the
+poets would indicate. Entering beneath the great gate, a little
+distance forward to the left may readily be found the site of the
+colossal bronze statue of the warrior-goddess in complete armor,
+formed by Phidias out of the spoils taken at Marathon. The square
+base, partly sunk in the uneven rock, is as perfect as if just put in
+readiness to receive the pedestal of that famous work. A road bending
+to the right and slightly hollowed out of the rock leads to the
+Parthenon. The outer platform which sustains this celebrated temple
+is partly cut from the rock of the hill and partly built up of common
+limestone. The inner one of three courses, as well as the whole
+superstructure, is formed of Pentelic marble of a compact crystalline
+structure and of dazzling whiteness. Long exposure has not availed to
+destroy its lustre, but only to soften its tone. The visitor, planting
+himself at the western front, is in a position to gain some adequate
+idea of the perfection of the noble building. The interior and central
+parts suffered the principal injury from the explosion of the Turkish
+powder magazine in 1687. The western front remains nearly entire.
+It has been despoiled, indeed, of its movable ornaments. The statues
+which filled the pediment are gone, with the exception of a fragment
+or two. The sculptured slabs have been removed from the spaces between
+the triglyphs, and the gilded shields which hung beneath have been
+taken down. Of the magnificent frieze, representing the procession
+of the great quadrennial festival, only the portion surrounding the
+western vestibule is still in place.[B]
+
+[Footnote A: The latter contains, among other relics of a balustrade
+which protected and adorned the platform of the temple, the
+exquisitely graceful torso of Victory untying her sandals, of which
+casts are to be seen in most of the museums of Europe.]
+
+[Footnote B: Among the figures of this bas-relief, twelve are
+recognized by their lofty stature and sitting posture as those of
+divinities. One group is represented in the engraving.]
+
+[Illustration: VICTORY UNTYING HER SANDALS.]
+
+[Illustration: TEMPLE OF VICTORY]
+
+[Illustration: THE PARTHENON.]
+
+Still, as these were strictly decorations, and wholly subordinate to
+the organic parts of the structure, their presence, while it would
+doubtless greatly enhance the effect of the whole, is not felt to be
+essential to its completeness. The whole Doric columns still bear
+the massive entablature sheltered by the covering roof. The simple
+greatness of the conception, the just proportion of the several parts,
+together with the elaborate finishing of the whole work, invest it
+with a charm such as the works of man seldom possess--the pure and
+lasting pleasure which flows from apparent perfection Entering the
+principal apartment of the building, traces are seen of the stucco and
+pictures with which the walls were covered when it was fitted up as
+a Christian church in the Byzantine period. Near the centre of the
+marble pavement is a rectangular space laid with dark stone from the
+Peirseus or from Eleusis. It marks the probable site of the colossal
+precious statue of the goddess in gold and ivory--one of the most
+celebrated works of Phidias. The smaller apartment beyond, accessible
+only from the opposite front of the temple, was used by the state as
+a place of deposit and safekeeping for bullion and other valuables in
+the care of the state treasurer.
+
+[Illustration: BAS RELIEF OF THE GODS (FRIEZE OF THE PARTHENON).]
+
+Having examined the great temple, and tested the curvature of
+its seemingly horizontal lines by sighting along the unencumbered
+platform, and having stopped at several points of the grand portico
+to admire the fine views of the city and surrounding country, the
+traveler picks his way northward, across a thick layer of fragments
+of columns, statues and blocks of marble, toward the low-placed,
+irregular but elegant Erechtheum, the temple of the most ancient
+worship and statue of the patron-goddess of the city. This building
+sits close by the northern as the Parthenon does by the southern wall
+of the enclosure. It has suffered equally with the other from the
+ravages of time, and its ruins, though less grand, are more beautiful.
+Most of the graceful Ionic columns are still standing, but large
+portions of the roof and entablature have fallen. Fragments of
+decorated cornice strew the ground, some of them of considerable
+length, and afford a near view of that delicate ornamentation and
+exquisite finish so rare outside the limits of Greece. The elevated
+porch of the Caryatides, lately restored by the substitution of a
+new figure in place of the missing statue now in the British Museum,
+attracts attention as a unique specimen of Greek art, and also as
+showing how far a skillful treatment will overcome the inherent
+difficulties of a subject. The row of fair maidens looking out toward
+the Parthenon do not seem much oppressed by the burden which rests
+upon them, while their graceful forms lend a pleasing variety to the
+scene. Passing out by the northern wing of the Propylaea, a survey is
+had of the numerous fragments of sculpture discovered among the ruins
+upon the hill, and temporarily placed in the ancient Pinacotheca.
+The eye rests upon sweet infant faces and upon rugged manly ones.
+Sometimes a single feature only remains, which, touched by the finger
+of genius, awakens admiration. A naked arm severed from the trunk, of
+feminine cast, but with muscles tightly strained and hand clenched as
+in agony, will arrest attention and dwell in the memory.
+
+North-west of the Acropolis, across a narrow chasm, lies the low,
+rocky height of the Areopagus, accessible at the southeast angle by
+a narrow flight of sixteen rudely-cut steps, which lead to a small
+rectangular excavation on the summit, which faces the Acropolis, and
+is surrounded upon three sides by a double tier of benches hewn out
+of the rock. Here undoubtedly the most venerable court of justice at
+Athens had its seat and tried its cases in the open air. Here too,
+without doubt, stood the great apostle when, with bold spirit and
+weighty words, he declared unto the men of Athens that God of whom
+they confessed their ignorance; who was not to be represented by gold
+or silver or stone graven by art and man's device; who dwelt not in
+temples made with hands, and needed not to be worshiped with men's
+hands. In no other place can one feel so sure that he comes upon the
+very footsteps of the apostle, and on no other spot can one better
+appreciate his high gifts as an orator or the noble devotion of his
+whole soul to the work of the Master. How poor in comparison with
+his life-work appear the performances of the greatest of the Athenian
+thinkers or doers!
+
+A little more than a quarter of a mile west of the Acropolis is
+another rocky hill--the Pnyx--celebrated as the place where the
+assembly of all the citizens met to transact the business of the
+state. A large semicircular area was formed, partly by excavation,
+partly by building up from beneath, the bounds of which can be
+distinctly traced. Considerable remains of the terrace-wall at the
+foot of the slope exist--huge stones twelve or fourteen feet in length
+by eight or ten in breadth. The chord of the semicircle is near the
+top of the hill, formed by the perpendicular face of the excavated
+rock, and is about four hundred feet in length by twenty in depth.
+Projecting from it at the centre, and hewn out of the same rock, is
+the bema or stone platform from which the great orators from the time
+of Themistocles and Aristides, and perhaps of Solon, down to the
+age of Demosthenes and the Attic Ten, addressed the mass of their
+fellow-citizens. It is a massive cubic block, with a linear edge of
+eleven feet, standing upon a graduated base of nearly equal height,
+and is mounted on either side by a flight of nine stone steps.
+From its connection with the most celebrated efforts of some of
+the greatest orators our race has yet seen, it is one of the most
+interesting relics in the world, and its solid structure will cause it
+to endure as long as the world itself shall stand, unless, as there is
+some reason to apprehend will be the case, it is knocked to pieces and
+carried off in the carpet-bags of travelers. No traces of the Agora,
+which occupied the shallow valley between the Pnyx and the Acropolis,
+remain. It was the heart of the city, and was adorned with numerous
+public buildings, porticoes, temples and statues. It was often
+thronged with citizens gathered for purposes of trade, discussion, or
+to hear and tell some new thing.
+
+[Illustration: PORCH OF THE CARYATIDES.]
+
+Half a mile or more to the south-east, on the banks of the Ilissus,
+stood a magnificent structure dedicated to Olympian Zeus--one of
+the four largest temples of Greece, ranking with that of Demeter at
+Eleusis and that of Diana at Ephesus. Its foundations remain, and
+sixteen of the huge Corinthian columns belonging to its majestic
+triple colonnade. One of these is fallen. Breaking up into the
+numerous disks of which it was composed--six and a half feet in
+diameter by two or more in thickness--and stretching out to a length
+of over sixty feet, it gives an impressive conception of the size of
+these columns, said to be the largest standing in Europe. The level
+area of the temple is now used as a training-ground for soldiers.
+Close by, and almost in the bed of the stream, which is dry the larger
+part of the year, issues from beneath a ledge of rock the copious
+fountain of sweet waters known to the ancients as Calirrhoe. It
+furnished the only good drinking-water of the city, and was used in
+all the sacrifices to the gods. A little way above, on the opposite
+bank of the Ilissus, is the site of the Panathenaic stadium, whose
+shape is perfectly preserved in the smooth grass-grown hollow with
+semicircular extremity which here lies at right angles to the stream,
+between parallel ridges partly artificial.
+
+Northward from the Acropolis, on a slight elevation, is the
+best-preserved and one of the most ancient structures of Athens--the
+temple of Theseus, built under the administration of Cimon by the
+generation preceding Pericles and the Parthenon. It is of the Doric
+order, and shaped like the Parthenon, but considerably inferior to
+it in size as well as in execution. It has been roofed with wood in
+modern times, and was long used as a church, but is now a place of
+deposit for the numerous statues and sculptured stones of various
+kinds--mostly sepulchral monuments--which have been recently
+discovered in and about the city. They are for the most part
+unimportant as works of art, though many are interesting from their
+antiquity or historic associations. Among these is the stone which
+once crowned the burial-mound on the plain of Marathon. It bears a
+single figure, said to represent the messenger who brought the tidings
+of victory to his countrymen.
+
+Near the Theseium was the double gate (Dipylum) in the ancient wall
+of the city whence issued the Sacred Way leading to Eleusis, and
+bordered, like the Appian Way at Rome, with tombs, many of them
+cenotaphs of persons who died in the public service and were deemed
+worthy of a monument in the public burying-ground. Within a few years
+an excavation has been made through an artificial mound of ashes,
+pottery and other refuse emptied out of the city, and a section of a
+few rods of this celebrated road has been laid bare. The sepulchral
+monuments are ranged on one side rather thickly, and crowd somewhat
+closely upon the narrow pavement. They are, for the most part, simple,
+thick slabs of white marble, with a triangular or pediment-shaped top,
+beneath which is sculptured in low relief the closing scene of the
+person commemorated, followed by a short inscription. The work is done
+in an artistic style worthy of the publicity its location gave it. On
+one of these slabs you recognize the familiar full-length figure of
+Demosthenes, standing with two companions and clasping in a parting
+grasp the hand of a woman, who is reclining upon her deathbed. The
+inscription is, _Collyrion, wife of Agathon_. On another stone of
+larger size is a more imposing piece of sculpture. A horseman fully
+armed is thrusting his spear into the body of his fallen foe--a
+hoplite. The inscription relates that the unhappy foot-soldier fell at
+Corinth _by reason of those five words of his_!--a record intelligible
+enough, doubtless, to his contemporaries, but sufficiently obscure and
+provocative of curiosity to later generations.
+
+There are other noted structures at Athens, such as the Choragic
+Monument of Lysicrates--the highest type of the Corinthian order of
+architecture, as the Erechtheum is of the Ionic and the Parthenon of
+the Doric--but want of space forbids any further description of them.
+Let the American traveler visit Athens with the expectation of finding
+a city occupying the most charming of sites, and containing by far
+the most interesting and important monuments of antiquity, in their
+original position, to be found in the whole world.
+
+J.L.T. PHILLIPS.
+
+[Illustration: MONUMENT OF LYSICRATES.]
+
+
+
+
+COMMONPLACE.
+
+
+ My little girl is commonplace, you say?
+ Well, well, I grant it, as you use the phrase
+ Concede the whole; although there was a day
+ When I too questioned words, and from a maze
+ Of hairsplit meanings, cut with close-drawn line,
+ Sought to draw out a language superfine,
+ Above the common, scarify with words and scintillate with pen;
+ But that time's over--now I am content to stand with other men.
+
+ It's the best place, fair youth. I see your smile--
+ The scornful smile of that ambitious age
+ That thinks it all things knows, and all the while
+ It nothing knows. And yet those smiles presage
+ Some future fame, because your aim is high;
+ As when one tries to shoot into the sky,
+ If his rash arrow at the moon he aims, a bolder flight we see,
+ Though vain, than if with level poise it safely reached the nearest tree.
+
+ A common proverb that! Does it disjoint
+ Your graceful terms? One more you'll understand:
+ Cut down a pencil to too fine a point,
+ Lo, it breaks off, all useless, in your hand!
+ The child is fitted for her present sphere:
+ Let her live out her life, without the fear
+ That comes when souls, daring the heights of dread infinity, are tost,
+ Now up, now down, by the great winds, their little home for ever lost.
+
+ My little girl seems to you commonplace
+ Because she loves the daisies, common flowers;
+ Because she finds in common pictures grace,
+ And nothing knows of classic music's powers:
+ She reads her romance, but the mystic's creed
+ Is something far beyond her simple need.
+ She goes to church, but the mixed doubts and theories that thinkers find
+ In all religious truth can never enter her undoubting mind.
+
+ A daisy's earth's own blossom--better far
+ Than city gardener's costly hybrid prize:
+ When you're found worthy of a higher star,
+ 'Twill then be time earth's daisies to despise;
+ But not till then. And if the child can sing
+ Sweet songs like "Robin Gray," why should I fling
+ A cloud over her music's joy, and set for her the heavy task
+ Of learning what Bach knew, or finding sense under mad Chopin's mask?
+
+ Then as to pictures: if her taste prefers
+ That common picture of the "Huguenots,"
+ Where the girl's heart--a tender heart like hers--
+ Strives to defeat earth's greatest powers' great plots
+ With her poor little kerchief, shall I change
+ The print for Turner's riddles wild and strange?
+ Or take her stories--simple tales which her few leisure hours beguile--
+ And give her Browning's _Sordello_, a Herbert Spencer, a Carlyle?
+
+ Her creed, too, in your eyes is commonplace,
+ Because she does not doubt the Bible's truth
+ Because she does not doubt the saving grace
+ Of fervent prayer, but from her rosy youth,
+ So full of life, to gray old age's time,
+ Prays on with faith half ignorant, half sublime.
+ Yes, commonplace! But if I spoil this common faith, when all is done
+ Can deist, pantheist or atheist invent a better one?
+
+ Climb to the highest mountain's highest verge,
+ Step off: you've lost the petty height you had;
+ Up to the highest point poor reason urge,
+ Step off: the sense is gone, the mind is mad.
+ "Thus far, and yet no farther, shalt thou go,"
+ Was said of old, and I have found it so:
+ This planet's ours, 'tis all we have; here we belong, and those are wise
+ Who make the best of it, nor vainly try above its plane to rise.
+
+ Nay, nay: I know already your reply;
+ I have been through the whole long years ago;
+ I have soared up as far as soul can fly,
+ I have dug down as far as mind can go;
+ But always found, at certain depth or height,
+ The bar that separates the infinite
+ From finite powers, against whose strength immutable we beat in vain,
+ Or circle round only to find ourselves at starting-point again.
+
+ If you must for yourself find out this truth,
+ I bid you go, proud heart, with blessings free:
+ 'Tis the old fruitless quest of ardent youth,
+ And soon or late you will come back to me.
+ You'll learn there's naught so common as the breath
+ Of life, unless it be the calm of death:
+ You'll learn that with the Lord Omnipotent there's nothing commonplace,
+ And with such souls as that poor child's, humbled, abashed, you'll
+ hide your face.
+
+CONSTANCE FENIMORE WOOLSON.
+
+
+
+
+PROBATIONER LEONHARD;
+
+OR, THREE NIGHTS IN THE HAPPY VALLEY.
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE TEST--WITH MENTAL RESERVATIONS.
+
+
+Elise went out to gather willow-twigs, as her mother had said when her
+father asked for her.
+
+A little later in the afternoon, Mr. Albert Spener walked swiftly down
+the street toward the house occupied by the Rev. Mr. Wenck. While
+he was yet at a distance Elise saw him approaching, and possibly she
+thought, "He has seen me and comes to meet me;" and many a pleasant
+stroll on many an afternoon would have justified the thought.
+
+But it was not until he had, as it were, stumbled upon Elise that he
+noticed her. He carried in his hand a letter, and when suddenly he
+stopped upon the sidewalk and looked at her, the changeful aspects of
+his face were marvelous to behold.
+
+"Where are you going?" he asked.
+
+"I was going home," she answered, not a little surprised by the abrupt
+and authoritative manner of his address.
+
+"I want to talk with you," said he. "Is it to-day that I am to begin
+to leave off loving you, Elise?"
+
+"That you are--What do you say, Albert?" she asked.
+
+"Have you not seen Brother Wenck's letter to your father, Elise?"
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"The lot--the lot--" he repeated, but his voice refused to help him
+tell the tale.
+
+"Albert, may I see the letter?" Father and Mother Loretz might have
+rejoiced in their daughter could they have seen and heard her in those
+trying moments. Her gentleness and her serene dignity said for her
+that she would not be over-thrown by the storm which had burst upon
+her in a moment, unlocked for as tempest and whirlwind out of a clear
+sky.
+
+Spener thrust into her hands the letter addressed to him that morning
+by the minister. It contained an announcement of the decision rendered
+by the lot, couched in terms more brief, perhaps, than those which
+conveyed the same intelligence to the father of Elise.
+
+She gave it back to him without a word.
+
+"If Brother Wenck is going to stand by it," said he, "there'll be no
+room for him in this place. I was just going to his house to tell him
+so. Will you go with me? I should like to have a witness. I'll make
+short work of it."
+
+"No," said Elise, shrinking back amazed from her companion. "I will
+not go with you to insult that good man."
+
+"You will go with me--_not_ to his house, then! Come, Elise, we must
+talk about this. You must help me untie this knot. I cannot imagine
+how I ever permitted things to take their chance. I have never heard
+of a sillier superstition than I seem to have encouraged. Talk about
+faith! Let a man act up to light and take the consequences. I can see
+clear enough now. _You_ never looked for this to happen, Elise?"
+
+She shook her head. Indeed, she never had--no, not for a moment.
+
+"To think I should have permitted it to go on!"
+
+"But you did let it go on--and I--consented. Do not let me forget
+that," she exclaimed. "I will go home, Albert."
+
+"Ha, Elise! I wish I could feel more confidence in your teachers when
+you get there."
+
+"I need no one to tell me what my duty is just here," she answered.
+
+"Have you ever loved me, child? _Child_! I am talking to a rock. You
+do not yield to this?" He waved the letter aloft, and as if he would
+dash it from him. Elise looked at him, and did not speak. "Sister
+Benigna will of course feel called upon to bless the Lord," said he.
+"But Wenck shall find a way out of this difficulty. Then we will have
+done with them both, my own."
+
+"Am I to have no voice in this matter?" she asked. "What if I say--"
+
+Spener grasped her hand so suddenly that, as if in her surprise she
+had forgotten what she was about to say, Elise added, "Sister Benigna
+is my best friend. She knows nothing about the lot."
+
+"Does not?"
+
+"I told you, Albert, that it was to be so. And--you do not mean to
+threaten Mr. Wenck?"
+
+"I mean to have him find a way out of this difficulty. He ought to
+have said to your father that this lot business belongs to a period
+gone by. He did hint at it. I supposed, of course, that he would see
+the thing came out right, since he let it go on."
+
+"Did you then believe it was only a play or a trick?" exclaimed Elise
+indignantly.
+
+"Not quite, but I did not suppose that we were a company who would
+stand by an adverse decision. You know, if you are the Elise I have
+loved so long, that I must love you always--that I am not going to
+give you up. Your father was bent on the test, but look at him and
+tell me if he expected this turn. He is twenty years older than he
+was yesterday. Folks used to resort to the lot in deciding about
+marriages, and it was all well enough if they didn't care how it
+turned out, or hadn't faith to believe in their own ability to choose.
+A pretty way of doing business, though! Suppose I had tried it on this
+place! I have always asked for God's blessing, and tried to act so
+that I need not blush when I asked it; but a man must know his own
+mind, he must act with decision. I say again, I don't like your
+teachers, Elise. Between Sister Benigna and Mr. Wenck, now, what would
+be my chances if I could submit to such a pair?"
+
+"You and I have no quarrel," said Elise gently. "I suppose that you
+acted in good faith. You know how much I care--how humiliated I shall
+feel if you attack in any way a man so good as Mr. Wenck. You do not
+understand Sister Benigna."
+
+It was well that she had these to speak of, and that she need not
+confine herself to the main thought before them, for Albert could do
+anything he attempted. Had not her father always said, "Let Spener
+alone for getting what he wants: he'll have it, but he's above-board
+and honest;" and what hopes, heaven-cleaving, had spread wing the
+instant her eyes met his!
+
+"It is easy to say that I do not understand," said he. "One has only
+to assume that another is so excellent and virtuous a character as to
+be beyond your comprehension, and then your mouth is stopped."
+
+"Ah, how bitter you are!" exclaimed Elise. Her voice was full of pain.
+
+Spener silently reproached himself, and said, with a tenderness that
+was irresistible, "You don't know what temptations beset a man in
+business and everywhere, Elise. It would be easier far to lie down
+and die, I have thought sometimes, than to stand up and meet the enemy
+like a man. You will never convince me that my duty is to let you go,
+to give you up. I can think of nothing so wicked."
+
+These words, which had a joyful sound to which she could not seal her
+ears, made Elise stop suddenly, afraid of Albert, afraid of herself.
+"I think," she said after a moment, "we had best not walk together
+any longer. There is nothing we can say that will satisfy ourselves or
+ought to satisfy each other."
+
+"Do you mean that you accept this decision?" said he.
+
+"I promised, Albert. So did you."
+
+"We will not talk about it. But we can at least walk together, Elise.
+You need not speak. What you confessed just now is true--you cannot
+say anything to the purpose."
+
+So they walked on together. Silently, past all Spenersberg's
+dwelling-places they walked, till they came to the cemetery, and
+ascending the hill they strolled about that pleasant place among the
+graves, and thought, perhaps, How blessed are the dead! and oh to be
+lying there in a dreamless sleep beneath the blooming wild roses, and
+where dirges were sounding through the cedars day and night! Elise
+might have thought thus, but not her companion. He was the last man
+to wish to pass from the scene of his successes merely because a great
+failure threatened him. Looking upon the slight young figure beside
+him and her grave sweet face, a wrathful contempt was aroused within
+him that he should have allowed himself to be placed in a situation so
+absurd. As they walked down the hill again, he startled his companion
+by a merry outbreak. "Tell me you are not mine!" he said: "there never
+was a joke like it!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+SISTER BENIGNA.
+
+
+On her return home Elise found Sister Benigna seated at the piano,
+attuning herself, as she said, after her work among the restive
+children of her school.
+
+When she looked upon her friend and recalled the bitter words Albert
+had spoken against her, Elise felt their injustice. It was true, as
+she had told him, he did not understand Sister Benigna.
+
+Sitting down beside the window, Elise began to busy herself over the
+dainty basket she was elaborately decorating. After a few moments
+Sister Benigna left the piano and stood looking at Elise and her work.
+She had something to say, but how should she say it? how approach the
+heart which had wrapped itself up in sorrow and surrounded itself with
+the guards of silence?
+
+Presently Elise looked at her, but not until she had so long resisted
+the inclination to do so that there was something like violence in the
+effort. When her eyes met the gaze of Sister Benigna the warm blood
+rushed to her cheeks, and she looked quickly down again. Did Sister
+Benigna know yet about the letter Mr. Wenck had written?
+
+A sad smile appeared on Benigna's face. She shook her head. If she did
+not know what had happened, she no doubt understood that some kind of
+trouble had entered the house.
+
+Drawing a roll of needlework from her pocket, she quietly occupied
+herself with it until Elise, unable to endure the silence longer,
+said, "Oh, Sister Benigna, is it not time we did something about the
+Sisters' House? I have been reading about one: I forget where it is.
+What a beautiful Home you and I could make for poor people, and sick
+girls not able to work, and old women! We ought to have such a Home in
+Spenersberg. I have been thinking all day it is what we must have, and
+it is time we set about it."
+
+"I do not agree with you," was the quiet answer. "There is no real
+need for it here, and perhaps there never will be. Work that is so
+unnecessary might better be avoided. In Spenersberg it is better that
+the poor and the old and the sick should be cared for in their homes,
+by their own households: there is no want here."
+
+"Will you read what I have been reading?" said Elise, hesitating, not
+willing yet to give up the project which looked so full of promise.
+
+"I know all about Sisters' Houses, and they are excellent
+institutions, but if you will go from house to house here you will
+find that you would probably keep house by yourself a long time if you
+opened such an establishment. No, no: you have your work all prepared
+for you, and I certainly have mine. There is a good deal to be done
+yet for the festival. Tomorrow, after five, come to the school-room and
+we will practice a while. And we might do something here to-night. The
+children surprise me: I seem to be surrounded by a little company of
+angels while they sing."
+
+"Oh, Sister Benigna," exclaimed Elise throwing down her work in
+despair, "I don't in the least care about the festival. I should be
+glad to know it was all given up. I cannot sing at it. I think I have
+lost my voice: I do, indeed. I tried it this afternoon, and I croaked
+worse than anything you ever heard."
+
+"Croaked? We must see to that," said Sister Benigna; but, though her
+voice was so cheerful, she closed her eyes as she spoke, and passed
+her hands over them, and in spite of herself a look of pain was for an
+instant visible on her always pale face. She rose quickly and walked
+across the room, and crossed it twice before she came again to the
+window.
+
+"You don't understand me to-day," said Elise impetuously; "and I don't
+want you to." But Elise would not have spoken at all had she looked at
+Sister Benigna.
+
+A silence of many seconds, which seemed much longer to Elise,
+followed her words. She did not dare to go on. What was Sister Benigna
+thinking? Would she never speak? Had she nothing to say? Elise was
+about to rise also, because to sit still in that silence or to break
+it by words had become equally impossible, when Sister Benigna,
+approaching gently, laid her hand upon her and said, "Wait one moment:
+I have something to tell you, Elise."
+
+And so Elise sat down. She could not summon the strength to go with
+that voice in her ear and the touch of that hand arresting her.
+
+"I once had a friend as young as you are, of whom you often remind
+me," said Benigna. "She had a lover, and their faith led them to
+seek a knowledge of the Lord's will concerning their marriage. It
+was inquired for them, and it was found against the union. You often
+remind me of her, I said, but your fortunes are not at all like hers."
+
+"Sister Benigna, why do you tell me this?" asked Elise quickly, in a
+voice hardly audible. She was afraid to listen. She recalled Albert's
+words. She did not know if she might trust the friendly voice that
+spoke.
+
+"Because I have always thought that some time it would be well for you
+to hear it; but if you do not wish to hear it, I will go no farther."
+
+Elise looked at Benigna--not trust her! "Please go on," she said.
+
+"I knew the poor child very well. She had grown up in an unhappy
+home, and had never known what it was to have comfort and peace in the
+house, or even plenty to eat and to wear. She was expected to go out
+and earn her living as soon as she had learned the use of her hands
+and feet. Poor child! she felt her fortune was a hard one, but God
+always cared for her. In one way and another she in time picked up
+enough knowledge of music to teach beginners. The first real friend
+she had was the friend who became so dear to her that--I need not try
+to find words to tell you how dear he was.
+
+"She was soon skilled enough to be able to take more intelligent and
+advanced pupils, and in the church-music she had the leading parts.
+By and by the music was put into her hands for festivals and the
+great days, Christmas and Easter, as it has been put into mine here in
+Spenersberg. One day _he_ said to her, 'It seems to us the best thing
+in life to be near each other. Would it might be God's will that we
+should never part!' She responded to that prayer from the depths of
+her heart, and a great gulf seemed to open before her, for she thought
+what would her life be worth if they were destined to part? Then he
+said, 'Let us inquire the will of our Lord;' and she said, 'Let it
+be so;' and they had faith that would enable them to abide by the
+decision. The lot pronounced against them. I do not believe that it
+had entered the heart of either of them to understand how necessary
+they had become to each other, and when they saw that all was over it
+was a sad awaking. For a little while it was with both as if they had
+madly thrown a birthright away; for, though they had faith, they were
+not yet perfect in it. Not soon did either see that this life had
+a blessing for them every day--new every morning, fresh every
+evening--and that from everlasting to everlasting are the mercies of
+God. But at last he said, 'I am afraid, my darling'" (Elise started at
+this word of endearment. It was like a revelation to think that there
+had been lovers in the world before her time), "'it will go harder
+with me than with you. I cannot stay here and go on with my work. I
+must go among new people, and begin again.' And so he went away, and
+at last, when by the grace of God they met again--surely, surely by no
+seeking of their own--they were no less true friends because they had
+for their lifetime been led into separate paths. Their faith saved
+them."
+
+Low though the voice was in which these last words were spoken, there
+was a strength and inspiration in them which Elise felt. She looked
+at Sister Benigna with steady, wondering eyes. Such a story from her
+lips, and told so, and told now! And her countenance! what divine
+beauty glowed in it! The moment had a vision that could never be
+forgotten.
+
+Elise did not speak, but neither, having heard this tale, did she now
+rise to depart. She folded her hands and bowed her head upon them, and
+so they sat silent until the first chords of the "Pastoral Symphony"
+drew the souls of both away up into a realm which is entered only by
+the pure in heart.
+
+About this time it was that Leonhard Marten, while passing, heard that
+recitative of a soprano voice which so amazed him. Dropping quickly
+into the shade of the trees opposite Loretz's house, he listened to
+the announcement, "There were shepherds abiding in the field, keeping
+watch over their flocks by night," and there remained until he saw two
+men advancing toward the house, one of them evidently approaching his
+home.
+
+Through the sleepless night Elise's thoughts were constantly going
+over the simple incidents of the story Sister Benigna had told her.
+But they had not by morning yielded all the consolations which the
+teller of the tale perceived among their possibilities, for the
+reason, perhaps, that Elise's sympathies had been more powerfully
+excited by the tale than her faith. It was not upon the final result
+of the severance effected by the lot that her mind rested dismayed:
+her heart was full of pain, thinking of that poor girl's early life,
+and that at last, when all the recollection of it was put far from her
+by the joy which shone upon her as the sun out of darkness, she
+must look forward and by its light behold a future so dreary. "How
+fearful!" she moaned once; and her closed eyes did not see the face
+that turned toward her full of pain, full of love.
+
+Of all doubts that could afflict the soul of Sister Benigna, none
+more distracting than this was conceivable: Had she proved the best
+instructor to this child of her spirit? Had she even been _capable_ of
+teaching her truest truth? Was it the truth or herself to which Elise
+was always deferring? Was obedience a duty when not impelled and
+sanctified by faith? In what did the prime virtue of resignation
+consist? Would not obedience without faith be merely a debasing
+superstitious submission to the will of the believing? Her reflections
+were not suggested by a shrewd guess. She knew that the lot had been
+resorted to, and that the letters had been written to Elise and Albert
+which acquainted them with the result; and the peace of her prayerful
+soul was rent by the thought that a joyless surrender of human will
+to a higher was, perhaps, no better than the poor helpless slave's
+extorted sacrifice. The happiness of the household seemed to Benigna
+in her keeping. If they had gone lightly seeking the oracle of God,
+as they would have sought a fortune-teller, was not the Most High
+dishonored? She could not say this to Elise, but could she say it to
+Albert Spener? Ought she not to say it to him? There was no other to
+whom it could be said. Had the coming day any duty so imperative as
+this? She arose to perform it, but Spener, as we know, had gone away
+the day before.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+THE MEN OF SPENERSBERG.
+
+
+This Spenersberg, about which Leonhard was not a little eager to know
+more when he shut the door of the apartment into which his host had
+ushered him--for he must remain all night--what was it?
+
+A colony, or a brotherhood, or a community, six years old. Such a fact
+does not lie ready for observation every day--such a place does not
+lie in the hand of a man at his bidding. What, then, was its history?
+We need not wait to find out until morning, when Leonhard will proceed
+to discover. He is satisfied when he lies down upon the bed, which
+awaited him, it seems, as he came hither on the way-train--quite
+satisfied that Spener of Spenersberg must be a man worth seeing.
+Breathing beings possessed of ideas and homes here must have been
+handled with power by a master mind to have brought about this
+community, if so it is to be called, in six short years, thinks
+Leonhard. He recalls his own past six years, and turns uneasily on his
+bed, and finds no rest until he reminds himself of the criticism
+he has been enabled to pass on Miss Elise's rendering of "He is a
+righteous Saviour," and the suggestion he made concerning the pitch
+of "Ye shall find rest for your souls." The recollection acts upon him
+somewhat as the advancing wave acts on the sand-line made by the wave
+preceding. When he made the first suggestion, Sister Benigna stood
+for a moment looking at him, surprised by his remark; but, less than a
+second taken up with a thought of him, she had passed instantly on to
+say, "Try it so, Elise: 'He is a righteous Saviour.' We will make it
+a slower movement. Ah! how impressive! how beautiful! It is the
+composer's very thought! Again--slow: it is perfect!"
+
+Was this kind of praise worth the taking? a source of praise worth
+the seeking? Leonhard had said ungrateful things about his
+prize-credentials to Miss Marion Ayres, and I do believe that these
+very prizes, awarded for his various drawings, were never so valued
+by him as the look with which priestly Benigna seemed to admit him at
+least so far as into the fellowship of the Gentiles' Court.
+
+He would have fallen asleep just here with a pleasant thought but for
+the recollection of Wilberforce's letter, which startled him hardly
+less than the apparition of his friend in the moonlight streaming
+through his half-curtained window would have done. Is it always so
+pleasant a thought that for ever and ever a man shall bear his own
+company?
+
+But this Spenersberg? Seven years ago, on the day when he came of age,
+Albert Spener, then a young clerk in a fancy-goods store, went to look
+at the estate which his grandfather had bequeathed to him the year
+preceding. Not ten years ago the old man made his will and gave the
+property, on which he had not quite starved, to his only grandson, and
+here was this worthless gorge which stretched between the fields more
+productive than many a famous gold-mine.
+
+The youth had seen at once that if he should deal with the land as
+his predecessors had done, he would be able to draw no more from the
+stingy acres than they. He had shown the bent of his mind and the
+nature of his talent by the promptness with which he put things remote
+together, and by the directness with which he reached his conclusions.
+
+He had left his town-lodgings, having obtained of his employer leave
+of absence for one week, and within twenty-four hours had come to
+his conclusion and returned to his post. Of that estate which he had
+inherited but a portion, and a very small portion, offered to the
+cultivator the least encouragement. The land had long ago been
+stripped of its forest trees, and, thus defrauded of its natural
+fertilizers, lay now, after successive seasons of drain and waste, as
+barren as a desert, with the exception of that narrow strip between
+the hills which apparently bent low that inland might look upon river.
+
+Along the banks of the stream, which flowed, a current of considerable
+depth and swiftness, toward its outlet, the river, willows were
+growing. Albert's employer was an importer to a small extent,
+and fancy willow-ware formed a very considerable share of his
+importations. The conclusion he had reached while surveying his land
+was an answer to the question he had asked himself: Why should
+not this land be made to bring forth the kind of willow used by
+basket-weavers, and why should not basket-weavers be induced to gather
+into a community of some sort, and so importers be beaten in the
+market by domestic productions? The aim thus clearly defined Spener
+had accomplished. His Moravians furnished him with a willow-ware
+which was always quoted at a high figure, and the patriotic pride
+the manufacturer felt in the enterprise was abundantly rewarded: no
+foreign mark was ever found on his home-made goods.
+
+But _his_ Moravians: where did these people come from, and how came
+they to be known as his?
+
+The question brings us to Frederick Loretz. In those days he was a
+porter in the establishment where Spener was a clerk. He had filled
+this situation only one month, however, when he was attacked with a
+fever which was scourging the neighborhood, and taken to the hospital.
+Albert followed him thither with kindly words and care, for the poor
+fellow was a stranger in the town, and he had already told Spener his
+dismal story. Afar from wife and child, among strangers and a pauper,
+his doom, he believed, was to die. How he bemoaned his wasted life
+then, and the husks which he had eaten!
+
+In his delirium Loretz would have put an end to his life. Spener
+talked him out of this horror of himself, and showed him that there
+was always opportunity, while life lasted, for wanderers to seek again
+the fold they had strayed from; for when the delirium passed the man's
+conscience remained, and he confessed that he had lived away from
+the brethren of his faith, and was an outcast. Oh, if he could but
+be transported to Herrnhut and set down there a well man in that
+sanctuary of Moravianism, how devoutly would he return to the faith
+and practice of his fathers!
+
+When Spener returned from his trip of investigation he hastened
+immediately to the hospital, sought out poor half-dead Loretz, laid
+his hand on his shoulder, and said, "Come, get up: I want you." And
+he explained his project: "I will build a house for you, send for
+your wife and child, put you all together, and start you in life. I
+am going into the basket business, and I want you to look after
+my willows. After they are pretty well grown you shall get in some
+families--Simon-Pure Moravians, you know--and we will have a village
+of our own. D'ye hear me?"
+
+The poor fellow did hear: he struggled up in his bed, threw his arms
+around Spener's neck, tried to kiss him, and fainted.
+
+"This is a good beginning," said Spener to himself as he laid the
+senseless head upon the pillow and felt for the beating heart. The
+beating heart was there. In a few moments Loretz was looking, with
+eyes that shone with loving gratitude and wondering admiration, on the
+young man who had saved his life.
+
+"I have no money," said this youth in further explanation of his
+project--for he wanted his companion to understand his circumstances
+from the outset--"but I shall borrow five thousand dollars. I can pay
+the interest on that sum out of my salary. Perhaps I shall sell a few
+lots on the river, if I can turn attention to the region. It will all
+come out right, anyhow. Now, how soon can you be ready? I will write
+to your wife to-day if you say so, and tell her to come on with the
+little girl."
+
+"Wait a week," said Loretz in a whisper; and all that night and the
+following day his chances for this world and the next seemed about
+equal.
+
+But after that he rallied, and his recovery was certain. It was slow,
+however, hastened though it was by the hope and expectation which
+had opened to him when he had reached the lowest depth of despair and
+covered himself with the ashes of repentance.
+
+The letter for the wife and little girl was written, and money sent to
+bring them from the place where Loretz had left them when he set
+out in search of occupation, to find employment as a porter, and the
+fever, and Albert Spener.
+
+During the first year of co-working Loretz devoted himself to the
+culture of the willow, and then, as time passed on and hands were
+needed, he brought one family after another to the place--Moravians
+all--until now there were at least five hundred inhabitants in
+Spenersberg, a large factory and a church, whereof Spener himself was
+a member "in good and regular standing."
+
+Seven years of incessant labor, directed by a wise foresight, which
+looked almost like inspiration and miracle, had resulted in all this
+real prosperity. Loretz never stopped wondering at it, and yet he
+could have told you every step of the process. All that had been
+_done_ he had had a hand in, but the devising brain was Spener's;
+and no wonder that, in spite of his familiarity with the details,
+the sum-total of the activities put forth in that valley should have
+seemed to Loretz marvelous, magical.
+
+He had many things to rejoice over besides his own prosperity. His
+daughter was in all respects a perfect being, to his thinking. For six
+years now she had been under the instruction of Sister Benigna,
+not only in music, but in all things that Sister Benigna, a
+well-instructed woman, could teach. She sang, as Leonhard Marten would
+have told you, "divinely," she was beautiful to look upon, and Albert
+Spener desired to marry her.
+
+Surely the Lord had blessed him, and remembered no more those years
+of wanderings when, alienated from the brethren, he sought out his
+own ways and came close upon destruction. What should he return to the
+beneficent Giver for all these benefits?
+
+Poor Loretz! In his prosperity he thought that he should never be
+moved, but he would not basely use that conviction and forget the
+source of all his satisfaction. He remembered that it was when he
+repented of his misdeeds that Spener came to him and drew him from the
+pit. He could never look upon Albert as other than a divine agent;
+and when Spener joined himself to the Moravians, led partly by his
+admiration of them, partly by religious impulse, and partly because
+of his conviction that to be wholly successful he and his people must
+form a unit, his joy was complete.
+
+The proposal for Elise's hand had an effect upon her father which any
+one who knew him well might have looked for and directed. The pride of
+his life was satisfied. He remembered that he and his Anna, in seeking
+to know the will of the Lord in respect to their marriage, had been
+answered favorably by the lot. He desired the signal demonstration of
+heavenly will in regard to the nuptials proposed. Not a shadow of
+a doubt visited his mind as to the result, and the influence of his
+faith upon Spener was such that he acquiesced in the measure, though
+not without remonstrance and misgiving and mental reservation.
+
+To find his way up into the region of faith, and quiet himself there
+when the result of the seeking was known, was almost impossible for
+Loretz. He could fear the Judge who had decreed, but could he trust in
+Him? He began to grope back among his follies of the past, seeking a
+crime he had not repented, as the cause of this domestic calamity. But
+ah! to reap such a harvest as this for any youthful folly! Poor soul!
+little he knew of vengeance and retribution. He was at his wit's end,
+incapable alike of advancing, retreating or of peaceful surrender.
+
+It was pleasant to him to think, in the night-watches, of the young
+man who occupied the room next to his. He did not see--at least had
+not yet seen--in Leonhard a messenger sent to the house, as did his
+wife; but the presence of the young stranger spoke favorable things in
+his behalf; and then, as there was really nothing to be _done_ about
+this decision, anything that gave a diversion to sombre thoughts was
+welcome. Sister Benigna had spoken very kindly to Leonhard in the
+evening, and he had pointed out a place in one of Elise's solos where
+by taking a higher key in a single passage a marvelous effect could be
+produced. That showed knowledge; and he said that he had taught music.
+Perhaps he would like to remain until after the congregation festival
+had taken place.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE BOOK.
+
+
+In the morning the master of the house rapped on Leonhard's door and
+said: "When you come down I have something to show you." The voice
+of Mr. Loretz had almost its accustomed cheerfulness of tone, and he
+ended his remark with a brief "Ha! ha!" peculiar to him, which not
+only expressed his own good-humor, but also invited good-humored
+response.
+
+Leonhard answered cheerily, and in a few moments he had descended the
+steep uncovered stair to the music-room.
+
+"Now for the book," Loretz called out as Leonhard entered.
+
+How handsome our young friend looked as he stood there shaking hands
+with the elderly man, whose broad, florid face now actually shone with
+hospitable feeling!
+
+"Is father going to claim you as one of us, Mr. Marten?" asked the
+wife of Loretz, who answered her husband's call by coming into the
+room and bringing with her a large volume wrapped in chamois skin.
+
+"What shall I be, then?" asked Leonhard. "A wiser and a better man, I
+do not doubt."
+
+"What! you do not know?" the good woman stayed to say. "Has nobody
+told you where you are, my young friend?"
+
+"I never before found myself in a place I should like to stay in
+always; so what does the rest signify?" answered Leonhard. "What's in
+a name?"
+
+"Not much perhaps, yet something," said Loretz. "We are all Moravians
+here. I was going to look in this book here for the names of your
+ancestors. I thought perhaps you knew about Spenersberg."
+
+"I am as new to it all as Christopher Columbus was to the West India
+islands. If you find the names of my kinsmen down in your book, sir,
+it--it will be a marvelous, happy sight for me," said Leonhard.
+
+"I'll try my hand at it," said Loretz. "Ha! ha!" and he opened the
+volume, which was bound in black leather, the leaves yellowed with
+years. "This book," he continued, "is one hundred and fifty years
+old. You will find recorded in it the names of all my grandfather's
+friends, and all my father's. See, it is our way. There are all the
+dates. Where they lived, see, and where they died. It is all down.
+A man cannot feel himself cut off from his kind as long as he has a
+volume like that in his library. I have added a few names of my own
+friends, and their birthdays. Here, you see, is Sister Benigna's,
+written with her own hand. A most remarkable woman, sir. True as
+steel--always the same. But"--he paused a moment and looked at
+Leonhard with his head inclined to one side, and an expression of
+perplexity upon his face--"there's something out of the way here in
+this country. I have not more than one name down to a dozen in my
+father's record, and twenty in my grandfather's. We do not make
+friends, and we do not keep them, as they did in old time. We don't
+trust each other as men ought to. Half the time we find ourselves
+wondering whether the folks we're dealing with are _honest_. Now think
+of that!"
+
+"Are men any worse than they were in the old time?" asked Leonhard,
+evidently not entering into the conversation with the keenest
+enjoyment.
+
+"I do not know how it is," said Loretz with a sigh, continuing to turn
+the leaves of the book as he spoke.
+
+"Perhaps we have less imagination, and don't look at every new-comer
+as a friend until we have tried him," suggested Leonhard. "We decide
+that everybody shall be tested before we accept him. And isn't it the
+best way? Better than to be disappointed, when we have set our heart
+on a man--or a woman."
+
+"I do not know--I cannot account for it," said Mr. Loretz. Then with a
+sudden start he laid his right hand on the page before him, and with a
+great pleased smile in his deep-set, small blue eyes he said: "Here is
+your name. I felt sure I should find it: I felt certain it was down.
+See here, on my grandfather's page--_Leonhard Marten, Herrnhut_, 1770.
+How do you like that?"
+
+"I like it well," said Leonhard, bending over the book and examining
+the close-fisted autograph set down strongly in unfading ink. Had he
+found an ancestor at last? What could have amazed him as much?
+
+"What have you found?" asked Mrs. Loretz, who had heard these remarks
+in the next room, where she was actively making preparations for the
+breakfast, which already sent forth its odorous invitations.
+
+"We have found the name," answered her husband. "Come and see. I have
+read it, I dare say, a hundred times: that was what made me feel that
+an old friend had come."
+
+"That means," said the good woman, hastening in at her husband's call,
+and reading the name with a pleased smile--"that means that you belong
+to us. I thought you did. I am glad."
+
+Were these folk so intent on securing a convert that in these various
+ways they made the young stranger feel that he was not among strangers
+in this unknown Spenersberg? Nothing was farther from their thought:
+they only gave to their kindly feeling hearty utterance, and perhaps
+spoke with a little extra emphasis because the constraint they
+secretly felt in consequence of their household trouble made them
+unanimous in the effort to put it out of sight--not out of this
+stranger's sight, but out of their own.
+
+"Perhaps you will stop with us a while, and maybe write your name on
+my page before you go," said Loretz, afraid that his wife had gone a
+little too far.
+
+"Without a single test?" Leonhard answered. "Haven't we just agreed
+that we wise men don't take each other on trust, as they did in our
+grandfathers' day?"
+
+"A man living in Herrnhut in 1770 would not have for a descendant a--a
+man I could not trust," said Loretz, closing the book and placing it
+in its chamois covering again. "Breakfast, mother, did you say?"
+
+"Have you wanted ink?" asked Sister Benigna, entering at that instant.
+"Are we writing in the sacred birthday book?"
+
+"Not yet," said Leonhard hastily, the color rising to his face in a
+way to suggest forked lightning somewhere beyond sight.
+
+"You have wanted ink, and are too kind to let me know," she said. "I
+emptied the bottle copying music for the children yesterday."
+
+"The ink was put to a better use then than I could have found for it
+this morning," said Leonhard.
+
+And Mrs. Loretz, who looked into the room just then, said to herself,
+as her eyes fell on him, "Poor soul! he is in trouble."
+
+In fact, this thought was in Leonhard's mind as he went into breakfast
+with the family: "A deuced good friend I have proved--to Wilberforce!
+Isn't there anybody here clear-eyed enough to see that it would be
+like forgery to write my name down in a book of friendship?"
+
+The morning meal was enlivened by much more than the usual amount of
+talk. Leonhard was curious to know about Herrnhut, that old home
+of Moravianism, and the interest which he manifested in the history
+Loretz was so eager to communicate made him in turn an object of
+almost affectionate attention. That he had no facts of private
+biography to communicate in turn did net attract notice, because,
+however many such facts he might have ready to produce, by the time
+Loretz had done talking it was necessary that the day's work should
+begin.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+CONFERENCE MEETING.
+
+
+The school-room was a large apartment in the basement of the factory
+which had been used as a drying-room until it became necessary to
+find for the increasing numbers of the little flock more spacious
+accommodations. The basement was entered by a door at the end of the
+building opposite that by which the operatives entered the factory,
+and the hours were so timed that the children went and came without
+disturbance to themselves or others. The path that led to the basement
+door was neatly bordered with flowering plants and bushes, and
+sunlight was always to be found there, if anywhere in the valley, from
+eight o'clock till two.
+
+Leonhard walked to the factory with Sister Benigna, to whose conduct
+Loretz had consigned him when called away by the tower bell.
+
+At the door of the basement Mr. Wenck was standing with a printed copy
+of Handel's sacred oratorio of _The Messiah_ in his hand. Evidently he
+was waiting for Sister Benigna.
+
+But when she had said to Leonhard, "Pass on to the other end of the
+building and you will find the entrance, and Mr. Spener's office in
+the corner as you enter," and Leonhard had thanked her, and bowed and
+passed on, and she turned to Mr. Wenck, it was very little indeed that
+he said or had to say about the music which he held in his hand.
+
+"I have no doubt that all the preparation necessary for to-morrow
+evening is being made," he said. "You may need this book. But I
+did not come to talk about it. Sister Benigna," he continued in a
+different tone, and a voice not quite under his control, "is it not
+unreasonable to have passed a sleepless night thinking of Albert and
+Elise?"
+
+"Very unreasonable." But he had not charged her, as she supposed, with
+that folly, as his next words showed.
+
+"It is, and yet I have done it--only because all this might have been
+so easily avoided."
+
+"And yet it was unavoidable," said she, looking toward the school-room
+door as one who had no time to waste in idle talk.
+
+"Not that I question the wisdom of the resort if all were of one
+mind," said Mr. Wenck, who had the dreary all-day before him, and was
+not in the least pressed for time. "But I can see that even on the
+part of Brother Loretz the act was not a genuine act of faith."
+
+Startled by the expression the minister was giving to her secret
+thoughts, Benigna exclaimed, "And yet what can be done?"
+
+"Nothing," he answered. "If Loretz should yield to Spener, and if I
+should--do you not see he has had everything his own way here?--he
+would feel that nothing could stand in opposition to him. If he were a
+different man! And they are both so young!"
+
+"I know that Elise has a conscience that will hold her fast to duty,"
+said Benigna, but she did not speak hopefully: she spoke deliberately,
+however, thinking that these words _conscience_ and _duty_ might
+arrest the minister's attention, and that he would perhaps, by some
+means, throw light upon questions which were constantly becoming more
+perplexing to her. Was conscience an unfailing guide? Was one person's
+duty to be pronounced upon by another without scruple, and defined
+with unfaltering exactness? But the words had not arrested the
+minister's attention.
+
+"If they could only see that there is nothing to be done!" said he.
+"Oh, they will, Benigna! Had they only the faith, Benigna!"
+
+"Yet how vain their sacrifice, for they have it not!" said she. And
+as if she would not prolong an interview which must be full of pain,
+because no light could proceed from any words that would be given them
+to speak, Sister Benigna turned abruptly toward the basement door when
+she had said this, and entered it without bestowing a parting glance
+even on the minister.
+
+He walked away after an instant's hesitation: indeed there was nothing
+further to be said, and she did well to go.
+
+Going homeward by a path which led along the hillside above the
+village street, he must pass the small house separated from all
+others--the house which was the appointed resting-place of all who
+lived in Spenersberg to die there--known as the Corpse-house. To it
+the bodies of deceased persons were always taken after death, and
+there they remained until the hour when they were carried forth for
+burial.
+
+As Mr. Wenck approached he saw that the door stood open: a few steps
+farther, and this fact was accounted for. A bent and wrinkled old
+woman stood there with a broom in her hand, which she had been using
+in a plain, straight-forward manner.
+
+"Ah, Mary," he said, "what does this mean, my good woman?"
+
+"It is the minister," she answered in a low voice, curtseying. "I was
+moved to come here this morning, sir, and see to things. It was time
+to be brushing up a little, I thought. It is a month now since the
+last."
+
+"I will take down the old boughs then, and garnish the walls with new
+ones. And have you looked at the lamp too, Mary?"
+
+"It is trimmed, sir," said the woman; and the minister's readiness to
+assist her drew forth the confession: "I was thinking on my bed in the
+night-watches that it must be done. There will one be going home soon.
+And it may be myself, sir. I could not have been easy if I had not
+come up to tidy the house."
+
+Having finished her task, which was a short one and easily performed,
+the woman now waited to watch the minister as he selected cedar boughs
+and wove them into wreaths, and suspended them from the walls and
+rafters of the little room; and it comforted the simple soul when,
+standing in the doorway, the good man lifted his eyes toward heaven
+and said in the words of the church litany:
+
+ From error and misunderstanding,
+ From the loss of our glory in Thee,
+ From self-complacency,
+ From untimely projects,
+ From needless perplexity,
+ From the murdering spirit and devices of Satan,
+ From the influence of the spirit of this world,
+ From hypocrisy and fanaticism,
+ From the deceitfulness of sin,
+ From all sin,
+ _Preserve us, gracious Lord and God_--
+
+and devoutly she joined in with him in the solemn responsive cry.
+
+It was very evident that the minister's work that day was not to be
+performed in his silent home among his books.
+
+On the brightest day let the sun become eclipsed, and how the earth
+will pine! What melancholy will pervade the busy streets, the pleasant
+fields and woods! How disconsolately the birds will seek their mates
+and their nests!
+
+The children came together, but many a half hour passed during
+which the shadow of an Unknown seemed to come between them and their
+teacher. The bright soul, was she too suffering from an eclipse? Does
+it happen that all souls, even the most valiant, most loving, least
+selfish, come in time to passes so difficult that, shrinking back,
+they say, "Why should I struggle to gain the other side? What is
+there worth seeking? Better to end all here. This life is not worth
+enduring"? And yet, does it also come to pass as certainly that these
+valiant, unselfish, loving ones will struggle, fight, climb, wade,
+creep on, on while the breath of life remains in them, and never
+surrender? It seemed as if Sister Benigna had arrived at a place where
+her baffled spirit stood still and felt its helplessness. Could she
+do nothing for Elise, the dear child for whose happiness she would
+cheerfully give her life, and not think the price too dear?
+
+By and by the children were aware that Sister Benigna had come again
+among them: the humblest little flower lifted up its head, and the
+smallest bird began to chirp and move about and smooth its wings.
+
+Sister Benigna! what had she recollected?--that but a single day
+perhaps was hers to live, and here were all these children! As she
+turned with ardent zeal to her work--which indeed had not failed of
+accustomed conduct so far as routine went--tell me what do you find in
+those lovely eyes if not the heavenliest assurances? Let who will
+call the scene of this life's operations a vale of tears, a world of
+misery, a prison-house of the spirit, here is one who asks for herself
+nothing of honors or riches or pleasures, and who can bless the
+Lord God for the glory of the earth he has created, and for those
+everlasting purposes of his which mortals can but trust in, and which
+are past finding out. Children, let us do our best to-day, and wait
+until to-morrow for to-morrow's gifts. This exhortation was in the
+eyes, mien, conduct of the teacher, and so she led them on until, when
+they came to practice their hymns for the festival, every little heart
+and voice was in tune, and she praised them with voice so cheerful,
+how should they guess that it had ever been choked by anguish or had
+ever fainted in despair?
+
+O young eyes saddening over what is to you a painful, insoluble
+problem! yet a little while and you shall see the mists of morning
+breaking everywhere, and the great conquering sun will enfold you too
+in its warm embrace: the humble laurels of the mountain's side, even
+as the great pines and cedars of the mountain's crest, have but to
+receive and use what the sterile rock and the blinding cloud, the
+wintry tempest and the rain and the summer's heat bestow, and lo! the
+heights are alive with glory. But it is not in a day.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+WILL THE ARCHITECT HAVE EMPLOYMENT?
+
+
+On entering the factory, Leonhard met Loretz near the door talking
+with Albert Spener. When he saw Leonhard, Loretz said, "I was just
+saying to Mr. Spener that I expected you, sir, and how he might
+recognize you; but you shall speak for yourself. If you will spend a
+little time looking about, I shall be back soon: perhaps Mr. Spener--"
+
+"Mr. Leonhard Marten, I believe," said Mr. Albert Spener with a little
+exaggeration of his natural stiffness. Perhaps he did not suspect that
+all the morning he had been manifesting considerable loftiness toward
+Loretz, and that he spoke in a way that made Leonhard feel that his
+departure from Spenersberg would probably take place within something
+less than twenty-four hours.
+
+Yet within half an hour the young men were walking up and down the
+factory, examining machinery and work, and talking as freely as if
+they had known each other six months. They were not in everything
+as unlike as they were in person. Spener was a tall, spare man, who
+conveyed an impression of mental strength and physical activity. He
+could turn his hand to anything, and _attempt_ anything that was to be
+done by skillful handicraft; and whether he could use his wits well
+in shaping men, let Spenersberg answer. His square-shaped head was
+covered with bright brown hair, which had a reddish tinge, and his
+moustache was of no stinted growth: his black eyes penetrated and
+flashed, and could glow and glare in a way to make weakness and
+feebleness tremble. His quick speech did not spare: right and left he
+used his swords of thought and will. Fall in! or, Out of the way! were
+the commands laid down by him since the foundations of Spenersberg
+were laid. In the fancy-goods line he might have made of himself a
+spectacle, supposing he could have remained in the trade; but set
+apart here in this vale, the centre of a sphere of his own creation,
+where there was something at stake vast enough to justify the exercise
+of energy and authority, he had a field for the fair play of all that
+was within him--the worst and the best. The worst that he could be he
+was--a tyrant; and the best that he could be he was--a lover. Hitherto
+his tyrannies had brought about good results only, but it was well
+that the girl he loved had not only spirit and courage enough to love
+him, but also faith enough to remove mountains.
+
+If Leonhard had determined that he would make a friend of Spener
+before he entered the factory, he could not have proceeded more wisely
+than he did. First, he was interested in the works, and intent on
+being told about the manufacture of articles of furniture from a
+product ostensibly of such small account as the willow; then he was
+interested in the designs and surprised at the ingenious variety, and
+curious to learn their source, and amazed to hear that Mr. Spener had
+himself originated more than half of them. Then presently he began to
+suggest designs, and at the end of an hour he found himself at a table
+in Spener's office drawing shapes for baskets and chairs and tables
+and ornamental devices, and making Spener laugh so at some remark as
+to be heard all over the building.
+
+"You say you are an architect," he said after Leonhard had covered a
+sheet of paper with suggestions written and outlined for him, which he
+looked at with swiftly-comprehending and satisfied eyes. "What do you
+say to doing a job for me?"
+
+"With all my heart," answered Leonhard, "if it can be done at once."
+
+These words were in the highest degree satisfactory. Here was a man
+who knew the worth of a minute. He was the man for Spener. "Come with
+me," he said, "and I'll show you a building-site or two worth putting
+money on;" and so they walked together out of the factory, crossed a
+rustic foot-bridge to the opposite side, ascended a sunny half-cleared
+slope and passed across a field; and there beneath them, far below,
+rolled the grand river which had among its notable ports this little
+Spenersberg.
+
+"What do you think of a house on this site, sir?" asked Spener,
+looking with no small degree of satisfaction around him and down the
+rocky steep.
+
+"I think I should like to be commissioned to build a castle with
+towers and gates of this very granite which you could hew out by
+the thousand cord from the quarry yonder. What a perfect gray for
+building!"
+
+"I have always thought I would use the material on the ground--the
+best compliment I could pay this place which I have raised my fortune
+out of," said Spener.
+
+"There's no better material on the earth," said Leonhard.
+
+"But I don't want a castle: I want a house with room enough in
+it--high ceilings, wide halls, and a piazza fifteen or twenty feet
+wide all around it."
+
+"Must I give up the castle? There isn't a better site on the Rhine
+than this."
+
+"But I'm not a baron, and I live at peace with my neighbors--at least
+with outsiders." That last remark was an unfortunate one, for it
+brought the speaker back consciously to confront the images which were
+constantly lurking round him--only hid when he commanded them out of
+sight in the manfulness of a spirit that would not be interfered
+with in its work. He sat looking at Leonhard opposite to him, who had
+already taken a note-book and pencil from his pocket, and, planting
+his left foot firmly against one of the great rocks of the cliff, he
+said, "Loretz tells me you stayed all night at his house."
+
+"Yes, he invited me in when I inquired my way to the inn."
+
+"Sister Benigna was there?"
+
+"She wasn't anywhere else," said Leonhard, looking up and smiling.
+"Excuse the slang. If you are where she is, you may feel very certain
+about her being there."
+
+"Not at all," said Albert, evidently nettled into argument by the
+theme he had introduced. "She is one of those persons who can be in
+several places at the same time. You heard them sing, I suppose. They
+are preparing for the congregation festival. It is six years since
+we started here, but we only built our church last year: this year
+we have the first celebration in the edifice, and of course there is
+great preparation."
+
+"I have been wondering how I could go away before it takes place ever
+since I heard of it."
+
+"If you wonder less how you can stay, remain of course," said Spener
+with no great cordiality: he owed this stranger nothing, after all.
+
+"It will only be to prove that I am really music-mad, as they have
+been telling me ever since I was born. If that is the case, from the
+evidences I have had since I came here I think I shall recover."
+
+"What do you mean?" asked Spener.
+
+"I mean that I see how little I really know about the science. I
+never heard anything to equal the musical knowledge and execution of
+Loretz's daughter and this Sister Benigna you speak of."
+
+"Ah! I am not a musician. I tried the trombone, but lacked the
+patience. I am satisfied to admire. And so you liked the singers?
+Which best?"
+
+"Both."
+
+"Come, come--what was the difference?"
+
+"The difference?" repeated Leonhard reflecting.
+
+Spener also seemed to reflect on his question, and was so absorbed
+in his thinking that he seemed to be startled when Leonhard, from his
+studies of the square house with the wide halls and the large rooms
+with high ceilings, turned to him and said, "The difference, sir, is
+between two women."
+
+"No difference at all, do you mean? Do you mean they are alike? They
+are not alike."
+
+"Not so alike that I have seen anything like either of them."
+
+"Ah! neither have I. For that reason I shall marry one of them, while
+the other I would not marry--no, not if she were the only woman on the
+continent."
+
+"You are a fortunate man," said Leonhard.
+
+"I intend to prove that. Nothing more is necessary than the girl's
+consent--is there?--if you have made up your mind that you must have
+her."
+
+"I should think you might say that, sir."
+
+"But you don't hazard an opinion as to which, sir."
+
+"Not I."
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"It might be Miss Elise, if--"
+
+"If what?"
+
+"I am not accustomed to see young ladies in their homes. I have only
+fancied sometimes what a pretty girl might be in her father's house."
+
+"Well, sir?" said Spener impatiently.
+
+"A young lady like Miss Elise would have a great deal to say, I should
+suppose."
+
+"Is she dumb? I thought she could talk. I should have said so."
+
+"I should have guessed, too, that she would always be singing about
+the house."
+
+"And if not--what then?"
+
+"Something must be going wrong somewhere. So you see it can't be Miss
+Elise, according to my judgment."
+
+Spener laughed when this conclusion was reached.
+
+"Come here again within a month and see if she can talk and sing,"
+said he with eyes flashing. "Perhaps you have found that it is as easy
+to frighten a bugbear out of the way as to be frightened by one. I
+never found, sir, that I couldn't put a stumbling-block out of my
+path. We have one little man here who is going to prove himself a
+nuisance, I'm afraid. He is a good little fellow, too. I always liked
+him until he undertook to manage my affairs. I don't propose to give
+up the reins yet a while, and until I do, you see, he has no chance.
+I am sorry about it, for I considered him quite like a friend; but a
+friend, sir, with a flaw in him is worse than an enemy. I know where
+to find my enemies, but I can't keep track of a man who pretends to be
+a friend and serves me ill. But pshaw! let me see what you are doing."
+
+Leonhard was glad when the man ceased from discoursing on
+friendship--a favorite theme among Spenersbergers, he began to
+think--and glad to break away from his work, for he held his pencil
+less firmly than he should have done.
+
+Spener studied the portion completed, and seemed surprised as well as
+pleased. "You know your business," said he. "Be so good as to finish
+the design."
+
+Then returning the book to Leonhard, he looked at his watch. "It is
+time I went to dinner," he said. "Come with me. Loretz knows you are
+with me, and will expect you to be my guest to-day." So they walked
+across the field, but did not descend by the path along which they had
+ascended. They went farther to the east, and Spener led the way down
+the rough hillside until he came to a point whence the descent was
+less steep and difficult. There he paused. A beautiful view was spread
+before them. Little Spenersberg lay on the slope opposite: between ran
+the stream, which widened farther toward the east and narrowed toward
+the west, where it emptied into the river. Eastward the valley also
+widened, and there the willows grew, and looked like a great garden,
+beautiful in every shade of green.
+
+"I should not have the river from this point," said Spener, "but I
+should have a great deal more, and be nearer the people: I do not
+think it would be the thing to appear even to separate myself from
+them. I have done a great deal not so agreeable to me, I assure you,
+in order to bring myself near to them. One must make sacrifices to
+obtain his ends: it is only to count the cost and then be ready to put
+down the money. Suppose you plant a house just here."
+
+"How could it be done?"
+
+"You an architect and ask me!"
+
+"Things can be planted anywhere," answered Leonhard, "but whether the
+cost of production will not be greater than the fruit is worth, is
+the question. You can have a platform built here as broad as that the
+temple stood on if you are willing to pay for the foundations."
+
+"That is the talk!" said Spener. "Take a square look, and let me know
+what you can do toward a house on the hillside. You see there is no
+end of raw material for building, and it is a perfect prospect. But
+come now to dinner."
+
+CAROLINE CHESEBRO.
+
+[TO BE CONTINUED.]
+
+
+
+
+COUNTRY-HOUSE LIFE IN ENGLAND.
+
+
+The love for country life is, if possible, stronger in England now
+than at any previous period in her history. There is no other country
+where this taste has prevailed to the same extent. It arose originally
+from causes mainly political. In France a similar condition of things
+existed down to the sixteenth century, and was mainly brought to an
+end by the policy of ministers, who dreaded the increasing power of
+petty princes in remote provinces becoming in combination formidable
+to the central power. It was specially the object of Richelieu and
+Mazarin to check this sort of baronial _imperium in imperio_, and
+it became in the time of Louis XIV the keystone of that monarch's
+domestic policy. This tended to encourage the "hanging on" of _grands
+seigneurs_ about the court, where many of the chief of them, after
+having exhausted their resources in gambling or riotous living, became
+dependent for place or pension on the Crown, and were in fact the
+creatures of the king and his minister. Of course this did not apply
+to all. Here and there in the broad area of France were to be found
+magnificent châteaux--a few of which, especially in Central France,
+still survive--where the marquis or count reigned over his people an
+almost absolute monarch.
+
+There is a passage in one of Horace Walpole's letters in which that
+virtuoso expresses his regret, after a visit to the ancestral "hôtels"
+of Paris, whose contents had afforded him such intense gratification,
+that the nobility of England, like that of France, had not
+concentrated their treasures of art, etc. in London houses. Had he
+lived a few years longer he would probably have altered his views,
+which were such as his sagacious and manly father, who dearly loved
+his Norfolk home, Houghton, would never have held.
+
+In England, from the time that anything like social life, as we
+understand the phrase, became known, the power of the Crown was so
+well established that no necessity for resorting to a policy such as
+Richelieu's for diminishing the influence of the noblesse existed.
+
+In fact, a course distinctly the reverse came to be adopted from
+the time of Elizabeth down to even a later period than the reign of
+Charles II.
+
+In the reign of Elizabeth an act was passed, which is to this hour
+probably on the statute book, restricting building in or near the
+metropolis. James I appears to have been in a chronic panic on this
+subject, and never lost an opportunity of dilating upon it. In one of
+his proclamations he refers to those swarms of gentry "who, through
+the instigation of their wives, or to new model and fashion their
+daughters who, if they were unmarried, marred their reputations,
+and if married, lost them--did neglect their country hospitality and
+cumber the city, a general nuisance to the kingdom." He desired the
+Star Chamber "to regulate the exorbitancy of the new buildings about
+the city, which were but a shelter for those who, when they had spent
+their estates in coaches, lacqueys and fine clothes like Frenchmen,
+lived miserably in their houses like Italians; but the honor of the
+English nobility and gentry is to be hospitable among their tenants.
+
+"Gentlemen resident on their estates," said he, very sensibly,
+"were like ships in port: their value and magnitude were felt
+and acknowledged; but when at a distance, as their size seemed
+insignificant, so their worth and importance were not duly estimated."
+
+Charles I., with characteristic arbitrariness, carried matters with
+a still higher hand. His Star Chamber caused buildings to be actually
+razed, and fined truants heavily. One case which is reported displays
+the grim and costly humor of the illegal tribunal which dealt with
+such cases. Poor Mr. Palmer of Sussex, a gay bachelor, being called
+upon to show cause why he had been residing in London, pleaded in
+extenuation that he had no house, his mansion having been destroyed by
+fire two years before. This, however, was held rather an aggravation
+of the offence, inasmuch as he had failed to rebuild it; and Mr.
+Palmer paid a penalty of one thousand pounds--equivalent to at least
+twenty thousand dollars now.
+
+A document which especially serves to show the manner of life of the
+ancient noblesse is the earl of Northumberland's "Household Book"
+in the early part of the sixteenth century. By this we see the great
+magnificence of the old nobility, who, seated in their castles, lived
+in a state of splendor scarcely inferior to that of the court. As
+the king had his privy council, so the earl of Northumberland had
+his council, composed of his principal officers, by whose advice and
+assistance he established his code of economic laws. As the king had
+his lords and grooms of the chamber, who waited in their respective
+turns, so the earl was attended by the constables of his several
+castles, who entered into waiting in regular succession. Among other
+instances of magnificence it may be remarked that not fewer than
+eleven priests were kept in the household, presided over by a doctor
+or bachelor of divinity as dean of the chapel.
+
+An account of how the earl of Worcester lived at Ragland Castle before
+the civil wars which began in 1641 also exhibits his manner of life
+in great detail: "At eleven o'clock the Castle Gates were shut and the
+tables laid: two in the dining-room; three in the hall; one in Mrs.
+Watson's appartment, where the chaplains eat; two in the housekeeper's
+room for my ladie's women. The Earl came into the Dining Room attended
+by his gentlemen. As soon as he was seated, Sir Ralph Blackstone,
+Steward of the House, retired. The Comptroller, Mr. Holland, attended
+with his staff; as did the Sewer, Mr. Blackburn, and the daily waiters
+with many gentlemen's sons, from two to seven hundred pounds a year,
+bred up in the Castle; my ladie's Gentleman Usher, Mr. Harcourt; my
+lord's Gentlemen of the Chamber, Mr. Morgan and Mr. Fox.
+
+"At the first table sat the noble family and such of the nobility as
+came there. At the second table in the Dining-room sat Knights and
+honorable gentlemen attended by footmen.
+
+"In the hall at the first table sat Sir R. Blackstone, Steward, the
+Comptroller, Secretary, Master of the Horse, Master of the Fishponds,
+my Lord Herbert's Preceptor, with such gentlemen as came there under
+the degree of knight, attended by footmen and plentifully served with
+wine.
+
+"At the third table in the hall sate the Clerk of the Kitchen, with
+the Yeomen, officers of the House, two Grooms of the Chamber, etc.
+
+"Other officers of the Household were the Chief Auditor, Clerk of
+Accounts, Purveyor of the Castle, Usher of the Hall, Closet Keeper,
+Gentleman of the Chapel, Keeper of the Records, Master of the
+Wardrobe, Master of the Armoury, Master Groom of the Stable for the 12
+War-horses, Master of the Hounds, Master Falconer, Porter and his men,
+two Butchers, two Keepers of the Home Park, two Keepers of the Red
+Deer Park, Footmen, Grooms and other Menial Servants to the number of
+150. Some of the footmen were Brewers and Bakers.
+
+"_Out offices_.--Steward of Ragland, Governor of Chepstow Castle,
+Housekeeper of Worcester House in London, thirteen Bailiffs, two
+Counsel for the Bailiffs--who looked after the estate--to have
+recourse to, and a Solicitor."
+
+In a delicious old volume now rarely to be met with, called _The
+Olio_, published eighty years ago, Francis Grose the antiquary thus
+describes certain characters typical of the country life of the
+earlier half of the seventeenth century: "When I was a young man there
+existed in the families of most unmarried men or widowers of the rank
+of gentlemen, resident in the country, a certain antiquated female,
+either maiden or widow, commonly an aunt or cousin. Her dress I have
+now before me: it consisted of a stiff-starched cap and hood, a little
+hoop, a rich silk damask gown with large flowers. She leant on an
+ivory-headed crutch-cane, and was followed by a fat phthisicky dog
+of the pug kind, who commonly reposed on a cushion, and enjoyed the
+privilege of snarling at the servants, and occasionally biting their
+heels, with impunity. By the side of this old lady jingled a bunch of
+keys, securing in different closets and corner-cupboards all sorts
+of cordial waters, cherry and raspberry brandy, washes for the
+complexion, Daffy's elixir, a rich seed-cake, a number of pots of
+currant jelly and raspberry jam, with a range of gallipots and phials
+and purges for the use of poorer neighbors. The daily business of this
+good lady was to scold the maids, collect eggs, feed the turkeys and
+assist at all lyings-in that happened within the parish. Alas! this
+being is no more seen, and the race is, like that of her pug dog and
+the black rat, totally extinct.
+
+"Another character, now worn out and gone, was the country squire:
+I mean the little, independent country gentleman of three hundred
+pounds a year, who commonly appeared in a plain drab or plush coat,
+large silver buttons, a jockey cap, and rarely without boots. His travels
+never exceeded the distance to the county-town, and that only at
+assize-and session-time, or to attend an election. Once a week
+he commonly dined at the next market-town with the attorneys and
+justices. This man went to church regularly, read the weekly journal,
+settled the parochial disputes between the parish officers at the vestry,
+and afterward adjourned to the neighboring ale-house, where he
+usually got drunk for the good of his country. He never played at cards
+but at Christmas, when a family pack was produced from the mantelpiece.
+He was commonly followed by a couple of greyhounds and a pointer,
+and announced his arrival at a friend's house by cracking his whip or
+giving the view-halloo. His drink was generally ale, except on Christmas,
+the Fifth of November or some other gala-day, when he would make
+a bowl of strong brandy punch, garnished with a toast and nutmeg.
+A journey to London was by one of these men reckoned as great an
+undertaking as is at present a voyage to the East Indies, and
+undertaken with scarcely less precaution and preparation. The mansion
+of one of these squires was of plaster striped with timber, not unaptly
+called calimanco-work, or of red brick; large casemented bow-windows,
+a porch with seats in it, and over it a study, the eaves of the house well
+inhabited by swallows, and the court set round with hollyhocks. The
+hall was furnished with flitches of bacon, and the mantelpiece with guns
+and fishing-rods of different dimensions, accompanied by the broadsword,
+partisan and dagger borne by his ancestors in the Civil Wars. The
+vacant spaces were occupied by stags' horns. Against the wall was
+posted King Charles's _Golden Rules_, Vincent Wing's _Almanack_
+and a portrait of the duke of Marlborough: in his window lay Baker's
+_Chronicle_, Fox's _Book of Martyrs_, Glanvil on _Apparitions_,
+Quincey's _Dispensatory_, the _Complete Justice_ and a _Book of
+Farriery_. In the corner, by the fireside, stood a large wooden
+two-armed chair with a cushion; and within the chimney-corner were
+a couple of seats. Here, at Christmas, he entertained his tenants
+assembled round a glowing fire made of the roots of trees and other
+great logs, and told and heard the traditionary tales of the village
+respecting ghosts and witches till fear made them afraid to move.
+In the mean time the jorum of ale was in continual circulation.
+The best parlor, which was never opened but on particular occasions,
+was furnished with Turk-worked chairs, and hung round with portraits
+of his ancestors--the men, some in the character of shepherds with
+their crooks, dressed in full suits and huge full-bottomed perukes,
+and others in complete armor or buff-coats; the females, likewise
+as shepherdesses with the lamb and crook, all habited in high heads
+and flowing robes. Alas! these men and these houses are no more!
+The luxury of the times has obliged them to quit the country and
+become humble dependants on great men, to solicit a place or
+commission, to live in London, to rack their tenants and draw their
+rents before due. The venerable mansion is in the mean time
+suffered to tumble down or is partly upheld as a farm-house,
+till after a few years the estate is conveyed to the steward of the
+ neighboring lord, or else to some nabob, contractor or limb of the law."
+
+It is unquestionably owing to the love of country life amongst the
+higher classes that England so early attained in many respects what
+may be termed an even civilization. In almost all other countries the
+traveler beyond the confines of a few great cities finds himself in a
+region of comparative semi-barbarism. But no one familiar with English
+country life can say that this is the case in the rural districts
+of England, whilst it is most unquestionably so in Ireland, simply
+because she has through absenteeism been deprived of those influences
+which have done so much for her wealthy sister. Go where you will
+in England to-day, and you will find within five miles of you a good
+turnpike road, leading to an inn hard by, where you may get a clean
+and comfortable though simple dinner, good bread, good butter, and
+a carriage--"fly" is the term now, as in the days of Mr. Jonathan
+Oldbuck--to convey you where you will. And this was the case long
+before railways came into vogue.
+
+The influence of the great house has very wide ramifications, and
+extends far beyond the radius of park, village and estate. It greatly
+affects the prosperity of the country and county towns. Go into Exeter
+or Shrewsbury on a market-day in the autumn months, and you will find
+the streets crowded with carriages. If a local herald be with you, he
+will tell you all about their owners by glancing at the liveries and
+panels. They belong, half of them, to the old county gentry, who have
+shopped here--always at the same shops, according as their proprietors
+are Whigs or Tories--for generations. It may well be imagined what
+a difference the custom of twenty gentlemen spending on an average
+twenty-five thousand dollars a year makes to a grocer or draper.
+Besides, this class of customer demands a first-rate article, and
+consequently it is worth while to keep it in stock. The fishmonger
+knows that twenty great houses within ten miles require their handsome
+dish of fish for dinner as regularly as their bread and butter. It
+becomes worth his while therefore to secure a steady supply. In this
+way smaller people profit, and country life becomes pleasant to them
+too, inasmuch as the demands of the rich contribute to the comfort of
+those in moderate circumstances.
+
+Let us pass to the daily routine of an affluent country home. The
+breakfast hour is from nine to eleven, except where hunting-men or
+enthusiasts in shooting are concerned. The former are often in the
+saddle before six, and young partridge-slayers may, during the first
+fortnight of September--after that their ardor abates a bit--be found
+in the stubbles at any hour after sunrise.
+
+A country-house breakfast in the house of a gentlemen with from three
+thousand a year upward, when several guests are in the house, is a
+very attractive meal. Of course its degree of excellence varies, but
+we will take an average case in the house of a squire living on his
+paternal acres with five thousand pounds a year and knowing how to
+live.
+
+It is 10 A.M. in October: family prayers, usual in nine country-houses
+out of ten, which a guest can attend or not as he pleases, are over.
+The company is gradually gathering in the breakfast-room. It is an
+ample apartment, paneled with oak and hung with family pictures. If
+you have any appreciation for fine plate--and you are to be pitied if
+you have not--you will mark the charming shape and exquisite
+chasing of the antique urn and other silver vessels, which shine as
+brilliantly as on the day they left the silversmiths to Her Majesty,
+Queen Anne. No "Brummagem" patterns will you find here.
+
+On the table at equidistant points stand two tiny tables or
+dumb-waiters, which are made to revolve. On these are placed sugar,
+cream, butter, preserves, salt, pepper, mustard, etc., so that every
+one can help himself without troubling others--a great desideratum,
+for many people are of the same mind on this point as a well-known
+English family, of whom it was once observed that they were very nice
+people, but didn't like being bored to pass the mustard.
+
+On the sideboard are three beautiful silver dishes with spirit-lamps
+beneath them. Let us look under their covers. Broiled chicken, fresh
+mushrooms on toast, and stewed kidney. On a larger dish is fish, and
+ranged behind these hot viands are cold ham, tongue, pheasant and
+game-pie. On huge platters of wood, with knives to correspond, are
+farm-house brown bread and white bread, whilst on the breakfast-table
+itself you will find hot rolls, toast--of which two or three fresh
+relays are brought in during breakfast--buttered toast, muffins and
+the freshest of eggs. The hot dishes at breakfast are varied almost
+every morning, and where there is a good cook a variety of some twenty
+dishes is made.
+
+Marmalade (Marie Malade) of oranges--said to have been originally
+prepared for Mary queen of Scots when ill, and introduced by her into
+Scotland--and "jams" of apricot and other fruit always form a part
+of an English or Scotch breakfast. The living is just as good--often
+better--among the five-thousand-pounds-a-year gentry as among the
+very wealthy: the only difference lies in the number of servants and
+guests.
+
+The luncheon-hour is from one to two. At luncheon there will be a
+roast leg of mutton or some such _pièce de résistance_, and a
+made dish, such as minced veal--a dish, by the way, not the least
+understood in this country, where it is horribly mangled--two hot
+dishes of meat and several cold, and various sorts of pastry. These,
+with bread, butter, fruit, cheese, sherry, port, claret and beer,
+complete the meal.
+
+Few of the men of the party are present at this meal, and those who
+are eat but little, reserving their forces until dinner. All is placed
+on the table at once, and not, as at dinner, in courses. The servants
+leave the room when they have placed everything on the table, and
+people wait on themselves. Dumb-waiters with clean plates, glasses,
+etc. stand at each corner of the table, so that there is very little
+need to get up for what you want.
+
+The afternoon is usually passed by the ladies alone or with only
+one or two gentlemen who don't care to shoot, etc., and is spent in
+riding, driving and walking. Englishwomen are great walkers. With
+their skirts conveniently looped up, and boots well adapted to defy
+the mud, they brave all sorts of weather. "Oh it rains! what a bore!
+We can't go out," said a young lady, standing at the breakfast-room
+window at a house in Ireland; to which her host rejoined, "If you
+don't go out here when it rains, you don't go out at all;" which is
+pretty much the truth.
+
+About five o'clock, as you sit over your book in the library, you
+hear a rapid firing off of guns, which apprises you that the men have
+returned from shooting. They linger a while in the gun-room talking
+over their sport and seeing the record of the killed entered in the
+game-book. Then some, doffing the shooting-gear for a free-and-easy
+but scrupulously neat attire, repair to the ladies' sitting-room or
+the library for "kettledrum."
+
+On a low table is placed the tea equipage, and tea in beautiful little
+cups is being dispensed by fair hands. This is a very pleasant time
+in many houses, and particularly favorable to fun and flirtation. In
+houses where there are children, the cousins of the house and others
+very intimate adjourn to the school-room, where, when the party is
+further reinforced by three or four boys home for the holidays, a
+scene of fun and frolic, which it requires all the energies of the
+staid governess to prevent going too far, ensues.
+
+So time speeds on until the dressing-bell rings at seven o'clock,
+summoning all to prepare for the great event of the day--dinner. Every
+one dons evening-attire for this meal; and so strong a feeling obtains
+on this point that if, in case of his luggage going wrong or other
+accident, a man is compelled to join the party in morning-clothes, he
+feels painfully "fish-out-of-waterish." We know, indeed, of a case in
+which a guest absurdly sensitive would not come down to dinner until
+the arrival of his things, which did not make their appearance for a
+week.
+
+Ladies' dress in country-houses depends altogether upon the occasion.
+If it be a quiet party of intimate friends, their attire is of the
+simplest, but in many fashionable houses the amount of dressing is
+fully as great as in London. English ladies do not dress nearly as
+expensively or with so much taste as Americans, but, on the other
+hand, they have the subject much less in their thoughts; which is
+perhaps even more desirable.
+
+There is a degree of pomp and ceremony, which, however, is far from
+being unpleasant, at dinner in a large country-house. The party is
+frequently joined by the rector and his wife, a neighboring squire
+or two, and a stray parson, so that it frequently reaches twenty. Of
+course in this case the pleasantness of the prandial period depends
+largely upon whom you have the luck to get next to; but there's this
+advantage in the situation over a similar one in London--that you
+have, at all events, a something of local topics in common, having
+picked up a little knowledge of places and people during your stay, or
+if you are quite a new-comer, you can easily set your neighbor a-going
+by questions about surroundings. Generally there is some acquaintance
+between most of the people staying in a house, as hosts make up their
+parties with the view of accommodating persons wishing to meet others
+whom they like. Young men will thus frequently get a good-natured
+hostess to ask some young lady whose society they especially affect,
+and thus country-houses become proverbially adapted for match-making.
+
+There are few houses now-a-days in which the gentlemen linger in
+the dining-room long after the ladies have left it. Habits of hard
+drinking are now almost entirely confined to young men in the army
+and the lower classes. The evenings are spent chiefly in conversation:
+sometimes a rubber of whist is made up, or, if there are a number of
+young people, there is dancing.
+
+A rather surprising step which occasioned something of a scandalous
+sensation in the social world was resorted to some years ago at a
+country-house in Devonshire. Two or three fast young ladies, finding
+the evening somewhat heavy, and lamenting a dearth of dancing men,
+rang the bell, and in five minutes the lady of the house, who was
+in another room, was aghast at seeing them whirling round in
+their Jeames's arms. It was understood that the ringleader in this
+enterprise, the daughter of an Irish earl, was not likely to be asked
+to repeat her visit.
+
+About eleven wine and water and biscuits are brought into the
+drawing-room, and a few minutes later the ladies retire. The wine and
+water, with the addition of other stimulants, are then transferred
+to the billiard- and smoking-rooms, to which the gentlemen adjourn
+so soon as they have changed their black coats for dressing-gowns or
+lounging suits, in which great latitude is given to the caprice of
+individual fancy.
+
+The sittings in these apartments are protracted until any hour, as the
+servants usually go to bed when they have provided every one with
+his flat candle-stick--that emblem of gentility which always so
+prominently recurred to the mind of Mrs. Micawber when recalling the
+happy days when she "lived at home with papa and mamma." In some fast
+houses pretty high play takes place at such times.
+
+It not unfrequently happens that the master of the house takes but
+a very limited share in the recreations of his guests, being much
+engrossed by the various avocations which fall to the lot of a
+country proprietor. After breakfast in the morning he will make it his
+business to see that each gentleman is provided with such recreation
+as he likes for the day. This man will shoot, that one will fish;
+Brown will like to have a horse and go over to see some London friends
+who are staying ten miles off; Jones has heaps of letters which
+must be written in the morning, but will ride with the ladies in the
+afternoon; and when all these arrangements are completed the squire
+will drive off with his old confidential groom in the dog-cart, with
+that fast-trotting bay, to attend the county meeting in the nearest
+cathedral town or dispense justice from the bench at Pottleton;
+and when eight o'clock brings all together at dinner an agreeable
+diversity is given to conversation by each man's varied experiences
+during the day.
+
+Of course some houses are desperately dull, whilst others are always
+agreeable. Haddo House, during the lifetime of Lord Aberdeen, the
+prime minister, had an exceptional reputation for the former quality.
+It was said to be the most silent house in England; and silence in
+this instance was regarded as quite the reverse of golden. The family
+scarcely ever spoke, and the guest, finding that his efforts brought
+no response, became alarmed at the echoes of his own voice. Lord
+Aberdeen and his son, Lord Haddo--an amiable but weak and eccentric
+man, father of the young earl who dropped his title and was drowned
+whilst working as mate of a merchantman--did not get on well together,
+and saw very little of each other for some years. At length a
+reconciliation was effected, and the son was invited to Haddo. Anxious
+to be pleasant and conciliatory, he faltered out admiringly, "The
+place looks nice, the trees are very green." "Did you expect to see
+'em blue, then?" was the encouraging paternal rejoinder.
+
+The degree of luxury in many of these great houses is less remarkable
+than its completeness. Everything is in keeping, thus presenting a
+remarkable contrast to most of our rich men's attempts at the same.
+The dinner, cooked by a _cordon bleu_ of the cuisine [A]--whose
+resources in the way of "hot plates" and other accessories for
+furnishing a superlative dinner are unrivaled--is often served on
+glittering plate, or china almost equally valuable, by men six
+feet high, of splendid figure, and dressed with the most scrupulous
+neatness and cleanliness. Gloves are never worn by servants in
+first-rate English houses, but they carry a tiny napkin in their hands
+which they place between their fingers and the plates. Nearly all
+country gentlemen are hospitable, and it very rarely happens that
+guests are not staying in the house. A county ball or some other such
+gathering fills it from garret to cellar.
+
+[Footnote A: Frenchmen say that the best English dinners are now the
+best in the world, because they combine the finest French _entrées_
+and _entremets_ with _pièces de résistance_ of unrivaled excellence.]
+
+The best guest-rooms are always reserved for the married: bachelors
+are stowed away comparatively "anywhere." In winter fires are always
+lit in the bedrooms about five o'clock, so that they may be warm at
+dressing-time; and shortly before the dressing-bell rings the servant
+deputed to attend upon a guest who does not bring a valet with him
+goes to his room, lays out his evening-toilette, puts shirt, socks,
+etc. to air before the fire, places a capacious pitcher of boiling
+water on the washing-stand, and having lit the candles, drawn the
+easy-chair to the fire, just ready on provocation to burst into a
+blaze, lights the wax candles on the dressing-table and withdraws.
+
+In winter the guest is asked whether he likes a fire to get up by,
+and in that event a housemaid enters early with as little noise as
+possible and lights it. On rising in the morning you find all your
+clothes carefully brushed and put in order, and every appliance for
+ample ablutions at hand.
+
+A guest gives the servant who attends him a tip of from a dollar and
+a quarter to five dollars, according to the length of his stay. If he
+shoots, a couple of sovereigns for a week's sport is a usual fee to a
+keeper. Some people give absurdly large sums, but the habit of giving
+them has long been on the decline. The keeper supplies powder and
+shot, and sends in an account for them. Immense expense is involved
+in these shooting establishments. The late Sir Richard Sutton, a
+great celebrity in the sporting world, who had the finest shooting in
+England, and therefore probably in the world, used to say that every
+pheasant he killed cost him a guinea. On some estates the sale of the
+game is in some degree a set-off to the cost of maintaining it, just
+as the sale of the fruit decreases the cost of pineries, etc. Nothing
+but the fact that the possession of land becomes more and more vested
+in those who regard it as luxury could have enabled this sacrifice of
+farming to sport to continue so long. It is the source of continual
+complaint and resentment on the part of the farmers, who are only
+pacified by allowance being made to them out of their rent for damage
+done by game.
+
+The expense of keeping up large places becomes heavier every year,
+owing to the constantly-increasing rates of wages, etc., and in
+some cases imposes a grievous burden, eating heavily into income
+and leaving men with thousands of acres very poor balances at their
+bankers to meet the Christmas bills. Those who have large families
+to provide for, and get seriously behindhand, usually shut up or let
+their places--which latter is easily done if they be near London or
+in a good shooting country--and recoup on the Continent; but of
+late years prices there have risen so enormously that this plan of
+restoring the equilibrium between income and expenditure is far less
+satisfactory than it was forty years ago. The encumbrances on many
+estates are very heavy. A nobleman who twenty years ago succeeded to
+an entailed estate, with a house almost gutted, through having had
+an execution put in it, and a heavy debt--some of which, though not
+legally bound to liquidate, he thought it his duty to settle--acted
+in a very spirited manner which few of his order have the courage to
+imitate. He dropped his title, went abroad and lived for some years
+on about three thousand dollars a year. He has now paid off all
+his encumbrances, and has a clear income, steadily increasing, of
+a hundred thousand dollars a year. In another case a gentleman
+accomplished a similar feat by living in a corner of his vast mansion
+and maintaining only a couple of servants.
+
+In Ireland, owing to the lower rates of wages and far greater--in the
+remoter parts--cheapness of provisions, large places can be maintained
+at considerably less cost, but they are usually far less well kept,
+partly owing to their being on an absurdly large scale as compared
+with the means of the proprietors, and partly from the slovenly habits
+of the country. And in some cases people who could afford it will not
+spend the money. There are, however, notable exceptions. Powerscourt
+in Wicklow, the seat of Viscount Powerscourt, and Woodstock in
+Kilkenny, the beautiful demesne of Mr. Tighe, are probably in as
+perfect order as any seats in England. A countryman was sent over to
+the latter one day with a message from another county. "Well, Jerry,"
+said the master on his return, "what did you think of Woodstock?"
+"Shure, your honor," was the reply, "I niver seed such a power of
+girls a-swaping up the leaves."
+
+Country-house life in Ireland and Scotland is almost identical with
+that in England, except that, in the former especially, there is
+generally less money. Scotland has of late years become so much the
+fashion, land has risen so enormously in value, and properties are
+so very large, that some of the establishments, such as those at
+Drumlanrig, Dunrobin, Gordon Castle and Floors, the seats respectively
+of the dukes of Buccleuch, Sutherland, Richmond and Roxburghe, are on
+a princely scale. The number of wealthy squires is far fewer than
+in England. It is a curious feature in the Scottish character that
+notwithstanding the radical politics of the country--for scarcely
+a Conservative is returned by it--the people cling fondly to
+primogeniture and their great lords, who, probably to a far greater
+extent than in England, hold the soil. The duke of Sutherland
+possesses nearly the whole of the county from which he derives his
+title, whilst the duke of Buccleuch owns the greater part of four.
+
+Horses are such a very expensive item that a large stable is seldom
+found unless there is a very large income, for otherwise the rest
+of the establishment must be cut down to a low figure. Hunting
+millionaires keep from ten to twenty, or even thirty, hacks and
+hunters, besides four or five carriage-horses. Three or four
+riding-horses, three carriage-horses and a pony or two is about the
+usual number in the stable of a country gentleman with from five to
+six thousand pounds a year. The stable-staff would be coachman, groom
+and two helpers. The number of servants in country-houses varies from
+seven or eight to eighty, but probably there are not ten houses in the
+country where it reaches so high a figure as the last: from fifteen to
+twenty would be a common number.
+
+There are many popular bachelors and old maids who live about half the
+year in the country-houses of their friends. A gentleman of this sort
+will have his chambers in London and his valet, whilst the lady will
+have her lodgings and maid. In London they will live cheaply and
+comfortably, he at his club and dining out with rich friends, she in
+her snug little room and passing half her time in friends' houses.
+There is not the slightest surrender of independence about these
+people. They would not stay a day in a house which they did not like,
+but their pleasant manners and company make them acceptable, and
+friends are charmed to have them.
+
+One of the special recommendations of a great country-house is that
+you need not see too much of any one. There is no necessary meeting
+except at meals--in many houses then even only at dinner--and in the
+evening. Many sit a great deal in their own rooms if they have writing
+or work to do; some will be in the billiard-room, others in the
+library, others in the drawing-room: the host's great friend will be
+with him in his own private room, whilst the hostess's will pass most
+of the time in that lady's boudoir.[A]
+
+[Footnote A: Perhaps the most charming idea of a country-house was
+that conceived by Mr. Mathew of Thomastown--a huge mansion still
+extant, now the property of the count de Jarnac, to whom it descended.
+This gentleman, who was an ancestor of the celebrated Temperance
+leader, probably had as much claret drunk in his house as any one in
+his country; which is saying a good deal.
+
+He had an income which would be equivalent to one hundred and
+twenty-five thousand dollars a year in our money, and for several
+years traveled abroad and spent very little. On his return with an
+ample sum of ready money, he carried into execution a long-cherished
+scheme of country life.
+
+He arranged his immense mansion after the fashion of an inn. The
+guests arrived, were shown to their rooms, and treated as though they
+were in the most perfectly-appointed hotel. They ordered dinner when
+they pleased, dined together or alone as suited them, hunted, shot,
+played billiards, cards, etc. at will, and kept their own horses.
+There was a regular bar, where drinks of the finest quality were
+always served. The host never appeared in that character: he was just
+like any other gentleman in the house.
+
+The only difference from a hotel lay in the choice character of the
+company, and the fact that not a farthing might be disbursed. The
+servants were all paid extra, with the strict understanding that they
+did not accept a farthing, and that any dereliction from this rule
+would be punished by instant dismissal.
+
+Unlike most Irish establishments, especially at that date (about the
+middle of the last century), this was managed with the greatest order,
+method and economy.
+
+Among the notable guests was Dean Swift, whose astonishment at the
+magnitude of the place, with the lights in hundreds of windows at
+night, is mentioned by Dr. Sheridan.
+
+It is pleasant to add in this connection that the count and countess
+de Jarnac worthily sustain the high character earned a century
+since by their remarkable ancestor, who was one of the best and most
+benevolent men of his day.]
+
+In some respects railroads have had a very injurious effect on the
+sociability of English country life. They have rendered people in
+great houses too apt to draw their supplies of society exclusively
+from town. English trains run so fast that this can even be done in
+places quite remote from London. The journey from London to Rugby,
+for instance, eighty miles, is almost invariably accomplished in two
+hours. Leaving at five in the afternoon, a man reaches that station at
+7.10: his friend's well-appointed dog-cart is there to meet him, and
+that exquisitely neat young groom, with his immaculate buckskins and
+boots in which you may see yourself, will make the thoroughbred do the
+four miles to the hall in time to enable you to dress for dinner
+by 7.45. Returning on Tuesday morning--and all the lines are most
+accommodating about return tickets--the barrister, guardsman,
+government clerk can easily be at his post in town by eleven o'clock.
+Thus the actual "country people" get to be held rather cheap, and come
+off badly, because Londoners, being more in the way of hearing,
+seeing and observing what is going on in society, are naturally more
+congenial to fine people in country-houses who live in the metropolis
+half the year.
+
+It is evident from the following amusing squib, which appeared in one
+of the Annuals for 1832, how far more dependent the country gentleman
+was upon his country neighbors in those days, when only idle men could
+run down from town:
+
+"Mr. J., having frequently witnessed with regret country gentlemen,
+in their country-houses, reduced to the dullness of a domestic circle,
+and nearly led to commit suicide in the month of November, or, what is
+more melancholy, to invite the ancient and neighboring families of
+the Tags, the Rags and the Bobtails, has opened an office in Spring
+Gardens for the purpose of furnishing country gentlemen in their
+country-houses with company and guests on the most moderate terms. It
+will appear from the catalogue that Mr. J. has a choice and elegant
+assortment of six hundred and seventeen guests, ready to start at a
+moment's warning to any country gentleman at any house. Among them
+will be found three Scotch peers, several ditto Irish, fifteen decayed
+baronets, eight yellow admirals, forty-seven major-generals on half
+pay (who narrate the whole Peninsular War), twenty-seven dowagers,
+one hundred and eighty-seven old maids on small annuities, and several
+unbeneficed clergymen, who play a little on the fiddle. All the above
+play at cards, and usually with success if partners. No objection to
+cards on Sunday evenings or rainy mornings. The country gentleman to
+allow the guests four feeds a day, and to produce claret if a Scotch
+or Irish peer be present."
+
+A country village very often has no inhabitants except the parson
+holding the rank of gentry. The majority of ladies in moderate or
+narrow circumstances live in county-towns, such as Exeter, Salisbury,
+etc., or in watering-places, which abound and are of all degrees of
+fashion and expense. County-town and watering-place society is a thing
+_per se_, and has very little to do with "county" society, which
+means that of the landed gentry living in their country-houses.
+Thus, noblemen and gentlemen within a radius of five miles of such
+watering-places as Bath, Tonbridge Wells and Weymouth would not have a
+dozen visiting acquaintances resident in those towns.
+
+To get into "county" society is by no means easy to persons without
+advantages of position or connection, even with ample means, and to
+the wealthy manufacturer or merchant is often a business of years. The
+upper class of Englishmen, and more especially women, are accustomed
+to find throughout their acquaintance an almost identical style and
+set of manners. Anything which differs from this they are apt to
+regard as "ungentlemanlike or unladylike," and shun accordingly. The
+dislike to traders and manufacturers, which is very strong in those
+counties, such as Cheshire and Warwickshire, which environ great
+commercial centres, arises not from the folly of thinking commerce a
+low occupation, but because the county gentry have different tastes,
+habits and modes of thought from men who have worked their way up from
+the counting-room, and do not, as the phrase goes, "get on" with
+them, any more than a Wall street broker ordinarily gets on with a
+well-read, accomplished member of the Bar.
+
+A result of this is that a large number of wealthy commercial men, in
+despair of ever entering the charmed circle of county society, take up
+their abode in or near the fashionable watering-places, where,
+after the manner of those at our own Newport, they build palaces in
+paddocks, have acres of glass, rear the most marvelous of pines and
+peaches, and have model farms which cost them thousands of pounds
+a year. To this class is owing in a great degree the extraordinary
+increase of Leamington, Torquay, Tonbridge Wells, etc.--places which
+have made the fortunes of the lucky people who chanced to own them.
+
+English ladies, as a rule, take a great deal of interest in the poor
+around them, and really know a great deal of them. The village near
+the hall is almost always well attended to, but it unfortunately
+happens that outlying properties sometimes come off far less well. The
+classes which see nothing of each other in English rural life are the
+wives and daughters of the gentry and those of the wealthier farmers
+and tradesmen: between these sections a huge gulf intervenes, which
+has not as yet been in the least degree bridged over. In former days
+very great people used to have once or twice in the year what were
+called "public days," when it was open house for all who chose to
+come, with a sort of tacit understanding that none below the class
+of substantial yeomen or tradesmen would make their appearance. This
+custom has now fallen into disuse, but was maintained to the last by
+the Hon. Doctor Vernon-Harcourt, who was for more than half a century
+archbishop of York, and is yet retained by Earl Fitzwilliam at
+Wentworth House, his princely seat in Yorkshire. There, once or twice
+a year, a great gathering takes place. Dinner is provided for hundreds
+of guests, and care is taken to place a member of the family at every
+table to do his or her part toward dispensing hospitality to high and
+low.
+
+During the summer and early autumn croquet and archery offer good
+excuses for bringing young people together, and reunions of this kind
+palliate the miseries of those who cannot afford to partake of the
+expensive gayeties of the London season. The archery meetings are
+often exceedingly pretty fêtes. Somtimes they are held in grounds
+specially devoted to the purpose, as is the case at St. Leonard's,
+near Hastings, where the archery-ground will well repay a visit. The
+shooting takes place in a deep and vast excavation covered with the
+smoothest turf, and from the high ground above is a glorious view of
+the old castle of Hastings and the ocean. In Devonshire these meetings
+have an exceptional interest from the fact that they are held in the
+park of Powderham Castle, the ancestral seat of the celebrated family
+of Courtenay. All the county flocks to them, some persons coming fifty
+miles for this purpose. Apropos of one of these meetings, we shall
+venture to interpolate an anecdote which deserves to be recorded for
+the sublimity of impudence which it displays. The railway from London
+to Plymouth skirts the park of Powderham, running so close beside
+it that each train sends a herd of deer scampering down the velvety
+glades. One afternoon a bouncing young lady, who belonged to a family
+which had lately emerged from the class of yeoman into that of gentry,
+and whose "manners had not the repose which stamps the caste of Vere
+de Vere," found herself in a carriage with two fashionably-attired
+persons of her own sex. As the train ran by the park, one of these
+latter exclaimed to her companion, "Oh look, there's Powderham! Don't
+you remember that archery-party we went to there two years ago?" "To
+be sure," was the rejoinder. "I'm not likely to forget it, there were
+some such queer people. Who were those vulgarians whom we thought so
+particularly objectionable? I can't remember." "Oh, H----: H----
+of P----! That was the name." Upon this the other young lady in the
+carriage bounced to her feet with the words, "Allow me to tell you,
+madam, that I am Miss H---- of P----!" Neither of those she addressed
+deigned to utter a word in reply to this announcement, nor did it
+appear in the least to disconcert them. One slowly drew out a gold
+double eye-glass, leisurely surveyed Miss H---- of P---- from head to
+foot, and then proceeded to talk to her companion in French. Perhaps
+the best part of the joke was that Miss H---- made a round of visits
+in the course of the week, and detailed the disgusting treatment to
+which she had been subjected to a numerous acquaintance, who, it
+is needless to say, appeared during the narration as indignant and
+sympathetic as she could have wished, but who are declared by some
+ill-natured persons to have been precisely those who in secret
+chuckled over the insult with the greatest glee.
+
+English gentlemen experience an almost painful sensation as they
+journey through our land and observe the utter indifference of its
+wealthier classes to the charms of such a magnificent country. "Pearls
+before swine," they say in their hearts. "God made the country and man
+made the town." "Yes, and how obviously the American prefers the work
+of man to the work of the Almighty!" These and similar reflections
+no doubt fill the minds of many a thoughtful English traveler as the
+train speeds over hill and dale, field and forest. What sites are
+here! he thinks. What a perfect park might be made out of that wild
+ground! what cover-shooting there ought to be in that woodland! what
+fishing and boating on that lake! And then he groans in spirit as the
+cars enter a forest where tree leans against tree, and neglect reigns
+on all sides, and he thinks of the glorious oaks and beeches so
+carefully cared for in his own country, where trees and flowery are
+loved and petted as much as dogs and horses. And if anything can
+increase the contempt he feels for those who "don't care a rap" for
+country and country life, it is a visit to such resorts as Newport and
+Saratoga. There he finds men whose only notion of country life is what
+he would hold to be utterly destitute of all its ingredients. They
+build palaces in paddocks, take actually no exercise, play at cards
+for three hours in the forenoon, dine, and then drive out "just like
+ladies," we heard a young Oxonian exclaim--"got up" in the style that
+an Englishman adopts only in Hyde Park or Piccadilly.
+
+When an American went to stay with Lord Palmerston at Broadlands, the
+great minister ordered horses for a ride in the delicious glades of
+the New Forest. When they came to the door his guest was obliged to
+confess himself no horseman. The premier, with ready courtesy, said,
+"Oh, then, we'll walk: it's all the same to me;" but it wasn't quite
+the same. The incident was just one of those which separate the
+Englishman of a certain rank from the American.
+
+There is of course a certain class of Americans, more especially among
+the _jeunesse dorée_ of New York, who greatly affect sport: they
+"run" horses and shoot pigeons, but these are not persons who commend
+themselves to real gentlemen, English or American. They belong to
+the bad style of "fast men," and are as thoroughly distasteful to
+a Devonshire or Cheshire squire as to one who merits "the grand old
+name"--which they conspicuously defame--in their own country.
+
+The English country-loving gentleman to whom we have been referring
+is, for the most part, of a widely different mould--a man of
+first-rate education, frequently of high attainments, and often one
+whose ends and aims in life are for far higher things than pleasure,
+even of the most innocent kind, but who, when he takes it, derives it
+chiefly from the country. Many of this kind will instantly occur to
+those acquainted with English worthies: to mention two--John Evelyn
+and Sir Fowell Buxton.
+
+REGINALD WYNFORD.
+
+
+
+
+THE FOREST OF ARDEN.
+
+
+A girl of seventeen--a girl with a "missish" name, with a "missish"
+face as well, soft skin, bright eyes, dark hair, medium height and a
+certain amount of coquetry in her attire. This completes the "visible"
+of Nellie Archer. And the invisible? With an exterior such as this,
+what thoughts or ideas are possible within? Surely none worth the
+trouble of searching after. It is a case of the rind being the better
+part of the fruit, the shell excelling the kernel; and with a slight
+effort we can imagine her acquirements. Some scraps of geography,
+mixed up with the topography of an embroidery pattern; some grammar,
+of much use in parsing the imperfect phrases of celebrated authors,
+to the neglect of her own; some romanticism, finding expression in the
+arrangement of a spray of artificial flowers on a spring bonnet; some
+idea of duty, resulting in the manufacture of sweet cake or "seeing
+after" the dessert for dinner; and a conception of "woman's mission"
+gained from Tennyson--
+
+ Oh teach the orphan-boy to read,
+ Or teach the orphan-girl to sew.
+
+No! no! no! not so fast, please. In spite of Nellie's name, of her
+face, of her attire, that little head is filled quite otherwise. It is
+not her fault that this is so: is it her misfortune? But to give the
+history of this being entire, it is necessary to begin seventeen years
+back, at the very beginning of her life, for in our human nature, as
+in the inanimate world, a phenomenon is better understood when we know
+its producing causes.
+
+Nellie's father was a business-man of a type common in America--one
+whose affairs led him here, there and everywhere. Never quiet while
+awake, and scarcely at rest during slumber, he resembled Bedreddin
+Hassan in frequently going to sleep in one town, to awake in another
+far distant, but without the benighted Oriental's surprise at the
+transfer, the afrit who performed this prodigy being a steam-engine,
+and the magician it obeyed the human mind.
+
+In these rapid peregrinations it would not have been easy for Mr.
+Archer to carry an infant with him; so, when his wife died and left
+Nellie to his sole care at six months old, he speedily cast about in
+his mind to rid himself of the encumbrance.
+
+Having heard that country air is good for children, he sent the little
+one to the interior, and quite admired himself for giving her such an
+advantage: then, too, the house in the city could be sold.
+
+But to whom did he entrust his child? For a while this had been the
+great difficulty. In vain he thought over the years he had lived, to
+find a friend: he had been too busy to make friends. For an honest
+person he had traversed the world too hurriedly to perceive the
+deeper, better part of mankind; he had floated on the surface with the
+scum and froth, and could recall no one whom he could trust. At last,
+away back in the years of his childhood, he saw a face--that of a
+young but motherly Irishwoman, who had lived in his father's family as
+a faithful servant, and had been a fond partisan of his in his fickle
+troubles when a boy.
+
+He sought and found her in his need. She had married, borne children
+and grown old: her offspring, after much struggling and little help
+from the parent birds, had learned to fly alone, and had left the
+home-nest to try their own fortunes. It was not hard for Mr. Archer
+to persuade Nurse Bridget and her husband to inhabit his house in the
+country and take charge of the baby. In a short time the arrangements
+were complete, and the three were installed in comfort, for the busy
+man did not grudge money.
+
+If in the long years that followed a thought of the neglected little
+one did at times reproach him, he dismissed it with the resolution of
+doing something for her when she should be grown up; but at what date
+this event was to take place, or what it was that he intended to do,
+he did not definitely settle.
+
+The mansion in the country was an old rambling house, in which
+there were enough deserted rooms to furnish half a dozen ghosts with
+desirable lodgings, without inconvenience to the living dwellers. The
+front approach was through an avenue of hemlocks, dark and untrimmed.
+Under the closed windows lay a tangled garden, where flowers grew
+rank, shadowed by high ash and leafy oak, outposts of the forest
+behind--a forest jealous of cultivation, stealthily drawing nearer
+each year, and threatening to reconquer its own.
+
+There was an unused well in a corner that looked like the habitation
+of a fairy--of a good fairy, I am sure, because the grass grew
+greenest and best about the worn curb, and the tender mosses and
+little plants that could not support the heat in summer found a refuge
+within its cool circle and flourished there.
+
+On the other side of the house, and dividing it from level fields,
+were the kitchen-garden and orchard. In springtime you might have
+imagined the latter to be a grove of singing trees, bearing song
+for fruit: in autumn, had you seen it when the sun was low, glinting
+through leaves and gilding apples and stem, you would have been
+reminded of the garden of the Hesperides.
+
+Below the fields lay a broad river--in summer, languid and clear;
+in winter, turbid and full. The child often wondered (as soon as
+she could wonder) if, when it was lying so tranquil under the summer
+clouds, it was thinking of the frolic it would have with the great
+blocks of ice in the winter; whether it loved best the rush and
+struggle of the floods or the quiet of low water; and, above all,
+whither it was going.
+
+The homely faces and bent, ungainly forms of the old nurse and her
+husband harmonized well with the mellow gloom about them; and the
+infant Nellie completed the scene, like the spot of sunlight in the
+foreground of a picture by Rembrandt.
+
+Now, Nellie inherited her father's active disposition, and, left to
+her own amusement, her occupations were many and various. At three
+years of age she was turned loose in the orchard, with three blind
+puppies in lieu of toys. Day by day she augmented her store, until she
+had two kittens, one little white pig with a curly tail, half a dozen
+soft piepies, one kid, and many inanimate articles, such as broken
+bottles, dishes, looking-glass and gay bits of calico. When the little
+thing became sleepy she would toddle through the long grass to a
+corner, whence the river could be heard fretting against its banks,
+and lie there: she said the water sang to her. Finding that this was
+her favorite spot, the old nurse placed there a bright quilt for her
+to rest on, and in case she should awake hungry there stood a tin
+of milk hard by. This was all the attention she received, unless the
+fairy of the well took her under her protection, but for that I cannot
+vouch. Sometimes the puppies drank her milk before she awoke; then she
+went contentedly and ate green apples or ripe cherries. Thus she lived
+and grew.
+
+By the time Nellie was seven she had seen whole generations of pets
+pass away. It was wonderful what knowledge she gained in this golden
+orchard. She knew that piepies became chickens--that they were killed
+and eaten; so death came into her world. She knew that the kid grew
+into a big goat, and became very wicked, for he ran at her one day,
+throwing her to the ground and hurting her severely; so sin came into
+her world. She saw innate depravity exemplified in the conduct of her
+innocent white pig, that would take to puddles and filth in spite of
+her gentle endeavors to restrain its wayward impulses. Her puppies
+too bit each other, would quarrel over a bone, growl and get generally
+unmanageable. None of her animals fulfilled the promise of their
+youth, and her care was returned with base ingratitude. Even
+the little wrens bickered with the blue-birds, and showed their
+selfishness and jealousy in chasing them from the crumbs she
+impartially spread for all in common.
+
+So at seven she was a wise little woman, and said to her nurse one
+day, "I do not care for pets any more: they all grow up nasty."
+
+Was Solomon's "All is vanity" truer?
+
+With so much experience Nellie felt old, for life is not counted by
+years alone: it is the loss of hope, the mistrust of appearance, the
+vanishing of illusion, that brings age. A hopeful heart is young at
+seventy, and youth is past when hope is dead. But, in spite of all,
+hope was not dead in the heart of the little maid, and though deceived
+she was quite ready to be deceived a second time, as was Solomon, and
+as we are all.
+
+It was now that the girl began to be fond of flowers. She made
+herself a bed for them in a sunny corner of the kitchen-garden, and
+transplanted daisy roots and spring-beauties, with other wood- and
+field-plants as they blossomed. She watched the ferns unroll their
+worm-like fronds, made plays with the nodding violets, and ornamented
+her head with dandelion curls. This was indeed a happy summer.
+Her rambles were unlimited, and each day she was rewarded by new
+discoveries and delightful secrets--how the May-apple is good to eat,
+that sassafras root makes tea, that birch bark is very like candy,
+though not so sweet, and slippery elm a feast.
+
+Her new playmates were as lovely and perfect as she could desire.
+_They_ did not "grow up nasty," but in the autumn, alas! they died.
+
+One day at the end of the Indian summer, after having wandered for
+hours searching for her favorites, she found them all withered. The
+trees also looked forlorn, shivering in the chill air, with scarce a
+leaf to cover them: the wind moaned, and the sky was gray instead
+of the bright summer blue. The little one, tired and disappointed,
+touched by this mighty lesson of decay, threw herself on a friendly
+bank and wept.
+
+It is true the beautiful face of Nature had grown sad each winter, and
+her flowers and lovely things had yearly passed away, but Nellie had
+not then loved them.
+
+Here she was found by a boy rosy-cheeked and bright, who all his life
+had been loved and caressed to the same extent that Nellie had been
+neglected. He lived beyond the forest, and had come this afternoon
+to look for walnuts. Seeing the girl unhappy, he essayed some of the
+blandishing arts his mother had often lavished on him, speaking to her
+in a kindly tone and asking her why she cried.
+
+The child looked up at the sound of this new voice, and her
+astonishment stopped her tears. After gazing at him for some time with
+her eyes wide open, she remarked, wonderingly, "You are little, like
+me."
+
+"I am not very small," replied the boy, straightening himself.
+
+"Oh, but you _are_ young and little," she insisted.
+
+"I am young, but not little. Come stand up beside me. See! you don't
+more than reach my shoulder."
+
+"Shall you ever get bigger?"
+
+"Of course I shall."
+
+"Shall you grow up nasty?" she continued, trying to bring her stock of
+experience to bear on this new phenomenon.
+
+"No, I sha'n't!" he answered very decidedly.
+
+"Shall you die?"
+
+"No, not until I am old, old, old."
+
+"I am very glad: I will take you for a pet, All my little animals get
+nasty, and my flowers have died, but I don't care, now that you have
+come: I think I shall like you best."
+
+"But I won't be your pet," said the boy, offended.
+
+"Why not?" she asked, looking at him beseechingly. "I should be very
+good to you;" and she smoothed his sleeve with her brown hand as if it
+were the fur of one of her late darlings.
+
+"Who are you?" he demanded inquisitively.
+
+"I am myself," she innocently replied.
+
+"What is your name?"
+
+"I am Nellie. Have you a name?" she eagerly went on. "If you haven't,
+I'll give you a pretty one. Let me see: I will call you--"
+
+"You need not trouble yourself, thank you: I have a name of my own,
+Miss Nellie. I am Danby Overbeck."
+
+"Dan--by--o--ver--beck!" she repeated slowly. "Why, you have an awful
+long name, Beck, for such a little fellow."
+
+"I am not little, and I will not have you call me Beck: that is no
+name."
+
+"I forgot all but the last. Don't get nasty, please;" and she patted
+his arm soothingly. "What does your nurse call you?"
+
+"I am no baby to have a nurse," he said disdainfully.
+
+"You have no nurse? Poor thing! What do you do? who feeds you?"
+
+"I feed myself."
+
+"Where do you live," she asked, looking about curiously, as if she
+thought he had some kind of a nest near at hand.
+
+"Oh, far away--at the other side of the woods."
+
+"Won't you come and live with me? Do!"
+
+"No indeed, gypsy: I must go home. See, the sun is almost down. You
+had better go too: your mother will be anxious."
+
+"I have no mother, and my flowers are all dead. I wish you would be my
+pet--I wish you would come with me;" and her lip trembled.
+
+"My gracious, child! what would the old lady at home say? Why, there
+would be an awful row."
+
+"Never mind, come," she answered coaxingly, rubbing her head against
+his sleeve like a kitten. "Come, I will love you so much."
+
+"You go home," he said, patting her head, "and I will come again some
+day, and will bring you flowers."
+
+"The flowers are all dead," she replied, shaking her head.
+
+"I can make some grow. Go now, run away: let me see you off."
+
+She looked for a moment at this superior being, who could make flowers
+grow and could live without the care of a nurse, and then, obeying the
+stronger intelligence, she trotted off toward home.
+
+And now life contained new pleasure for Nellie, for the boy was
+large-hearted and kind, coming almost daily to take her with him on
+his excursions. Indeed, he was as lonely as the child, companions
+being difficult to find in that out-of-the-way neighborhood, and the
+odd little thing amused him. She would trudge bravely by his side
+when he went to fish, or carry his bag when he went gunning; and his
+promise of flowers was redeemed with gifts from the conservatory,
+which enhanced her opinion of this divinity, seeing that they were
+even more beautiful than those of her own fields. Often, when tired of
+sport, Danby would read to her, sitting in the shade of forest trees,
+stories of pirates and robbers or of wonderful adventures: these were
+the afternoons she enjoyed the most.
+
+One day, seeing her lips grow bright and her eyes dark from her
+intense interest in the story, he offered her the book as he was
+preparing to go, saying, "Take it home, Nellie, and read it."
+
+She took the volume in her hand eagerly, looked at the page a little
+while, a puzzled expression gradually passing over her face, until
+finally she turned to him open-eyed and disappointed, saying simply,
+"I can't."
+
+"Oh try!"
+
+"How shall I try?"
+
+"It begins _there_: now go on, it is easy. _There_" he repeated,
+pointing to the word, "go on," he added impatiently.
+
+"Where shall I go?"
+
+"Why read, Stupid! Look at it."
+
+She bent over and gazed earnestly where the end of his finger touched
+the book. "I look and look," she said, shaking her head, "but I do
+not see the pretty stories that you do. They seem quite gone away, and
+nothing is left but little crooked marks."
+
+"I do believe you can't read."
+
+"I do believe it too," said Nellie.
+
+"But you must try; such a big girl as you are getting to be!"
+
+"I try and I look, but it don't come to me."
+
+"You must learn."
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Do you intend to do it?"
+
+"Why should I? You can read to me."
+
+"You will never know anything," exclaimed the boy severely. "How do
+you spend your time in the morning, when I am not here?"
+
+"I do nothing."
+
+"Nothing?"
+
+"That is, I wait until you come," in an explanatory tone.
+
+"What do you do while you are waiting?"
+
+"I think about you, and wonder how soon you will be here; and I walk
+about, or lie on the grass and look at the clouds."
+
+"Well, did I ever hear of such an idle girl? I shall not come again
+if you don't learn to read." Nellie was not much given to laughter
+or tears. She had lived too much alone for such outward appeals for
+sympathy. Why laugh when there is no one near to smile in return? Why
+weep when there is no one to give comfort? She only regarded him with
+a world of reproach in her large eyes.
+
+"Nellie," he said, in reply to her eyes, "you ought to learn to read,
+and you _must_. Did no one ever try to teach you?"
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"Have you no books?"
+
+Again a negative shake.
+
+"Just come along with me to the house. I'll see about this thing: it
+must be stopped." And Danby rose and walked off with a determined air,
+while the girl, abashed and wondering, followed him. When they arrived
+he plunged into the subject at once: "Nurse Bridget, can you read?"
+
+"An' I raly don't know, as I niver tried."
+
+"Fiddlesticks! Of course Maurice is too blind, and very likely he
+never tried either. Are there no books in the house?"
+
+"An' there is, then--a whole room full of them, Master Danby. We are
+not people of no larnin' here, I can tell you. There is big books,
+an' little books, an' some awful purty books, an' some," she added
+doubtfully, "as is not so purty."
+
+"You know a great deal about books!" said the boy sarcastically.
+
+"An' sure I do. Haven't I dusted them once ivery year since I came to
+this blessed place? And tired enough they made me, too. I ain't likely
+to forgit them."
+
+"Well, let us see them."
+
+"Sure they're locked."
+
+"Open them," said the impatient boy.
+
+"Do open them," added Nellie timidly.
+
+But it required much coaxing to accomplish their design, and after
+nurse did consent time was lost in looking for the keys, which were at
+last found under a china bowl in the cupboard. Then the old woman led
+the way with much importance, opening door after door of the unused
+part of the house, until she came to the library. It was a large,
+sober-looking room, with worn furniture and carpet, but rich in
+literature, and even art, for several fine pictures hung on the
+walls. The ancestor from whom the house had descended must have been
+a learned man in his day, and a wise, for he had gathered about him
+treasures. Danby shouted with delight, and Nellie's eyes sparkled as
+she saw his pleasure.
+
+"Open all the windows, nurse, please, and then leave us. Why, Nellie,
+there is enough learning here to make you the most wonderful woman in
+the world! Do you think you can get all these books into your head?"
+he asked mischievously, "because that is what I expect of you. We will
+take a big one to begin with." The girl looked on while he, with mock
+ceremony, took down the largest volume within reach and laid it open
+on a reading-desk near. "Now sit;" and he drew a chair for her before
+the open book, and another for himself. "It is nice big print. Do you
+see this word?" and he pointed to one of the first at the top of the
+page.
+
+She nodded her head gravely.
+
+"It is _love_: say it."
+
+She repeated the word after him.
+
+"Now find it all over the page whereever it occurs."
+
+With some mistakes she finally succeeded in recognizing the word
+again.
+
+"Don't you forget it."
+
+"Yes."
+
+"No, you must _not_."
+
+"I mean I won't."
+
+"All right! Here is another: it is called _the_. Now find it."
+
+Many times she went through the same process. In his pride of teaching
+Danby did not let his pupil flag. When he was going she asked timidly,
+"Shall you come again?"
+
+"Of course I shall, Ignoramus, but don't you forget your lesson."
+
+"No, no," she answered brightening. "I will think of it all the time I
+am asleep."
+
+"That is a good girl," he said patronizingly, and bade her good-bye.
+
+It was thus she learned to read, not remarkably well, but well enough
+to content Danby, which was sufficient to content Nellie also; and the
+ambitious boy was not satisfied until she could write as well.
+
+An end came to this peaceful life when the youth left home for
+college. The girl's eyes seemed to grow larger from intense gazing at
+him during the last few weeks that preceded his departure, but that
+was her only expression of feeling. The morning after he left, the
+nurse, not finding her appear at her usual time, went to her chamber
+to look for her. She lay on the bed, as she had been lying all the
+night, sleepless, with pale face and red lips. Nurse asked her what
+was the matter.
+
+"Nothing," was the reply.
+
+"Come get up, Beauty," coaxed the nurse.
+
+But Nellie turned her face to the wall and did not answer. She lay
+thus for a week, scarcely eating or sleeping, sick in mind and body,
+struggling with a grief that she hardly knew was grief. At the end
+of that time she tottered from the bed, and, clothing herself with
+difficulty, crept to the library.
+
+The instinct that sends a sick animal to the plant that will cure
+it seemed to teach Nellie where to find comfort. Danby was gone, but
+memory remained, and the place where he had been was to her made
+holy and possessed healing power, as does the shrine of a saint for a
+believer. Her shrine was the reading-desk, and the chair on which he
+had sat during those happy lessons. To make all complete, she lifted
+the heavy book from the shelf and opened it at the page from which she
+had first learned. She put herself in his chair and caressed the words
+with her thin hand, her fingers trembling over the place that his had
+touched, then dropping her head on the desk where his arm had lain,
+she smiling slept.
+
+She awoke with the nurse looking down on her, saying, "Beauty, you are
+better."
+
+And so she was: she drank the broth and ate the bread and grapes that
+had been brought her, and from that day grew stronger. But the shadow
+in her eyes was deeper now, and the veins in her temples were bluer,
+as if the blood had throbbed and pained there. Every morning found
+her at her post: she had no need to roam the woods and fields now--her
+world lay within her. It was sad for one so young to live on memory.
+
+For many days her page and these few words were sufficient to content
+her, and to recall them one after another, as Danby had taught, was
+her only occupation. But by and by the words themselves began to
+interest her, then the context, and finally the sense dawned upon
+her--dawned not less surely that it came slowly, and that she was now
+and then compelled to stop and think out a word.
+
+And what did she learn? Near the top of the large page the first
+word, "love." It ended a sentence and stood conspicuous, which was the
+reason it had caught the eye of the eager boy when he began to teach.
+What did it mean? What went before? What after? It was a long time
+before she asked herself these questions, for her understanding had
+not formed the habit of being curious. Previously her eyes alone had
+sight, now her intellect commenced seeing. What was the web of which
+this word was the woof, knitting together, underlying, now appearing,
+now hidden, but always there? She turned the leaves and counted where
+it recurred again and again, like a bird repeating one sweet note, of
+which it never tires. Then the larger type in the middle of each page
+drew her attention: she read, _As You Like It_. "What do I like? This
+story is perhaps as I like it. I wonder what it is about? I don't care
+now for pirates and robbers: I liked them when _he_ read to me, but
+not now." Her thoughts then wandered off to Danby, and she read no
+more that day.
+
+However, Nellie had plenty of time before her, and when her thinking
+was ended she would return to her text. I do not know how long a time
+it required for her to connect the sentence that followed the word
+"love;" but it became clear to her finally, just as a difficult puzzle
+will sometimes resolve itself as you are idly regarding it. And this
+is what she saw: "Love! But it cannot be sounded: my affection hath an
+unknown bottom, like the bay of Portugal." The phrase struck her as
+if it was her own, and for the first time in her life she blushed.
+She did not know much about the bay of Portugal, it is true, but she
+understood the rest. From that time forth the book possessed a strange
+interest for her. Much that she did not comprehend she passed by.
+Often for several days she would not find a passage that pleased her,
+but when such a one was discovered her slow perusal of it and long
+dwelling on it gave a beauty and power to the sentiment that more
+expert students might have lost. I cannot describe the almost feverish
+effect upon her of that poetical quartette beginning with--
+
+ Good shepherd, tell this youth what 'tis to love.
+
+How she hung over it, smiled at it, brightening into delight at the
+echo of her own feelings! In the raillery of Rosalind her heart found
+words to speak; and her sense and wit were awakened by the sarcasm of
+the same character. "Pray you, no more of this: 'tis like the howling
+of Irish wolves against the moon," came like a healthy tonic after a
+week of ecstasy spent over the preceding lines.
+
+Her mind grew in such companionship. She lived no more alone: she
+had found friends who sympathized with her. Smiles and tears became
+frequent on her face, making it more beautiful. _As You Like It_ was
+just as she liked it. The forest of Arden was her forest. Rosalind's
+banished father was her father: that busy man she had never seen. With
+the book for interpreter she fell in love with her world over again.
+Sunset and dawn possessed new charms; the little flowers seemed
+dignified; moonlight and fairy-land unveiled their mysteries; nothing
+was forgotten. It appeared as if all the knowledge of the world was
+contained in those magic pages, and the master-key to this treasure,
+the dominant of this harmony, was _love_--the word that Danby
+had taught her. The word? The feeling as well, and with the
+feeling--_all_.
+
+Circling from this passion as from a pole-star, all those great
+constellations of thought revolved. With Lear's madness was Cordelia's
+affection; with the inhumanity of Shylock was Jessica's trust; with
+the Moor's jealousy was Desdemona's devotion. The sweet and bitter
+of life, religion, poetry and philosophy, ambition, revenge and
+superstition, controlled, created or destroyed by that little word.
+And _how_ they loved--Perdita, Juliet, Miranda--quickly and entirely,
+without shame, as she had loved Danby--as buds bloom and birds warble.
+Oh it was sweet, sweet, sweet! Amid friends like these she became gay,
+moved briskly, grew rosy and sang. This was her favorite song, to a
+melody she had caught from the river:
+
+ Under the greenwood tree
+ Who loves to lie with me,
+ And turn his merry note
+ Unto the sweet bird's throat,
+ Come hither, come hither, come hither:
+ Here shall he see
+ No enemy
+ But winter and rough weather.
+
+Four years passed by--not all spent with one book, however. Nellie's
+desire for study grew with what it fed on. This book opened the way
+for many. Reading led to reflection; reflection, to observation;
+observation, to Nature; and thus in an endless round.
+
+About this time her busy father remembered he possessed a "baby," laid
+away somewhere, like an old parchment, and he concluded he would "look
+her up." His surprise was great when he saw the child a woman--still
+greater when he observed her self-possession, her intelligence, and a
+certain quaint way she had of expressing herself that was charming in
+connection with her fresh young face. She was neither diffident nor
+awkward, knowing too little of the world to fear, and having naturally
+that simplicity of manner which touches nearly upon high breeding.
+But Mr. Archer being one of those men who think that "beauty should
+go beautifully," her toilette shocked him. Under the influence of her
+presence he felt that he had neglected her. The whole house reproached
+him: the few rooms that had been furnished were dilapidated and worn.
+
+"I did not know things looked so badly down here," he said
+apologetically. "I am sure I must have had everything properly
+arranged when Nurse Bridget came. Your cradle was comfortable, was it
+not?"
+
+"I scarcely remember," answered his daughter demurely.
+
+"Oh! ah! yes! It is some time ago, I believe?"
+
+"Seventeen years."
+
+"Y-e-s: I had forgotten."
+
+He had an idea, this man of a hundred schemes, that his "baby"
+was laughing at him, and, singularly enough, it raised her in his
+estimation. He even asked her to come and live with him in the city,
+but she refused, and he did not insist.
+
+Then he set about making a change, which was soon accomplished. He
+sent for furniture and carpets, and cleared the rubbish from without
+and within. Under his decided orders a complete outfit "suitable for
+his daughter" soon arrived, and with it a maid. Nellie, whose ideas
+of maids were taken from Lucetta, was much disappointed in the actual
+being, and the modern Lucetta was also disappointed when she saw
+the "howling wilderness" to which she had been inveigled; so the two
+parted speedily. But Mr. Archer remained: he was one of those men
+who do things thoroughly which they have once undertaken. When he
+was satisfied with Nellie's appearance he took her to call on all the
+neighboring families within reach.
+
+Among others, they went to see Mrs. Overbeck, Danby's mother, whom
+Mr. Archer had known in his youth. Nellie wore her brave trappings
+bravely, and acted her part nicely until Mrs. Overbeck gave her a
+motherly kiss at parting, when she grew pale and trembled. Why should
+she? Her hostess thought it was from the heat, and insisted on her
+taking a glass of wine.
+
+In the autumn of this year Danby graduated and returned home. Nellie
+had not seen him during all this interval: he had spent his vacations
+abroad, and had become quite a traveled man. While she retained her
+affection for him unchanged, he scarcely remembered the funny little
+girl who had been so devoted to him in the years gone by. A few days
+after he arrived, his mother, in giving him the local news, mentioned
+the charming acquaintance she had made of a young lady who lived in
+the neighborhood. On hearing her name the young man exclaimed, "Why,
+that must be Nellie!"
+
+"Do you know her?" asked his mother in surprise.
+
+"Of course I do, and many a jolly time I have had with her. Odd little
+thing, ain't she?"
+
+"I should not call her odd," remarked his mother.
+
+"You do not know her as I do."
+
+"Perhaps not. I suppose you will go with me when I return her visit."
+
+"Certainly I will--just in for that sort of thing. A man feels the
+need of some relaxation after a four years' bore, and there is nothing
+like the society of the weaker sex to give the mind repose."
+
+"Shocking boy!" said the fond mother with a smile.
+
+In a short time the projected call was made.
+
+"You will frighten her with all that finery, my handsome mother,"
+remarked Danby as they walked to the carriage.
+
+"I think she will survive it, but I shall not answer for the effect of
+those brilliant kids of yours."
+
+"The feminine eye is caught by display," said her son sententiously.
+
+They chatted as they drove rapidly through the forest to the old
+house, entered the front gate and rolled up the broad avenue.
+
+"I had no idea the place looked so well," remarked Danby, _en
+connaisseur_, as they approached. "I always entered by the back way;"
+and he gave his moustache a final twirl.
+
+After a loud knock from a vigorous hand the door was opened by a small
+servant, much resembling Nellie some four years before. Danby was
+going to speak to her, but recalling the time that had elapsed, he
+knew it could not be she. All within was altered. Three rooms
+_en suite_, the last of which was the library, had been carefully
+refurnished. He looked about him. Could this be the place in which he
+had passed so many days? But he forgot all in the figure that advanced
+to receive them. With a pretty grace she gave her hand to his mother
+and welcomed "Mr. Overbeck." How she talked--talked like a babbling
+brook! It was now his turn to open big eyes and be silent. He tried
+to recall the girl he had left. Vain endeavor! This bright creature,
+grave and gay, silent but ready, respectful yet confident, how could
+he follow her? The visit came to an end, but was repeated again and
+again by Danby, and each time with new astonishment, new delight. She
+had the coquetry of a dozen women, yet her eyes looked so true. She
+was a perfect elf for pranks and jokes, yet demure as a nun. When he
+tried to awe her with his learning, she was saucy; if he was serious,
+she was gay; if he wished to teach, she rebelled. She was self-willed
+as a changeling, refractory yet gentle, seditious but just,--only
+waiting to strike her colors and proclaim him conqueror; but this he
+did not know, for she kept well hid in her heart what "woman's fear"
+she had. She was all her favorite heroines in turn, with herself added
+to the galaxy.
+
+One day he penetrated into the library, notwithstanding some very
+serious efforts on her part to prevent him: by this time he would
+occasionally assert himself. The furniture there was not much altered.
+A few worn things had been replaced, but the room looked so much the
+same that the scene of that first reading-lesson came vividly to his
+mind. He turned to the side where the desk had stood. It was still
+there, with the two chairs before it, and on it was the book. She
+would not for the world have had it moved, but it was, as it were,
+glorified. Mr. Archer had wished "these old things cleared away," but
+Nellie had besought him so earnestly that he allowed them to stay,
+stipulating, however, that they should be upholstered anew. To this
+she assented, saying, "Send me the best of everything and _I_ will
+cover them--the very best, mind;" and her father, willing to please
+her, did as she desired.
+
+So the old desk became smart in brocade and gold-lace, the book
+received a cushion all bullion and embroidery, and the chairs emulated
+the splendor. It required a poet or a girl in love to clothe a fancy
+so beautifully, and Nellie was both. It was her shrine: why should she
+not adorn it?
+
+I cannot follow the process of thought in Danby's mind as he looked
+at this and at Nellie--Nellie blushing with the sudden guiltiness that
+even the discovery of a harmless action will bring when we wish to
+conceal it. Sometimes a moment reveals much.
+
+"Nellie"--it was the first time he had called her so since his
+return--"I must give you a reading-lesson: come, sit here."
+
+Mechanically she obeyed him, all the rebel fading away: she looked
+like the Nellie of other days. She felt she had laid bare her soul,
+but in proportion as her confusion overcame her did he become decided.
+It is the slaves that make tyrants, it is said.
+
+Under the impulse of his hand the book opened at the well-worn page.
+
+"Read!"
+
+For a little while she sat with downcast eyes. Well she knew the
+passage to which he was pointing: "Love! But it cannot be sounded: my
+affection hath an unknown bottom, like the bay of Portugal."
+
+The sentence seemed to dance and grow till it covered the page--grow
+till in her sight it assumed the size of a placard, and then it took
+life and became her accuser--told in big letters the story of her
+devotion to the mocking boy beside her.
+
+"There is good advice on the preceding page," he whispered smiling.
+"Orlando says he would kiss before he spoke: may I?"
+
+She started up and looked at his triumphant face a moment, her mouth
+quivering, her eyes full of tears. "How can you--" she began.
+
+But before she could finish he was by her side: "Because I love
+you--love you, all that the book says, and a thousand times more.
+Because if you love me we will live our own romance, and I doubt if we
+cannot make our old woods as romantic as the forest of Arden. Will you
+not say," he asked tenderly, "that there will be at least one pair of
+true lovers there?"
+
+I could not hear Nellie's answer: her head was so near his--on his
+shoulder, in fact--that she whispered it in his ear. But a moment
+after, pushing him from her with the old mischief sparkling from her
+eyes, she said, "'Til frown and be perverse, and say thee nay, so thou
+wilt woo,'" and looked a saucy challenge in his face.
+
+"Naughty sprite!" he exclaimed, catching her in his arms and shutting
+her mouth with kisses.
+
+It was not long after, perhaps a year, that a happy bride and groom
+might have been seen walking up the hemlock avenue arm in arm.
+
+"Do you remember," she asked, smiling thoughtfully--"do you remember
+the time I begged you to come home with me and be my pet?"
+
+The young husband leaned down and said something the narrator did
+not catch, but from the expression of his face it must have been very
+spoony: with a bride such as that charming Nellie, how could he help
+it?
+
+Yes, she had brought him home. Mr. Archer had given the house with its
+broad acres as a dowry to his daughter, and Nellie had desired that
+the honeymoon should be spent in her "forest of Arden."
+
+ITA ANIOL PROKOP.
+
+
+
+
+JACK, THE REGULAR.
+
+
+ In the Bergen winter night, when the hickory fire is roaring,
+ Flickering streams of ruddy light on the folk before it pouring--
+ When the apples pass around, and the cider follows after,
+ And the well-worn jest is crowned by the hearers' hearty laughter--
+ When the cat is purring there, and the dog beside her dozing,
+ And within his easy-chair sits the grandsire old, reposing,--
+ Then they tell the story true to the children, hushed and eager,
+ How the two Van Valens slew, on a time, the Tory leaguer,
+ Jack, the Regular.
+
+ Near a hundred years ago, when the maddest of the Georges
+ Sent his troops to scatter woe on our hills and in our gorges,
+ Less we hated, less we feared, those he sent here to invade us
+ Than the neighbors with us reared who opposed us or betrayed us;
+ And amid those loyal knaves who rejoiced in our disasters,
+ As became the willing slaves of the worst of royal masters,
+ Stood John Berry, and he said that a regular commission
+ Set him at his comrades' head; so we called him, in derision,
+ "Jack, the Regular."
+
+ When he heard it--"Let them fling! Let the traitors make them merry
+ With the fact my gracious king deigns to make me Captain Berry.
+ I will scourge them for the sneer, for the venom that they carry;
+ I will shake their hearts with fear as the land around I harry:
+ They shall find the midnight raid waking them from fitful slumbers;
+ They shall find the ball and blade daily thinning out their numbers:
+ Barn in ashes, cattle slain, hearth on which there glows no ember,
+ Neatless plough and horseless wain; thus the rebels shall remember
+ Jack, the Regular!"
+
+ Well he kept his promise then with a fierce, relentless daring,
+ Fire to rooftrees, death to men, through the Bergen valleys bearing:
+ In the midnight deep and dark came his vengeance darker, deeper--
+ At the watch-dog's sudden bark woke in terror every sleeper;
+ Till at length the farmers brown, wasting time no more on tillage,
+ Swore those ruffians of the Crown, fiends of murder, fire and pillage,
+ Should be chased by every path to the dens where they had banded,
+ And no prayers should soften wrath when they caught the bloody-handed
+ Jack, the Regular.
+
+ One by one they slew his men: still the chief their chase evaded.
+ He had vanished from their ken, by the Fiend or Fortune aided--
+ Either fled to Powles Hoek, where the Briton yet commanded,
+ Or his stamping-ground forsook, waiting till the hunt disbanded;
+ So they checked pursuit at length, and returned to toil securely:
+ It was useless wasting strength on a purpose baffled surely.
+ But the two Van Valens swore, in a patriotic rapture,
+ _They_ would never give it o'er till they'd either kill or capture
+ Jack, the Regular.
+
+ Long they hunted through the wood, long they slept upon the hillside;
+ In the forest sought their food, drank when thirsty at the rill-side;
+ No exposure counted hard--theirs was hunting border-fashion:
+ They grew bearded like the pard, and their chase became a passion:
+ Even friends esteemed them mad, said their minds were out of balance,
+ Mourned the cruel fate and sad fallen on the poor Van Valens;
+ But they answered to it all, "Only wait our loud view-holloa
+ When the prey shall to us fall, for to death we mean to follow
+ Jack, the Regular."
+
+ Hunted they from Tenavlieon to where the Hudson presses
+ To the base of traprocks high; through Moonachie's damp recesses;
+ Down as far as Bergen Hill; by the Ramapo and Drochy,
+ Overproek and Pellum Kill--meadows flat and hilltops rocky--
+ Till at last the brothers stood where the road from New Barbadoes,
+ At the English Neighborhood, slants toward the Palisadoes;
+ Still to find the prey they sought left no sign for hunter eager:
+ Followed steady, not yet caught, was the skulking, fox-like leaguer
+ Jack, the Regular.
+
+ Who are they that yonder creep by those bleak rocks in the distance,
+ Like the figures born in sleep, called by slumber to existence?--
+ Tories doubtless from below, from the Hoek, sent out for spying.
+ "No! the foremost is our foe--he so long before us flying!
+ Now he spies us! see him start! wave his kerchief like a banner!
+ Lay his left hand on his heart in a proud, insulting manner.
+ Well he knows that distant spot's past our ball, his low scorn flinging.
+ If you cannot feel the shot, you shall hear the firelock's ringing,
+ Jack, the Regular!"
+
+ Ha! he falls! An ambuscade? 'Twas impossible to strike him!
+ Are there Tories in the glade? Such a trick is very like him.
+ See! his comrade by him kneels, turning him in terror over,
+ Then takes nimbly to his heels. Have they really slain the rover?
+ It is worth some risk to know; so, with firelocks poised and ready,
+ Up the sloping hills they go, with a quick lookout and steady.
+ Dead! The random shot had struck, to the heart had pierced the Tory--
+ Vengeance seconded by luck! Lies there, cold and stiff and gory,
+ Jack, the Regular.
+
+ "Jack, the Regular, is dead! Honor to the man who slew him!"
+ So the Bergen farmers said as they crowded round to view him;
+ For the wretch that lay there slain had with wickedness unbending
+ To their roofs brought fiery rain, to their kinsfolk woeful ending.
+ Not a mother but had prest, in a sudden pang of fearing,
+ Sobbing darlings to her breast when his name had smote her hearing;
+ Not a wife that did not feel terror when the words were uttered;
+ Not a man but chilled to steel when the hated sounds he muttered--
+ Jack, the Regular.
+
+ Bloody in his work was he, in his purpose iron-hearted--
+ Gentle pity could not be when the pitiless had parted.
+ So, the corse in wagon thrown, with no decent cover o'er it--
+ Jeers its funeral rites alone--into Hackensack they bore it,
+ 'Mid the clanging of the bells in the old Brick Church's steeple,
+ And the hooting and the yells of the gladdened, maddened people.
+ Some they rode and some they ran by the wagon where it rumbled,
+ Scoffing at the lifeless man, all elate that death had humbled
+ Jack, the Regular.
+
+ Thus within the winter night, when the hickory fire is roaring,
+ Flickering streams of ruddy light on the folk before it pouring--
+ When the apples pass around, and the cider follows after,
+ And the well-worn jest is crowned by the hearers' hearty laughter--
+ When the cat is purring there, and the dog beside her dozing,
+ And within his easy-chair sits the grandsire old, reposing,--
+ Then they tell the story true to the children, hushed and eager,
+ the two Van Valens slew, on a time, the Tory leaguer,
+ Jack, the Regular.
+
+THOMAS DUNN ENGLISH.
+
+
+
+
+OBSERVATIONS AND ADVENTURES IN SUBMARINE DIVING.
+
+
+ [Greek: --liphon
+ eponumon te reuma kai petraerephae
+ autoktit' antra.]--AESCHYLUS: _Prometheus Bound_.
+
+Did you ever pause before a calm, bright little pool in the woods, and
+look steadily at the picture it presents, without feeling as if you
+had peeped into another world? Every outline is preserved, every tint
+is freshened and purified, in the cool, glimmering reflection. There
+is a grace and a softness in the prismatic lymph that give a new form
+and color to the common and familiar objects it has printed in its
+still, pellucid depths. Every little basin of clear water by the
+roadside is a magic mirror, and transforms all that it encloses. There
+is a vastness of depth, too, in that concave hemisphere, through
+which the vision sinks like a falling star, that excites and fills the
+imagination. What it shows is only a shadow, but all things seen are
+mere shadows painted on the retina, and you have, at such times,
+a realistic sense of the beautiful and bold imagery which calls a
+favorite fountain of the East the Eye of the Desert.
+
+The alluring softness of this mimic world increases to sublimity when,
+instead of some rocky basin, dripping with mossy emeralds and coral
+berries, you look upon the deep crystalline sea. Each mates to its
+kind. This does not gather its imagery from gray, mossy rock or
+pendent leaf or flower, but draws into its enfolding arms the wide
+vault of the cerulean sky. The richness of the majestic azure is
+deepened by that magnificent marriage. The pale blue is darkened to
+violet. Far through the ever-varying surface of the curious gelatinous
+liquid breaks the phosphorescence, sprinkled into innumerable lights
+and cross-lights. As you look upon those endless pastures thought is
+quickened with the conception of their innumerable phases of vitality.
+The floating weed, whose meshes measure the spaces of continents and
+archipelagoes, is everywhere instinct with animal and vegetable life.
+The builder coral, glimmering in its softer parts with delicate hues
+and tints, throws up its stony barrier through a thousand miles of
+length and a third as much in breadth, fringing the continents with
+bays and sounds and atoll islands like fairy rings of the sea.
+Animate flowers--sea-nettles, sea anemones, plumularia, campanularia,
+hydropores, confervae, oscillatoria, bryozoa--people the great waters.
+Sea-urchins, star-fish, sea-eggs, combative gymnoti, polypes, struggle
+and thrive with ever-renewing change of color; gelatinous worms
+that shine like stars cling to every weed; glimmering animalcules,
+phosphorescent medusae, the very deep itself is vivid with sparkle
+and corruscation of electric fire. So through every scale, from the
+zoophyte to the warm-blooded whale, the sea teems with life, out of
+which fewer links have been dropped than from sub-aërial life. It is a
+matter for curious speculation that the missing species belong not to
+the lower subsidiary genera, as in terrene animals, but to the
+highest types of marine life. In the quarries of Lyme Regis, among the
+accumulations of a sea of the Liassic period, lay the huge skeleton of
+the Ichthyosaurus, a warm-blooded marine existence, with huge saucer
+eyes of singular telescopic power, that gleamed radiant "with the
+eyelids of the morning," "by whose neesings alight doth shine"--the
+true leviathan of Job. In the same extinct sea is found the skeleton
+of the Plesiosaurus, a marine lizard of equal size, and warm-blooded,
+whose swan-like neck and body graced the serene seas of the
+pre-adamite world. Another was that of the Pterodactyl, the antique
+aragon, a winged fish. The task of sustaining these existences was too
+great for old Ocean, and the monsters dropped from the upper end of
+the chain into the encrusting mud, the petrified symbols of failure.
+So one day man may drop into the limbo of vanities, among the
+abandoned tools in the Creator's workshop.
+
+But, however high or low the degree in the scale, one distinguishing
+feature marks the vital creation in vegetable or animal--an
+intelligence capable of adjusting itself to the elements about it, and
+electing its food. The sunflower, even, does not follow the sun by a
+mechanical law, but, growing by a fair, bright sheet of water, looks
+as constantly at that shining surface for the beloved light as
+ever did the fabled Greek boy at his own image in the fountain.
+The tendrils of the vine seek and choose their own support, and the
+thirsty spongioles of the root find the nourishing veins of water.
+Growth, says a naturalist, is the conscious motion of vegetable life.
+But this theory of kinship, imperfect in the plant, becomes plain
+and distinct in the animate creation. However far removed, the wild
+dolphin at play and the painted bird in the air are cousins of man,
+with a responsive chord of sympathy connecting them.
+
+It is this feeling that sends an exhilarating thrill through the
+submarine explorer when a school of porpoises frisk by with undulating
+grace, the marine type of a group of frolicking children. It is the
+instinctive perception that it is a pure enjoyment to the fish, the
+healthy glow and laugh of submarine existence. But for that sense of
+sympathetic nature the flying-fish, reeling porpoise and dolphin would
+be no more to him than the skipping shuttle in a weaver's loom, the
+dull impetus of senseless machinery. Self-generated motion is the
+outward and visible sign of vitality--its wanton exercise the symbol
+and expression of enjoyment. The poor philosopher who distinguished
+humanity as singular in the exhibition of humor had surely never heard
+a mocking-bird sing, watched a roguish crow or admired a school of
+fish.
+
+This keen appreciation of a kindred life in the sea has thrown its
+charm over the poetry and religion of all races. Ocean us leaves the
+o'erarching floods and rocky grottoes at the call of bound Prometheus;
+Cyrene, with her nymphs, sits in the cool Peneus, where comes
+Aristaeus mourning for his stolen bees; the Druid washed his
+hedge-hyssop in the sacred water, and priestesses lived on coral reefs
+visited by remote lovers in their sundown seas; Schiller's diver
+goes into the purpling deep and sees the Sea-Horror reaching out its
+hundred arms; the beautiful Undine is the vivid poetry of the sea.
+Every fountain has its guardian saint or nymph, and to this day not
+only the German peasant and benighted English boor thrill at the sight
+of some nymph-guarded well, but the New Mexican Indian offers his rude
+pottery in propitiation of the animate existence, the deity of the
+purling spring.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Der Taucher," for all the rhythm and music that clothes his luckless
+plunge, was but a caitiff knight to some of our submarine adventurers.
+A diver during the bay-fight in Mobile harbor had reason to apprehend
+a more desperate encounter. A huge cuttle-fish, the marine monster of
+Pliny and Victor Hugo, had been seen in the water. His tough,
+sinuous, spidery arms, five fathoms long, wavered visibly in the blue
+transparent gulf,
+
+ Und schaudernd dacht ich's--da kroch's heran,
+ Regte hundert Gelenke zugleich,
+ Will schnappen nach mir.
+
+A harpoon was driven into the leathery, pulpy body of the monster, but
+with no other effect than the sudden snapping of the inch line like
+thread. It was subsequent to this that, as the diver stayed his steps
+in the unsteady current, his staff was seized below. The water was
+murky with the river-silt above the salt brine, and he could see
+nothing, but after an effort the staff was rescued or released.
+Curious to know what it was, he probed again, and the stick was
+wrenched from his hand. With a thrill he recognized in such power the
+monster of the sea, the devil-fish. He returned anxious, doubtful, but
+resolute. Few like to be driven from a duty by brute force. He armed
+himself, and descended to renew the hazardous encounter in the gloomy
+solitude of the sea-bottom. I would I had the wit to describe that
+tournament beneath the sea; the stab, thrust, curvet, plunge--the
+conquest and capture of the unknown combatant. A special chance
+preserves the mediaeval character of the contest, saving it from the
+sulphurous associations of modern warfare that might be suggested by
+the name of devil-fish. No: the antagonist wore a coat-of-mail and
+arms of proof, as became a good knight of the sea, and was besides
+succulent, digestible--a veritable prize for the conqueror. It was a
+monstrous crab.
+
+The constant encounter of strange and unforeseen perils enables the
+professional diver to meet them with the same coolness with which
+ordinary and familiar dangers are confronted on land. On one occasion
+a party of such men were driven out into the Gulf by a fierce
+"norther," were tossed about like chips for three days in the vexed
+element, scant of food, their compass out of order, and the horizon
+darkened with prevailing storm. At another time a party wandered out
+in the shallows of one of the keys that fringe the Gulf coast. They
+amused themselves with wading into the water, broken into dazzling
+brilliance. A few sharks were seen occasionally, which gradually and
+unobserved increased to, a squadron. The waders meanwhile continued
+their sport until the evening waned away. Far over the dusk violet
+Night spread her vaporous shadows:
+
+ The blinding mist came up and hid the land,
+ And round and round the land,
+ And o'er and o'er the land,
+ As far as eye could see.
+
+At last they turned their steps homeward, crossing the little sandy
+key, between which and the beach lay a channel shoulder-deep, its
+translucent waves now glimmering with phosphorescence. But here
+they were met by an unexpected obstacle. The fleet of sharks, with
+a strategical cunning worthy of admiration, had flanked the little
+island, and now in the deeper water formed in ranks and squadrons,
+and, with their great goggle eyes like port-fires burning, lay ready
+to dispute the passage. Armed with such weapons as they could clutch,
+the men dashed into the water with paeans and shouts and the broken
+pitchers of fallen Jericho. The violet phosphorescence lighted them on
+their way, and tracked with luminous curve and star every move of the
+enemy. The gashed water at every stroke of club or swish of tail or
+fin bled in blue and red fire, as if the very sea was wounded. The
+enemy's line of battle was broken and scattered, but not until more
+than one of the assailants had looked point-blank into the angry eyes
+of a shark and beaten it off with actual blows. It was the Thermopylae
+of sharkdom, with numbers reversed--a Red Sea passage resonant with
+psalms of victory.
+
+There are novel difficulties as well as dangers to be encountered. The
+native courage of the man must be tempered, ground and polished. On
+land it is the massing of numbers that accomplishes the result--the
+accumulation of vital forces and intelligence upon the objective
+point. The innumerable threads of individual enterprise, like the
+twist of a Manton barrel, give the toughest tensile power. Under the
+sea, however, it is often the strength of the single thread, the
+wit of the individual pitted against the solid impregnability of the
+elements, the _vis inertiae_ of the sea. It looks as if uneducated
+Nature built her rude fastnesses and rocky battlements with a special
+view to resistance, making the fickle and unstable her strongest
+barricade. An example of the skill and address necessary to conquer
+obstacles of the latter kind was illustrated in Mobile Bay. There lay
+about a sunken vessel an impenetrable mail of quicksand. It became
+necessary to sink piles into this material. The obstacle does not
+lie in its fickle, unstable character, but its elastic tension. It
+swallows a nail or a beam by slow, serpent-like deglutition. It is
+hungry, insatiable, impenetrable. Try to force it, to drive down
+a pile by direct force: it resists. The mallet is struck back by
+reverberating elasticity with an equal force, and the huge pointed
+stake rebounds. Brute force beats and beats in vain. The fickle sand
+will not be driven--no, not an inch.
+
+Wit comes in where weight breaks down. A force-pump, a common
+old-style fire-engine, was rigged up, the nozzle and hose bound to a
+huge pile,
+
+ to equal which the tallest pine
+ Hewn on Norwegian hills, to be the mast
+ Of some great ammiral, were but a wand.
+
+The pump was set to work. The water tore through the nostril-pipe,
+boring a hole with such rapidity that the tall beam dropped into the
+socket with startling suddenness. Still breathing torrents, the pipe
+was withdrawn: the clutching sand seized, grappled the stake. It is
+cemented in.
+
+ You may break, you may shatter the _stake_, if you will,
+
+but--you can never pull it out.
+
+Perhaps the most singular and venturesome exploit ever performed in
+submarine diving was that of searching the sunken monitor Milwaukee
+during the bay-fight in Mobile harbor. This sea-going fortress was a
+huge double-turreted monitor, with a ponderous, crushing projectile
+force in her. Her battery of four fifteen-inch guns, and the tough,
+insensible solidity of her huge wrought-iron turrets and heavy plated
+hulk, burdened the sleepy waters of the bay. Upon a time she braced
+her iron jacket about her, girded her huge sides with fifteen-inch
+pistolry, and went rolling her clumsy volume down the bay to mash Fort
+Taylor to rubbish and débacle. The sea staggered under her ponderous
+gliding and groaned about her massive bulk as she wended her awkward
+course toward the bay-shore over against the fort. She sighted her
+blunderbusses, and, rolling, grunting, wheezing in her revolving
+towers like a Falstaff ill at ease, spat her gobbets of flame and
+death. The poor little water-spaniel fort ran down to the shore and
+barked at her of course. _Cui bono_ or _malo?_ Why, like Job's mates,
+fill its poor belly with the east wind, or try to draw out leviathan
+with a hook, or his tongue with a cord thou lettest down? Yet who
+treads of the fight between invulnerable Achilles and heroic Hector,
+and admires Achilles? The admiral of the American fleet, sick of the
+premature pother, signaled the lazy solidity to return. The loathly
+monster, slowly, like a bull-dog wrenched from his victim, rolled
+snarling, lazily, leisurely down the bay, not obeying and yet not
+disobeying the signal.
+
+All along the sunny coast, like flowers springing up in a
+battle-field, were rows of little white cottages, tenanted by women
+and children--love, life and peace in the midst of ruin and sudden
+death. At the offending spectacle of homely peace among its enemies
+the unglutted monster eased its huge wrath. Tumbling and bursting
+among the poor little pasteboard shells of cottages, where children
+played and women gossiped of the war, and prayed for its end, no
+matter how, fell the huge globes and cones of murder. Shrieks and
+cries, slain babes and wounded women on shore; surly, half-mutinous
+officers and crew on that iron hulk, shocked at the fell work they
+were set to do; and the glimmer and wash of the bay-water below--that
+sweet, tranquil, half-transparent liquid, with idle weeds and chips
+upon it, empty crates and boxes of dead merchandise, sacked of their
+life and substance by the war, as one might swallow an oyster; the
+soft veils of shadowy ships and the distant city spires; umbrageous
+fires and slips of shining sand all mirrored in the soft and quiet
+sea, while this devilish pother went on. There is a buoy adrift! No,
+it is a sodden cask, perhaps of spoiling meat, while the people in the
+town yonder are starving; and still the huge iron, gluttonous monster
+bursts its foam of blood and death, while the surly crew curse and
+think of mothers and babes at home. Better to look at the bay, the
+idle, pleasing summer water, with chips and corks and weeds upon it;
+better to look at the bubbling cask yonder--much better, captain,
+if you only knew it! But the reluctant, heavy iron turret groans and
+wheezes on its pivotal round, and it will be a minute or half a minute
+before the throated hell speaks again. But it _will_ speak: machinery
+is fatally accurate to time and place. Can nothing stay it, or
+stop the trembling of those bursting iron spheres among yon pretty
+print-like homes? No: look at the buoy, wish-wash, rolling lazily,
+bobbing in the water, a lazy, idle cask, with nothing in the world
+to do on this day of busy mischief. What hands coopered it in the new
+West? what farmer filled it? There is the grunting of swine, lowing of
+cattle, in the look of the staves. But the turret groans and wheezes
+and goes around, whether you look at it or not. What cottage this
+time? The soft lap-lap of the water goes on, and the tedious cask gets
+nearer: it will slide by the counter. You have a curious interest in
+that. No: it grates under the bow; it--Thunder and wreck and ruin!
+Has the bay burst open and swallowed us? The huge, invulnerable iron
+monster--not invulnerable after all--has met its master in the idle
+cask. It is blind, imprisoned Samson pulling down the pillars of the
+temple. The tough iron plates at the bow are rent and torn and twisted
+like wet paper. A terrible hole is gashed in the hull. The monster
+wobbles, rolls, gasps, and drinks huge gulps of water like a wounded
+man--desperately wounded, and dying in his thirsty veins and arteries.
+The swallowed torrent rushes aft, hissing and quenching the fires;
+beats against the stern, and comes forward with the rush of that
+repulse to meet the incoming wave. Into the boats, the water--anywhere
+but here. She reels again and groans; and then, as a desperate hero
+dies, she slopes her huge warlike beak at the hostile water and rushes
+to her own ruin with a surge and convulsion. The victorious sea sweeps
+over it and hides it, laughing at her work. She will keep it safely.
+That is the unsung epic of the Milwaukee, without which I should have
+little to say of the submarine diving during the bay-fight.
+
+The harbor of Mobile is shaped like a rude Innuit boot. At the top,
+Tensaw and Mobile Rivers, in their deltas, make, respectively, two
+and three looplike bands, like the straps. The toe is Bonsecour
+Bay, pointing east. The heel rests on Dauphin Island, while the main
+channel flows into the hollow of the foot between Fort Morgan and
+Dauphin Island. In the north-west angle, obscured by the foliage,
+lay the devoted city, suffering no less from artificial famine, made
+unnecessarily, than the ligatures that stopped the vital current of
+trade. Tons of meat were found putrefying while the citizens, and
+even the garrison, had been starving on scanty rations. Food could
+be purchased, but at exorbitant rates, and the medium of exchange,
+Confederate notes, all gone to water and waste paper. The true story
+of the Lost Cause has yet to be written. North of Mobile, in the
+Trans-Mississippi department, thousands whose every throb was devoted
+to the enterprise, welcomed the Northern invaders, not as destroyers
+of a hope already dead by the act of a few entrusted with its defence,
+but as something better than the anarchy that was not Southern
+independence or anything else human.
+
+Such were the condition, period and place--the people crushed
+between the upper and nether millstones of two hostile and contending
+civilizations--when native thrift evoked a new element, that set
+in sharp contrast the heroism of life and the heroism of death, the
+courage that incurs danger to save against the courage that
+accepts danger to destroy. The work was the saving of the valuable
+arms--costing the government thirty thousand dollars per gun--and the
+machinery of the sunken Milwaukee.[A] By a curious circumstance this
+party of divers was composed partly, if not principally or entirely,
+of mechanics and engineers who were exempt from military service
+under the economic laws of the Confederacy, yet who in heart and soul
+sympathized with the rebellion. They had worked to save for the South:
+now they were to work and save for the North. It was a service of
+superadded danger. All the peril incurred from missile weapons
+was increased by the hidden danger of the secret under-sea and the
+presence of the terrible torpedoes. These floated everywhere, in all
+innocent, unsuspicious shapes. One monster, made of boiler iron, a
+huge cross, is popularly believed to be still hidden in the bay. The
+person possessing the chart wherein the masked battery's place was set
+down is said to have destroyed it and fled. Let us hope, however, that
+this is an error.
+
+[Footnote A: The Milwaukee was sunk nearly due east of the city: the
+Osage, Tecumseh, several despatch-boats and steamers, besides the
+three monitors, were sunk by torpedoes in the bay.]
+
+Keep in mind, in reading this account, the contrasted picture of peace
+in Nature and war in man--the calm blue sky; the soft hazy outlines
+of woods and bay-shore dropping their soft veils in the water; the
+cottages, suggesting industry and love; the distant city; the delicate
+and graceful spars of the Hartford; the busy despatch-steamers plying
+to and fro; the bursting forts and huge ugly monitors; the starry
+arches of flying shells by night and flying cloud by day; the soft lap
+of the water; the sensuous, sweet beauty of that latitude of eternal
+spring; and the soft dark violet of the outer sea, glassing itself in
+calm or broken into millioned frets of blue, red and starry fire; the
+danger above and the danger below; the dark mysterious caverns of the
+sea, rich with coral grots and grove and abounding marine life; the
+impenetrable gloom of the ship's hold, whose unimaginable darkness and
+labyrinthine intricacy of machinery set obstacles at every turn and
+move and step; the darkness; the fury; the hues and shape, all that
+art can make or Nature fashion, gild or color wrought into one grand
+tablature of splendor and magnificence. War and peaceful industry met
+there in novel rivalry, and each claimed its privileges. The captain
+of the Search said to the officers, while crowding his men behind the
+turret, with sly, dry humor, "Come, you are all _paid_ to be shot at:
+my men are not."
+
+More than once the accuracy of the enemy's fire drove the little party
+to shelter. Though the diver was shielded by the impenetrable fickle
+element that gave Achilles invulnerability, the air-pump above was
+exposed, and thus the diver might be slain by indirection. There
+lay Achilles' heel, the exposed vulnerable part that Mother Thetis's
+baptism neglected.
+
+The work below was arduous: the hulk crowded with the entangling
+machinery of sixteen engines, cuddies, ports, spars, levers, hatches,
+stancheons, floating trunks, bibulous boxes heavy with drink, and the
+awful, mysterious gloom of the water, which is not night or darkness,
+but the absence of any ray to touch the sensitive optic nerve. The
+sense of touch the only reliance, and the life-line his guide.
+
+But the peril incurred can be better understood through an
+illustrative example of a perilous adventure and a poor return.
+Officers and men of the unfortunate monitor asked for the rescue of
+their property, allowing a stipulated sum in lieu of salvage. Among
+these was a petty officer, anxious for the recovery of his chest.
+It involved peculiar hazards, since it carried the diver below
+the familiar turret-chamber, through the _inextricabilis error_ of
+entangling machinery in the engine-room, groping among floating and
+sunken objects, into a remote state-room, the Acheron of the cavernous
+hold. He was to find by touch a seaman's chest; handle it in that
+thickening gloom; carry it, push it, move it through that labyrinthine
+obscurity to a point from which it could be raised. To add
+immeasurably to the intricacy of this undertaking, there was the need
+of carrying his life-line and air-hose through all that entanglement
+and obscurity. Three times in that horror of thick darkness like wool
+the line tangled in the web of machinery, and three times he had, by
+tedious endeavor, to follow it up, find the knot and release it. Then
+the door of the little state-room, the throat of exit, was shut to,
+and around and around the dense chamber he groped as if in a dream,
+and could find no vent. All was alike--a smooth, slimy wall, glutinous
+with that gelatinous liquid, the sea-water. The tangled line became a
+blind guide and fruitful source of error; the hours were ebbing away,
+drowning life and vital air in that horrible watery pit;
+
+ Aut hoc inclusi ligno occultantur Achivi,
+
+or, a worse enemy than the subtle Greek's, death from the suspended
+air-current. Speed, nimbleness, strength and activity were worthless:
+with tedious fingers he must follow the life-line, find its
+entanglements and slowly loosen them, carefully taking up the slack,
+and so follow the straightened cord to the door. Then the chest: he
+must not forget that. Slowly he heaves and pushes, now at this, now
+at the life-line hitching on knob, handle, lever or projecting peg--on
+anything or nothing in that maze of machinery; by involution and
+evolution, like the unknown quantity in a cubic equation, through all
+the twists, turns, assumptions and substitutions, and always with that
+unmanageable, indivisible coefficient the box, until he reaches the
+upper air.
+
+In Aesop's fable, when the crane claimed the reward of the wolf for
+using his long neck and bill as a forceps in extracting a bone from
+the latter's oesophagus, Lupus suggests that for the crane to have had
+his head down in the lupine throat and _not_ get it snapped off
+was reward enough for any reasonable fowl. The petty officer was
+sufficiently learned in the Lyceum to administer a like return. The
+stipulated salvage was never paid or offered.[A]
+
+[Footnote A: It was a warrant-officer of the Milwaukee: I do not wish
+to be more definite; but the money (fifty dollars) may be sent to the
+editor of this Magazine, who will forward it to the diver.]
+
+The monitors had small square hatches or man-ports let into the deck,
+admitting one person conveniently.
+
+ Hinc via, Tartanii quae fert Acherontis ad undas.
+
+A swinging ladder, whose foot was clear of the floor, led down
+into the recesses. A diver, having completed his task, ascended the
+treacherous staircase to escape, and found the hatch blocked up.
+A floating chest or box had drifted into the opening, and, fitting
+closely, had firmly corked the man up in that dungeon, tight as a fly
+in a bottle. From his doubtful perch on the ladder he endeavored to
+push the obstacle from its insertion. Two or more equal difficulties
+made this impossible. The box had no handle, and it was slippery with
+the ooze and mucus of the sea. The leverage of pushing only wedged
+it faster in the orifice. The inconstant ladder swayed from it as
+a fulcrum. Again and again by art and endeavor and angle of push he
+essayed, and the ladder made sport of it. It was deadly sport, that
+swing and seesaw on the slippery rungs in the immeasurable loneliness
+of the silent, shrouded cabin. It was no rush of air, sending life
+tingling in the blood made brilliant with carmine of oxidation, but
+the dense, mephitic sough of the thick wool of water. He descended
+and sat upon the floor to think. Feasible methods had failed, and the
+sands of his life were running out like the old physician's. Now to
+try the impracticable. There are heaps of wisdom in the wrong way
+sometimes, which, I suppose, is the reason some of us like it. The
+box was out of his reach, choked in the gullet of that life-hole. No
+spring or leap from floor or ladder could reach its slippery side
+or bear it from its fixture. The sea had caught him prowling in its
+mysteries, and blocked him up, as cruel lords of ancient days walled
+up the intruder on their domestic privacy. Wit after brute force:
+man and Nature were pitted against each other in the uncongenial
+gloom--life the stake.
+
+He groped about his prison, glutinous with infusoriae and the oily
+consistence of the sea. Here a nail, there a block or lever, shaped
+out mentally by the touch, theorized, studied upon and thrown down.
+Now a hatchet, monkey-wrench, monkey's-tail, or gliding fish or
+wriggling eel, companions of his imprisonment. At last the cold
+touch of iron: the hand encloses and lifts it; its weight betrays its
+length; he feels it to the end--blunt, square, useless. He tries the
+other end--an edge or spike. That will do. Standing under the hatch,
+guided by the ladder to the position, and with a strong swinging,
+upward blow, the new tool is driven into the soft, fibrous and
+adhesive pine bottom of the box. On the principle on which your
+butler's practiced elbow draws the twisted screw sunk into the
+cobwebbed seal of your '48 port, he uncorks himself. The box pulled
+out of the hatch, the sea-gods threw up the sponge, that zoophyte
+being handy.
+
+These few incidents, strung together at random, and embracing only
+limited experiences out of many in one enterprise, are illustrative,
+in their variety and character, of this hardy pursuit, and the
+fascination of danger which is the school of native hardihood.
+But they give the reader a very imperfect idea of the nature and
+appearance of the new element into which man has pushed his industry.
+The havoc and spoil, the continued danger and contention, darken the
+gloom of the submarine world as a flash of lightning leaves blacker
+the shadow of the night and storm.
+
+The first invention to promote subaqueous search was the diving-bell,
+a clumsy vessel which isolates the diver. It is embarrassing, if not
+dangerous, where there is a strong current or if it rests upon a slant
+deck. It limits the vision, and in one instance it is supposed the
+wretched diver was taken from the bell by a shark. It permits an
+assistant, however, and a bold diver will plunge from the deck above
+and ascend in the vessel, to the invariable surprise of his companion.
+An example of one of its perils, settling in the mud, occurred, I
+think, in the port of New York. A party of amateurs, supported by
+champagne flasks and a reporter, went down. The bell settled and stuck
+like a boy's sucker. One of the party proposed shaking or rocking the
+bell, and doing so, the water was forced under and the bell lifted
+from the ooze.
+
+But a descent in submarine armor is the true way to visit the world
+under water. The first sensation in descending is the sudden bursting
+roar of furious, Niagarac cascades in the ears. It thunders and booms
+upon the startled nerve with the rush and storm of an avalanche. The
+sense quivers with it. But it is not air shaken by reflected blows: it
+is the cascades driven into the enclosing helmet by the force-pump.
+As the flexile hose has to be stiffly distended to bear an aqueous
+gravity of twenty-five to fifty pounds to the square inch, the force
+of the current can be estimated. The tympanum of the ear yields to
+the fierce external pressure. The brain feels and multiplies the
+intolerable tension as if the interior was clamped in a vice, and
+that tumultuous, thunderous torrent pours on. Involuntarily the mouth
+opens: the air rushes in the Eustachian tube, and with sudden velocity
+strikes the intruded tension of the drum, which snaps back to its
+normal state with a sharp, pistol-like crack. The strain is momently
+relieved to be renewed again, and again relieved by the same attending
+salutes.
+
+In your curious dress you must appear monstrous, even to that marine
+world, familiar with abnormal creations. The whale looks from eyes on
+the top of his head; the flat-fish, sole, halibut have both eyes on
+the same side; and certain Crustacea place the organ on a foot-stalk,
+as if one were to hold up his eye in his hand to include a wider
+horizon. But the monster which the fish now sees differs from all
+these. It has four great goggle eyes arranged symmetrically around
+its head. Peering through these plate-glass optics, the diver sees
+the curious, strange beauty of the world around him, not as the bather
+sees it, blurred and indistinct, but in the calm splendor of its own
+thallassphere. The first thought is one of unspeakable admiration of
+the miraculous beauty of everything around him--a glory and a splendor
+of refraction, interference and reflection that puts to shame the
+Arabian story of the kingdom of the Blue Fish. Above him is that pure
+golden canopy with its rare glimmering lustrousness--something like
+the soft, dewy effulgence that comes with sun-breaks through showery
+afternoons. The soft delicacy of that pure straw-yellow that prevails
+everywhere is crossed and lighted by tints and glimmering hues of
+accidental and complementary color indescribably elegant. The floor of
+the sea rises like a golden carpet in gentle incline to the surface;
+but this incline, experience soon teaches, is an ocular deception,
+the effect of refraction, such as a tumbler of water and a spoon can
+exhibit in petty. It is perhaps the first observable warning that you
+are in a new medium, and that your familiar friend, the light, comes
+to you altered in its nature; and it is as well to remember this and
+"make a note on it."
+
+Raising your eyes to the horizontal and looking straight forward,
+a new and beautiful wealth of color is developed. It is at first a
+delicate blue, as if an accidental color of the prevailing yellow.
+But soon it deepens into a rich violet. You feel as if you had never
+before appreciated the loveliness of that rich tint. As your eye
+dwells upon it the rich lustrous violet darkens to indigo, and sinking
+into deeper hues becomes a majestic threat of color. It is ominous,
+vivid blue-black--solid, adamantine, a crystal wall of amethyst. It is
+all around you. You are cased, dungeoned in the solid masonry of the
+waters. It is beauty indeed, but the sombre and awful beauty of the
+night and storm. The eye turns for relief and reassurance to the
+paly-golden lustrous roof, and watches that tender penciling which
+brightens every object it touches. The hull of the sunken ship,
+lying slant and open to the sun, has been long enough submerged to
+be crusted with barnacles, hydropores, crustacea and the labored
+constructions of the microscopic existences and vegetation that fill
+the sea. The song of Ariel becomes vivid and realistic in its rich
+word-power:
+
+ Full fathom five thy father lies;
+ Of his bones are coral made;
+ Those are pearls that were his eyes:
+ Nothing of him that doth fade
+ But doth suffer a sea-change
+ Into something rich and strange.
+
+The transfiguration of familiar objects is indeed curious and
+wonderful. The hulk, once gaudy with paint and gilding, has come under
+the skill of the lapidary and sea-artist. It is crusted with emerald
+and flossy mosses, and glimmers with diamond, jacinth, ruby, topaz,
+sapphire and gold. Every jewel-shape in leaf, spore, coral or plume,
+lying on a greenish crystalline ground, is fringed with a soft
+radiance of silver fire, and every point is tipped in minute ciliate
+flames of faint steely purple. It is spotted with soft velvety black
+wherever a shadow falls, that mingles and varies the wonderful display
+of color. It is brilliant, vivid, changeable with the interferences
+of light from the fluctuating surface above, which transmogrifies
+everything--touches the coarsest objects with its pencil, and they
+become radiant and spiritual. A pile of brick, dumped carelessly
+on the deck, has become a huge hill of crystal jewelry, lively with
+brilliant prismatic radiance. Where the light falls on the steps of
+the staircase it shows a ladder of silver crusted with emeralds. The
+round-house, spars, masts, every spot where a peak or angle catches
+the light, have flushed into liquid, jeweled beauty; and each point, a
+prism and mirror, catches, multiplies and reflects the other splendor.
+A rainbow, a fleecy mist over the lake, made prismal by the sunlight,
+a bunch of sub-aqueous moss, a soap-bubble, are all examples in our
+daily experience of that transforming power of water in the display of
+color. The prevailing tone is that soft, golden effulgence which,
+like the grace of a cheerful and loving heart, blends all into one
+harmonious whole.
+
+But observation warns the spectator of the delusive character of all
+that splendor of color. He lifts a box from the ooze: he appears
+to have uncorked the world. The hold is a bottomless chasm. Every
+indentation, every acclivity that casts a shadow, gives the impression
+of that soundless depth. The bottom of the sea seems loopholed with
+cavities that pierce the solid globe and the dark abysses of space
+beyond. The diver is surrounded by pitfalls, real and imaginary. There
+is no graduation. The shallow concave of a hand-basin is as the shadow
+of the bottomless well.
+
+If the exploration takes place in the delta of a great river, the
+light is affected by the various densities of the double refracting
+media. At the proper depth one can see clearly the line where these
+two meet, clean cut and as sharply defined as the bottom of a green
+glass tumbler through the pure water it contains. The salt brine or
+gelatinous sea-water sinks weighted to the bottom, and over it flows
+the fresh river-water. If the latter is darkened with sediment, it
+obscures the silent depths with a heavy, gloomy cloud. In seasons of
+freshet this becomes a total darkness.
+
+But even on a bright, sunshiny day, under clear water, the shadow of
+any object in the sea is unlike any shade in the upper atmosphere. It
+draws a black curtain over everything under it, completely obscuring
+it. Nor is this peculiarity lost when the explorer enters the shadow;
+but, as one looking into a tunnel from without can see nothing
+therein, though the open country beyond is plainly visible, so,
+standing in that submarine shadow, all around is dark, though beyond
+the sable curtain of the shadow the view is clear. Apply this optical
+fact to the ghastly story of a diver's alleged experience in the
+cabin of a sunken ship. It is narrated that there was revealed to
+his appalled sight the spectacle of the drowned passengers in various
+attitudes of alarm or devotion when the dreadful suffocation came.
+The story is told with great effect and power, but unless a voltaic
+lantern is included in the stage furniture, the ghastly tableaux must
+sink into the limbo of incredibilities.
+
+The cabin of a sunken vessel is dark beyond any supernal conception of
+darkness. Even a cabin window does not alter this law, though it
+may be itself visible, with objects on its surface, as in a child's
+magic-lantern. As the rays of light pass through an object flatwise,
+like the blade of a knife through the leaves of a book, and may be
+admitted through another of like character in the plane of the first,
+so a ray of light can penetrate with deflection through air and water.
+But becoming polarized, the interposition of a third medium ordinarily
+transparent will stop it altogether. Hence the plate-glass window
+under water admits no light into the interior of a cabin. The distrust
+of sight grows with the diver's experience. The eye brings its habit
+of estimating proportion and distance from an attenuated atmosphere
+into another and denser medium, and the seer is continually deceived
+by the change. He hesitates, halts, and is observant of the pitfalls
+about him. A gang-plank slightly above the surface of the deck is
+bordered, where its shadow falls, by dismal trenches. There is a range
+of hills crossing the deck before him. As he approaches he estimates
+the difficulty of the ascent. At its apparent foot he reaches to
+clamber the steep sides, and the sierra is still a step beyond his
+reach. Drawing still nearer, he prepares to crawl up; his hand touches
+the top; it is less than shoulder-high.
+
+But perhaps the strongest illustration of the differing densities
+of these two media is furnished by an attempt to drive a nail
+under water. By an absolute law such an effort, if guided by sight
+independent of calculation, must fail. Habit and experience, tested
+in atmospheric light, will control the muscles, and direct the blow
+at the very point where the nail-head is not. For this reason the
+ingenious expedient of a voltaic lantern under water has proved to
+be impracticable. It is not the light alone which is wanted, but that
+sweet familiar atmosphere through which we are habituated to look. The
+submarine diver learns to rely wholly on the truer sense of touch, and
+guided by that he engages in tasks requiring labor and skill with the
+easy assurance of a blind man in the crowded street.
+
+The conveyance of sound through the inelastic medium of water is so
+difficult that it has been called the world of silence. This is only
+comparatively true. The fish has an auditory cavity, which, though
+simple in itself, certifies the ordinary conviction of sound, but it
+is dull and imperfect; and perhaps all marine creatures have other
+means of communication. There is an instance, however, of musical
+sounds produced by marine animals, which seems to show an appreciation
+of harmony. In one of the lakes of Ceylon, Sir Emerson Tennent heard
+soft musical sounds, like the first faint notes of the aeolian harp
+or the faint vibrations of a wineglass when its rim is rubbed by a wet
+finger. This curious harmony is supposed to be produced by a species
+of testaceous mollusk. A similar intonation is heard at times along
+the Florida coast.
+
+Interesting as this may be, as indicating an appreciation of that
+systematic order in arrangement which in music is harmony, it does not
+alter the fact that to the ears of the diver, save the cascade of the
+air through the life-hose, it is a sea of silence. No shout or spoken
+word reaches him. Even a cannon-shot comes to him dull and muffled,
+or if distant it is unheard. But a sharp, quick sound, that appears to
+break the air, like ice, into sharp radii, can be heard, especially if
+struck against anything on the water. The sound of driving a nail on
+the ship above, for example, or a sharp tap on the diving-bell below,
+is distinctly and reciprocally audible. Conversation below the surface
+by ordinary methods is out of the question, but it can be sustained
+by placing the metal helmets of the interlocutors together, thus
+providing a medium of conveyance.
+
+The effort to clothe with intelligence subaqueous life must have been
+greatly strengthened among primitive nations by the musical sounds
+to which I have referred. Those mysterious breathings were associated
+with a human will, and gave forebodings from their very sweetness.
+Everywhere they are associated with a passionate or pathetic mystery,
+and the widely-spread area over which their island home is portrayed
+as existing strengthens the conclusion that the strange music of the
+sea belongs not to Ceylon or Florida or the Mediterranean alone. It
+affords us another instance, by that common enjoyment of sweet sounds,
+of the chain of sympathy between all intelligent creatures, and better
+prepares us for familiar acquaintance with the beings which people the
+sea. We have prejudices and preconceived ideas to get rid of, whose
+strength has crystallized into aphorisms. "Cold as a fish" and
+"fish-eyed" are ordinary expressions. Then the touch of a fish, cold,
+slippery, serpent-like, causes an involuntary shrinking.
+
+But the submarine diver has a new revelation of piscine character and
+beauty, and perhaps can better understand the enticings of a siren or
+fantastic Lurlei than the classical scholar. In the flush of aureal
+light tinging their pearly glimmering armor are the radiant, graceful,
+frolicsome inhabitants of the sea. The glutinous or oily exudation
+that covers them is a brilliant varnish. Their lustrous colors,
+variety of crystalline tints and beautiful markings and spots, attract
+the eye of the artist even in the fish-market; but when glowing with
+full life, lively, nimble, playful, surely the most graceful living
+creatures of earth, air or sea, the soul must be blind indeed that can
+look upon them unmoved.
+
+The dull optic seen glazing in the death-throes upon the market-stall,
+with coarse vulgar surroundings, becomes, in its native element,
+full of intelligence and light. In even the smaller fry the round orb
+glitters like a diamond star. One cannot see the fish without seeing
+its eye. It is positive, persistent, prevalent, the whole animate
+existence expressed in it. As far as the fish can be seen its eye is
+visible. The glimmer of scales, the grace of perfect motion, the rare
+golden pavilion with its jeweled floor and heavy violet curtains,
+complete a scene whose harmony of color, radiance and animal life is
+perfect. The minnow and sun-perch are the pages of the tourney on the
+cloth of gold. There is a fearless familiarity in these playful
+little things, a social, frank intimacy with their novel visitor, that
+astonishes while it pleases. They crowd about him, curiously touch
+him, and regard all his movements with a frank, lively interest.
+Nor are the larger fish shy. The sheeps-head, red and black groper,
+sea-trout and other, familiar fish of the sportsman, receive him with
+frank bonhommie or fearless curiosity. In their large round beautiful
+eyes the diver reads evidence of intelligence and curious wonder that
+sometimes startles him with its entirely human expression. There is
+a look of interest mixed with curiosity, leading to the irresistible
+conclusion of a kindred nature. No faithful hound or pet doe could
+express a franker interest in its eyes. Curiosity, which I take to
+be expressly destructive of the now-exploded theory of instinct, is
+expressed not only by the eye, but by the movements. As in man there
+is an eager passion to handle that which is novel, so these curious
+denizens of the sea are persistent in their efforts to touch the
+diver. An instance of this occurred, attended with disagreeable
+results to one of the parties, and that not the fish. The Eve of this
+investigation was a large catfish. These fish are the true rovers of
+the water. They have a large round black eye, full of intelligence
+and fire: their warlike spines and gaff-topsails give them the true
+buccaneer build. One of these, while the diver was engaged, incited by
+its fearless curiosity, slipped up and touched him with its cold nose.
+The man involuntarily threw back his hand, and the soft palm striking
+the sharp gaff, it was driven into the flesh. There was an instant's
+struggle before the fish wrenched itself loose from the bleeding
+member, and then it only swung off a little, staring with its bold
+black eyes at the intruder, as if it wished to stay for further
+question. It is hard to translate the expression of that look of
+curious wonder and surprise without appearing to exaggerate, but the
+impression produced was that if the fish did not speak to him, it was
+from no lack of intelligent emotions to be expressed in language.
+
+A prolonged stay in one place gave a diver an opportunity to test this
+intelligence further, and to observe the trustful familiarity of this
+variety of marine life. He was continually surrounded at his work by
+a school of gropers, averaging a foot in length. An accident having
+identified one of them, he observed it was a daily visitor. After the
+first curiosity the gropers apparently settled into the belief that
+the novel monster was harmless and clumsy, but useful in assisting
+them to their food. The species feed on Crustacea and marine
+worms, which shelter under rocks, mosses and sunken objects at the
+sea-bottom. In raising anything out of the ooze a dozen of these fish
+would thrust their heads into the hollow for their food before the
+diver's hand was removed. They would follow him about, eyeing his
+motions, dashing in advance or around in sport, and evidently with
+a liking for their new-found friend. Pleased with such an unexpected
+familiarity, the man would bring them food and feed them from his
+hand, as one feeds a flock of chickens. The resemblance, in their
+familiarity and some of their ways, to poultry was, in fact, very
+striking. As a little chick will sometimes seize a large crumb and
+scurry off, followed by the flock, so a fish would sometimes snatch a
+morsel and fly, followed by the school. If he dropped it or stopped to
+enjoy his _bonne bouche_, his mates would be upon him. Sometimes two
+would get the same morsel, and there would be a trial of strength,
+accompanied with much flash and glitter of shining scales. But no
+matter how called off, their interest and curiosity remained with the
+diver. They would return, pushing their noses about him, caressingly
+in appearance if not intent, and bob into the treasures of worm and
+shellfish his labor exposed. He became convinced that they were
+sportive, indulging in dash and play for the fun of it, rather than
+for any grosser object to be attained.
+
+This curious intimacy was continued for weeks: the fish, unless driven
+away by some rover of prey of their kind, were in regular attendance
+during his hours of work. Perhaps the solitude and silence of that
+curious submarine world strengthened the impression of recognition
+and intimacy, but by every criterion we usually accept in terrestrial
+creation these little creatures had an interest and a friendly feeling
+for one who furnished them food, and who was always careful to avoid
+injuring them or giving them any unnecessary alarm. He could not,
+of course, take up a fish in his hand, any more than a chicken will
+submit to handling; but as to the comparative tameness of the two,
+the fish is more approachable than the chicken. That they knew and
+expected the diver at the usual hour was a conclusion impossible
+to deny, as also that they grew into familiarity with him, and were
+actuated by an intelligent recognition of his service to them. It
+would be hard to convince this gentleman that a school of fish cannot
+be as readily and completely tamed as a flock of chickens.
+
+Why not? The fear of man is no instinctive feeling in the invertebrate
+creation. The pioneer who penetrates into the uninhabited wilds of
+our Western frontier finds bird and beast fearless and familiar. Man's
+cruelty is a lesson of experience. The timid and fearful of the lower
+creation belong to creatures of prey. The shark, for example, is as
+cowardly as the wolf.
+
+I thought to speak of other marine creations with which the diver
+grows acquainted, finding in them only a repetition of the same degree
+of life he has seen in the upper world. But let it be enough to state
+the conclusion--as yet only an impression, and perhaps never to be
+more--that in marine existence there is to be found the counterpart
+always of some animate existence on earth, invertebrate or radiate,
+in corresponding animals or insects, between whose habits and modes
+of existence strong analogies are found. The shrimps that hang in
+clusters on your hand under the water are but winged insects of the
+air in another frame that have annoyed you on the land.
+
+Let me dismiss the subject with the brief account of a diver caught in
+a trap.
+
+In the passion of blind destruction that followed and attended the
+breaking out of hostilities between the North and the South, as a
+child breaks his rival's playthings, the barbarism of war destroyed
+the useful improvements of civilization. Among the things destroyed by
+this iconoclastic fury was the valuable dry-dock in Pensacola Bay. It
+was burned to the water's edge, and sunk. A company was subsequently
+organized to rescue the wreck, and in the course of the submarine
+labor occurred the incident to which I refer.
+
+The dry-dock was built in compartments, to ensure it against sinking,
+but the ingenuity which was to keep it above water now served
+effectually to keep it down. Each one of these small water-tight
+compartments held the vessel fast to the bottom, as Gulliver was bound
+by innumerable threads to the ground of Lilliput. It was necessary
+to break severally into the lower side of each of these chambers, and
+allow the water to flow evenly in all. The interior of the hull was
+checkered by these boxes. Huge beams and cross-ties intersected
+each other at right angles, forming the frame for this honeycombed
+interior, pigeon-holed like a merchant's desk. It was necessary to
+tear off the skin and penetrate from one to the other in order to
+effect this.
+
+It was a difficult and tedious job under water. The net of
+intersecting beams lay so close together that the passage between was
+exceedingly narrow and compressed, barely admitting the diver's
+body. The pens, so framed by intersecting beams, were narrowed and
+straitened, embarrassing attempts at labor in them, which the cold,
+slippery, serpent-like touch of the sea-water was not likely to make
+pleasanter. It folded the shuddering body in its coils, and a most
+ancient and fish-like smell did not improve the situation. The toil
+was multiplied by the innumerable pigeon-holes, as if they fitted
+into one another like a Chinese puzzle, with the unlucky diver in the
+middle box. It was a nightmare of the sea, the furniture of a dream
+solidified in woody fibre.
+
+Into one of these crowding holes the diver crawled. There was the
+tedious work of tearing off the casing to occupy an hour or more, and
+when it was accomplished he endeavored to back out of his situation.
+He was stopped fast and tight in his regression. The arrangement of
+the armor about the head and shoulders, making a cone whose apex was
+the helmet, prevented his exit. It was like the barb of a harpoon,
+and caught him fast in the wood. Such a danger is not sudden in its
+revelation. There is at first only a feeling of impatience at the
+embarrassment, a disposition to "tear things." In vain attempts at
+doubling and other gymnastic feats the diver wasted several hours,
+until his companions above became alarmed at the delay. They renewed
+and increased their labors at the force-pump, and the impetuous
+torrent came surging about the diver's ears. It served to complete
+his danger. It sprung the trap in which he lay enclosed. The inflated
+armor swelled and filled up the crowded spaces. It stiffened out the
+casing of the helmet to equal the burden of fifty pounds to the square
+inch, and made it as hard as iron. He was caught like the gluttonous
+fox. The bulky volume of included air made exit impossible. It was no
+longer a labyrinth as before, where freedom of motion incited courage:
+he was in the fetters of wind and water, bound fast to the floor of
+his dungeon den. He signaled for the pump to stop. It was the only
+alternative. He might die without that life-giving air, but he would
+certainly die if its volume was not reduced. The cock at the back
+of the helmet for discharging the vessel was out of his reach. The
+invention never contemplated a case in which the diver would perish
+from the presence of air.
+
+As the armor worn was made tight at the sleeves with elastic
+wristbands, his remedy was to insert his fingers under it, and slowly
+and tediously allow the bubbling air to escape. In this he persevered
+steadily, encouraged by the prospect of escape. The way was long and
+difficult, but release certain with the reduction of that huge bulk.
+
+But a new and subtler danger attacked him--the very wit of Nature
+brought to bear upon his force and ingenuity. It was as if the
+mysterious sirens of the sea saw in that intellectual force the real
+strength of their prisoner, and sought to steal it from him while they
+lulled him to indifference. Inhaling and reinhaling the reduced volume
+of air, it became carbonized and foul, not with the warning of sudden
+oppression, but
+
+ Sly as April melts to May,
+ And May slips into June.
+
+The senses, intoxicated by the new companion sent them by the lungs,
+began to sport with it, as ignorant children with a loaded shell,
+forgetful of duty and the critical condition of the man. They began to
+wander in vagaries and delusions. A soft chime of distant bells rang
+in his ears with the sweet sleepy service of a Sabbath afternoon; the
+sound of hymns and the organ mingled with the melody and the chant of
+the sirens of the sea.
+
+ There is sweet music here that softer falls
+ Than petals from blown roses on the grass,
+ Or night-dew on still waters, between walls
+ Of shadowy granite in a gleaming pass--
+ Music that gentler on the spirit lies
+ Than tired eyelids upon tired eyes.
+ Here are cool mosses deep,
+ And through the moss the ivies creep,
+ And in the stream the long-leaved flowers weep,
+ And from the craggy ledge the poppy hangs in sleep.
+
+The sensuous beauty, the infinite luxury of repose sung by the poet,
+filled and steeped his senses. The desire to sleep was intoxicating,
+delicious, irresistible; and with it ran delicious, restful thrills
+through all his limbs, the narcotism of the blood. It was partly,
+no doubt, the effect of inhaling that pernicious air; partly
+that hibernation of the bear which in the freezing man precedes
+dissolution; and possibly more than that, something more than any mere
+physical cause--life perhaps preparing to lay this tired body down,
+its future usefulness destroyed.
+
+This delicious enervation had to be constantly resisted and dominated
+by a superior will. One more strenuous effort to relieve that
+straitened garrison, to release that imprisoned and fettered body,
+and then, if that failed, an unconditional surrender to the armies of
+eternal steep. But it did not fail. That constant, persevering tugging
+of the fingers at the wristbands, pursued mechanically in that strange
+condition of pleasing stupor, had reduced the exaggerated distensions
+of the bulbous head-gear. A stout, energetic push set the diver free,
+and he was drawn to the surface dazed, drowsy, and only half conscious
+of the peril undergone. But with the rush of fresh, untainted air to
+the lungs came an emotion of gratitude to the Giver of life and the
+full consciousness of escape.
+
+And this sums up my sketch illustrative of the peculiar character of
+marine life, and the hazards of submarine adventure, hitherto known to
+few, for--well, for _divers_ reasons.
+
+WILL WALLACE HARNEY.
+
+
+
+
+CONFIDENTIAL.
+
+
+My ear has ever been considered public property for private usage. I
+cannot call to mind the time when I was not somebody's confidante,
+the business beginning as far back as the winter I ran down to Aunt
+Rally's to receive my birthday-party of sweet or bitter sixteen, as
+will appear.
+
+Ralph Romer was the first to spread the news of my arrival in the
+village among the girls of my own age. Ralph Romer it was who had
+braved the dangers of "brier and brake" to find the bright holly
+berries with which Aunt Hally had decorated the cheery little parlor
+for the occasion; and it was with Ralph Romer I danced the oftenest on
+that famous night.
+
+"Wouldn't I just step out on the porch a short little minute," he
+whispered as he came around in the rear of Aunt Hally to bid me
+good-night, ending the whisper, according to the style of all
+boy-lovers, "I've got something to tell you."
+
+The door stood open and conveniently near, and I suppose I wanted to
+see how high the snow had drifted since dark; and, a better reason
+still, I couldn't afford to let Ralph take my hand off with him; and
+so I had to go out on the porch just long enough to get it back,
+while he said: "Ettie Moore says she loves me, and we are going to
+correspond when I go back to college; and as you know all lovers
+and their sweethearts must have a confidante to smuggle letters and
+valentines across the lines, we have both chosen you for ours. Oh, I
+was so afraid you wouldn't come!"
+
+I found the snow had drifted--well, I don't believe I knew how many
+inches.
+
+I have not promised a recital of all my auricular experiences. Enough
+to say, that in time I settled down into the conviction that it was
+my special mission to be the receptacle of other people's secrets; and
+they seemed determined to convince me that they thought so too.
+
+So, when Mr. Tennent Tremont happened along and became a candidate for
+auricular favors, like a tradesman who has gained the self-sustaining
+ground which has made him indifferent as to custom-seeking, I could
+afford to be entirely independent about giving a previous promise to
+keep his secrets for him; and so, dear reader, they are as much yours
+as mine.
+
+When my brother introduced him into our family circle we took him
+to be a Northern college-chum, met with during his
+just-returned-from-trip to Washington; for it was in those days when
+Southern hospitality was as much appreciated as it was liberally
+bestowed. It was a good time for a modest stranger to come among new
+faces. We were in the flutter and bustle which a wedding in the family
+makes, and it gave him an opportunity to get used to us, and left us
+none to observe him unpleasantly much.
+
+But when the wedding was over, and I had made up my week of lost
+sleep, and he and my brother had kept themselves out of the way on a
+camp-hunt, for my mother to do up her week of house-cleaning,--it is
+here that our story proper begins.
+
+As we were leaving the breakfast-table one morning my brother caught
+my dress-sleeve, and, dropping in the rear of Mr. Tennent Tremont,
+allowed him to find the verandah: "Really, sis, I don't think you are
+doing the clever thing, quite."
+
+"How?"
+
+"Why, in not helping me to entertain my friend."
+
+"Getting tired of him?"
+
+"No, he isn't one of that kind; but, to tell the truth, I am too busy
+just now to give him the whole of my time."
+
+"Too busy turning your own cakes. Yes, I see."
+
+"Which is no more than my sister is doing; which reminds me to say
+that J.B. will call this morning, he desired me to inform you. But,
+dear sis, we must not be so absorbed in our own love-matters as to
+give my friend only a moiety of our attention, for, poor fellow! he
+has one of his own."
+
+"So I am to bore him for the sake of relieving you? Is that my role?"
+
+"Now stop! He simply wants a lady confidante."
+
+I broke away from my brother's hold, and ran up to my room to see if
+all was right for my expected caller, giving my right ear a pull, by
+way of saying to that victimized organ, "You are needed."
+
+And what think you I did next? Got out my embroidery-material bag, and
+put it in order for action at a moment's warning. I was prepared for a
+reasonable amount of martyrdom pertaining to my profession, but I was
+always an economist of time, and not another unemployed hour would I
+yield to the selfish demands of my forthcoming job.
+
+The next day was one of November drizzle, the house confinement of
+which, my adroit brother declared, could only be mitigated by my
+presence in the sitting-room until the improved state of the weather
+allowed their escape from it.
+
+I was in the habit of appropriating such weather to my piano, and I
+had not touched it for a month. Whether Mr. Tennent Tremont's nerves
+were in a sound state or not, I was determined to practice until
+twelve. But when he came in from the library and assisted me in
+opening the instrument, I was obliged to ask him what he would have.
+They were my first direct words to him, our three weeks' guest.
+
+"Oh, 'Summer Night' is a favorite," he said.
+
+I gave him the song, and then executed the long variations; then,
+dropping my tired hands in my lap, inquired whether he liked vocal or
+instrumental best.
+
+"Not any more of either, just now, thanking you kindly for what you
+have given me," he said. "Have you ever been a confidante, Miss ----?"
+
+"That is my vocation, Mr. Tremont," I replied, grasping my bag.
+
+"Which? your embroidery or--"
+
+"Both combined," I tried to say pleasantly, "as on this occasion. I am
+at Mr. Tremont's service;" and I threaded my tapestry-needle.
+
+Without a prefatory word he began: "Years before your young heart was
+awakened to 'the sweetest joy, the wildest woe,' I loved."
+
+"And single yet!" I exclaimed as I let my hands drop and glanced up
+at his brown hair, to see if all those years had left their silver
+footprints there.
+
+"And single yet," he repeated slowly, "and still worshiping at the
+same shrine; and to no other will I ever bow until this head is
+silvered o'er, and this strong arm palsied with the infirmities of
+age--if a long life is indeed to be mine."
+
+His ardor startled me, but I managed to stitch away composedly, and he
+went on:
+
+"I know it is in the highest degree selfish to inflict on you a
+recital of what may not interest you; but I have tried to keep my
+secret buried from human eyes, from all but _hers_, and you are now
+the only being on earth to whom I have ever _said_, 'I love.' As
+intimate as I have been with your brother, if he knows it, it is by
+his penetration, for no word of acknowledgment has ever passed my lips
+before. May I go on?" he asked.
+
+"Oh yes," I answered, taken by surprise. "I suppose so. It is a relief
+to talk, and to listen, I have told you, is my vocation."
+
+"How long can you listen?" he questioned in delighted eagerness.
+
+I fancied he would have to be allowanced, and I held up my paper
+pattern before me: "This bouquet of flowers is to be transferred.
+I will give you all the time it will take to do it. Remember, the
+catastrophe must be reached by that time. Some one else will probably
+want my ear."
+
+"But," said he, "listening is not the only duty of a confidante: you
+must aid me by your counsel. Only a woman may say how a woman may be
+won."
+
+"You have my sympathies, Mr. Tremont, on the score of your being a
+very dear brother's friend. I know nothing of her--next to nothing of
+you. I can neither counsel nor aid you."
+
+"That brother is familiar with every page of my outward life-history.
+It was in our family he spent his vacation, while you and your father
+were traveling in Europe."
+
+"Well, then, that will do about yourself. Now about her?"
+
+The door-bell was rung: the waiter announced--well, my obliging
+brother has already given enough of his name--"Mr. J.B." My confessor
+withdrew.
+
+The next morning, as I was bringing the freshened flower-vases into
+the sitting-room, he brought me my bag, saying, "Now about her."
+
+I opened the piano, repeated his favorite, kept my seat and cultivated
+my roses vigorously.
+
+"Miss ----," he began, "I would not knowingly give pain to a human
+creature. Yesterday, when your visitor found me by your side, I
+observed a frown on his face. I detest obtrusiveness, but if there is
+anything in the relation in which you stand to each other which will
+make my attentions objectionable to either of you, they shall cease
+this moment. You are at perfect liberty to repeat to him every word I
+have said to you."
+
+"I thank you sincerely for your considerateness," I said. "I am under
+no obligations of the kind to him or any other gentleman."
+
+He introduced his topic by saying: "I am glad that I shall have to
+say little more of myself. Oh, what a strange joy it is to be able to
+speak unreservedly of her, and of the long pent-up hopes and fears
+of the past years! And now, if you will assist me in interpreting
+her conduct toward me--if you will inspire me with even faint hope
+of success--if you will advise me as you would a brother how to
+proceed,--gratitude will be too weak a word for my feeling toward you
+for the remainder of my life."
+
+"I have not yet sufficient light on her part of the affair to aid you
+by advice," I answered. "In these slowly-developing love-affairs
+there is usually but one great hindering cause. Do you know," I said,
+laughing as much as I dared, looking into his woebegone face, "that
+you have not told me what has passed between you?"
+
+His moment or two of death silence made me almost regret my last
+words.
+
+"In the first of our acquaintance I was ever tortured by her
+indifference. My first attentions were quietly received, never
+encouraged. Then came the still more torturing fear--agony let me call
+it--lest she was pre-engaged. Thank God! that burden was lifted from
+my poor heart, but only, it seemed, to make room for the very one of
+all in the catalogue of causes by which a lover's hope dies beyond the
+possibility of a resurrection. It is the rock--no, I fear the
+placid waters of friendship into which my freighted bark is now
+drifting--which may lie between it and the bright isle of love, the
+safe harbor" (he shuddered), "not the blissful possession."
+
+Reader, the roses were not growing under my needle: my sympathies were
+at last fully enlisted.
+
+"You have well said," I answered. "Friendship is the 'nine notch'
+in which a lover makes 'no count' in the game of hearts. But steer
+bravely past these dark gulfs of despair. Have you ever had recourse
+to jealousy in your desperation?" I queried.
+
+"I scorn such a base ally. Your brother can tell you I am here partly
+because I would avoid increasing an affection in another which I
+cannot return."
+
+"Does she know of that?" I asked, not at all prepared in my own mind
+to yield the potency of the ally in my sincere desire to aid him by
+this test of a woman's affection.
+
+"Yes: I have no reason, however, for thinking that the fact has raised
+her estimate of the article," he said, making a poor attempt to smile.
+
+I felt ashamed of my suggestion, and said quickly, "You correspond,
+of course: how are her letters?" Now I was sure of my safest clue in
+finding her out.
+
+"It was through the medium of her letters that I first obtained my
+knowledge of her mind, her temperament, her disposition, her admirable
+domestic virtues; for they were written without reserve. They excited
+my highest admiration; they stimulated my desire to know more of her;
+but they contain no word of love for me."
+
+His want of boldness almost excited my contempt. My skill was baffled
+on every side, and, not caring much to conceal my impatience, I said,
+"You have asked me to advise you as I would my brother. She is cold
+and selfish: give her up."
+
+"Give her up!" he said with measured and emphatic slowness--"give
+her up, when I have sought her beneath every clime on which the sun
+shines--not for months, but for years? Give her up, when her presence
+gives me all I have ever known of happiness? Give her up!" and he
+leaned his head on the back of his chair and closed his eyes.
+
+I had imagined him gifted with wonderful self-control, but when I
+looked up from my work all color had faded from his cheeks, the lips
+seemed ready to yield the little blood left there by the clinch of the
+white-teeth upon them, while every muscle of the face quivered with
+spasmodic effort to control emotion. When the eyes were opened and
+fixed on the ceiling, I saw no trace in them of anger, revenge, or
+even of wounded pride. They were full of tears, ready to gush in one
+last flood-tide of feeling over a subdued, chastened, but breaking
+heart.
+
+It was very evident that my treatment was not adding much comfort to
+my patient, however salutary it might prove in the end. I knew of his
+intention to leave the next day: there was little time left me to aid
+him, and I had come to regard the unknown woman's mysterious nature or
+strategic warfare as pitted against my superior penetration. That
+he might be victorious she must be vanquished. _She_ was, then, my
+antagonist.
+
+The deepening twilight was producing chilliness. I flooded the room
+with brilliant light, stirred the grate into glowing warmth, and
+invited him to a seat near the fire.
+
+"You will not leave me, will you? This may be--_it will be_--my last
+demand on you as a confidante. How is the bouquet progressing?" he
+asked.
+
+"See," I said, holding my embroidery up before me: "we must hurry. I
+have but one more tendril to add."
+
+"Tendrils are clinging things, like hope, are they not?" he said
+pensively.
+
+But sentimentalizing was not the business of the hour, and I intimated
+as much to him. "Yes," I replied, "but hope must now give place to
+effort. I see you are not going to take my 'give-her-up' advice."
+
+"No--only from her who has the right to give it."
+
+I now considered my patient out of danger.
+
+"Then why do you torture yourself longer with doubts? Perhaps your
+irresolution has caused a want of confidence in the strength of
+your affection. At least give her an opportunity to define her true
+position toward you. Beard the lions of indifference and friendship in
+their dens, and do not yield to unmanly cowardice. Strange that I have
+given you the counsel last which should have been given first! But do
+not, I beseech you, lose any time in seeking her. Assure her of your
+long and unwavering devotion. Constancy is the most valued word in a
+true woman's vocabulary. You have staked too much happiness to lose:
+you _must_ win."
+
+"And if I lose," he said--holding up something before him which I
+took to be a picture, though it was in the shape of a heart--"and if
+I lose, then perish all of earth to me. But leave me only this, and
+should I hold you thus, and gaze on what I have first and last and
+only loved until this perishable material on which I have placed you
+turn to dust, still will you be graven on a heart whose deathless love
+can know no death; for a thing so holy as the love I bear you was not
+made to die."
+
+My work--now my completed work--dropped beneath my fingers, for the
+last stitch was taken.
+
+If I could not prevent his self-torture, he should not, at least,
+torture me longer; and snatching the thing from his grasp, I exclaimed
+as I closed my hands over it, "Now, before I return it, you must, you
+_shall_, promise me that you will take the last advice I gave you; or
+will you allow me to look at it, and then unseal the silent lips
+and give you the prophetic little 'yes' or 'no' which a professed
+physiognomist like your confidante can always read in the eye?"
+
+"I would rather you did the last," he said; and I rose, leaned my
+elbow on the corner of the mantel nearest the gaslight, rested my head
+on my empty hand, so as to shade my eyes from the intensity of the
+brilliant burner near me, and with the awe creeping over me with
+which the old astrologers read the horoscope of the midnight stars,
+I looked, and saw--only a wonderfully faithful copy of the portrait
+hanging just over me, of which Mr. Tennent Tremont's confidante was
+the original. I threw it from me, and burst into tears. He stood quite
+near me. I thought I hated him, but my obtuse, blundering, idiotic
+self more than him. I waved my hand in token either of his silence or
+withdrawal, for in all my life long I, with a whole dictionary in
+my mind of abusive epithets, was never more at a loss for a word. My
+token was unheeded.
+
+He only murmured softly,
+
+ I had never seen thee weeping:
+ I cannot leave thee now.
+
+When you snatched my picture from me a moment ago I saw a glistening
+tear of sympathy in your eye; but what are these?"
+
+"So cruel! so ungenerous! so unfair!" I said, still pressing my hands
+tightly over my eyes. "How can I ever forgive you?"
+
+With softer murmur than the last he repeated the words,
+
+ "'Tis sweet to let the pardoned in."
+
+"Astounding presumption that!" I said, now giving him the benefit of
+my full gaze--"to speak of pardon before making a confession of
+your guilt! But before I give you time even for that, the remaining
+mysteries which still hang around your tale of woe shall be cleared
+up. Please to inform the court how the original of your purloined
+sketch could have been the object of years of devotion, when it has
+been only four weeks to-day since you laid your mortal eyes on her?"
+
+"Ah! you may well say mortal; but you know the soul too has its visual
+organs. I saw and loved and worshiped my ideal in those years, and
+sought her too--how unceasingly!--and I said,
+
+ Only for the real will I with the ideal part:
+ Another shall not even tempt my heart.
+
+When I saw her just four weeks since, I knew her,
+
+ And my heart responded as, with unseen wings,
+ An angel touched its unswept strings,
+ And whispers in its song,
+ Where hast thou strayed so long?"
+
+But the avenging demon of curiosity was not to be exorcised by
+sentimental evasion: "Those letters, sir, of which you spoke, _they_
+must have been of a real, tangible form--not a part of the mythical
+phantasmagoria of your idealistic vision."
+
+He laughed as a light-hearted child would, but knitted his brow with
+a perplexed air as he said, "Why don't the British government send
+a woman to find the source of the Nile? I must thank your
+unsophisticated brother's pride in his sister's epistolary
+accomplishments for my privilege of perusal. What next?"
+
+I thought a moment. Before, I had fifty other queries to propound, but
+now as I looked into the glowing anthracite before me which gave us
+those pleasant Reveries, they very naturally all resolved themselves
+into explained mysteries without his aid.
+
+He insists that the "prophetic little yes or no" never came.
+
+Upon my honor, dear reader, as a confidante, I still think it the
+most unfair procedure which ever "disgraced the annals of civilized
+warfare;" but I shall have abundant opportunity for revenge, for we
+are to make the journey of life together.
+
+
+
+
+GLIMPSES OF JOHN CHINAMAN.
+
+
+When John Marshall picked up the first golden nugget in California,
+a call was sounded for the gathering of an immense gold-seeking
+army made up of many nationalities; and among the rest China sent a
+battalion some fifty thousand strong.
+
+John Chinaman has remained with us ever since, despised and abused,
+being neither a co-worshiper nor a co-sympathizer in aught save
+the getting of gold. In dress, custom and language his is still a
+nationality as distinct from ours as are the waters of the Gulf Stream
+from those of the ocean.
+
+It is possible that this may be but the second migration of Tartars to
+the American shore. It is possible that the North American Indian and
+the Chinaman may be identical in origin and race. Close observers find
+among the aboriginal tribes resident far up on the north-west American
+coast peculiar habits and customs, having closely-allied types among
+the Chinese. The features of the Aleuts, the natives of the Aleutian
+Islands, are said to approximate closely to those of the Mongolians.
+The unvarying long black hair, variously-shaded brown skin, beardless
+face and shaven head are points, natural and artificial, common to
+the Indian and Mongolian. There is a hint of common custom between the
+Indian scalplock and Chinese cue.
+
+"John" has been a thorough gleaner of the mines. The "superior race"
+allowed him to make no valuable discoveries. He could buy their
+half-worked-out placers. The "river-bed" they sold him when its
+chances of yielding were deemed desperate. When the golden fruitage
+of the banks was reduced to a dollar per day, they became "China
+diggings." But wherever "John" settled he worked steadily, patiently
+and systematically, no matter whether his ten or twelve hours' labor
+brought fifty cents or fifty dollars; for his industry is of an
+untiring mechanical character. In the earlier and flusher days of
+California's gold-harvest the white man worked spasmodically. He
+was ever leaving the five-dollar diggings in hand for the fifty- or
+hundred-dollar-per-day claims afar off in some imaginary bush. These
+golden rumors were always on the wing. The country was but half
+explored, and many localities were rich in mystery. The white vanguard
+pushed north, south and east, frequently enduring privation and
+suffering. "John," in comparative comfort, trotted patiently after,
+carrying his snugly made-up bundle of provisions and blankets at one
+end of a bamboo pole, his pick, shovel, pan and rocker at the other,
+to work over the leavings. The leavings sometimes turned out more gold
+than "new ground," much to the chagrin of the impatient Caucasian. But
+John, according to his own testimony, never owned a rich claim. Ask
+him how much it yielded per day, and he would tell you, "sometimes
+four, sometimes six bittee" (four or six shillings). He had many
+inducements for prevarication. Nearly every white man's hand was
+against him. If he found a bit of rich ground, "jumpers" were ready to
+drive him from it: Mexicans waylaid him and robbed him of his dust. In
+remote localities he enclosed his camp by strong stockades: even these
+were sometimes forced and carried at night by bands of desperadoes.
+Lastly came the foreign miner's tax-collector, with his demand of four
+dollars monthly per man for the privilege of digging gold. There
+were hundreds and thousands of other foreign laborers in the
+mines--English, German, French, Italian and Portuguese--but they paid
+little or none of this tax, for they might soon be entitled to a vote,
+and the tax-collector was appointed by the sheriff of the county, and
+the sheriff, like other officials, craved a re-election. But John was
+never to be a voter, and so he shouldered the whole of this load, and
+when he could not pay, the official beat him and took away his tools.
+John often fought this persecutor by strategy. In localities where no
+white men would betray him he signalized his coming from afar. From
+the crags of Red Mountain on the Tuolumne River I have often seen the
+white flag waved as the dreaded collector came down the steep trail
+to collect his monthly dues. That signal or a puff of smoke told the
+Chinese for miles along the river-valley to conceal themselves from
+the "license-man." Rockers, picks and shovels were hastily thrust into
+clumps of chapparal, and their owners clambered up the hillsides
+into artificial caves or leafy coverts. Out of companies of fifty
+the collector finds but twenty men at work. These pay their tax, the
+official rides on down the river, the hidden thirty Mongolians emerge
+from cover; and more than once has a keen collector "doubled on them"
+by coming back unexpectedly and detecting the entire gang on their
+claim.
+
+John has been invaluable to the California demagogue, furnishing
+for him a sop of hatred and prejudice to throw before "enlightened
+constituencies." It needs but to mention the "filthy Chinaman" to
+provoke an angry roar from the mass-meeting. Yet the Chinaman is
+not entirely filthy. He washes his entire person every day when
+practicable; he loves clean clothes; his kitchen-utensils will bear
+inspection. When the smallpox raged so severely in San Francisco a few
+years since, there were very few deaths among his race. But John
+_is_ not nice about his house. He seems to have none of our ideas
+concerning home comfort. Smoke has no terror for him; soap he keeps
+entirely for his clothes and person; floor-and wall-washing are things
+never hinted at; and the refuse of his table is scarcely thrown out
+of doors. Privacy is not one of his luxuries--he wants a house full:
+where there is room for a bunk, there is room for a man. An anthill,
+a beehive, a rabbit-warren are his models of domestic comfort: what is
+stinted room for two Americans is spaciousness for a dozen Chinese.
+Go into one of their cabins at night, and you are in an oven full of
+opium- and lamp-smoke. Recumbent forms are dimly seen lying on bunks
+above and below. The chattering is incessant. Stay there ten minutes,
+and as your eye becomes accustomed to the smoke you will dimly see
+blue bundles lying on shelves aloft. Anon the bundles stir, talk and
+puff smoke. Above is a loft six feet square: a ladder brings it in
+communication with the ground floor. Mongolians are ever coming down,
+but the gabble of tongues above shows that a host is still left. Like
+an omnibus, a Chinese house is never full. Nor is it ever quiet. At
+all hours of the night may be heard their talk and the clatter of
+their wooden shoes. A Chinaman does not retire like an American,
+intending to make a serious business of his night's sleeping. He
+merely "lops down" half dressed, and is ready to arise at the least
+call of business or pleasure.
+
+While at work in his claim his fire is always kindled near by, and
+over it a tea-pot. This is his beverage every half hour. His tea must
+be hot, strong and without milk or sugar. He also consumes a terrible
+mixture sold him by white traders, called indiscriminately brandy, gin
+or whisky, yet an intoxicated Chinaman is the rarest of rare sights.
+Rice he can cook elegantly, every grain being steamed to its utmost
+degree of distension. Soup he makes of no other meat than pork. The
+poorest among his hordes must have a chicken or duck for his holiday.
+He eats it merely parboiled. He will eat dog also, providing it is not
+long past maturity.
+
+The Chinese grocery-stores are museums to the American. There are
+strange dried roots, strange dried fish, strange dried land and marine
+plants, ducks and chickens, split, pressed thin and smoked; dried
+shellfish; cakes newly made, yellow, glutinous and fatty, stamped with
+tea-box characters; and great earthen jars filled with rottenness. I
+speak correctly if perhaps too forcibly, for when those imposing jars
+are opened to serve a customer with some manner of vegetable cut in
+long strips, the native-born American finds it expedient to hold
+his nose. American storekeepers in the mines deal largely in Chinese
+goods. They know the Mongolian names of the articles inquired for,
+but of their character, their composition, how they are cooked or
+how eaten, they can give no information. It is heathenish "truck," by
+whose sale they make a profit. Only that and nothing more.
+
+A Chinese miner's house is generally a conglomeration of old boards,
+mats, brush, canvas and stones. Rusty sheets of tin sometimes help to
+form the edifice. Anything lying about loose in the neighborhood is
+certain in time to form a part of the Mongolian mansion.
+
+When the white man abandons mining-ground he often leaves behind very
+serviceable frame houses. John comes along to glean the gold left by
+the Caucasian. He builds a cluster of shapeless huts. The deserted
+white man's house gradually disappears. A clapboard is gone, and then
+another, and finally all. The skeleton of the frame remains: months
+pass away; piece by piece the joists disappear; some morning they are
+found tumbled in a heap, and at last nothing is left save the cellar
+and chimneys. Meantime, John's clusters of huts swell their rude
+proportions, but you must examine them narrowly to detect any traces
+of your vanished house, for he revels in smoke, and everything about
+him is soon colored to a hue much resembling his own brownish-yellow
+countenance. Thus he picks the domiciliary skeleton bare, and then
+carries off the bones. He is a quiet but skillful plunderer. John No.
+1 on his way home from his mining-claim rips off a board; John No.
+2 next day drags it a few yards from the house. John No. 3 a week
+afterward drags it home. In this manner the dissolution of your
+house is protracted for months. In this manner he distributes the
+responsibility of the theft over his entire community. I have seen a
+large boarding-house disappear in this way, and when the owner, after
+a year's absence, revisited the spot to look after his property, he
+found his real estate reduced to a cellar.
+
+John himself is a sort of museum in his character and habits. We must
+be pardoned for giving details of these, mingled promiscuously,
+rather after the museum style. His New Year comes in February. For
+the Chinaman of limited means it lasts a week, for the wealthy it may
+endure three. His consumption of fire-crackers during that period is
+immense. He burns strings a yard in length suspended from poles over
+his balconies. The uproar and sputtering consequent on this festivity
+in the Chinese quarter at San Francisco is tremendous. The city
+authorities limit this Celestial Pandemonium to a week.
+
+He does not forsake the amusement of kite-flying even when arrived at
+maturity. His artistic imitations of birds and dragons float over
+our housetops. To these are often affixed contrivances for producing
+hollow, mournful, buzzing sounds, mystifying whole neighborhoods.
+His game of shuttlecock is to keep a cork, one end being stuck with
+feathers, flying in the air as long as possible, the impelling member
+being the foot, the players standing in a circle and numbering from
+four to twenty. Some show great dexterity in kicking with the heel.
+His vocal music to our ears seems a monotonous caterwaul. His violin
+has but one string: his execution is merely a modified species of
+saw-filing.
+
+He loves to gamble, especially in lotteries. He is a diligent student
+of his own comfort. Traveling on foot during a hot day, he protects
+himself with an umbrella and refreshes himself with a fan. In place of
+prosaic signs on his store-fronts, he often inscribes quotations from
+his favorite authors.
+
+He is a lover of flowers. His balconies and window-sills are often
+thickly packed with shrubs and creepers in pots. He is not a speedy
+and taciturn eater. His tea-table talks are full of noisy jollity, and
+are often prolonged far into the night.
+
+He is a lover of the drama. A single play sometimes requires months
+for representation, being, like a serial story, "continued" night
+after night. He never dances. There is no melody in the Mongolian
+foot. Dancing he regards as a species of Caucasian insanity.
+
+To make an oath binding he must swear by the head of a cock cut off
+before him in open court. Chinese testimony is not admissible in
+American courts. It is a legal California axiom that a Chinaman
+cannot speak the truth. But cases have occurred wherein, he being an
+eye-witness, the desire to hear what he _might_ tell as to what he had
+seen has proved stronger than the prejudice against him; and the more
+effectually to clinch the chances of his telling the truth, the above,
+his national form of oath, has been resorted to. He has among us some
+secret government of his own. Before his secret tribunals more than
+one Mongolian has been hurried in Star-Chamber fashion, and never
+seen afterward. The nature of the offences thus visited by secret and
+bloody punishment is scarcely known to Americans. He has two chief
+deities--a god and a devil. Most of his prayers are offered to his
+devil. His god, he says, being good and well-disposed, it is not
+necessary to propitiate him. But his devil is ugly, and must be won
+over by offering and petition. Once a year, wherever collected in any
+number, he builds a flimsy sort of temple, decorates it with ornaments
+of tinsel, lays piles of fruit, meats and sugared delicacies on an
+altar, keeps up night and day a steady crash of gongs, and installs
+therein some great, uncouth wooden idols. When this period of worship
+is over the "josh-house" disappears, and the idols are unceremoniously
+stowed away among other useless lumber.
+
+He shaves with an instrument resembling a butcher's cleaver in
+miniature. Nature generally denies him beard, so he shaves what a
+sailor would term the fore and after part of his head. He reaps his
+hirsute crop dry, using no lather. His cue is pieced out by silken
+braid, so interwoven as gradually to taper into a slim tassel,
+something like a Missouri mule-driver's "black snake" whip-lash. To
+lose this cue is to lose caste and standing among his fellows. No
+misfortune for him can be greater.
+
+Coarse cowhide boots are the only articles of American wear that he
+favors. He inclines to buy the largest sizes, thinking he thereby gets
+the most for his money, and when his No. 7 feet wobble and chafe in
+No. 12 boots he complains that they "fit too much."
+
+He cultivates the vegetables of his native land in California. They
+are curiosities like himself. One resembles our string-bean, but is
+circular in shape and from two to three feet in length. It is not
+in the least stringy, breaks off short and crisp, boils tender very
+quickly and affords excellent eating. He is a very careful cultivator,
+and will spend hours picking off dead leaves and insects from the
+young plants. When he finds a dead cat, rat, dog or chicken, he throws
+it into a small vat of water, allows it to decompose, and sprinkles
+the liquid fertilizer thus obtained over his plantation. Watermelon
+and pumpkin seeds are for him dessert delicacies. He consumes his
+garden products about half cooked in an American culinary point of
+view, merely wilting them by an immersion in boiling water.
+
+There are about fifteen English words to be learned by a Chinaman on
+arriving in California, and no more. With these he expresses all his
+wants, and with this limited stock you must learn to convey all that
+is needful to him. The practice thus forced upon one in employing
+a Chinese servant is useful in preventing a circumlocutory habit of
+speech. Many of our letters the Mongolian mouth has no capacity for
+sounding. _R_ he invariably sounds like _l_, so that the word "rice"
+he pronounces "lice"--a bit of information which may prevent an
+unpleasant apprehension when you come to employ a Chinese cook. He
+rejects the English personal pronoun I, and uses the possessive "my"
+in its place; thus, "My go home," in place of "I go home."
+
+When he buries a countryman he throws from the hearse into the
+air handfuls of brown tissue-paper slips, punctured with Chinese
+characters. Sometimes, at his burial-processions, he gives a small
+piece of money to every person met on the road. Over the grave he
+beats gongs and sets off packs of fire-crackers. On it he leaves
+cooked meats, drink, delicacies and lighted wax tapers. Eventually the
+bones are disinterred and shipped to his native land. In the remotest
+mining-districts of California are found Chinese graves thus opened
+and emptied of their inmates. I have in one instance seen him, so
+far as he was permitted, render some of these funeral honors to an
+American. The deceased had gained this honor by treating the Chinese
+as though they were partners in our common humanity. "Missa Tom," as
+he was termed by them, they knew they could trust. He acquired among
+them a reputation as the one righteous American in their California
+Gomorrah. Chinamen would come to him from distant localities, that
+he might overlook their bills of sale and other documents used in
+business intercourse with the white man. Their need of such, an honest
+adviser was great. The descendants of the Pilgrim Fathers often took
+advantage of their ignorance of the English language, written or
+spoken. "Missa Tom" suddenly died. I had occasion to visit his farm a
+few days after his death, and on the first night of my stay there saw
+the array of meats, fruit, wine and burning tapers on a table in front
+of the house, which his Chinese friends told me was intended as an
+offering to "Missa Tom's" spirit.
+
+We will dive for a moment into a Chinese wash-cellar. "John" does
+three-fourths of the washing of California. His lavatories are on
+every street. "Hip Tee, Washing and Ironing," says the sign, evidently
+the first production of an amateur in lettering. Two doors above is
+the establishment of Tong Wash--two below, that of Hi Sing. Hip Tee
+and five assistants are busy ironing. The odor is a trinity of steam,
+damp clothes and opium. More Mongolian tongues are heard from smoky
+recesses in the rear. As we enter, Hip Tee is blowing a shower of
+moisture from his mouth, "very like a whale." This is his method
+of dampening the linen preparatory to ironing. It is a skilled
+performance. The fluid leaves his lips as fine as mist. If we are on
+business we leave our bundles, and in return receive a ticket covered
+with hieroglyphics. These indicate the kind and number of the garments
+left to be cleansed, and some distinguishing mark (supposing this
+to be our first patronage of Hip Tee) by which we may be again
+identified. It may be by a pug nose, a hare lip, red hair, no hair or
+squint eyes. They never ask one's name, for they can neither pronounce
+nor write it when it is given. The ticket is an unintelligible tracery
+of lines, curves, dots and dashes, made by a brush dipped in India
+ink on a shred of flimsy Chinese paper. It may teem with abuse and
+ridicule, but you must pocket all that, and produce it on calling
+again, or your shirts and collars go into the Chinese Circumlocution
+Wash-house Office. It is very difficult getting one's clothes back if
+the ticket be lost--very. Hip Tee now dabs a duplicate of your ticket
+in a long book, and all is over. You will call on Saturday night for
+your linen. You do so. There is apparently the same cellar, the same
+smell of steam, damp clothes and opium, the same sputter of sprinkling
+water, and apparently the same Hip Tee and assistants with brown
+shaven foreheads and long cues hanging straight down behind or coiled
+in snake-like fashion about their craniums. You present your ticket.
+Hip Tee examines it and shakes his head. "No good--oder man," he says,
+and points up the street. You are now perplexed and somewhat alarmed.
+You say: "John, I want my clothes. I left them here last Monday. You
+gave me that ticket." "No," replies Hip Tee very decidedly, "oder
+man;" and again he waves his arm upward. Then you are wroth. You
+abuse, expostulate, entreat, and talk a great deal of English, and
+some of it very strong English, which Hip Tee does not understand;
+and Hip Tee talks a great deal of Chinese, and perhaps strong Chinese,
+which you do not understand. You commence sentences in broken Chinese
+and terminate them in unbroken English. Hip Tee commences sentences
+in broken English and terminates them in pure Chinese, from a like
+inability to express his indignation in a foreign tongue. "What for
+you no go oder man? No my ticket--tung sung lung, ya hip kee--_ping!"_
+he cries; and all this time the assistants are industriously ironing
+and spouting mist, and leisurely making remarks in their sing-song
+unintelligibility which you feel have uncomplimentary reference to
+yourself. Suddenly a light breaks upon you. This is not Hip Tee's
+cellar, this is not Hip Tee. It is the establishment of Hi Sing. This
+is Hi Sing himself who for the last half hour has been endeavoring
+with his stock of fifteen English words to make you understand that
+you are in the wrong house. But these Chinese, as to faces and their
+wash-houses, and all the paraphernalia of their wash-houses, are so
+much alike that this is an easy mistake to make. You find the lavatory
+of Hip Tee, who pronounces the hieroglyphics all correct, and delivers
+you your lost and found shirts clean, with half the buttons broken,
+and the bosoms pounded, scrubbed and frayed into an irregular sort of
+embroidery.
+
+"He can only dig, cook and wash," said the American miner
+contemptuously years ago: "he can't work rock." To work rock in mining
+parlance is to be skillful in boring Earth's stony husk after mineral.
+It is to be proficient in sledging, drilling and blasting. The
+Chinaman seemed to have no aptitude for this labor. He was content to
+use his pick and shovel in the gravel-banks: metallic veins of gold,
+silver or copper he left entirely to the white man.
+
+Yet it was a great mistake to suppose he could not "work rock," or
+do anything else required of him. John is a most apt and intelligent
+labor-machine. Show him once your tactics in any operation, and ever
+after he imitates them as accurately as does the parrot its memorized
+sentences. So when the Pacific Railroad was being bored through the
+hard granite of the Sierras it was John who handled the drill and
+sledge as well as the white laborer. He was hurled by thousands on
+that immense work, and it was the tawny hand of China that hewed out
+hundreds of miles for the transcontinental pathway. Nor is this
+all. He is crowding into one avenue of employment after another in
+California. He fills our woolen- and silk-mills; he makes slippers and
+binds shoes; he is skilled in the use of the sewing-machine; cellar
+after cellar in San Francisco is filled with these Celestial brownies
+rolling cigars; his fishing-nets are in every bay and inlet; he is
+employed in scores of the lesser establishments for preserving fruit,
+grinding salt, making matches, etc. He would quickly jump into the
+places of the carpenter, mason and blacksmith were he allowed, for
+there are numbers of them whose knowledge of these and other trades is
+sufficient at least to render them useful as assistants. He is handy
+on shipboard: the Panama steamers carry Chinese foremast hands. He is
+preferred as a house-servant: the Chinese boy of fourteen or sixteen
+learns quickly to cook and wash in American fashion. He is neat
+in person, can be easily ruled, does not set up an independent
+sovereignty in the kitchen, has no followers, will not outshine
+his mistress in attire; and, although not perfect, yet affords a
+refreshing change from our Milesian tyrants of the roast and wash-tub.
+But when you catch this Celestial domestic treasure, be sure that the
+first culinary operations performed for his instruction are correctly
+manipulated, for his imitativeness is of a cast-iron rigidity. Once
+in the mould, it can only with great difficulty be altered. Burn your
+toast or your pudding, and he is apt to regard the accident as the
+rule.
+
+The young Chinese, especially in San Francisco, are anxious to acquire
+an English education. They may not attend the public schools. A few
+years since certain Chinese mission-schools were established by the
+joint efforts of several religious denominations. Young ladies and
+gentlemen volunteered their services on Sunday to teach these Chinese
+children to read. They make eager, apt and docile pupils. Great is
+their pride on mastering a few lines of English text. They become much
+attached to their teachers, and it is possible, if the vote of the
+latter were taken, it would evidence more liking for their yellow,
+long-cued pupils than for any class of white children. But while so
+assiduous to learn, it is rather doubtful whether much real religious
+impression is made upon them. It is possible that their home-training
+negatives that.
+
+We have spoken entirely of the Chinaman. What of the Chinawoman in
+America? In California the word "Chinawoman" is synonymous with what
+is most vile and disgusting. Few, very few, of a respectable class
+are in the State. The slums of London and New York are as respectable
+thoroughfares compared with the rows of "China alleys" in the heart of
+San Francisco. These can hardly be termed "abandoned women." They
+have had no sense of virtue, propriety or decency to abandon. They are
+ignorant of the disgrace of their calling: if the term may be allowed,
+they pursue it innocently. Many are scarcely more than children. They
+are mere commodities, being by their own countrymen bought in China,
+shipped and consigned to factors in California, and there sold for a
+term of years.
+
+The Chinaman has bitter enemies in San Francisco: they thirst to
+annihilate him. He is accustomed to blows and brickbats; he is
+legitimate game for rowdies, both grown and juvenile; and children
+supposed to be better trained can scarce resist the temptation of
+snatching at his pig-tail as he passes through their groups in front
+of the public schools. Even on Sundays nice little boys coming from
+Sabbath-school, with their catechisms tucked under their jackets,
+and texts enjoining mercy and gentleness fresh upon their lips, will
+sometimes salute the benighted heathen as he passes by with a volley
+of stones. If he turns on his small assailants, he is apt to meet
+larger ones. Men are not wanting, ready and panting, to take up the
+quarrel thus wantonly commenced by the offspring of the "superior
+race." There are hundreds of families, who came over the sea to seek
+in America the comfort and prosperity denied them in the land of their
+birth, whose children from earliest infancy are inculcated with the
+sentiment that the Chinaman is a dog, a pest and a curse. On the
+occasion of William H. Seward's visit to a San Francisco theatre, two
+Chinese merchants were hissed and hooted by the gallery mob from a
+box which they had ventured to occupy. This assumption of style and
+exclusiveness proved very offensive to the shirt-sleeved, upper-tier
+representatives of the "superior race," who had assembled in large
+numbers to catch a glimpse of one of the black man's great champions.
+Ethiopia could have sat in that box in perfect safety, but China in
+such a place was the red rag rousing the ire of the Democratic bull.
+John has a story of his own to carry back home from a Christian land.
+
+For this prejudice and hostility there are provocative causes,
+although they may not be urged in extenuation. The Chinaman is a
+dangerous competitor for the white laborer; and when the latter, with
+other and smaller mouths to feed, once gets the idea implanted in
+his mind that the bread is being taken from them by what he deems a
+semi-human heathen, whose beliefs, habits, appearance and customs are
+distasteful to him, there are all the conditions ready for a state
+of mind toward the almond-eyed Oriental which leans far away from
+brotherly love.
+
+Brotherly love sometimes depends on circumstances. "Am I not a man and
+brother?" cries John from his native shore. "Certainly," we respond.
+Pass round the hat--let us take up a contribution for the conversion
+of the poor heathen. The coins clink thickly in the bottom of the
+charitable chapeau. We return home, feeling ourselves raised an inch
+higher heavenward.
+
+"Am I not a man and brother?" cries John in our midst, digging our
+gold, setting up opposition laundries and wheeling sand at half a
+dollar per day less wages. "No. Get out, ye long-tailed baste! An' wad
+ye put me on a livil with that--that baboon?" Pass round the hat.
+The coins mass themselves more thickly than ever. For what? To buy
+muskets, powder and ball. Wherefore? Wait! More than once has the
+demagogue cried, "Drive them into the sea!"
+
+PRENTICE MULFORD.
+
+
+
+
+A WINTER REVERIE.
+
+
+ We stood amid the rustling gloom alone
+ That night, while from the blue plains overhead,
+ With golden kisses thickly overblown,
+ A shooting star into the darkness sped.
+ "'Twas like Persephone, who ran," we said,
+ "Away from Love." The grass sprang round our feet,
+ The purple lilacs in the dusk smelled sweet,
+ And the black demon of the train sped by,
+ Rousing the still air with his long, loud cry.
+
+ The slender rim of a young rising moon
+ Hung in the west as you leaned on the bar
+ And spun a thread of some sweet April tune,
+ And wished a wish and named the falling star.
+ We heard a brook trill in the fields afar;
+ The air wrapped round us that entrancing fold
+ Of vanishing sweet stuff that mortal hold
+ Can never grasp--the mist of dreams--as down
+ The street we went in that fair foreign town.
+
+ I might have whispered of my love that night,
+ But something wrapped you as a shield around,
+ And held me back: your quiver of affright,
+ Your startled movement at some sudden sound--
+ A night-bird rustling on the leafy ground--
+ Your hushed and tremulous whisper of alarm,
+ Your beating heart pressed close against my arm,--
+ All, all were sweet; and yet _my_ heart beat true,
+ Nor shrined one wish I might not breathe to you.
+
+ So when we parted little had been said:
+ I left you standing just within the door,
+ With the dim moonlight streaming on your head
+ And rippling softly on the checkered floor.
+ I can remember even the dress you wore--
+ Some dainty white Swiss stuff that floated round
+ Your supple form and trailed upon the ground,
+ While bands of coral bound each slender wrist,
+ Studded with one great purple amethyst.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ My story is not much--is it?--to tell:
+ It seems a wandering line of music, faint,
+ Whose sweet pathetic measures rise and swell,
+ Then, strangled, fall with curious restraint.
+ 'Tis like the pictures that the artists paint,
+ With shadows forward thrown into the light
+ From the real figures hidden out of sight.
+ And is not life crossed in this strange, sad way
+ With dreams whose shadows lengthen day by day?
+
+ But you, dear heart--sweet heart loved all these years--
+ Will recognize the passion of the strain:
+ Who eats the lotos-flower of Love with tears,
+ Will know the rapture of that numb, vague pain
+ Which thrills the heart and stirs the languid brain.
+ All day amid the toiling throng we strive,
+ While in our heart these sacred, sweet loves thrive,
+ And in choice hours we show them, white and cool
+ Like lilies floating on a troubled pool.
+
+MILLIE W. CARPENTER.
+
+
+
+
+"PASSPORTS, GENTLEMEN!"
+
+
+The close of July, 1870, found our party tarrying for a few days at
+Geneva. We had left home with the intention of "doing" Europe in less
+than four months. June and July were already gone, but in that time,
+traveling as only Americans can, Great Britain, Belgium, the Rhine
+country and portions of Switzerland had been visited and admired. We
+were now pausing for a few days to take breath and prepare for yet
+wider flights. Our proposed route from Geneva would lead us through
+Northern Germany, returning by way of Paris to London and Liverpool.
+
+We had intentionally left Paris for the last, hoping that the
+Communist disturbances would be completely quieted before September.
+At this time their forces had been recently routed, and the Versailles
+troops were occupying the capital. The leaders of the Commune were
+scattered in every direction, and, if newspaper accounts were to be
+believed, were being captured in every city of France. Especially was
+this true of the custom-house upon the Swiss frontier, where report
+said that more than one leading Communist had been stopped by the
+lynx-eyed officials, who would accept no substitute for the signed and
+countersigned passport, and hold no parley until such a passport had
+been presented.
+
+In view of these facts, the American minister in Paris had issued a
+circular letter to citizens of the United States traveling abroad,
+requesting them to see that their passports had the official visé
+before attempting to enter France, thus saving themselves and friends
+a large amount of unnecessary trouble and delay. Nothing was said
+of those who might think proper to attempt an entrance _without_ a
+passport, such temerity being in official eyes beyond all advice or
+protection. Influenced by this letter and several facts which had come
+under our notice proving the uncertainty of all things, and especially
+of travel in France, we saw that our passports were made officially
+correct.
+
+While at Geneva our party separated for a few days. My friends
+proposed making an expedition up the lake, while I arranged to spend
+a day and night at Aix-les-Bains, a small town in the south of France.
+My object in visiting it was not to enjoy the sulphur-baths for which
+it is famous, but to see some friends who were spending the summer
+there. I had written, telling them to expect me by the five o'clock
+train on Wednesday afternoon. As my stay was to be so brief, I left
+my valise at the hotel in Geneva, and found myself now, for the first
+time, separated from that trusty sable friend which had until this
+hour been my constant companion by day and night.
+
+The train was just leaving the station when a lady sitting opposite to
+me, with her back to the locomotive, asked, in French, if I would be
+willing to change seats. Catching her meaning rather by her gestures
+than words, I inquired in English if she would like my seat, and found
+by her reply that I was traveling with an English lady.
+
+I should here explain that although I had studied the French language
+as part of my education, I found it impossible to speak French with
+any fluency or understand it when spoken. My newly-made friend,
+however (for friend she proved herself), spoke French and English with
+equal fluency.
+
+In the process of comparing notes (so familiar to all travelers)
+mention was made of the recent war and the unwonted strictness and
+severity of the custom-house officials. In an instant my hand was upon
+my pocket-book, only to find that I had neglected to take my passport
+from my valise.
+
+The embarrassment of the situation flashed upon me, and my troubled
+countenance revealed to my companion that something unusual had
+occurred. I answered her inquiring look by saying that I had left my
+passport in Geneva. Her immediate sympathy was only equaled by her
+evident alarm. She said there was but one thing to be done--return
+instantly for it. I fully agreed with her, but found, to my dismay,
+upon consulting a guide-book, that our train was an express, which did
+not stop before reaching Belgarde, the frontier-town.
+
+I would willingly have pulled the bell-rope had there been any, and
+stopped the train at any cost, but it was impossible, and nothing
+remained but to sit quietly while I was relentlessly hurried into the
+very jaws of the French officials. The misery of the situation was
+aggravated by the fact that I could not command enough French to
+explain how I came to be traveling without a passport. As a last
+resort, I applied to my friend, begging her to explain to the officer
+at the custom-house that I was a citizen of the United States, and had
+left my passport in Geneva. This she readily promised to do, although
+I could see that she had but little faith in the result. After a ride
+of an hour, during which my reflections were none of the pleasantest,
+we arrived at Belgarde. Here the doors of the railway carriages were
+thrown open, and we were politely requested to alight. We stepped
+out upon a platform swarming with fierce gendarmes, whom I regarded
+attentively, wondering which of them was destined to become my
+protector. From the platform we were ushered into a large room
+communicating by a narrow passage with a second room, into which our
+baggage was being carried. One by one my fellow-passengers approached
+the narrow and (to me) gloomy passage and presented their passports.
+These were closely scanned by the officer in charge, handed to an
+assistant to be countersigned, and the holder, all being right, was
+passed into the second room. Our turn soon came, and, accompanied by
+the English lady, I approached my fate.
+
+Her passport was declared to be official, and handing it back
+the officer looked inquiringly at me. My friend then began her
+explanation. As I stood attentively regarding the officer's face, I
+could see his puzzled look change into one of comprehension, and
+then of amusement. To her inquiry he replied that there would be
+no objection under the circumstances to my returning to Geneva and
+procuring my passport. Encouraged by the favorable turn my fortunes
+had taken, I asked, through my friend, if it would be possible for me
+to go on without a passport. An instantaneous change passed over his
+countenance, and, shrugging his shoulders, he replied that it was
+impossible: there was a second custom-house at Culoz, where I should
+certainly be stopped, forced to explain how I had passed Belgarde, and
+severely punished for attempting to enter without a passport. I did
+not, however, wait for him to finish his angry harangue, but passed on
+to the second room, where I was soon joined by my interpreting friend,
+who explained to me in full what I had already learned from the
+officer's countenance and gesture. She thought that I was fortunate in
+escaping so easily, and advised an immediate return to Geneva. I again
+consulted my guide-book, and found that there was no return train for
+several hours, and consequently that I should arrive in Geneva too
+late to start for Aix-les-Bains that night. This would necessitate
+waiting until Thursday, and perhaps force me to give up the trip, for
+our seats were engaged in the Chamouni coach for Friday morning. I
+imagined my friends in vain awaiting my arrival at Aix, and the smiles
+of our party when they found me in Geneva upon their return from the
+lake. But, more than all, the possibility of not reaching Aix at all
+troubled me, for I was very anxious to see my friends there, and had
+written home that I intended to see them.
+
+I found by my guide-book that our train reached Culoz before the
+Geneva return train; so on the instant I formed the desperate resolve
+of running the blockade at Belgarde, and if I found it impossible to
+pass the custom-house at Culoz, _there_ to take the return train for
+Geneva. I walked to the platform as if merely accompanying my friend,
+stood for a moment at the door of the carriage conversing with her,
+and then, as the train started for Culoz, quickly stepped in and shut
+the door. Her dismay was really pitiable: had I not been somewhat
+troubled in mind myself, I should have laughed outright. She saw
+nothing before me but certain destruction, and I am free to confess
+that the prospect of a telegram flashing over the wires at that moment
+from Belgarde to Culoz was not reassuring. The die, however, had
+been cast, and now nothing remained but to endure in silence the
+interminable hour which must elapse ere we should reach Culoz. There
+we were to change cars, the Geneva train going on to Paris, while
+we took the train on the opposite platform for Aix-les-Bains. This
+necessitated passing through the dépôt, and passing through the dépôt
+was passing through the custom-house. As our train stopped in front of
+the fatal door, and one by one the passengers filed into it and were
+lost to sight, I seemed to see written above the door, "All hope
+abandon, ye who enter here!" It was simply rushing into the jaws of
+fate: there was not the slightest possibility of my being able to pass
+through that dépôt unchallenged. I should be carried on to Paris if
+I remained in the train; I should be arrested if I remained on the
+platform; I was discovered if I entered the custom-house. Eagerly I
+glanced around for some means of escape. Every instant the number of
+passengers on the platform was decreasing, the danger of discovery
+rapidly increasing.
+
+I had feared lest some benevolent French officer, anxious for my
+safety, would be found waiting to assist me in alighting: I was
+thankful to find that I should be allowed to assist myself, and
+that no one paid any particular attention to me. As I stood there
+hesitating what course to pursue, and feeling how much easier my mind
+at this moment would be were I waiting on the Belgarde platform, I
+noticed a door standing open a few steps to the left. Without any
+further hesitation I walked directly in, to find myself in a railroad
+restaurant. It proved to be a tower of refuge.
+
+No one had noticed me. There were other passengers in the room,
+waiting for the Paris train; so, joining myself to them, I remained
+there until the custom-house doors were closed and the guards had left
+the platform. The question now arose, How should I reach the opposite
+platform? The train might start at any moment: the only legitimate
+passage was closed. I knew that the attempt would be fraught with
+danger, yet I felt that it was now too late to draw back. If I
+remained any length of time in the restaurant, I should be suspected
+and discovered; and as I thought of that moment a terrific scene arose
+before my mind in which an excited French official thundered at me
+in his choicest French, while I stood silent, unable to explain who
+I was, how I came there, whither I was going; I imagined myself being
+searched for treasonable documents and none being found; I seemed to
+see my captors consulting how they could best compel me to tell what
+I knew. These scenes and others of like nature entertained me while
+I waited for the coast--or rather platform--to be cleared. When at
+length all the immediate guards were gone, I started out to find
+my way, if possible, to the train for Aix. I have read of travelers
+cutting their way through trackless forests, of ice-bound mariners
+anxiously seeking the North-west passage, and, worse than all, of
+luckless countrymen wandering bewildered through the streets of
+Boston; but I am confident that no traveler, mariner or countryman
+ever sought his way with more circumspection and diligence than I in
+my search for a passage between those two platforms.
+
+As I glanced cautiously up and down I saw a door standing open at
+some little distance. Around that door all my hopes were immediately
+centred. It might lead directly to the custom-house; it might be the
+entrance to the barracks of the guards; it might be--I knew not what;
+but it might afford a passage to the other platform.
+
+I walked quickly to the door, glanced in, saw no one and entered. The
+room was a baggage-room, and at that moment unoccupied. It instantly
+occurred to me that a baggage-room _ought_ to open on both platforms.
+I felt as though I could have shouted "Eureka!" and I am confident
+that the joy of Archimedes as he rushed through the streets of
+Syracuse was no greater than mine as I felt that I had so unexpectedly
+discovered the passage I was seeking. Passing through this room, I
+found myself in a second, like the former unoccupied. It had occurred
+to me that all the doors might be closed, and the thought had
+considerably abated my rejoicing; but no! I saw a door which stood
+invitingly open.
+
+No guards were stationed on the platform; so I stepped out, and before
+me stood the train for Aix, into which my fellow-passengers were
+entering, some of them still holding their passports in their hands.
+Taking my seat in one of the carriages, in a few moments the train
+started and I was on my way to Aix. The relief was unspeakably great.
+An instant before it seemed as if nothing short of a miracle
+could save me from a French guard-house, and now, by the simplest
+combination of circumstances, in which a restaurant and baggage-room
+bore an important part, I had passed unchallenged. I remember that I
+enjoyed the scenery and views along the route from Culoz to Aix more
+than while passing from Belgarde to Culoz.
+
+My friends were found expecting me upon my arrival, and joined in
+congratulating me upon my happy escape. A night and day were passed
+very pleasantly, and then arose the question of return.
+
+I suggested telegraphing to Geneva for my passport, but that
+was vetoed, and it was decided that I should return as I had
+come--passportless. I confess that the attempt seemed somewhat
+hazardous. If it was dangerous to attempt an entrance into France,
+how much more so to attempt an exit, especially when the custom-house
+force had been doubled with the sole object that all possibility of
+escape might be precluded, and that any one passing Culoz might be
+stopped at Belgarde! It was urged, however, that our seats had been
+engaged in the diligence for Friday morning, and to send for the
+passport would consume considerable time--would certainly delay the
+party until Saturday, and perhaps until Monday, which delay would
+seriously affect all their plans, time being so limited and so many
+places remaining to be visited. I had passed once, why not again?
+Influenced by these facts, and thinking what a triumph it would be
+once more to baffle French vigilance, I determined to attempt the
+return. There was a train leaving Aix about eight P.M., reaching
+Geneva at eleven: it was decided that I should take this train. I had
+arranged a vague plan of action, although I expected to depend rather
+upon the suggestion of the moment.
+
+It was quite dark when we reached Culoz. As the train arrived at the
+platform, and we were obliged again to change cars, I thought of the
+friendly restaurant; but no! the restaurant was closed, and moreover
+a company of gendarmes was present to see that every one entered the
+door leading to the custom-house. There was no room for hesitation or
+delay. I entered under protest, but still I entered.
+
+In a moment I perceived the desperate situation. The room had two
+doors--one opening upon the platform from which we had just come, and
+now guarded by an officer; the other leading to the opposite platform,
+and there stood the custom-house officer receiving and inspecting the
+passports. It was indeed Scylla and Charybdis. If I attempted to pass
+the officer without a passport, I was undone; if I remained until all
+the other passengers had passed out, I was undone. For an instant I
+felt as if I had better give up the unequal contest. The forces of the
+enemy were too many for me. I saw that I had been captured: why fight
+against Fate? A moment's reflection, however, restored my courage. It
+was evident that one thing alone remained to be done: that was to find
+my way out of the door by which I had just entered, as speedily as
+possible. But there stood the guard.
+
+The train by which we had come was still before the platform: an idea
+suggested itself. Acting as if I had left some article in the train, I
+stepped hurriedly up to the guard, who, catching my meaning, made way
+for me without a word. Once upon the platform, I resolved never again
+to enter that door except as a prisoner. The guard followed me with
+his eyes for a moment, and then, seeing me open one of the carriage
+doors, turned back to his post. As soon as I perceived that I was
+no longer watched I glided off in the opposite direction under the
+shadows of the platform. I was looking for a certain door which I
+remembered well as a friend in need. I knew not in which direction it
+lay, nor could I have recognized it if shut; but hardly had I gone ten
+steps when the same door stood open before me. It was the act of an
+instant to spring through it, out of sight of the guard. Why this door
+and baggage-room should have been left thus open and unguarded when
+such evident and scrutinizing care was taken in every other quarter, I
+have to this day been unable to understand. But for that fact I should
+have found it utterly impossible to pass that custom-house going or
+coming.
+
+Once in the baggage-room, the way was familiar, and, passing into the
+second room, I found the door open as on the day previous, and in
+a moment stood undiscovered upon the platform. Entering the waiting
+train, I was soon on the way to Belgarde.
+
+My only thought during the ride was, What shall I do when we arrive at
+Belgarde? I expected to see the doors thrown open as before, and hear
+again the polite invitation to enter the custom-house. Was it not
+certain detection to refuse? was it not equally dangerous to obey? The
+officer at Belgarde had seen me the day before, and warned me not to
+go to Culoz. What reception would he give me when he saw me attempting
+to return? Or it might be he would not remember me, and then in
+the darkness and confusion I should surely be taken for an escaping
+Communist. That I had passed Culoz was no comfort when I remembered
+that this would only aggravate my guilt in their eyes.
+
+The case did indeed seem desperate. Willingly would I have jumped out
+and walked the entire distance to Geneva, if I might only thus
+escape that terrible custom-house, which every moment loomed up more
+terrifically. At length this troubled hour was passed: we had arrived
+at Belgarde, and the moment for action had come. I had determined to
+avoid the custom-house at all hazards. When the doors were thrown
+open I expected to alight, but not to enter. My plan was to find some
+sheltering door, or even corner, where I could remain until the others
+had presented their passports and were beginning to return, then join
+them and take my seat as before. The dépôt at Belgarde was brilliantly
+lighted, and the gendarmes pacing to and fro in the gaslight seemed
+not only to have increased in numbers, but to have acquired an
+additional ferocity since the day previous.
+
+As I looked but my spirit sank within me. I could only brace myself
+for the coming crisis. For several moments nothing was said or done.
+The doors remained shut, and no one seemed at all concerned about
+our presence. Each minute appeared an hour as I sat there awaiting
+my fate. The suspense was becoming too great: I felt that my stock of
+self-possession was entirely deserting me. At length I began to hope
+that they were satisfied with the examination at Culoz, and would
+allow us to pass unchallenged. Just at that moment, as hope was
+dawning into certainty, the door opened and the custom-house officer
+entered with a polite bow, while a body of gendarmes drew up behind
+him upon the platform. He uttered two French words, and I needed no
+interpreter to tell me that they were "Passports, gentlemen!"
+
+I shuddered as I saw him standing so near, within reach of my arm.
+There were six persons besides myself in the carriage, and I was
+occupying a seat beside the door farthest from the platform. Any one
+who has seen a European railway-carriage will understand me when I say
+that I sat next to the right-hand door, while he had entered by the
+left. One by one the passports were handed up to him until he held six
+in his hand.
+
+With the rest of the passengers I had taken out my pocket-book and
+searched as if for my passport, but had handed none to him, and now I
+sat awaiting developments. I saw that he would read the six passports,
+and then turn to me for the seventh.
+
+The desperate thought flashed upon me of opening the door and escaping
+into the darkness. The carriage itself was so dimly lighted that I
+could barely see the face of my opposite neighbor, and I therefore
+hoped to be able to slip out without any one perceiving it. The
+attempt was desperate, but so was the situation. The officer was
+buried in the passports, holding them near his face to catch the dim
+light. The door was fastened upon the outside, and so, watching him,
+I leaned far out of the window until I was able to reach the catch
+and unfasten the door. A slight push, and it swung noiselessly open. I
+glanced at the officer: he was intently reading the _last_ passport. I
+had placed one foot upon the outside step, and was about to glide out
+into the darkness, when he laid the paper down and looked directly at
+me.
+
+It would have been madness to attempt an escape with his eyes upon me;
+so, assuming as nonchalant a look as my present feelings would allow,
+I answered his inquiring glance with one of confident assurance.
+
+He saw my nonchalant expression. He saw the open pocket-book in my
+hand. He had _not_ counted the number of passports. All the passengers
+were settling themselves to sleep. It must be all right; so, with
+a polite "Bon soir, messieurs!" he bowed and left the carriage. My
+sensation of relief may be better imagined than described. Hardly had
+he left our carriage when we heard the sound of voices and hurrying
+feet upon the platform, and looking out saw some unfortunate
+individual carried off under guard. I trembled as I thought how
+narrowly I had escaped his fate. In a few moments, however, we were
+safely on our way to Geneva, and as we sped on into the darkness,
+while congratulating myself upon my fortunate escape, I firmly
+resolved to be better prepared for the emergency the next time I
+should hear those memorable words, "Passports, gentlemen!"
+
+A.H.
+
+
+
+
+OUR MONTHLY GOSSIP.
+
+THE CORNWALLIS FAMILY.
+
+
+The death was lately announced of two of the last survivors--only
+one of the name is now left--of a family whose chief played a very
+conspicuous, and for himself unfortunate, part in this country a
+century ago--the marquis Cornwallis. His only son, who married a
+daughter of the celebrated match-making duchess of Gordon, left no
+male issue, but five daughters. Two of them, the countess of St.
+Germans--wife of the earl who accompanied the prince of Wales on his
+visit here--and Lady Braybrook, died some years ago; and recently
+Lady Mary Ross, whose husband edited the correspondence of the first
+marquis, and Lady Louisa, who never married, have also gone to their
+graves.
+
+The family of Cornwallis is very ancient, and can point to many
+distinguished members. Its ancestral seat is at Brome, in Suffolk.
+This is a fine old mansion, and the hall, which is very lofty and open
+to the roof, is an excellent specimen of the work of other days. The
+chapel contains capital oak carving. In the village church there are
+monuments worth notice of the family.
+
+Following the fate of so many other places, Brome passed after the
+death of the second marquis to a _novus homo_, one Matthias Kerrison,
+who, having begun life as a carpenter, contrived in various ways to
+acquire a colossal fortune. His son rose to distinction in the army,
+obtained a seat in Parliament, which he held for thirty years, and was
+created a baronet.
+
+He left at his death a son and three daughters. The former, long
+married, is childless. The sisters are respectively the wives of Earl
+Stanhope, the well-known historian; Lord Henniker, a wealthy Suffolk
+proprietor; and Lord Bateman. It is understood that under the late
+baronet's will the son of the last will, in the event of the present
+baronet dying childless, succeed to the property. It will thus be
+observed that Brome, after having been for four centuries in one
+family, is destined to change hands repeatedly in a few years.
+
+When the second Marquis Cornwallis died sonless, the marquisate became
+extinct, but the earldom passed to his first cousin. This nobleman,
+by no means an able or admirable person, married twice. By his first
+marriage he had a daughter, who married Charles Wykeham-Martin, Esq.,
+M.P., whose father, by a concatenation of chances, became the owner
+of Leeds Castle, near Maidstone, in Kent--a splendid moated baronial
+pile, dating from the thirteenth century, but added to and improved
+in admirable taste. Leeds was formerly the property of the Fairfax
+family, whose chief, the present lord, resides near Washington. It
+came to them from the once famous family of Colepepper.
+
+Earl Cornwallis married a second time late in life, and had an only
+daughter, Lady Julia. From that time his one idea seemed to be to
+accumulate for this child, and accordingly at his death she was
+the greatest heiress in England, her long minority serving to add
+immensely to her father's hoards. Of course, when the time approached
+for her entering society under the chaperonage of her cousins, the
+marquis's daughters, speculation was very rife in the London world as
+to whom she would marry, and many a mamma of high degree cast sheep's
+eyes at the heiress, and thought how charmingly her accumulations
+would serve to clear the encumbrances on certain acres. But they were
+not kept long in suspense. One night during the London season, when
+the ladies Cornwallis gave a grand ball, a damper was cast over the
+proceedings, so far at least as aspirants to the heiress's money-bags
+were concerned, by the announcement of her engagement. Said a lady to
+a gentleman in the course of that evening, "Most extraordinary! There
+seem to be no men in the room to-night." "Why, of course not," was the
+rejoinder, "after this fatal news." Lady Julia's choice fell upon a
+young officer in the Guards, Viscount Holmesdale, eldest son of Earl
+Amherst. Lord Holmesdale was unexceptionable in point of position,
+but his pecuniary position was such as to make one hundred and fifty
+thousand dollars a year a very agreeable addition to his income. It
+may, however, be a satisfaction to those less richly endowed with this
+world's goods than Lady Holmesdale to reflect that being an heiress
+generally proves rather the reverse of a passport to matrimonial
+bliss; and by all accounts she is no exception to the usual fate in
+this respect. We can't have everything in this world.
+
+Lady Holmesdale's property was tied up by her old father (whose whole
+thoughts were given to this end, and who was in the habit of carrying
+his will on his person) to such a degree that in the event of her
+death her husband can only derive a very slight benefit from his
+wife's property beyond the insurances which may have been effected
+on her life. She is childless, and has very precarious health. Her
+principal seat is Linton Park, near Maidstone, Kent, in which county
+she is the largest landowner. In the event of her dying without issue,
+her estates pass to the son of Major Fiennes Cornwallis, who was
+second son of the late Mr. Wykeham-Martin by Lady Holmesdale's elder
+half-sister.
+
+A cousin of Lady Holmesdale, Miss Cornwallis, the last representative
+of a third branch, died some years ago. This lady, who possessed rare
+literary and social acquirements, bequeathed her property to Major
+Wykeham-Martin, who thereupon changed his name to Cornwallis. The
+major, a gallant officer, one of those of whom Tennyson says,
+
+ Into the jaws of death
+ Rode the six hundred,
+
+only survived the Balaklava charge to die a few years later through
+an accident in the hunting-field. "A fine, modest young officer," was
+Thackeray's verdict about him, when, after dinner at "Tom Phinn's," a
+noted bachelor barrister of eminence whose little dinners were not
+the least agreeable in London, the story of that famous ride had been
+coaxed out of the young _militaire_, who, if left to himself, would
+never have let you have a notion that he had seen such splendid
+service. The only Cornwallis now left is Lady Elizabeth, granddaughter
+of the first marquis.
+
+
+
+
+NOVELTIES IN ETHNOLOGY.
+
+
+Two savants of high reputation have lately undertaken to seek out the
+origin of that German race which has just put itself at the head of
+military Europe. One is Wilhelm Obermüller, a German ethnologist,
+member of the Vienna Geographical Society, whose startling theory
+nevertheless is that the Germans are the direct descendants of Cain!
+The other scholar, M. Quatrefages, a man of still greater reputation,
+devotes himself to a proposition almost as extraordinary--namely, that
+the Prussian pedigree is Finn and Slav, with only a small pinch of
+Teuton, and hence, in an ethnographical view, is anti-German!
+
+That M. Quatrefages should maintain such a postulate, his patriotism
+if not his scientific reputation might lead us to expect; but that
+Obermüller should be so eager to trace German origin back to the first
+murderer is rather more suprising. Obermüller's work embraces in
+its general scope the origin of all European nations, but the most
+striking part is that relating to Germany. He holds that, from
+the remotest era, the Celto-Aryan race, starting from the plain
+of Tartary, the probable cradle of mankind, split into two great
+branches--one the Oriental Aryans, and the other the Western Aryans,
+or Celts. The former--who, as he proceeds to show, were no other than
+the descendants of Cain--betook themselves to China, which land they
+found inhabited by the Mongolians, another great primordial race; and
+we are told that the Mongolians are indicated when mention is made in
+Scripture of Cain's marriage in the land of Nod. The intermixture of
+Cainists and Mongolians produced the Turks, while the pure Cainist
+tribes formed the German people, under the name of Swabians (Chinese,
+_Siampi_), Goths (_Yeuten_ in Chinese) and Ases (_Sachsons_). Such, in
+brief, is the curious theory of Obermüller.
+
+The question next arises, How is it that we find the Germans
+transplanted from the Hoang-Ho to the Rhine? We are told that, being
+driven out of China by the Turks, they poured into the European
+countries which the Celts or Western Aryans had already occupied.
+These latter had in the mean time gone out from the Asiatic cradle
+of the race, and following the course of the Indus to Hindostan and
+Persia, had, under the name of Chaldeans, overrun Armenia, Syria,
+Arabia, Egypt and North Africa, which latter they found inhabited by
+certain negro races, whereas in Egypt they discovered red-skins or
+Atlantides; which latter, by the way, form also our own aborigines.
+The intermixture of the Celts with these primitive races just named
+produced the Jews and Semitic people. At the time of the Celtic
+invasion Western Europe and Northern Africa were occupied by the race
+of the Atlantides, while the Mongolians, including also the Lapps,
+Finns and Huns, peopled the north of Europe and of Asia. The Celts
+pushed in between these two races, and only very much later the German
+people, driven out of China by the Turks, as we have said, arrived in
+Europe.
+
+When, therefore, did these Cainist invasions of Germany take place?
+Obermüller says that the date must have been toward the epoch of
+the Roman conquests. Gallia was then inhabited in the south by the
+primitive Atlantid race of Ligurians and by the Greek colony of
+Massilia; in the centre by the Gaelags (Celts) or Gauls, who, pouring
+northward from Spain, had conquered it fifteen hundred years before
+the Christian era; and in the north by the Belgic Cimbrians, who had
+come from Germany, and who were designated under the name of Germans
+(_Ghermann_) or border-men, and who, though called _Germani_ by Caesar
+and Tacitus, were yet not of the Cainist stock, but Celts. However,
+these Germans, whom the Romans encountered to their cost on the Rhine
+and Danube, were of the genuine Oriental Cainist stock, and these,
+after centuries of fierce struggle, they failed to conquer, though the
+Celts of Britain, Gaul and Spain, as well as all the old empires of
+the East, had fallen an easy prey to their victorious eagles.
+
+It only remains to add that this invasion of Germany by Cain's progeny
+was accomplished in three streams. The Ases (Sachsons) directed
+themselves to the Elbe and Danube, and thence to the north; the Suevi,
+or Swabians, chose the centre and south of Germany; while the Goths
+did not rest till they had overrun Italy, Southern France and Spain.
+But each of these three main streams was composed of many tribes,
+whom the old writers catalogue without system, mixing both Celtic and
+Teutonic tribes under the general name of Germans; and it is only in
+modern days that the careless enumeration of the classic writers has
+been rejected, and a more scientific method substituted. It will
+be seen, in fine, that in the main Obermüller does not differ from
+accepted theories in German ethnology, which have long carefully
+dissevered the Celts from the Teutons, and assigned to each tribe with
+approximate accuracy its earliest fixed abode in Europe. It is the
+tracing back of the German race proper to the first-born of Adam,
+according to scriptural genealogy, which makes this theory curious and
+amusing.
+
+To the work of M. Quatrefages we have only space to devote a
+paragraph. Originally contributed to the _Revue des Deux Mondes_,
+it bears the marks in its inferences, if not in its facts, of being
+composed for an audience of sympathizing countrymen, rather than for
+the world of science at large. M. Quatrefages says that the first
+dwellers in Prussia were Finns, who founded the stock, and were in
+turn overpowered by the Slavs, who imposed their language and customs
+on the whole of the Baltic region. The consequent mixture of Finns and
+Slavs created a population wholly un-German; and what dash of genuine
+Germanism Prussia now has was subsequently acquired in the persons of
+sundry traders from Bremen, followed by a class of roving nobility,
+who entered the half-civilized country with their retainers in quest
+of spoils. Besides these elements, Prussia, like England and America,
+received in modern times an influx of French Huguenots; which M.
+Quatrefages naturally considers a piece of great good fortune for
+Prussia. Briefly, then, the French savant regards Prussia as German
+only in her nobility and upper-middle classes, while the substratum
+of population is a composition of Slav and Finn, and hence thoroughly
+anti-German. As, according to the old saying, if you scratch a Russian
+you will find a Tartar beneath, so, according to M. Ouatrefages,
+we may suppose that scraping a Prussian would disclose a Finn. The
+political inferences which he draws are very fanciful. He traces
+shadowy analogies between the tactics of Von Moltke's veterans and
+the warlike customs of the ancient Slavs, and suggests that the basic
+origin of the Prussian population may lead it to cultivate a Russian
+alliance rather than an Austrian, forgetting, apparently, that by
+his own admission the ruling-classes of Prussia are German in origin,
+ideas and sympathies.
+
+L.S.
+
+
+
+
+THE STEAM-WHISTLE.
+
+
+While Mr. Ruskin was lately bewailing the bell-ringing propensity of
+mankind, the English Parliament and several American legislatures,
+city or State, were assaulting the greater nuisance of the
+steam-whistle, and trying to substitute bell-ringing for it. Mr.
+Ruskin's particular grievance was, that his own nerves were _crispé_
+by the incessant ding-dong of the church-bells of Florence summoning
+the devout to prayer, but he generalized his wrath. Possibly, he
+would have been less sensitive and fastidious regarding the musical
+carillons of the Italian city were he wont to dwell within ear-shot of
+an American factory or railroad-station. Not that Mr. Ruskin fails to
+appreciate--or, rather, to depreciate--railways in their connection
+with Italian landscapes; for, besides his series of complaints
+regarding the Florence bells, he denounces the railway from Rome to
+Naples, and the railway-tunnels under Monts Cenis and St. Gothard, and
+the railway-bridge leading into Venice, as enemies of the beautiful
+and picturesque in Nature. But it is the locomotive, independent of
+the shriek, that is his abomination; whereas a man less sensitive to
+sights, and (if possible) more sensitive to sounds, might pardon the
+cutting up of the landscape were his ear-drum spared from splitting.
+
+Emerson asks, "What is so odious as noise?" But a _Saturday Reviewer_
+once devoted an elaborate essay to the eulogy of unmitigated noise, or
+rather to the keen enjoyment of it by children. People with enviable
+nerves and unenviable tastes often enjoy sounds in the ratio of their
+lack of melody--say, such everyday thoroughfare music as the slap and
+bang of coach-wheels on the cobble-stones; the creaking of street-cars
+round a sharp curve, like Milton's infernal doors "grating harsh
+thunder;" the squeaking falsettos of the cries by old-clothes' men,
+itinerant glaziers, fishmongers, fruiterers, tinkers and what not; the
+yells of rival coachmen at the railway-stations, giving one an idea
+of Bedlam; the street-fiddlers and violinists with horribly untuned
+instruments; the Italian open-air singers hoarsely shouting,
+"Shoo Fly" or "Viva Garibaldi! viva l'Italia!" the gongs beaten on
+steamboats and by hotel-runners at stations on the arrival of trains;
+the unearthly squeals and shrieks of new "musical instruments" sold
+cheap by street-peddlers; the horrible noise-producers which boys
+invent for the torture of nervous people--such, for example, as this
+present season's, which is happily styled "the devil's fiddle," or
+"the chicken-box," whose simplest form is an emptied tomato-can, with
+a string passed through the end and pulled with the rosined fingers.
+Now, that a man may be pleased with a rattle, even if it be only a
+car-rattle, is conceivable, but it is hard to understand how he can
+retain a relish for the squeal of a locomotive-whistle. The practice
+of summoning workmen to factories by this shrill monitor, of using
+it to announce the dinner-hour, the hour of resuming work after the
+nooning, and the hour of quitting work for the night, ought to be
+abolished everywhere. There is not the faintest excuse for it, because
+clocks and bells will do the same work exactly as well. On the other
+hand, the whistle causes perpetual irritation to the nervous, feeble
+and sick, and frequent cases of horses running away with fright at the
+sudden shriek, smashing property or destroying life.
+
+Let us give moral aid and comfort to the campaign, Cisatlantic and
+Transatlantic, against the steam-whistle. In the local councils of
+Philadelphia, Camden and other cities it has been well opened in our
+country; in the House of Commons has been introduced a bill providing
+that "no person shall use or employ in any manufactory or any other
+place any steam-whistle or steam-trumpet for the purpose of summoning
+or dismissing workmen or persons employed, without the sanction of the
+sanitary authorities." They call this whistle, by the way, it
+would seem, the "American devil," for the Manchester _Examiner_
+congratulates its readers that the "American devil" has been taken by
+the throat, and ere long his yells will be heard no more.
+
+John Leech, it is said, was actually driven from house to house in
+a vain effort to escape the nuisance of organ-grinders, whom he has
+immortalized in Punch by many exquisite sketches, showing that they
+know "the vally of peace and quietness." Some of his friends declare
+that this nuisance so worked on his nerves that he may be said to
+have died of organ-grinders. Holmes has immortalized the same guild of
+wandering minstrels as a sort of "crusaders sent from infernal clime
+to dock the ears of melody and break the legs of time." And yet the
+hand-organ, so often the subject of municipal legislation, is dulcet
+music compared with the steam-whistle, even when the latter instrument
+takes its most ambitiously artistic form of the "Calliope."
+
+
+
+
+SIAMESE NEWS.
+
+
+Letters recently received from Bangkok, Siam, bearing date July 25,
+1872, give the following interesting items.
+
+His Majesty has just appointed an English tutor to his royal brothers,
+associating with them some of the sons of the higher nobles to the
+number of twenty. This certainly indicates progress in liberal and
+enlarged views in a land where hitherto no noble, however exalted his
+rank or worthy his character, was considered a fit associate for the
+princes of the royal family, who have always been trained to hold
+themselves entirely aloof from those about them. The young king now on
+the throne has changed all this, and says he wishes not only that his
+brothers shall have the advantage of studying with others of their own
+age, but that they should thus learn to know their people better, and
+by mingling with them freely in their studies and sports acquire more
+liberal views of men and things than their ancestors had. He insists
+that his young brothers and their classmates shall stand on precisely
+the same footing, and each be treated by the teacher according to his
+merits. The king intends to appoint yet other teachers in his family
+for both boys and girls; and though perhaps the time may not yet have
+come, it is certainly not far distant, when Siam will sustain high
+schools and colleges, both literary and scientific.
+
+The religious aspect of the nation is somewhat less promising. Though
+the royal edict gives protection to all religions, and permits every
+man to choose for himself in matters of conscience, it can scarcely be
+said that the two kings take any real interest in Christianity. They
+think less of Booddhism, its mystic creed and imposing ceremonies, and
+have made very many changes in the form of worship; but, apparently,
+they are no more Christians than were their respective fathers, the
+late first and second kings. They treat Christianity with outward
+respect, because they esteem it decorous to do so; and the same is
+true of the regent and prime minister; but none of them even profess
+any real regard for the worship of the true God. The concessions made
+thus far indicate progress in civilization, not in piety; and while
+the kings and their subjects are assuredly loosing their grasp on
+Booddhism, they are not reaching out to lay hold on Christianity. It
+seems rather as if the whole nation were swaying off into the frigid
+regions of skepticism, and, influenced by the example of many unworthy
+representatives of Christian countries, they live only for the
+luxuries and laxities of the present life. Priestly robes are much
+less frequently seen on the river and in the streets than formerly;
+and many of the clergy no longer reside at the temples, but with their
+families in their own houses; thus relinquishing even the pretence of
+celibacy, which has hitherto been one of the very strongest points
+of Booddhism, giving it an appearance of sanctity and a hold on
+the affections of the people that nothing else can do. With this
+rapidly-increasing renunciation of priestly celibacy and the
+daily-diminishing ranks of the clergy, Booddhism, the mammoth religion
+of the world, seems tottering to ruin, and even the present generation
+may see its utter demolition, at least so far as Siam is concerned.
+Services at the temples are now held in imitation of English morning
+and evening prayers; a moral essay is read, at which the body-guards
+of the kings and the government officers are generally required to
+be present, and the remainder of the day they are excused from duty,
+instead of being kept, as formerly, Sundays and week-days, in almost
+perpetual attendance on His Majesty.
+
+The supreme king is now in his twentieth year, and will take the
+reins of government this year. He is tall and slight in person,
+gentlemanlike in manners, perfectly well bred, and always courteous to
+strangers, though even more modest and unassuming than was his father,
+the priest-king, whose praises are still fresh in every heart. His
+Majesty speaks English quite creditably, wears the English dress most
+of the time, and keeps himself well informed as to matters and things
+generally. His reign, thus far, promises well for himself and his
+kingdom.
+
+The second king, still called King _George Washington_, is now about
+thirty, and a most noble specimen of the courtly Oriental gentleman.
+His tall, compact figure is admirably developed both for strength and
+beauty, his face is full and pleasing, and his head finely formed.
+He is affable in manner, converses readily in English, and is fond
+of Europeans and their customs. He keeps his father's palace and
+steamboats in excellent condition, and his body-guard under thorough
+drill. On a recent visit of the American steamer Moreton he came out
+on the battlements of his palace, and after watching her progress for
+some time, he signaled her to lay to, which she did just opposite his
+palace. He immediately went aboard, and remained for an hour or so,
+chatting merrily with both ladies and gentlemen, while the steamer
+puffed up the river a few miles, and then returned for His Majesty to
+disembark at his own palace. King George occasionally wears the _full_
+English dress, either civil or military, but generally only the
+hat, coat, linen and shoes, with the Siamese _pàh-nûng_ in lieu of
+pantaloons. The regent, the minister of foreign affairs and many of
+the princes and nobles have adopted this mongrel costume, and, to a
+greater or less extent, our language, manner of living and forms
+of etiquette. Visitors to the kings now sit on chairs, instead of
+crouching on cushions before the throne, as formerly; while native
+princes and ministers of state no longer prostrate themselves with
+their faces in the dust in the royal presence, but stand at the foot
+of the throne while holding an audience with their Majesties, each
+being allowed full opportunity to state his case or present any
+petition he may desire. The sovereigns are no longer unknown,
+mysterious personages, whose features their people have never been
+permitted to look upon; but they may be seen any fine day taking their
+drives in their own coaches or phaetons, and lifting their hats to
+passing friends. Nor do they on ordinary occasions deem it necessary
+to be surrounded by armed soldiers for protection, but go where they
+list, with only their liveried coachmen and footmen, and perhaps a
+single companion or secretary inside.
+
+The city itself has correspondingly improved. Within the walls have
+just been completed two new streets, meeting at right angles near
+the mayor's office, where is a public park of circular form very
+handsomely laid out. The streets radiating from this centre are broad,
+and lined with new brick houses of two stories and tiled roofs. These
+are mostly private dwellings, uniformly built; and with their broad
+sidewalks and shade trees of luxuriant tropical growth present a
+very picturesque appearance. One wide street, commencing at the royal
+palace, extends six or seven miles through the city, reaching
+the river near a little village called Pak-lat-bon. This is the
+fashionable _drive_, where may be seen not only their Majesties, the
+regent, the prime minister and other high dignitaries lounging in
+stately equipages drawn by two or four prancing steeds, but many
+private citizens of different nations in their light pony-carriages,
+palanquins, etc., instead of the invariable barges and _sampans_ of a
+few years ago, when the river was the "Broadway" of the city and the
+canals its cross-streets. Steamers of various dimensions now
+busily ply the river: the kings own several, which they use for
+pleasure-boats; eight or ten are fitted up as war-steamers, and others
+are packets to Singapore, China and elsewhere, carrying passengers and
+merchandise.
+
+The regent, _Pra-Nai-Wai,_ is a sedate, dignified, courteous gentleman
+of sixty-five, who walks erect with firm step and manly form, and with
+mental and physical powers still unimpaired. His half-brother, who
+filled the post of minister of foreign affairs at the commencement
+of the present reign, died blind some little time back, after twice
+paying ten thousand dollars to a Dutch oculist from Batavia to operate
+on his eyes for cataract. His successor, the present minister, is one
+of the finest specimens of a Siamese gentleman in the country. He
+was first a provincial governor; then went on a special embassy to
+England; last year attended the supreme king on his visit to Singapore
+and Batavia; and recently accompanied him again to India, whence the
+royal party have but just returned. The regal convoy consisted of five
+or six war-steamers, and His Majesty, besides his own officers, was
+escorted also by the English consul at Bangkok, the harbor-master and
+several European officers in the Siamese service. The royal tourist
+visited Rangoon, Calcutta, Madras, Bombay, Allahabad and Ceylon;
+and entered with great gusto into the spirit of his travels, seeing
+everything, asking questions and taking notes as he passed from point
+to point. The regent, in conjunction with the second king, held the
+reins of government during the absence of the first king; and in truth
+the regent has for the most part governed the country since the death
+of the late king, in 1868, the young heir being then but fifteen years
+of age. The regent is decidedly a favorite with both kings and people,
+and his rule has been popular and prosperous.
+
+
+
+
+MADISON AS A TEMPERANCE MAN.
+
+
+Many years ago, when the temperance movement began in Virginia,
+ex-President Madison lent the weight of his influence to the
+cause. Case-bottles and decanters disappeared from the sideboard at
+Montpelier--wine was no longer dispensed to the many visitors at that
+hospitable mansion. Nor was this all. Harvest began, but the customary
+barrel of whisky was not purchased, and the song of the scythemen in
+the wheatfield languished. In lieu of whisky, there was a beverage
+most innocuous, unstimulating and unpalatable to the army of dusky
+laborers.
+
+The following morning, Mr. Madison called in his head-man to make the
+usual inquiry, "Nelson, how comes on the crop?"
+
+"Po'ly, Mars' Jeems--monsus po'ly."
+
+"Why, what's the matter?"
+
+"Things is seyus."
+
+"What do you mean by serious?"
+
+"We gwine los' dat crap."
+
+"Lose the crop! Why should we lose it?"
+
+"'Cause dat ar crap ar heap too big a crap to be gethered 'thout
+whisky. 'Lasses-and-water nuver gethered no crap sence de woil' war'
+made, ner 'taint gwine to."
+
+Mr. Madison succumbed: the whisky was procured, the "crap" was
+"gethered," case-bottles and decanters reappeared, and the ancient
+order was restored at Montpelier, never again to be disturbed.
+
+
+
+
+NOTES.
+
+
+Amidst the recent hurly-burly of politics in France, involving the
+fate of the Thiers government, if not of the republic itself, a minor
+grievance of the artists has probably been little noticed by the
+general public. Yet a grievance it was, and one which caused men of
+taste and sentiment to cry out loudly. The threatened act of vandalism
+against which they protested was a proposal to fell part of the Forest
+of Fontainebleau. The castle and forest have long belonged to the
+state, but why the woods should now be cut down by the government is
+not clear. The motive is probably to turn the fine timber into
+cash, though a Paris wit, in pretended despair of other explanation,
+jokingly alleged, at the time of Prince Napoleon's late expulsion from
+France, that the government was afraid the prince, taking refuge in
+its dense recesses, might there conceal himself (_à la_ Charles II.,
+we presume) in one of its venerable oaks. At any rate, it was arranged
+to level a part of the timber, and on hearing of this threatened
+mutilation of a favorite resort the French artists rallied to beg M.
+Thiers, like the character in General Morris's ballad, to "spare those
+trees." And well may they petition, for the forest contains nearly
+thirty-five thousand acres, abounding in beautiful and picturesque
+scenery. It can boast finer trees than any other French forest, while
+its meadows, lawns and cliffs furnish specimens of almost every plant
+and flower to be found in France. Now, when we add that its views are
+exceedingly varied, its rocks, ravines, plateaus and thickets
+each offering some entirely different and admirable study to the
+landscape-painters who frequent it in great numbers during the spring
+and autumn months (for it is only fourteen or fifteen leagues out of
+Paris, on the high road to Lyons), we have shown reason enough for the
+consentaneous action on the part of the men and women of the brush and
+pencil.
+
+The traveled reader will hardly need to be told that good judges
+consider the forest and castle to compose the finest domain in France.
+But there are also numberless historic reminiscences intertwined with
+Fontainebleau. And, by the way, it was originally known as the
+Forêt de Bierre, until some thirsty huntsmen, who found its spring
+deliciously refreshing, rebaptized it as Fontaine Belle Eau. Such, at
+least, is the old story. The first founding of a royal residence there
+dates at least as far back as the twelfth century, and possibly much
+farther, while the present château was begun by Francis I. in the
+sixteenth. So many famous historic events, indeed, have taken place
+within the precincts of the forest that the committee of "Protection
+Artistique" is pardonable in claiming that "Fontainebleau Forest ought
+to be ranked with those national historic monuments which must at all
+hazards be preserved for the admiration of artists and tourists," as
+well as of patriotic Frenchmen. What illustrations shall we select
+from among the events connected with it, about which a thousand
+volumes of history, poetry, art, science and romance have been
+composed? At Fontainebleau, Charles V. was royally feasted by Francis;
+there the Edict of Nantes was revoked; there Condé died; there the
+decree of divorce between Napoleon and Josephine was pronounced; and
+there the emperor afterward signed his own abdication. It is true
+that nobody proposes to demolish the castle, and that is the historic
+centre; but the petitioners claim that it is difficult and dangerous
+to attempt to divide the domain into historic and non-historic,
+artistic and non-artistic parts, with a view to its mutilation. There
+is ground for hoping that a favorable response will be given to the
+eloquent appeal of the artists and amateurs.
+
+The vanity of Victor Hugo, though always "Olympian," perhaps never
+mounted to a sublimer height than in the reply he sent to M. Catulle
+Mendes on receiving from him the news of Gautier's death. It contained
+but half a dozen lines, yet found space to declare, "Of the men of
+1830, _I alone am left_. It is now my turn." The profound egotism of
+"_il ne reste plus que moi_" could not escape being vigorously lashed
+by V. Hugo's old comrades of the quill, dating back with him to 1830,
+and now so loftily ignored. "See, even in his epistles of condolence,"
+they cry, "the omnipresent _moi_ of Hugo must appear, to overshadow
+everything else!" One indignant writer declares the poet to be a mere
+walking personal pronoun. Another humorously pities those still extant
+contemporaries of 1830 who, after having for forty years dedicated
+their songs and romances and dramas to Hugo, now learn from the
+selfsame maw which has greedily gulped their praises that they
+themselves do not exist, never did exist. One man of genius
+slyly writes: "Some of us veterans will find ourselves
+embarrassed--Michelet, G. Sand, Janin, Sandeau _et un pen moi_. Is it
+possible that we died a long time ago, one after the other, without
+knowing it? Was it a delusion on our part to fancy ourselves existing,
+or was our existence only a bad dream?" But to Victor Hugo even these
+complaints will perhaps seem to smoke like fresh incense on the altar
+of self-adulation which this great genius keeps ever lighted.
+
+The reader may remember the story of that non-committal editor who
+during the late canvass, desiring to propitiate all his subscribers of
+both parties, hoisted the ticket of "Gr---- and ----n" at the top
+of his column, thus giving those who took the paper their choice of
+interpretations between "Grant and Wilson" and "Greeley and Brown."
+A story turning on the same style of point (and probably quite as
+apocryphal, though the author labels it "_historique_") is told of an
+army officers' mess in France. A brother-soldier from a neighboring
+detachment having come in, and a _champenoise_ having been uncorked in
+his honor, "Gentlemen," said the guest, raising his glass, "I am about
+to propose a toast at once patriotic and political." A chorus of hasty
+ejaculations and of murmurs at once greeted him. "Yes, gentlemen,"
+coolly proceeded the orator, "I drink to a thing which--an object
+that--Bah! I will out with it at once. It begins with an _R_ and ends
+with an _e_."
+
+"Capital!" whispers a young lieutenant of Bordeaux promotion. "He
+proposes the _Republique_, without offending the old fogies by saying
+the word."
+
+"Nonsense! He means the _Radicale_," replies the other, an old captain
+from Cassel.
+
+"Upon my word," says a third as he lifts his glass, "our friend must
+mean _la Royaute_."
+
+"I see!" cries a one-legged veteran of Froschweiler: "we drink to _la
+Revanche_."
+
+In fact, the whole party drank the toast heartily, each interpreting
+it to his liking.
+
+In the hands of a Swift even so trivial an incident might be made
+to point a moral on the facility with which alike in theology
+and politics--from Athanasian Creed to Cincinnati or Philadelphia
+Platform--men comfortably interpret to their own diverse likings some
+doctrine that "begins with an _R_ and ends with an _e_," and swallow
+it with great unanimity and enthusiasm.
+
+Possibly the death of Mr. Greeley, after a prolonged delirium induced
+in part by political excitement, may add for Americans some fresh
+interest to the theory of a paper which just previous to that pathetic
+event M. Lunier had read before the Paris Academy of Medicine. The
+author confessed his statistics to be incomplete, but regarded them
+as ample for the decisive formulation of the proposition that great
+political crises tend to increase the number of cases of mental
+alienation. The leading point of his elaborate argument appears to
+be the classification of fresh cases of insanity developed since the
+beginning of the late French war. The strongest comparison is one
+indicating an excess of seven per cent, in the number of such cases,
+proportioned to the population in the departments conquered and
+occupied by the Germans, over those which they did not invade.
+Finally, M. Lunier reckons the cases of mental alienation induced
+by the late political and military events in France at from
+twelve hundred to fifteen hundred. Politics without war may, it is
+considered, produce the same results--results not at all surprising,
+of course, except as to their extent. As to this last, if M. Lunier's
+figures and deductions be correct, the mental strain of exciting
+politics is even more destructive than has been generally supposed.
+
+
+
+
+LITERATURE OF THE DAY.
+
+
+Gareth and Lynette. By Alfred Tennyson, D.C.L., Poet-Laureate. Boston:
+J.R. Osgood & Co.
+
+"With this poem the author concludes the Idyls of the King." The
+occasion is a tempting one to review the long series of Arthurian lays
+written by Tennyson, from the _Mort d' Arthur_, and the pretty song
+about Lancelot and Guinevere, and the first casting of "Elaine's"
+legend in the form of _The Lady of Shallot_, down to the present tale,
+flung like a capricious field flower into a wreath complete enough
+without it. The poet's first adventure into the subject--the
+mysterious, shadowy and elevated performance called the _Mort d'
+Arthur_--will probably be always thought the best. Tennyson, when
+he wrote it, was just trying the peculiarities of his style: he was
+testing the quality of his cadences, the ring of his long sententious
+lines repeated continually as refrains, and the trustworthiness of his
+artful, much-sacrificing simplicity. He put as it were a spot or two
+of pigment on the end of his painting-knife, and held it up into the
+air of the vaporous traditions of the Round Table. It stood the test,
+it had the color; but the artist, uncertain of his style, his public
+and his own liking, made a number of other tentatives before he
+could decide to go on in the manner he commenced with. He tried the
+_Guinevere_, laughing and galloping in its ballad-movement; he tried
+the _Shallot_, with a triple rhyme and a short positive refrain, like
+a bell rung in an incantation, and brought up every minute by a finger
+pressed upon the edge. Either of these three--although the metre of
+the first was the only one endurable by the ear in the case of a long
+series of poems--either of these had, it may be positively said, a
+general tone more suitable to the ancient feeling, and more consistent
+with the duty of a modern poet arranging for new ears the legends
+collected by Sir Thomas Malory, than the general tone of the present
+Idyls. Those first experiments, charged like a full sponge with the
+essence and volume of primitive legend, went to their purpose without
+retrospection or vacillation: each short tale, whether it laughed or
+moaned, promulgated itself like an oracle. The teller seemed to have
+been listening to the voice of Fate, and whether, Guinevere swayed the
+bridle-rein, or Elaine's web flew out and floated wide, or Lancelot
+sang tirra-lirra by the river, it was asserted with the positiveness
+of a Hebrew chronicle, which we do not question because it is history.
+But we hardly have such an illusion in reading the late Idyls. We
+seem to be in the presence of a constructor who arranges things, of a
+moralist turning ancient stories with a latent purpose of decorum, of
+an official Englishman looking about for old confirmations of modern
+sociology, of a salaried laureate inventing a prototype of Prince
+Albert. The singleness of a story-teller who has convinced himself
+that he tells a true story is gone. That this diversion into the
+region of didactics is accompanied, on our poet's part, with every
+ingenuity of ornament, and every grace of a style which people have
+learned to like and which he has made his own, need not be said.
+The Tennysonian beauties are all there. The work takes its place
+in literature, obscuring the Arthurian work of Dryden, as Milton's
+achievement of _Paradise Lost_ obscured the Italian work on the same
+subject which preceded it. The story is told, and the things of the
+Round Table can hardly be related again in English, any more than the
+tale of Troy could be sung again in Greek after the poem of Homer.
+But beauties do not necessarily compose into perfect Beauty, and
+the achievement of a task neatly done does not prevent the eye from
+wandering over the work to see if the material has been used to the
+best advantage. So, the reader who has allowed himself to rest long
+in the simple magic evoked by Malory or in the Celtic air of
+Villemarque's legends, will be fain to ask whether a man of Tennyson's
+force could not have given to his century a recasting which would have
+satisfied primitive credulity as well as modern subtility. There is
+an antique bronze at Naples that has been cleaned and set up in a
+splendid museum, and perhaps looks more graceful than ever; but the
+pipe that used to lead to the lips, and the passage that used to
+communicate with the priest-chamber, are gone, and nothing can
+compensate for them: it used to be a form and a voice, and now it is
+nothing but a form.
+
+We have just observed that in our opinion the first essays made by the
+Laureate with his Arthurian material had the best ring, or at least
+had some excellences lost to the later work. _Gareth and Lynette_,
+however, by its fluency and simplicity, and by not being overcharged
+with meaning, seems to part company with some of this overweighted
+later performance, and to attempt a recovery of the directness and
+spring of the start. It is, however, far behind all of them in a
+momentous particular; for in narrating _them_, the poet, while able to
+keep up his immediate connection with the source of tradition, and to
+narrate with the directness of belief, had still some undercurrent of
+thought which he meant to convey, and which he succeeded in keeping
+track of: Arthur and Guinevere, in the little song, ride along like
+primeval beings of the world--the situation seems the type of all
+seduction; the Lady of Shallot is not alone the recluse who sees life
+in a mirror, she is the cloistered Middle Age itself, and when her
+mirror breaks we feel that a thousand glasses are bursting, a thousand
+webs are parting, and that the times are coming eye to eye with the
+actual. In those younger days, Tennyson, possessed with a subject, and
+as it were floating in it, could pour out a legend with the credulity
+of a child and the clear convincing insight of a teacher: when he came
+in mature life to apply himself to the rounded work, he had more of a
+disposition to teach, and less of that imaginative reach which is
+like belief; and _now_ he is telling a story again for the sake of
+the story, but without the deeper meaning. Lynette is a supercilious
+damsel who asks redress of the knights of the Round Table: Gareth,
+a male Cinderella, starts from the kitchen to defend her, and after
+conquering her prejudices by his bravery, assumes his place as a
+disguised prince. It is a plain little comedy, not much in Tennyson's
+line: there are places where he tries to imitate the artless
+disconnected speech of youth; and here, as with the little nun's
+babble in _Guinevere_, and with some other passages of factitious
+simplicity, the poet makes rather queer work:
+
+ Gold? said I gold?--ay then, why he, or she,
+ Or whosoe'er it was, or half the world,
+ Had ventured--_had_ the thing I spake of been
+ Mere gold--but this was all of that true steel
+ Whereof they forged the brand Excalibur,
+ And lightnings played about it in the storm, etc.
+
+It may be questioned whether hap-hazard talk ever, in any age of human
+speech, took a form like that, though it is just like Tennyson in many
+a weary part of his poetry. The blank verse, for its part, is broken
+with all the old skill, and there are lines of beautiful license, like
+this:
+
+ Camelot, a city of shadowy palaces,
+
+or strengthened with the extra quantity, like this:
+
+ Stay, felon knight, I avenge me for my friend!
+
+or imitating the motion described, as these:
+
+ The hoof of his horse slept in the stream, the stream
+ Descended, and the Sun was washed away;
+
+but occasionally the effort to give variety leads into mere puzzles
+and disagreeable fractures of metre, such as the following quatrain:
+
+ Courteous or bestial from the moment,
+ Such as have nor law nor king; and three of these
+ Proud in their fantasy, call themselves the Day,
+ Morning-Star, and Noon-Sun, and Evening-Star.
+
+The first line in this quotation, if it be not a misprint of the
+American edition, can only be brought to any kind of rule by accenting
+each polysyllable on the last, and is not, when even that is done, a
+pleasant piece of caprice. There are plenty of phrases that shock
+the attention sufficiently to keep it from stagnating on the smooth
+surface of the verse; such are--"ever-highering eagle-circles," "there
+were none but few goodlier than he," "tipt with trenchant steel," and
+the expression, already famous, of "tip-tilted" for Lynette's nose; to
+which may be added the object of Gareth's attention, mentioned in the
+third line of the poem, when he "stared at the _spate_." But in the
+matter of descriptive power we do not know that the Laureate
+has succeeded better for a long time past in his touches of
+landscape-painting: the pictures of halls, castles, rivers and
+woods are all felicitous. For example, this in five lines, where the
+travelers saw
+
+ Bowl-shaped, through tops of many thousand pines,
+ A gloomy-gladed hollow slowly sink
+ To westward; in the deeps whereof a mere,
+ Round as the red eye of an eagle-owl,
+ Under the half-dead sunset glared; and cries
+ Ascended.
+
+Or this simple and beautiful sketch of crescent moonlight:
+
+ Silent the silent field
+ They traversed. Arthur's harp tho' summer-wan,
+ In counter motion to the clouds, allured
+ The glance of Gareth dreaming on his liege.
+ A star shot.
+
+It is still, perfect, and utterly simple sketches like these, thrown
+off in the repose of power, that form the best setting for a heroic
+or poetical action: what better device was ever invented, even by
+Tennyson himself, for striking just the right note in the reader's
+mind while thinking of a noble primitive knight, than that in another
+Idyl, where Lancelot went along, looking at a star, "_and wondered
+what it was"?_ Of a more imaginative kind of beauty are the
+descriptions of the walls of rock near Castle Dangerous, decked by the
+hermit with tinted bas-reliefs, and the fine one of Camelot, looking
+as if "built by fairy kings," with its city gate surmounted by the
+figures of the three mystic queens, "the friends of Arthur," and
+decked upon the keystone with the image of the Lady, whose form is
+set in ripples of stone and crossed by mystic fish, while her drapery
+weeps from her sides as water flowing away. The most charming part of
+the character-painting is where the shrewish Lynette, as her estimate
+of the scullion-knight gradually rises in view of his mighty deeds,
+evinces her kindlier mood, not directly in speech, but by catches of
+love-songs breaking out of the midst of her scornful gibes: this is
+a very subtle and suitable and poetical way of eliciting the
+under-workings of the damsel's mind, and it is continued through five
+or six pages in an interrupted carol, until at last the maiden, wholly
+won, bids him ride by her side, and finishes her lay:
+
+ O trefoil, sparkling on the rainy plain,
+ O rainbow, with three colors after rain,
+ Shine sweetly: thrice my love hath smiled on me.
+
+The allegory by which Gareth's four opponents are made to form a sort
+of stumbling succession representing Morn, Noon, Evening, and Night or
+Death, is hardly worth the introduction, but it is not insisted
+upon: the last of these knights, besieging Castle Perilous in a skull
+helmet, and clamoring for marriage with Lynette's sister Lyonors,
+turns out to be a large-sized, fresh-faced and foolish boy, who issues
+from the skull "as a flower new blown," and fatuously explains that
+his brothers have dressed him out in burlesque and deposited him as a
+bugbear at the gate. This is not very salutary allegorizing, but it
+is soon over, and the poem closed, leaving a pleasant perfume in the
+reader's mind of chivalry, errantry and the delicious days before the
+invention of civilization.
+
+
+
+Handbook of the History of Philosophy. By Dr. Albert Schwegler.
+Translated arid annotated by James Hutchison Stirling, LL.D. New York:
+Putnam.
+
+Spinoza teaches that "substance is God;" but, says Mr. Matthew Arnold,
+"propositions about substance pass by mankind at large like the idle
+wind, which mankind at large regards not: it will not even listen to
+a word about these propositions, unless it first learns what their
+author was driving at with them, and finds that this object of his
+is one with which it sympathizes." There is no way of getting the
+multitude to listen to Spinoza's _Ethics_ or Plato's _Dialectics_ but
+something is gained when a man of science like Dr. Schwegler happens
+to possess the gift of fluent and easy statement, and can pour into a
+work like the present, which is the expansion of a hasty encyclopaedia
+article, the vivacity of current speech, and the impulse which gives
+unity to a long history while it excludes crabbed digressions. It
+happens that the American world received the first translation of
+Schwegler's _History_ _of Philosophy_; and it may be asked, What need
+have Americans of a subsequent version by a Scotch doctor of laws? The
+answer is, that Mr. Seelye's earlier rendering was taken from a first
+edition, and that the present one includes the variations made in five
+editions which have now been issued. Even on British ground the work
+thus translated has reached three editions, and the multitude of
+"mankind at large," hearing of these repeated editions in Edinburgh
+and of twenty thousand copies sold in Germany, may begin to prick
+up its ears, and to think that this is one of the easily-read
+philosophies of modern times, of which Taine and Michelet have the
+secret. It is not so: abstractions stated with scientific precision in
+their elliptic slang or technicality are not and cannot be made easy
+reading: the strong hands of condensation which Schwegler pressed down
+upon the material he controlled so perfectly have not left it lighter
+or more digestible. The reader of this manual, for instance, will be
+invited to consider the Eleatic argumentation that nothing exists but
+Identity, "which is the beënt, and that Difference, the non-beënt,
+does not exist; and therefore that he must not only not go on talking
+about difference, but that he must not allude to difference as being
+anything but the non-beënt; for if he casts about for a synonym, and
+arrives at the notion that he may say non-existent for non-beënt, he
+is abjectly wrong, for beënt does not mean existent, and non-beënt
+non-existent, but it must be considered that the beënt is strictly the
+non-existent, and the existent the non-beënt." Such are the amenities
+of expression into which an eloquent metaphysician, trying his best
+to speak popularly, is led. Yet the book is readable to that orderly
+application of the mind which such studies exact, and is the firmest
+and strictest guide now speaking our English tongue. Its steady
+attention to the business in hand, from the pre-Socratic philosphies
+down through the great age of the Greek revival, to Germany and Hegel
+at last, is most sustained and admirable. Indeed, few thinkers of
+Anglo-Saxon birth are able even to praise such a book as it deserves.
+The only real impediment to its acceptance by scholars of our race is
+that its attention to modern philosophy is rather partial, the French
+and the Germans getting most of the story, and English philosophers
+like Locke and Hume receiving scant attention, while Paley is not
+recognized. This class of omissions is attended to by the Scotch
+translator in a mass of annotations which lead him into a broad and
+interesting view of British philosophy, in the course of which he has
+some severe reflections on the ignorance of Mr. Lewes and Mr. Mill. On
+account of these valuable notes, and also for the alterations made
+by Schwegler himself, we feel that we must invite American scholars
+possessing the Seelye translation to replace it or accompany it by
+this present version, which is a cheap and compassable volume.
+
+
+
+Joseph Noirel's Revenge. By Victor Cherbuliez. Translated from the
+French by Wm. F. West, A.M. New York: Holt & Williams.
+
+M. Victor Cherbuliez belongs to a Genevese family long and honorably
+connected with literature in the capacity of publishers both at Paris
+and Geneva. It is in the latter town and the adjacent region that the
+scene of the present story--the first, we believe, of the author's
+works which has found its way into English--is laid; and much of
+its charm is derived from the local coloring with which many of the
+characters and incidents are invested. Even the quiet home-life of
+so beautiful and renowned a place cannot but be tinted by reflections
+from the incomparable beauties of its surroundings, and from the
+grand and vivid passages of its singularly picturesque history. The
+subordinate figures on the canvas have accordingly an interest greater
+than what arises from their commonplace individualities and their
+meagre part in the action--like barndoor fowls pecking and clucking
+beside larger bipeds in a walled yard steeped in sunlight. But the
+sunlight which gives a delicious warmth and brightness to the earlier
+chapters of the novel is soon succeeded by gloom and tempest. The
+interest is more and more concentrated on the few principal persons;
+and the action, which at the outset promised to be light and amusing,
+with merely so much of tenderness and pathos as may belong to the
+higher comedy, becomes by degrees deeply tragical, and ends in a
+catastrophe which is saved from being horrible and revolting only by
+the shadows that forecast and the softening strains that attend it. In
+point of construction and skillful handling the story is as effective
+as French art alone could have made it, while it has an under-meaning
+rendered all the more suggestive by being left to find its way into
+the reader's reflections without any obvious prompting. The heroine,
+sole child of a prosperous bourgeois couple, stands between two
+lovers--one the last relic of a noble Burgundian family; the other a
+workman with socialist tendencies. Marguerite Mirion is invested with
+all the fascination which beauty of face, simplicity of mind, purity
+of soul, sweetness of disposition and joyousness of spirit can impart.
+Yet she is, and feels herself to be, entirely _bourgeoise,_ longing
+for no ideal heights, worldly or spiritual, ready for all ordinary
+duties, content with simple and innocent pleasures, rinding in the
+life, the thoughts, the occupations and enjoyments of her class all
+that is needed to make the current of her life run smoothly and to
+satisfy the cravings of her bright but gentle nature. It is in simple
+obedience to the will of her parents that she marries Count Roger
+d'Ornis, and is carried from her happy home at Mon-Plaisir to a
+dilapidated castle in the Jura, where there are no smiling faces or
+loving hearts to make her welcome--where, on the contrary, she meets
+only with haughty, spiteful or morose looks and a chilling and gloomy
+atmosphere. It is from sheer necessity that she accepts the aid
+of Joseph Noirel, her father's head-workman, whose ardent spirit,
+quickened by the consciousness of talent, but rendered morbid by the
+slights which his birth and position have entailed, has been plunged
+into blackest night by the loss of the single star that had illumined
+its firmament. Count Roger is not wholly devoid of honor and
+generosity; but he has no true appreciation of his wife, and will
+sacrifice her without remorse to save his own reputation. Joseph, on
+the other hand, is ready to dare all things to protect her from
+harm; but he cannot forego the reward which entails upon her a deeper
+misery. It is Marguerite alone who, in the terrible struggle of fate
+and of clashing interests and desires, rises to the height of absolute
+self-abnegation; and this not through any sudden development of
+qualities or intuitions foreign to her previous modes of thought,
+but by the simple application of these to the hard and complicated
+problems which have suddenly confronted her. Herein lies the novelty
+of the conception and the lesson which the author has apparently
+intended to convey. See, he seems to say, how the bourgeois nature,
+equally scorned by the classes above and below it as the embodiment of
+vulgar ease and selfishness, contains precisely the elements of true
+heroism which are wanting alike in those who set conventional rules
+above moral laws and in those who revolt against all restrictions. The
+book is thus an apology for a class which is no favorite with poets
+or romancers; but, as we have said, the design is only to be inferred
+from the story, and may easily pass unnoticed, at least with American
+readers. The character of Noirel is powerfully drawn, but it is less
+original than that of the heroine, belonging, for example, to the
+same type as the hero of _Le Rouge et le Noir_--"ce Robespierre de
+village," as Sainte-Beuve, we believe, calls him.
+
+
+
+Homes and Hospitals; or, Two Phases of Woman's Work, as exhibited in
+the Labors of Amy Button and Agnes E. Jones. Boston: American Tract
+Society; New York: Hurd & Houghton.
+
+Doubtless we should not, though most of us do, feel a tenderness for
+the Dorcas who proves to be a lady of culture and distinction, rather
+different from the careless respect we accord to the Dorcas who has
+large feet and hands, and mismanages her _h_'s. In this elegant little
+book "Amy" is the descendant of influential patrons and patronesses,
+and "Agnes" is the lovely saint whom Miss Nightingale calls "Una,"
+though her high-bred purity and lowly self-dedication rather recall
+the character of Elizabeth of Hungary. Agnes, in Crook lane and
+Abbot's street, encounters old paupers who have already enjoyed the
+bounty of her ancestress's (Dame Dutton) legacy. When she becomes
+interested in the old Indian campaigner, Miles, she is able to procure
+his admission to Chelsea through the influence of "my brother, Colonel
+Dutton." She lightens her watches by reading Manzoni's novel,
+_I Promessi Sposi,_ she quotes Lord Bacon, and compares the
+hospital-nurses to the witches in _Macbeth_. These mental and
+social graces do not, perhaps, assist the practical part of her
+ministrations, but they undoubtedly chasten the influence of
+her ministrations on her own character. It is as a purist and an
+aristocrat of the best kind that Miss Dutton forms within her own mind
+this resolution: "If the details of evil are unavoidably brought under
+your eye, let not your thoughts rest upon them a moment longer than is
+absolutely needful. Dismiss them with a vigorous effort as soon as you
+have done your best to apply a remedy: commit the matter into higher
+Hands, then turn to your book, your music, your wood-carving, your pet
+recreation, whatever it is. This is one way, at least, of keeping the
+mind elastic and pure." And with the discretion of rare breeding she
+carries into the haunts of vice and miserable intrigue the Italian
+byword: _Orecchie spalancate, e bocca stretta_. A similar elevation,
+but also a sense that responsibility to her caste requires the most
+tender humility, may be found in "Una." When about to associate with
+coarse hired London nurses at St. Thomas's Hospital, she asks herself,
+"Are you more above those with whom you will have to mix than our
+Saviour was in every thought and sensitive refinement?" It was by
+such self-teaching that these high-spirited girls made their life-toil
+redound to their own purification, as it did to the cause of humanity.
+The purpose served by binding in one volume the district experiences
+of Miss Dutton and the hospital record of Miss Jones is that of
+indicating to the average young lady of our period a diversity of ways
+in which she may serve our Master and His poor. With "Amy" she may
+retain her connection with society, and adorn her home and her circle,
+all the while that she reads the Litany with the decayed governess or
+_Golden Deeds_ to the dying burglar. With "Agnes" she may plunge into
+more heroic self-abnegation. Leaving the fair attractions of the world
+as utterly as the diver leaves the foam and surface of the sea, she
+may grope for moral pearls in the workhouse of Liverpool or train
+for her sombre avocation in the asylum at Kaiserwerth. Such absolute
+dedication will probably have some effect on her "tone" as a lady. She
+can no longer keep up with the current interests of society. Instead
+of Shakespeare and Italian literature, which we have seen coloring
+the career of the district visitor, her life will take on a sort of
+submarine pallor. The sordid surroundings will press too close for any
+gleam from the outer world to penetrate. The things of interest will
+be the wretched things of pauperdom and hospital service--the slight
+improvement of Gaffer, the spiritual needs of Gammer, the harsh
+tyranny of upper nurses. "To-day when out walking," says the brave
+young lady, as superintendent of a boys' hospital, "I could only keep
+from crying by running races with my boys." The effect of a training
+so rigid--training which sometimes includes stove-blacking and
+floor-washing--is to try the pure metal, to eject the merely
+ornamental young lady whose nature is dross, and to consolidate
+the valuable nature that is sterling. Miss Agnes, plunged in hard
+practical work, and unconsciously acquiring a little workmen's slang,
+gives the final judgment on the utility of such discipline: "Without
+a regular hard London training I should have been nowhere." Both the
+saints of the century are now dead, and these memoirs conserve the
+perfume of their lives.
+
+
+
+Songs from the Old Dramatists. Collected and Edited by Abby Sage
+Richardson, New York: Hurd & Houghton.
+
+Any anthology of old English lyrics is a treasure if one can depend
+upon the correctness of printing and punctuating. Mrs. Richardson has
+found a quantity of rather recondite ones, and most of the favorites
+are given too. Only to read her long index of first lines is to catch
+a succession of dainty fancies and of exquisite rhythms, arranged when
+the language was crystallizing into beauty under the fanning wings of
+song. That some of our pet jewels are omitted was to be expected.
+The compiler does not find space for Rochester's most sincere-seeming
+stanzas, beginning, "I cannot change as others do"--among the sweetest
+and most lyrical utterances which could set the stay-imprisoned hearts
+of Charles II.'s beauties to bounding with a touch of emotion. Perhaps
+Rochester was not exactly a dramatist, though that point is wisely
+strained in other cases. We do not get the "Nay, dearest, think me
+not unkind," nor do we get the "To all you ladies now on land," though
+sailors' lyrics, among the finest legacies of the time when gallant
+England ruled the waves, are not wanting. We have Sir Charles Sedley's
+
+ "Love still hath something of the sea
+ From which his mother rose,"
+
+and the siren's song, fit for the loveliest of Parthenopes, from
+Browne's _Masque of the Inner Temple_, beginning,
+
+ "Steer, hither steer your winged pines,
+ All beaten mariners!"--
+
+songs which severally repeat the fatigue of the sea or that daring
+energy of its Elizabethan followers which by a false etymology we term
+chivalrous. We do not find the superb lunacy of "Mad Tom of Bedlam" in
+the catch beginning, "I know more than Apollo," but we have something
+almost as spirited, where John Ford sings, in _The Sun's Darling_,
+
+ "The dogs have the stag in chase!
+ 'Tis a sport to content a king.
+ So-ho! ho! through the skies
+ How the proud bird flies,
+ And swooping, kills with a grace!
+ Now the deer falls! hark! how they ring."
+
+For what is pensive and retrospective in tone we are given a song
+of "The Aged Courtier," which once in a pageant touched the finer
+consciousness of Queen Elizabeth. The unemployed warrior, whose
+"helmet now shall make a hive for bees," treats the virgin sovereign
+as his saint and divinity, promising,
+
+ "And when he saddest sits in holy cell,
+ He'll teach his swains this carol for a song:
+ Blest be the hearts that wish my sovereign well!
+ Cursed be the souls that think her any wrong!
+ Goddess! allow this aged man his right
+ To be your beadsman now, that was your knight."
+
+The feudal feeling can hardly be more beautifully expressed.
+
+From the devotion that was low and lifelong we may turn to the
+devotion that was loud and fleeting. The love-songs are many and well
+picked: one is the madrigal from Thomas Lodge's _Eitphues' Golden
+Legacy,_ which "he wrote," he says, "on the ocean, when every line
+was wet with a surge, and every humorous passion counterchecked with
+a storm;" and which (the madrigal) had the good fortune to suggest and
+name Shakespeare's archest character, Rosalind. We cannot dwell
+upon this perfumed chaplet of love-ditties. Mrs. Richardson is here
+doubtless in her element, but she does not always lighten counsel
+with the wisdom of her words; for instance, when, in Beaumont and
+Fletcher's "Beauty clear and fair," she makes an attempted emendation
+in the lines--
+
+ "Where to live near,
+ And planted there,
+ Is still to live and still live new;
+ Where to gain a favor is
+ More than light perpetual bliss;
+ Oh make me live by serving you."
+
+On this the editress says: "I have always been inclined to believe
+that this line should read: 'More than _life_, perpetual bliss.'" The
+image here, where the whole figure is taken from flowers, is of being
+planted and growing in the glow of the mistress's beauty, whose favor
+is more fructifying than the sun, and to which he immediately begs
+to be recalled, "back again, to this _light_." To say that living
+anywhere is "more than life" is a forced bombastic notion not in
+the way of Beaumont and Fletcher, but coming later, and rather
+characteristic of Poe, with his rant about
+
+ "that infinity with which my wife
+ Was dearer to my soul than its soul-life."
+
+Mrs. Richardson's notes, in fact, contradict the impression of
+thoroughness which her selecting, we are glad to say, leaves on the
+mind. She is aware that the "Ode to Melancholy" in _The Nice Valour_
+begins in the same way as Milton's "Pensieroso," but she does not seem
+to know that the latter is also closely imitated from Burton's poem in
+his _Anatomy of Melancholy_. And she quotes John Still's "Jolly Good
+Ale and Old" as a "panegyric on old sack," sack being sweet wine.
+
+The publishers have done their part, and made of these drops of oozed
+gold what is called "an elegant trifle" for the holidays. Mr. John La
+Farge, a very "advanced" sort of artist and illustrator, has furnished
+some embellishments which will be better liked by people of broad
+culture, and especially by enthusiasts for Japanese art, than they
+will be by ordinary Christmas-shoppers, though the frontispiece to
+"Songs of Fairies," representing Psyche floating among water-lilies,
+is beautiful enough and obvious enough for anybody.
+
+
+
+
+
+_Books Received._
+
+
+A Concordance to the Constitution of the United States of America. By
+Charles W. Stearns, M.D. New York: Mason, Baker & Pratt.
+
+The Standard: A Collection of Sacred and Secular Music. By L.O.
+Emerson and H. R. Palmer. Boston: Oliver Ditson & Co.
+
+Gems of Strauss: A Collection of Dance Music for the Piano. By Johann
+Strauss. Boston: Oliver Ditson & Co.
+
+The Greeks of To-Day. By Charles K. Tuckerman. New York: G.P. Putnam &
+Sons.
+
+The Eustace Diamonds. By Anthony Trollope. New York: Harper &
+Brothers.
+
+How to Paint. By F.B. Gardner. New York: Samuel R. Wells.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Lippincott's Magazine Of Popular
+Literature And Science, No. 23, February, 1873, Vol. XI., by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LIPPINCOTT'S MAGAZINE ***
+
+***** This file should be named 13636-8.txt or 13636-8.zip *****
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+ Popular Literature and Science, Vol. XI, No. 23, February,
+ 1873.</title>
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Lippincott's Magazine Of Popular Literature
+And Science, No. 23, February, 1873, Vol. XI. No. 23., by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Lippincott's Magazine Of Popular Literature And Science, No. 23, February, 1873, Vol. XI. No. 23.
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: October 5, 2004 [EBook #13636]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LIPPINCOTT'S MAGAZINE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Patricia Bennett, Sandra Brown and
+the PG Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <h1>LIPPINCOTT'S MAGAZINE</h1>
+
+ <h3>OF</h3>
+
+ <h2><i>POPULAR LITERATURE AND SCIENCE.</i></h2>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <h4>FEBRUARY, 1873.<br />
+ Vol. XI., No. 23.</h4>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+
+ <h3>TABLE OF CONTENTS</h3>
+
+ <div class="toc">
+
+ <p><a href="#illustrations">ILLUSTRATIONS</a></p>
+
+ <p><a href="#H_4_0001">SEARCHING FOR THE QUININE-PLANT IN
+ PERU.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4"><a href="#H_4_0026">Concluding
+ Paper.</a></p>
+
+ <p><a href="#H_4_0002">A GLANCE AT THE SITE AND
+ ANTIQUITIES OF ATHENS By J.L.T. PHILLIPS.</a></p>
+
+ <p><a href="#H_4_0003">COMMONPLACE By CONSTANCE
+ FENIMORE WOOLSON.</a></p>
+
+ <p><a href="#H_4_0004">PROBATIONER LEONHARD; OR, THREE
+ NIGHTS IN THE HAPPY VALLEY By CAROLINE CHESEBRO.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4"><a href="#HCH0001">Chapter IV.&mdash;The
+ Test&mdash;With Mental Reservations.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4"><a href="#HCH0002">Chapter V.&mdash;Sister
+ Benigna.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4"><a href="#HCH0003">Chapter VI.&mdash;The Men
+ Of Spenersberg.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4"><a href="#HCH0004">Chapter VII.&mdash;The
+ Book.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4"><a href="#HCH0005">CHAPTER
+ VIII.&mdash;Conference Meeting.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4"><a href="#HCH0006">CHAPTER IX.&mdash;Will
+ The Architect Have Employment?</a></p>
+
+ <p><a href="#H_4_0011">COUNTRY-HOUSE LIFE IN ENGLAND
+ By REGINALD WYNFORD.</a></p>
+
+ <p><a href="#H_4_0012">THE FOREST OF ARDEN By ITA
+ ANIOL PROKOP.</a></p>
+
+ <p><a href="#H_4_0013">JACK, THE REGULAR By THOMAS
+ DUNN ENGLISH.</a></p>
+
+ <p><a href="#H_4_0014">OBSERVATIONS AND ADVENTURES IN
+ SUBMARINE DIVING By WILL WALLACE HARNEY.</a></p>
+
+ <p><a href="#H_4_0015">CONFIDENTIAL.</a></p>
+
+ <p><a href="#H_4_0016">GLIMPSES OF JOHN CHINAMAN By
+ PRENTICE MULFORD.</a></p>
+
+ <p><a href="#H_4_0017">A WINTER REVERIE By MILLIE W.
+ CARPENTER.</a></p>
+
+ <p><a href="#H_4_0018">"PASSPORTS, GENTLEMEN!" By
+ A.H.</a></p>
+
+ <p><a href="#H_4_0019">OUR MONTHLY GOSSIP.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4"><a href="#H_4_0027">The Cornwallis
+ Family.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4"><a href="#H_4_0020">Novelties In
+ Ethnology.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4"><a href="#H_4_0021">The
+ Steam-whistle.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4"><a href="#H_4_0022">Siamese News.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4"><a href="#H_4_0023">Madison As A Temperance
+ Man.</a></p>
+
+ <p><a href="#H_NOTE">NOTES.</a></p>
+
+ <p><a href="#H_4_0025">LITERATURE OF THE DAY.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4"><a href="#H_4_0028">Books Received.</a></p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+ <br />
+ <a name="illustrations"
+ id="illustrations"></a>
+
+ <h4>ILLUSTRATIONS</h4>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#image-0001">The Cones of
+ Patabamba.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#image-0002">"Pepe Garcia,
+ Who Marched Ahead, Announced the Print Of A South American
+ Tiger."</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#image-0003">"Napoleon-like,
+ They Washed Their Dirty Linen in The Family"</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#image-0004">"Aragon and his
+ Men Fell Upon the Deserters Without Mercy."</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#image-0005">"They Greeted
+ These Indian Relics As Crusoe Did The Footprints of the
+ Savages."</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#image-0006">"Another Savage
+ Had Found a Pair of Linen Pantaloons."</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#image-0007">View of the
+ Acropolis and The Columns Of The Temple Of Jupiter
+ Olympus.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#image-0008">Theatre of
+ Dionysus (Bacchus).</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#image-0009">Victory Untying
+ Her Sandals.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#image-0010">Temple of
+ Victory.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#image-0011">The
+ Parthenon.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#image-0012">Bas Relief of
+ the Gods (Frieze Of The Parthenon).</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#image-0013">Porch of the
+ Caryatides.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#image-0014">Monument of
+ Lysicrates.</a></p><br />
+ <hr />
+ <a name="H_4_0001"
+ id="H_4_0001"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h2>SEARCHING FOR THE QUININE-PLANT IN
+ PERU.</h2><a name="H_4_0026"
+ id="H_4_0026"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h3>CONCLUDING PAPER.</h3>
+
+ <p>Early on a brilliant morning, with baggage repacked, and the
+ lessening amount of provisions more firmly strapped on the
+ shoulders of the Indians, the explorers left their pleasant
+ site on the banks of the Maniri. The repose allowed to the bulk
+ of the party during the absence of their Bolivian companions
+ had been wholesome and refreshing. The success of the
+ bark-hunters in their search for cinchonas had cheered all
+ hearts, and the luxurious supper of dried mutton and chuno
+ arranged for them on their return gave a reminiscence of
+ splendor to the thatched hut on the banks of the stream. This
+ edifice, the last of civilized construction they expected to
+ see, had the effect of a home in the wilderness. The bivouac
+ there had been enjoyed with a sentiment of tranquil
+ carelessness. Little did the travelers think that savage eyes
+ had been peeping through the forest upon their fancied
+ security, and that the wild people of the valleys who were to
+ work them all kinds of mischief were upon their track from this
+ station forth.</p>
+
+ <p>The enormous fire kindled for breakfast mingled with the
+ stain of sunrise to cast a glow upon their departure. Across
+ the vale of the Cconi, as though a pair of sturdy porters had
+ arisen to celebrate their leavetaking, the cones of Patabamba
+ caught the first rays of the sun and held them aloft like
+ hospitable torches. These huge forms, soldered together at the
+ waist like Chang and Eng, and clothed with shaggy woods up to
+ the top, had been the guardian watchers over their days in the
+ ajoupa at Maniri. The sun just rising empurpled their double
+ cones, while the base and the surrounding landscape were washed
+ with the neutral tints of twilight.</p>
+
+ <p>After passing the narrow affluent after which the
+ camping-ground of Maniri was named, the party pursued the
+ course of the Cconi through a more level tract of country. The
+ stones and precipices became more rare, but in revenge the
+ sandy banks soon began to reflect a heat that was hardly
+ bearable. As the implacable sun neared its zenith the party
+ walked with bent heads and blinded eyes, now dashing through
+ great plains of bamboos, now following the hatchets of the
+ peons through thickets of heated shrubbery.</p>
+
+ <p>Whenever the country became more wooded in its character,
+ the bark-hunters, whose quest obliged them to stray in short
+ flights around the wings of the column, redoubled their mazes.
+ The careless air of these Bolivian retrievers, their voluntary
+ doublings through the most difficult jungles, and their easy
+ way of walking over everything with their noses in the air,
+ proved well their indifference to the obstacles which were
+ almost insurmountable to the rest.</p><a name="image-0001"
+ id="image-0001"><!--IMG--></a>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/0215.jpg"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/0215.jpg"
+ alt="The Cones of Patabamba" /></a> The Cones of
+ Patabamba
+ </div><!--IMAGE END-->
+
+ <p>Nothing could be more singular and interesting than to see
+ them consulting one by one the indications scattered around
+ them, and deciding on their probabilities or promises. Where
+ the height and thickness of the foliage prevented them from
+ seeing the sky, or even the shade of the surrounding green,
+ they walked bent toward the ground, stirring up the rubbish,
+ and choosing among the dead foliage certain leaves, of which
+ they carefully examined the two sides and the stem. When by
+ accident they found themselves near enough to speak to each
+ other&mdash;a rare chance, for each peon undertook a separate
+ line of search&mdash;they asked their friends, showing the
+ leaves they had found, whether their discoveries appertained to
+ the neighboring trees or whether the wind had brought the
+ pieces from a distance. This kind of investigation, pursued by
+ men who had prowled through forests all their lives, might seem
+ slightly puerile if the reader does not understand that it is
+ often difficult, or even impossible, to recognize the growing
+ tree by its bark, covered as it is from base to branches with
+ parasitic vegetation of every sort. In those forests whatever
+ has a stout stem is used without scruple by the bignonias and
+ air-plants, which race over the trunk, plant their root-claws
+ in the cracks, leap over the whole tree at a single jet, or
+ strangle it with multiplied knots, all the while adorning it
+ with a superb mantle of leaves and blossoms. This is a
+ difficulty which the most experienced <i>cascarilleros</i> are
+ not able to overcome. As an instance, the history is cited of a
+ <i>practico</i> or speculator who led an exploration for these
+ trees in the valley of Apolobamba. After having caused to be
+ felled, barked, measured, dried and trimmed all the cinchonas
+ of one of those natural thickets called <i>manchas</i>&mdash;an
+ operation which had occupied four months&mdash;he was about to
+ abandon the spot and pursue the exploration elsewhere, when
+ accident led him to discover, in the enormous trunk buried in
+ creepers against which he had built his cabin, a <i>Cinchona
+ nitida</i>, the forefather of all the trees he had
+ stripped.</p>
+
+ <p>In this kind of search the caravan pursued the borders of
+ the river, sometimes on this side and sometimes on that, now
+ passing the two-headed mountain Camanti, now sighting the
+ tufted peak of Basiri, now crossing the torrent called the
+ Garote. In the latter, where the dam and hydraulic works of an
+ old Spanish gold-hunter were still visible in a state of ruin,
+ the sacred golden thirst of Colonel Perez once more attacked
+ him. Two or three pins' heads of the insane metal were actually
+ unearthed by the colonel and displayed in a pie-dish; but the
+ business of the party was one which made even the finding of
+ gold insignificant, and they pursued their way.</p>
+
+ <p>The flanks of these mountains, however, were really of
+ importance to the botanical motive of the expedition. Along the
+ side of the Camanti, where the yellow Garote leaked downward in
+ a rocky ravine, the Bolivians were again successful. They
+ brought to Marcoy specimens of half a dozen cinchonas, for him
+ to sketch, analyze and decorate with Latin names. The colors of
+ two or three of these barks promised well, but the pearl of the
+ collection was a specimen of the genuine <i>Calisaya</i>, with
+ its silver-gray envelope and leaf ribbed with carmine. This
+ proud discovery was a boon for science and for commerce. It
+ threw a new light upon the geographical locality of the most
+ precious species of cinchona. It was incontestably the plant,
+ and the Bolivians appeared amazed rather than pleased to have
+ discovered outside of their own country a kind of bark proper
+ only to Bolivia, and hardly known to overpass the northern
+ extremity of the valley of Apolobamba. This discovery would
+ rehabilitate, in the European market, the quinine-plants of
+ Lower Peru, heretofore considered as inferior to those of Upper
+ Peru and Bolivia. The latter country has for some time secured
+ the most favorable reputation for its barks&mdash;a reputation
+ ably sustained by the efforts of the company De la Paz, to whom
+ the government has long granted a monopoly. This reputation is
+ based on the abundance in that country of two species, the
+ <i>Cinchona calisaya</i> and <i>Boliviana,</i> the best known
+ and most valued in the market. But for two valuable cinchonas
+ possessed by Bolivia, Peru can show twenty, many of them
+ excellent in quality, and awaiting only the enterprise of the
+ government and the natural exhaustion of the forests to the
+ south.</p>
+
+ <p>This magnificent bit of luck, the finding of the calisaya,
+ awakened in the susceptible bosom of Mr. Marcoy an ardent
+ desire to explore for himself the site of its discovery. But
+ Eusebio, the chief of the cascarilleros, assuming a mysterious
+ and warning expression, informed the traveler that the place
+ was quite inaccessible for a white man, and that he had risked
+ his own neck a score of times in descending the ravine which
+ separated the route from the hillside where the fortunate
+ plants were growing. He promised, however, to point out the
+ locality from afar, and to show, by a certain changeable gloss
+ proper to the leaf, the precise stratum of the calisaya amongst
+ the belts of the forest. This promise he forgot to execute more
+ particularly, but it appeared that the locality would never be
+ excessively hard to find, marked as it was by Nature with the
+ gigantic finger-post of Mount Camanti. Placing, then, in
+ security these precious specimens among their baggage, the
+ explorers continued their advance along the valley.</p>
+
+ <p>The footing was level and easy. Rocks and precipices were
+ left behind, and were displaced by a soft, slippery sort of
+ sand, where from space to space were planted, like so many
+ oases in a desert, clumps of giant reeds. By a strange but
+ natural caprice these beds of rustling verdure were cut in an
+ infinity of well-defined geometric forms. Seen from an eminence
+ and at a distance, this arrangement gave a singular effect. In
+ the midst of these native garden-beds were cut distinct and
+ narrow alleys, where the drifting sands were packed like
+ artificial paths. It is unnecessary to add that the soft
+ footways, notwithstanding their advertisement of verdure and
+ shade, proved to be of African temperature.</p>
+
+ <p>The last hours of daylight surprised the travelers among the
+ labyrinths of these strange gardens. A suitable spot was chosen
+ for the halt. As the porters were preparing to throw down their
+ packs, Pepe Garcia, who marched ahead, announced the print of a
+ South American tiger. The first care of the Indians, on hearing
+ this news, was to send forth a horrible cry and to throng
+ around the marks. The footprints disappeared at the thickest
+ part of the jungle. After an examination of the traces, which
+ resembled a large trefoil, they precipitated themselves on the
+ interpreter-in-chief, representing how impossible it was to
+ camp out in the neighborhood of the dreaded animal. But Pepe
+ Garcia, accustomed as he was by profession to try his strength
+ with the ferocious bear and the wily boar, was not the man to
+ be afraid of a tiger, even of a genuine tiger from Bengal. To
+ prove to the porters how slight was the estimation he placed on
+ the supposed enemy, and also to drill them in the case of
+ similar rencounters, he pushed the whole troop pellmell into
+ the thickest part of the reeds, with the surly order to cut
+ down the canes for sheds. Drawing his own knife, he slashed
+ right and left among the stems, which the Indians, trembling
+ with fear, were obliged to make into sheaves on the spot and
+ transport to the beach selected for the bivouac. Double rows of
+ these <i>arundos</i>, driven into the sand, formed the
+ partitions of the cabins, for which their interwoven leaves
+ made an appropriate thatch. The green halls with matted vaults
+ were picturesque enough; each peon, seeing how easily they were
+ constructed, chose to have a house for himself; and the Tiger's
+ Beach quickly presented the appearance of a camp disposed in a
+ long straight line, of which the timorous Indians occupied the
+ extremity nearest the river.</p>
+
+ <p>No "tiger" appeared to justify the apprehensions of the
+ porters; but what was lacking to their fears from beasts with
+ four feet was made up to them by beasts with wings. The night
+ closed in dry and serene. Since leaving Maniri, whether because
+ of the broadening of the valley, the rarity of the
+ water-courses or the decreasing altitude of the hills, the
+ adventurers had been little troubled with fogs at night. The
+ fauna of the region, too, had offered nothing of an alarming
+ complexion, except the footprints of the tiger in question: an
+ occasional tapir or peccary from the woods, and otters and fish
+ from the streams, had attracted the shots of the party, but
+ merely as welcome additions to their game-bags, not as food for
+ their fears. To-night, however, the veritable bugbear of the
+ tropical forest paid them a visit, and left a real souvenir of
+ his presence. As the Indian servants stretched themselves out
+ in slumber under the bright stars and in the partial shelter of
+ their ajoupas, a bat of the vampire species, attracted by the
+ emanations of their bodies, came sailing over them, and
+ emboldened by the silence reigning everywhere, selected a
+ victim for attack. Hovering over the fellow's exposed foot, he
+ bit the great toe, and fanning his prey in the traditional yet
+ inevitable manner by the natural movement of his wings, he
+ gorged himself with blood without disturbing the mozo. The
+ latter, on awakening in the morning, observed a slight swelling
+ in the perforated part, and on examination discovered a round
+ hole large enough to admit a pea. Without rising, the man
+ summoned his companions, who formed a group around him for the
+ purpose of furnishing a certain natural remedy in the shape of
+ a secretion which each one drew out of his ears. With this the
+ patient made himself a plaster for his wound, and appeared to
+ think but little of it. Questioned as to his sensations by the
+ white travelers, who found themselves a good deal more
+ disturbed with the idea of the vampire than they had been by
+ any indications of tigers or wild-boars, the fellow explained
+ that he had felt no sensation, unless it might have been an
+ agreeable coolness of his sand-baked feet. The incident seemed
+ so disagreeable and so likely of recurrence that Colonel Perez
+ ever afterward slept with his feet rolled up in a variety of
+ fantastic draperies, while Mr. Marcoy for several nights
+ retained his boots.</p><a name="image-0002"
+ id="image-0002"><!--IMG--></a>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/0216.jpg"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/0216.jpg"
+ alt="'Pepe Garcia, Who Marched Ahead, Announced the Print Of A South American Tiger.'" />
+ </a> 'Pepe Garcia, Who Marched Ahead, Announced the Print
+ Of A South American Tiger.'
+ </div><!--IMAGE END-->
+
+ <p>The path along the river-sands would have been voluntarily
+ followed by all the more irresponsible portion of the party,
+ notwithstanding the blinding heats, on account of its smoother
+ footing. The cascarilleros, however, objected that its tufts of
+ canes and passifloras offered no promise for their researches.
+ A compromise was effected. The porters, under the command of
+ Juan of Aragon, were allowed to follow the shore, and were
+ armed with a supply of fish-hooks to induce them to add from
+ time to time to the alarmingly diminished supply of provisions.
+ The grandees of the party followed the Bolivians, whose
+ specialty entitled them to control practically the direction of
+ the route, and plunged into the woods to botanize, to explore
+ and to search for game. A system of conversation by means of
+ shouts and pistol-shots was established between the two
+ divisions. The next night proved the wisdom of this
+ bifurcation. The united booty of earth, air and water, under
+ the form of a squirrel, a pair of toucans and a variety of
+ fish, afforded a meal which the porters described as <i>comida
+ opipara</i> or a sumptuous festival. Lulled and comforted by
+ the sensation which a contented stomach wafts toward the brain,
+ the explorers, after washing their hands and rinsing their
+ mouths at the riverside, betook themselves to a cheerful repose
+ <i>sub jove</i>, the locality offering no reeds of the
+ articulated species with which to construct a shelter.</p>
+
+ <p>The party, then, betook themselves to slumber with unusual
+ contentment, repeating the splendid supper in their dreams,
+ with the addition of every famous wine that Oporto and Rheims
+ could dispense, when they were awakened by a sudden and
+ terrible storm. A waterspout stooped over the forest and sucked
+ up a mass of crackling branches. The camp-fire hissed and went
+ out in a fume of smoke. A continuity of thunder, far off at
+ first, but approaching nearer and nearer, kept up a constant
+ and increasing fusillade, to whose reports was soon added the
+ voice of the Cconi, lashed in its bed and bellowing like the
+ sea. The surprising tumult went on in a <i>crescendo</i>. The
+ hardly-interrupted charges of the lightning gave to the eye a
+ strange vision of flying woods and soaring branches. Startled,
+ trembling and sitting bolt upright, the adventurers asked if
+ their last hour were come. The rain undertook to answer in
+ spinning down upon their heads drops that were like bullets,
+ and which for some time were taken for hail. Fearing to be
+ maimed or blinded as they sat, the party crowded together,
+ placing themselves back to back; and, unable to lay their heads
+ under their wings like the birds, sheltered them upon their
+ knees under the protection of their crossed arms. The fearful
+ deluge of heated shot lasted until morning. Then, as if in
+ laughter, the sun came radiantly out, the landscape readjusted
+ its disheveled beauties, and the ground, covered with boughs
+ distributed by the whirlwind, greedily drank in the waters from
+ heaven. Soon there remained nothing of the memorable tempest
+ but the diamonds falling in measured cadence from the refreshed
+ and stiffened leaves.</p>
+
+ <p>Up to sunrise the unfortunates rested stoically silent,
+ their knees in their mouths, and receiving the visitation like
+ a group of statuary. The rain ceasing with the same promptitude
+ with which it had risen, they raised their heads and looked
+ each other in the face, like the enemies over the fire in
+ Byron's <i>Dream</i>. Each countenance was blue, and decorated
+ with long flat locks of adhesive hair. The teeth of the whole
+ party were chattering like a concert of castanets. The sun,
+ like a practical joker, laughed ironically at the general
+ picture.</p>
+
+ <p>The first hours of morning were consecrated to a general
+ examination of the stores, especially the precious specimens of
+ cinchona. Bundles were restrapped, the damp provisions laid out
+ in the sun, and the clothing of the party, even to the most
+ intimate garment, was taken down to the river to be refreshed
+ and furbished up. A common disaster had created a common cause
+ amongst the whole troop, and with one accord
+ everybody&mdash;peons, mozos, interpreters, bark-strippers and
+ gentlemen&mdash;set in motion a grand cleaning-up day.
+ Napoleon-like, they washed their dirty linen in the family.
+ Whoever had seen the strangers coming and going from the beach
+ to the woods, clothed in most abbreviated fashion, and seeming
+ as familiar to the uniform as if they had always worn it under
+ the charitable mantle of the woods, would have taken them for a
+ savage tribe in the midst of its encampment. It is probable
+ they were so seen.</p>
+
+ <p>Thanks to the intense heat of the sun-shine, the garments
+ and baggage of the expedition were quickly dried. The first
+ were donned, the last was loaded on the porters, and the line
+ of march was taken up. Up to noon the road lay along the
+ blazing sands under a sun of fire. All the members of the party
+ felt fresh and hardy after the involuntary bath, except one of
+ the Indians, who was affected with a kind of ophthalmia. This
+ attack, which Mr. Marcoy attributed partly to the glare, partly
+ to the wet, and partly to a singular hobby peculiar to the
+ individual of sleeping with his eyes wide open, was of no long
+ duration. The pain which he complained of disappeared with a
+ few hours of exercise and with the determination he showed in
+ staring straight at the god of day, who, as if in memory of the
+ worship formerly extended toward him in the country, deigned to
+ serve as oculist for the sufferer. A little before sunset halt
+ was made for the night-camp in the centre of a beach protected
+ by clumps of reeds in three quarters of the wind. The Indian
+ porters, despatched for fish and firewood, returned suddenly
+ with a frightened mien to say that they had fallen into the
+ midst of a camp of savages. The white men quickly rejoined them
+ at the spot indicated, where they found a single hut in ruins,
+ made of reeds which appeared to have been cut for the
+ construction some fortnight before, and strewn with
+ fire-brands, banana skins and the tail of a large fish. Pepe
+ Garcia, consulted on these indications, explained that it was
+ in reality the camping-place of some of the savage Siriniris,
+ but that the narrowness of the hut seemed to indicate that not
+ more than two of the Indians, probably a man and woman, had
+ resided there during a short fishing-excursion.</p>
+
+ <p>This discovery cast a shade over the countenances of the
+ porters. After having collected the provisions necessary for a
+ slender supper, they drew apart, and, while cooking was going
+ on, began to converse with each other in a low voice. No notice
+ was taken of their behavior, however, though it would have
+ required little imagination to guess the subject of their
+ parliament. The tired eyes of the explorers were already
+ closed, while their ears, more alert, could hear the confused
+ murmur proceeding from the Indians' quarter, where the
+ disposition seemed to be to prolong the watch
+ indefinitely.</p><a name="image-0003"
+ id="image-0003"><!--IMG--></a>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/0219.jpg"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/0219.jpg"
+ alt="'Napoleon-like, They Washed Their Dirty Linen in The Family'" />
+ </a> 'Napoleon-like, They Washed Their Dirty Linen in The
+ Family'
+ </div><!--IMAGE END-->
+
+ <p>The dark hours filed past, and jocund day, according to
+ Shakespeare and Romeo, stood tiptoe on the mountain-tops of
+ Camanti and Basiri, when the travelers were awakened by a
+ fierce and terrible cry. Lifting their heads in astonishment,
+ they perceived the faithful Pepe Garcia, his face disfigured
+ with rage, and his fist shaking vigorously in the direction of
+ the Indians, who sat lowering and sullen in their places.
+ Aragon and the cascarilleros, collected around the chief
+ interpreter, far from trying to calm his anger, appeared to
+ feed it by their suggestions. An explanation of the scene was
+ demanded. Eight of the bearers, it appeared, had deserted,
+ leaving to their comrades the pleasure of watching over the
+ packages of cinchona, but assuming for their part the charge of
+ a good fraction of the provisions, which they had disappeared
+ with for the relief of their fellow-porters. This copious
+ bleeding of the larder drew from Colonel Perez a terrible oath,
+ and occasioned a more vivid sentiment in the entrails of Marcoy
+ than the defection of the men. If the evil was grand, the
+ remedy was correspondingly difficult. Indolent or mercurial at
+ pleasure, the Indians had doubtless threaded the woods with
+ winged feet, and were now far away. Mr. Marcoy proposed
+ therefore to continue the march without them, but to set down a
+ heavy account of bastinadoes to their credit when they should
+ turn up again at Marcapata. This proposition, as it erred on
+ the side of mercy, was unanimously rejected, and a
+ scouting-party was ordered in pursuit, consisting of the
+ bark-hunters and Juan of Aragon, to whom for the occasion Pepe
+ Garcia confided his remarkable
+ fowling-piece.</p><a name="image-0004"
+ id="image-0004"><!--IMG--></a>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:75%;">
+ <a href="images/0220.jpg"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/0220.jpg"
+ alt="'Aragon and his Men Fell Upon the Deserters Without Mercy.'" />
+ </a> 'Aragon and his Men Fell Upon the Deserters Without
+ Mercy.'
+ </div><!--IMAGE END-->
+
+ <p>In the afternoon the extemporized police reappeared. The
+ fugitives had been found tranquilly sitting on the banks of the
+ river, distending their abdomens with the stolen preserves and
+ chocolate. Aragon and his men fell upon the deserters without
+ mercy. The former, battering away at them with the stock of his
+ gun, and the latter, exercising upon their shoulders whatever
+ they possessed in the way of lassoes, axe-handles and
+ sabre-blades, maintained the argument effectually for some time
+ in this way, and did not descend to questions until muscular
+ fatigue caused them to desist. The catechism subsequently put
+ to the porters elicited the reply, from the spokesman of the
+ recusants, that they were tired of being afraid of the wild
+ Indians; that they objected to marching into the dens of
+ tigers; that, perceiving their rations diminished from day to
+ day, they had imagined the time not far distant when the same
+ would be withdrawn altogether. It was curious, as it seemed to
+ Marcoy when the argument was rehearsed to him presently, that
+ the fellows made no complaint of being footsore, overcharged
+ with burdens or conducted into paths too difficult for them. A
+ lurking admiration for the vigor with which, after all, they
+ played their crushing part of beasts of burden, procured them
+ immunity from further punishment after their return. Their
+ bivouacs were simply watched on the succeeding nights by
+ Bolivian sentinels.</p>
+
+ <p>After a few minutes allowed the strayed sheep to rub their
+ bruises, the march was continued. The afternoon afforded a
+ succession of the same sandy riverbanks, dressed with reeds,
+ false maize, calceolarias and purple passion-flowers, and
+ yielding for sole booty a brace of wild black ducks, and an
+ opossum holding in her pouch five saucy and scolding little
+ ones. The natural civet employed as a cosmetic by this animal
+ forbade the notion of using it for food, and it was thrown with
+ its family into the river, after being deprived of its glossy
+ skin.</p>
+
+ <p>As evening approached, and as all eyes were exploring the
+ banks for a suitable camping-ground, a spacious and even beach
+ was fixed upon as offering all the requisite conveniences. It
+ was agreed to halt there. Attaining the locality, however, they
+ were amazed to find all the traces of a previous occupation.
+ Several sheds, formed of bamboo hurdles set up against the
+ ground with sticks, like traps, were grouped together. Under
+ each was a hearth, a simple excavation, two feet across and a
+ few inches deep, and filled with ashes. A few arrows, feathers
+ and rude pieces of pottery were scattered around. They greeted
+ these Indian relics as Crusoe did the footprints of the
+ savages. Nor was it more reassuring to observe, among other
+ callers like themselves who had left their visiting-cards at
+ the doors since the departure of the proprietors, the
+ sign-manual of jaguars and tapirs, whose footprints were
+ plainly visible on the gravel.</p>
+
+ <p>A close examination was made of every detail pertaining to
+ the huts and their accessories, and the interpreters were asked
+ if it would be prudent to encamp in a spot thus leased in
+ advance. Pepe Garcia and Aragon were of opinion that it would
+ be better to pass the night there, assuring their employers
+ that there would be no danger in sleeping among the teraphim of
+ the savages, provided that nothing was touched or displaced.
+ Their motion was promptly adopted, to the great discomfiture of
+ the porters, who were poised on one foot ready for flight. A
+ salute of five shots was fired, with a vague intention of
+ giving any listeners the highest possible opinion of the white
+ explorers as a military power. An enormous fire was kindled,
+ sentinels were posted, and the party turned in, taking care,
+ however, during the whole night to close but one eye at a
+ time.</p><a name="image-0005"
+ id="image-0005"><!--IMG--></a>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/0222.jpg"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/0222.jpg"
+ alt="'They Greeted These Indian Relics As Crusoe Did The Footprints of the Savages.'" />
+ </a> 'They Greeted These Indian Relics As Crusoe Did The
+ Footprints of the Savages.'
+ </div><!--IMAGE END-->
+
+ <p>Day commenced to blush, when all ears were assaulted by a
+ concerted howl, proceeding from behind a bed of canes on the
+ other side of the river. "<i>Alerta! los Chunchos!</i>" cried
+ the sentinel. The three words produced a startling effect: the
+ porters sprang up like frightened deer; Mr. Marcoy grasped a
+ sheaf of pencils and a box of water-colors with a warlike air,
+ and the colonel's lips were crisped into a singular smile,
+ indicative of lively emotions. Hardly were the travelers
+ clothed and armed when the reeds parted with a rattling noise,
+ and three nude Indians, sepia-colored and crowned with tufts of
+ hair like horses' tails, leaped out like jacks-in-the-box. At
+ sight of the party standing to receive them they redoubled
+ their clamor, then, flourishing their arms and legs and turning
+ continually round, they gradually revolved into the presence of
+ the explorers. They selected as chiefs and sachems of the party
+ such as bore weapons, being the colonel, Marcoy and the two
+ interpreters. These they clasped in a warm, fulsome embrace:
+ they were smeared from head to foot with rocoa (crude arnotta),
+ and their passage through the river having dissolved this
+ pigment, they printed themselves off, in this act of amity,
+ upon the persons and clothing of their hosts. While the white
+ men, with a very bad grace, were cleaning off these tokens of
+ natural affection, the new-comers went on to present their
+ civilities all around. Two of the porters they recognized at
+ once, with their eagle eyesight, from having relieved them of
+ their shirts while the latter were working out some penalty at
+ the governor's farm of Sausipata, and proceeded to claim a warm
+ acquaintance on that basis; but the bearers, with equally
+ lively memories of the affront, responded simply with a frown
+ and the epithet of <i>Sua-sua</i>&mdash;double thief.</p>
+
+ <p>Pepe Garcia undertook a colloquy, and Aragon, not to be
+ behindhand, flashed a few words across the conversation, right
+ and left as it were, his expressions appearing to be in a
+ different tongue from those used by the chief interpreter, and
+ both utterly without perceptible resemblance to the rolling
+ consonants and gutturals of the savages. Marcoy imbibed a
+ strong impression that the only terms understood in common were
+ the words of Spanish with which the palaver was thickly
+ interlarded. This was the first time the interpreters were put
+ on their mettle in a strictly professional sense, and the test
+ was not altogether triumphant. However, by a careful raising of
+ the voice in all difficult passages, and a wild, expressive
+ pantomime, an understanding was arrived at.</p>
+
+ <p>The visitors belonged to the tribe of Siriniris, inhabiting
+ the space comprised between the valleys of Ocongate and
+ Ollachea, and extending eastwardly as far as the twelfth
+ degree. They lived at peace with their neighbors, the
+ Huat-chipayris and the Pukiris. For several days the reports of
+ the Christian guns (<i>tasa-tasa</i>) had advertised them of
+ the presence of white men in the valley, and, curious to judge
+ of their numbers, they had approached. They had formed a
+ cunning escort to the party, always faithful but never seen,
+ since the encampment at Maniri: every camping-ground since that
+ particular bivouac they faithfully described. They were, of
+ course, in particular and direful need of <i>sirutas</i> and
+ <i>bambas</i> (knives and hatchets), but their fears of the
+ <i>tasa-tasa</i>, or guns, was still stronger than their
+ desires, and their courage had not, until they saw the
+ strangers domiciled as guests in their own habitations,
+ attained the firmness and consistency necessary for a personal
+ approach. The three dancing ambassadors were ministers
+ plenipotentiary on the part of their tribe, located in a bamboo
+ metropolis five miles off.</p>
+
+ <p>The white men could not well avoid laying down their
+ <i>tasa-tasa</i> and disbursing <i>sirutas</i> and
+ <i>bambas</i>. The savages, after this triumph of diplomacy,
+ suddenly turned, and, thrusting their fingers in their mouths,
+ emitted a shrill note, which had the effect of enchanting the
+ forest of rushes across the river, and causing it to give birth
+ to a whole ballet of naked coryphei. Nine men, seven women and
+ three dogs composed the spectacle, of which the masculine part,
+ the human and the canine, proceeded to swim the stream and
+ fraternize with the strangers. The women rested on the bank
+ like river-nymphs: their costume was somewhat less prudish than
+ that of the men, the coat of rocoa being confined to their
+ faces, which were further decorated with joints of reed thrust
+ through the nose and ears. A glance of curiosity darted across
+ the water by the colonel was surprised in its flight by the
+ ambassadors, who addressed a hasty word or two to their ladies:
+ the latter, with one quick and cat-like gesture, whipped off
+ each a branch of the nearest foliage, and were dressed in a
+ single instant.</p>
+
+ <p>To reward all these vociferous mendicants with the
+ invaluable cutlery was hardly prudent. Seeing the hesitation of
+ their visitors, the savages adopted other tactics. Hurling
+ themselves across the river, they quickly reappeared, armed
+ with all the temptations they could think of to induce the
+ strangers to barter. The scene of these savages coming to
+ market was a picturesque one. Entering the water, provided with
+ their objects of exchange, which they held high above their
+ heads, and swimming with the right arm only, they began to cut
+ the river diagonally. The lifting of the waves and the dash of
+ spray almost concealed the file of dusky heads. Nothing could
+ be plainly seen but the left arms, standing out of the water as
+ stiff and inflexible as so many bars of bronze, relieved
+ against the silvery brightness of the water. These advancing
+ arms were adorned with the material of traffic&mdash;bird-skins
+ of variegated colors, bows and arrows, and live tamed parrots
+ standing upon perches of bamboo. The white spectators could not
+ but admire the native vigor, elegance and promptitude of their
+ motions as they rose from the water like Tritons, and, throwing
+ their treasures down in a heap, bounded forward to give their
+ visitors the conventional signals of friendship. A rapid
+ bargain was concluded, in which the sylvan booty of the wild
+ men (not forgetting the prudent exaction of their weapons) was
+ entirely made over to the custody of the explorers in exchange
+ for a few Birmingham knives worth fourpence each.</p>
+
+ <p>However curious and amicable might be their new relations
+ with the savages, the party were desirous to put an end to them
+ as soon as possible. Pepe Garcia announced that the pale
+ chiefs, wishing to resume their march, were about to separate
+ from them. This decision appeared to be unpleasant or
+ distressful in their estimation, and they tried to reverse it
+ by all sorts of arguments. No answer being volunteered, they
+ shouted to their women to await them, and betook themselves to
+ walking with the party. One of the three ambassadors, a
+ graceful rogue of twenty-five, marked all over with rocoa and
+ lote, so as to earn for himself the nickname of "the Panther,"
+ gamboled and caracoled in front of the procession as if to give
+ it an entertainment. His two comrades had garroted with their
+ arms the neck of the chief interpreter: another held Juan of
+ Aragon by the skirt of his blouse, and regulated his steps by
+ those of the youth. This accord of barbarism and civilization
+ had in it something decidedly graceful, and rather pathetic: if
+ ever the language natural to man was found, the medium in
+ circulation before our sickly machinery of speech came to be
+ invented, it was in this concert of persuasive action and
+ tender cooing notes. The main body of the Siriniris marched
+ pellmell along with the porters, whom this vicinage made
+ exceedingly uncomfortable, and who were perspiring in great
+ drops.</p>
+
+ <p>At the commencement of a wood the whites embraced the
+ occasion to take formal leave of their new acquaintances. As
+ they endeavored to turn their backs upon them they were at once
+ surrounded by the whole band, crying and gesticulating, and
+ opposing their departure with a sort of determined
+ playfulness.</p>
+
+ <p>At the same time a word often repeated, the word
+ <i>Huatinmio</i>, began to enter largely into their
+ conversation, and piqued the curiosity of the historiographer.
+ Marcoy begged the interpreter to procure him the explanation of
+ this perpetual shibboleth. Half by signs, half in the polyglot
+ jargon which he had been employing with the Siriniris, Garcia
+ managed to understand that the word in question was the name of
+ their village, situated at a small distance and in a direction
+ which they indicated. In this retreat, they said, no
+ inhabitants remained but women, children and old men, the rest
+ of the braves being absent on a chase. They proposed a visit to
+ their capital, where the strangers, they said, honored and
+ cherished by the tribe, might pass many enviable days.</p>
+
+ <p>The proposed excursion, which would cause a loss of
+ considerable time and a deflection from the intended route, was
+ declined in courteous terms by Marcoy through the
+ interpretation of Pepe Garcia. Among civilized folk this urbane
+ refusal would have sufficed, but the savages, taking such a
+ reply as a challenge to verbal warfare, returned to the charge
+ with increased tenacity. It were hard to say what natural logic
+ they put in practice or what sylvan persuasions they wrought
+ by, but their peculiar mode of stroking the white men's backs
+ with their hands, and the softer and still softer inflections
+ which they introduced into their voices, would have melted
+ hearts of marble. In brief, the civilized portion adopted the
+ more weakly part and allowed themselves to be led by the savage
+ portion.</p>
+
+ <p>The colonel and Pepe Garcia were still more easily persuaded
+ than Mr. Marcoy, and only awaited his adhesion. When it was
+ finally announced the Siriniris renewed their gambols and
+ uttered shouts of delight. They then took the head of the
+ excursion. A singularity in their guides, which quickly
+ attracted the notice of the explorers, was the perfect
+ indifference with which they took either the clearings or the
+ thickets in their path. Where the strangers were afraid of
+ tearing their garments, these unprotected savages had no care
+ whatever for their skins. It is true that their ingenuity in
+ gliding through the labyrinth resembled magic. However the
+ forest might bristle with undergrowth, they never thought of
+ breaking down obstacles or of cutting them, as the equally
+ practiced Bolivians did, with a knife. They contented
+ themselves with putting aside with one hand the tufts of
+ foliage as if they had been curtains or draperies, and that
+ with an easy decision of gesture and an elegance of attitude
+ which are hardly found outside of certain natural tribes.</p>
+
+ <p>The city of Huatinmio proved to be a group of seven large
+ sheds perched among plaintains and bananas, divided into
+ stalls, and affording shelter for a hundred individuals. The
+ most sordid destitution&mdash;if ignorance of comfort can be
+ called destitution&mdash;reigned everywhere around. The women
+ were especially hideous, and on receipt of presents of small
+ bells and large needles became additionally disagreeable in
+ their antics of gratitude. The bells were quickly inserted in
+ their ears, and soon the whole village was in
+ tintinnabulation.</p>
+
+ <p>A night was passed in the hospitality of these barbarians,
+ who vacated their largest cabin for their guests. A repast was
+ served, consisting of stewed monkey: no salt was used in the
+ cookery, but on the other hand a dose of pimento was thrown in,
+ which brought tears to the eyes of the strangers and made them
+ run to the water-jar as if to save their lives. The evening was
+ spent in a general conversation with the Siriniris, who were
+ completely mystified by the form and properties of a candle
+ which Mr. Marcoy drew from his baggage and ignited. The wild
+ men passed it from hand to hand, examining it, and singeing
+ themselves in turn. Still another marvel was the sheet of paper
+ on which the artist essayed a portrait of one of his hosts. The
+ finished sketch did not appear to attract them at all, or to
+ raise in their minds the faintest association with the human
+ form, but the texture and whiteness of the sheet excited their
+ lively admiration, and they passed it from one to another with
+ many exclamations of wonder. Meantime, a number of questions
+ were suggested and proposed through the interpreter.</p>
+
+ <p>The formality of marriage among the Siriniris was found to
+ be quite unknown; the most rudimentary idea of divine worship
+ could not be discovered; the treatment of the aged was shown to
+ be contemptuous and neglectful in the extreme; and the lines of
+ demarcation with the beasts seemed to be but feebly traced.
+ Finally, Mr. Marcoy begged the interpreter to propound the
+ delicate inquiry whether, among the viands with which they
+ nourished or had formerly nourished themselves, human flesh had
+ found a place. Garcia hesitated, and at first declined to push
+ the interrogation, but after some persuasion consented. The
+ Siriniris were not in the least shocked at the question, and
+ answered that the flesh of man, especially in infancy, was a
+ delicious food, far better than the monkey, the tapir or the
+ peccary; that their nation, in the days of its power,
+ frequently used it at the great feasts; but that the difficulty
+ of procuring such a rarity had increased until they were now
+ forced to strike it from their bill of fare.</p>
+
+ <p>The night passed without disturbance, and the next day's
+ parting was accompanied by reiterated requests for a repetition
+ of the visit. The Panther, who since their arrival had
+ oppressed the travelers with a multitude of officious
+ attentions, escorted them into the woods, and there took leave
+ of them with a gesture of his hand, relieving their eyes of his
+ slippery, snake-like robe of spots. A knife from their stores,
+ slung round his neck like a locket, smote his breast at each
+ step as he danced backward, and a couple of large fish-hooks
+ glanced in his ears.</p>
+
+ <p>With a feeling of relief and satisfied curiosity the
+ exploring party left behind them the traces of these children
+ of Nature, and returned toward the river. The cascarilleros,
+ all for their business, had regretted the waste of time, and
+ now betook themselves to an examination of the woods with all
+ their energy. After several hours of march their efforts were
+ crowned with success. Eusebio presently rejoined his employers,
+ showing leaves and berries of the <i>Cinchona scrobiculata</i>
+ and <i>pubescens</i>: the peons, on their side, had discovered
+ isolated specimens of the <i>Calisaya</i>, which, joined with
+ those found on Mount Camanti, indicated an extended belt of
+ that precious species. This was not the best. A veritable
+ treasure which they had unearthed, worth all the others put
+ together, was a line of those violet cinchonas which the native
+ exporters call <i>Cascarilla morada</i>, and the botanists
+ <i>Cinchona Boliviana</i>. The trees of this kind were grouped
+ in threes and fours, and extended for half a mile. This
+ repeated proof that the most valuable of all the cinchonas,
+ together with nearly every one of the others, were to be
+ discovered in a small radius along the valley of the Cconi,
+ filled the explorers with triumph, and demonstrated beyond a
+ doubt the sagacity of Don Santo Domingo in organizing the
+ expedition.</p>
+
+ <p>The purpose and intention of the journey was now abundantly
+ fulfilled. Had the travelers rested satisfied with the liberal
+ indications they had found, and consented to place themselves
+ between the haunts of the savages and the abodes of
+ civilization, with a tendency and determination toward the
+ latter, they might have returned with safety as with glory. The
+ estimate made by Eusebio, however, of the trend or direction of
+ the calisaya groves, induced him to forsake the bed of the
+ Cconi, and strike south-eastwardly, so as to cross the Ollachea
+ and the Ayapata.</p>
+
+ <p>"But the mountains are disappearing," hazarded Mr. Marcoy.
+ "Will not the cinchonas disappear with them?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh," answered the majordomo, like a pedagogue to a
+ confident school-boy, "the se&ntilde;or knows better how to put
+ ink or color on a sheet of paper than how to judge of these
+ things. The plain, the <i>campo llano</i>, is far enough to the
+ east. Before we should see the disappearance of the mountains,
+ we should have to cross as many hills and ravines as we have
+ left behind us."</p>
+
+ <p>"What do you think of doing, then?" naturally demanded
+ Marcoy, who had long since begun to feel that the expedition
+ had but one chief, and that was the sepia-colored cascarillero
+ from Bolivia,</p>
+
+ <p>"Everything and nothing," answered Eusebio.</p>
+
+ <p>These enigmas always carry the day. The apparatus of march
+ was once more set in motion toward the adjacent water-sheds.
+ After a considerable journey&mdash;rewarded, it must be said,
+ with a succession of cinchona discoveries&mdash;they halted
+ near a clearing in the forest, where large heaps of stones and
+ pebbles, arranged in semicircles, attracted their attention.
+ The cascarilleros explained this appearance as due to former
+ arrangements for gold-washing in an old river-bed, the San
+ Gavan or the Ayapata, that had now changed its locality.</p>
+
+ <p>While examining the unusual appearance an abominable clamor
+ burst from the woods around, and a band of Siriniris appeared,
+ led by a lusty ruffian crowned with oriole feathers, whom the
+ travelers recognized as having been among their previous
+ acquaintances.</p>
+
+ <p>The encounter was very disagreeable, but the strangers
+ determined to make the best of it. The manner of this band of
+ Indians was somewhat different from that of the others. They
+ brought nothing for barter, and had an indescribably coarse and
+ hardy style of behavior.</p>
+
+ <p>The travelers determined to buy a little information, if
+ nothing better, with their knives and fish-hooks. Garcia was
+ accordingly instructed to demand the meaning of the heaps and
+ causeways of stones. The savages laughed at first, but finally
+ informed the visitors that the constructions which puzzled them
+ so had been made by people of their own race many years ago,
+ for the purpose of gathering gold from the river which used to
+ run along there, but which now flowed seven miles off.</p>
+
+ <p>This information was dear to the historic instinct of
+ Marcoy. He spoke, by his usual proxy, to the Indian of the
+ oriole, commanding him not to begin every explanation by
+ laughing, as he had been doing, but to answer intelligently,
+ promising a reward of several knives. The savage exchanged a
+ rapid glance with his fellows, and then he and they stood up as
+ stiff and mute as the trees. Marcoy then asked him if he had
+ never heard his father or his grandfather speak of the great
+ city of San Gavan, built hereabouts formerly by the Spanish
+ chevaliers, and which the Caranga and Suchimani Indians from
+ the Inambari River had destroyed by fire.</p>
+
+ <p>The evident recognition of this legend by the savages, and
+ their rapid exchange among themselves of the words <i>sacapa
+ huayris Ipa&ntilde;os</i>, induced Marcoy to ask if they could
+ guide them to the site of the former city. They answered that a
+ day's march would be sufficient, and pointed with their arms in
+ the direction of north-north-west.</p>
+
+ <p>The temptation to see the place whose golden renown, after
+ having made the tour of the American continent, had reached
+ Spain and the world at large, was too strong to be resisted.
+ Colonel Perez, besides the magic attraction which the mention
+ of gold had for him, felt his national pride touched by the
+ idea of a place where his compatriots had added such
+ magnificence to the Spanish name, and gained so many ingots of
+ gold by paddling in the streams. The cascarilleros were
+ delighted to extend their journey, in hopes of yet larger
+ discoveries. As for the porters, since the manifestations of
+ the savages they clung to the party with as much anxiety as
+ they had ever shown to escape from it.</p>
+
+ <p>In 1767 the city of San Gavan, remaining intact amid the
+ ruin of all its neighbors, was the sole disburser of the riches
+ of the Caravaya Valley. The gold-dust, collected throughout the
+ whole territory on a government monopoly, was brought thither
+ upon the backs of Indians, melted into ingots, and distributed
+ to Lima and the world at large. On the night of the 15th and
+ 16th of December in that year the wealthy city was fired by the
+ Carangas and the Suchimanis, and all the inhabitants slain with
+ arrows or clubs. The first lords of the soil had resumed their
+ rights.</p>
+
+ <p>When the news of the event was brought to Lima, the viceroy
+ of the period, Antonio Amat, swore on a piece of the true cross
+ to exterminate every Indian in Peru. It is to the persuasions
+ of his favorite, Mariquita Gallegas, that the preservation of
+ the native tribes from a bloody extirpation is due. This woman,
+ <i>La Perichola</i>, whose caricatured likeness we see in the
+ most agreeable of Offenbach's operas, and whose deeds of mercy
+ and edifying end in a convent entitle her to some charitable
+ consideration, persuaded her royal lover to operate on the
+ natives with missionaries and teachers rather than with fire
+ and sword. Antonio Amat yielded, and the Indians have
+ survived.</p><a name="image-0006"
+ id="image-0006"><!--IMG--></a>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:70%;">
+ <a href="images/0224.jpg"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/0224.jpg"
+ alt="'Another Savage Had Found a Pair of Linen Pantaloons.'" />
+ </a> 'Another Savage Had Found a Pair of Linen Pantaloons.'
+ </div><!--IMAGE END-->
+
+ <p>Let no traveler go to South America and cross the Andes with
+ the idea of unearthing a Nineveh or a Babylon on the site of
+ San Gavan. The emissaries of Don Santo Domingo were quickly
+ standing, among the grinning and amused Indians, on the
+ locality of the Golden Depot of San Gavan. But Nature had
+ thoroughly reclaimed her own, and the place, indicated again
+ and again by the savages with absolute unanimity, showed
+ nothing but mounds of fern and moss under canopies of forest
+ trees.</p>
+
+ <p>A day's rest and a sketch or two were consecrated by Marcoy
+ to this historic spot, the grave of a civilization. It had been
+ well if he had restrained his feelings of romance, and betaken
+ himself with his companions to the homeward track.</p>
+
+ <p>As the explorers were breakfasting in the morning on a
+ squirrel and a couple of birds shot among the vanished streets
+ of San Gavan, a disagreeable incident supervened. The wild
+ Indians had disappeared over-night. But now, seemingly born
+ instantaneously from the trees, a throng of Siriniris burst
+ upon the scene, rushing up to the travelers, straining them
+ repeatedly in a rude embrace, then leaving them, then
+ assaulting them again, and accompanying every contact with the
+ eternal cry, <i>Siruta inta menea</i>&mdash;"Give me a knife."
+ Each member of the troop had now six savages at his heels, and
+ they were not those of the day before, but a new and rougher
+ band. The chiefs of the party rushed together and brandished
+ their muskets. This forced the savages to retire, but gave to
+ the rencounter that hostile air which, in consideration of the
+ disparity of numbers, ought at all hazards to have been
+ avoided. The wild men quickly formed a circle around the
+ artillery. The latter, fearing for their porters and the
+ precious baggage, leaped through this circle and joined their
+ servants, making believe to cock their fire-arms. Upon this the
+ Indians, half afraid of the guns, vanished into the woods,
+ first picking up whatever clothing and utensils they could lay
+ their hands on. In an instant they were showing these trophies
+ to their rightful owners from a safe distance, laughing as if
+ they would split their sides. One of the naked rascals had
+ seized a flannel undershirt of the colonel's, which was drying
+ on a branch. His efforts to introduce his great feet into the
+ sleeves were excruciating. Another savage had found a pair of
+ linen pantaloons, which he was endeavoring to put on like a
+ coat, appearing much embarrassed with the posterior portion,
+ which completely masked his face. Aragon had seen a young
+ reprobate of his own age make off with a pair of socks of his
+ property. Detecting the rogue half hidden by a tree, the mozo
+ made a sortie, seized the Indian, and by a violent shake
+ brought the property out of his mouth, where it had been
+ concealed as in a natural pocket.</p>
+
+ <p>The travelers immediately threw themselves into marching
+ order and took up their line of route. The savages followed. At
+ the first obstacle, a mass of matted trees, they easily
+ rejoined the party of whites.</p>
+
+ <p>Then, for the first time, the idea of their power seemed to
+ strike them, and they precipitated themselves upon the porters,
+ who took to flight, rolling from under their packs like animals
+ of burden. In a moment every article of baggage, every knife
+ and weapon, was seized, and the red-skins, singing and howling,
+ were making off through the woods. Among them was now seen the
+ Siriniri with orioles' feathers, who must have guided them to
+ their prey.</p>
+
+ <p>The expedition was pillaged, and pillaged as a joke. The
+ thieves were heard laughing as they scampered off like deer
+ through the woods.</p>
+
+ <p>It was hard to realize at once the gravity of the
+ misfortune. No one was hurt, no one was insulted. But
+ provisions, clothing, articles of exchange and weapons were all
+ gone, except such arms and ammunition as the travelers carried
+ on their persons. A collection of cinchonas was in possession
+ of one of the Bolivians, though it represented but a fraction
+ of the species discovered. The besiegers, however, had
+ disappeared, and a westerly march was taken up. Good time was
+ made that day, and a heavy night's sleep was the consequence.
+ With the morning light came the well-remembered and hateful
+ cry, and the little army found itself surrounded by a throng of
+ merry naked demons, among whom were some who had not profited
+ by the distribution of the spoils. At the magic word
+ <i>siruta</i> all these new-comers rushed in a mass upon the
+ white men. Marcoy managed to slip his fine ivory-handled
+ machete within his trowser leg, but every other cutting tool
+ disappeared as if by magic from the possession of the
+ explorers. The shooting-utensils the savages, believing them
+ haunted, would not touch. Then, half irritated at the
+ exhaustion of the booty, the amiable children of Nature burst
+ out into open derision. The artists of the tribe, filling their
+ palms with rocoa, and moistening the same with saliva, went up
+ to their late patrons and began to decorate their faces. The
+ latter, judging patience their best policy, sat in silence
+ while the delicate fancy of the savages expended itself in
+ arabesques and flourishes. Perez and Aragon had their eyes
+ surrounded with red spectacles. The face of Marcoy, covered
+ with a heavy beard, only allowed room for a "W" on the
+ forehead, and Pepe Garcia was quit for a set of interfacings
+ like a checkerboard. Having thus signed their marks upon their
+ visitors, the aborigines retired, catching up here and there a
+ stray ball of cord or a strip of beef, saluting with the hand,
+ and vanishing into the woods with the repeated compliment,
+ <i>Eminiki</i>&mdash;"I am off."</p>
+
+ <p>The victims rested motionless for fifteen minutes: then
+ pellmell, through the thickest of the brush and down the
+ steepest of the hill, blotted out under gigantic ferns and
+ covered by umbrageous vines, stealing along water-courses and
+ skirting the sides of the mountains, they rushed precipitately
+ westward.</p>
+
+ <p>Two months after the priest of Marcapata had dismissed with
+ his benediction the party of confident and enthusiastic
+ explorers, he received again his strayed flock, but this time
+ in rags, armed with ammunitionless guns and one poor knife,
+ wasted by hunger, baked by the sun, and tattooed like
+ Polynesians by the briers and insects. The good man could not
+ repress a tear. "Ah, my son," said he as he clasped Marcoy's
+ hand, "see what it costs to go hunting the cascarilla in the
+ land of the infidels!"</p>
+
+ <p>The explorations started by Don Juan Sanz de Santo Domingo
+ came to profitable result, but not to his advantage. Three
+ weeks after the pioneers arrived again in Cuzco, Don Juan
+ started another expedition, on a much larger scale, to
+ accomplish the working of the cinchona valleys, under charge of
+ the same Bolivians, who could make like a bee for every tree
+ they had discovered. A detachment of soldiers was to protect
+ the party, and the working force was more than double. Finally,
+ the night before the intended start, the Bolivian
+ cascarilleros, with their examinador, disappeared together. It
+ is probable that Don Juan's scheme, nursed, according to
+ custom, with too much publicity, had attracted the attention of
+ the merchants of Cuzco, who had found it profitable to buy off
+ the bark-searchers for their own interest.</p>
+
+ <p>The crash of this immense enterprise was too much for Don
+ Juan. Threatened with creditors, Jews, <i>escribanos</i> and
+ the police, he retired to a silver-mine he was opening in the
+ province of Abancay. This mine, in successful operation, he
+ depended on for satisfying his creditors. He found it choked
+ up, destroyed with a blast of powder by some enemy. Unable to
+ bear the disappointment, Don Juan blew out his brains in the
+ office belonging to his mine. A month afterward, Don Eugenic
+ Mendoza y Jara, the bishop of Cuzco, sent a couple of Indians
+ for the body, with instructions to throw it into a ditch: the
+ men attached a rope to the feet and dragged it to a ravine,
+ where dogs and vultures disposed of the unhallowed
+ remains.</p><a name="H_4_0002"
+ id="H_4_0002"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h2>A GLANCE AT THE SITE AND ANTIQUITIES OF ATHENS.</h2>
+
+ <p>The day is a happy one to the student-traveler from the
+ Western World in which he first looks upon the lovely plain of
+ Athens. Rounding the point where Hymettus thrusts his huge
+ length into the sea, the long, featureless mountain-wall of
+ Southern Attica suddenly breaks down, and gives place to a
+ broad expanse of fertile, and well-cultivated soil, sloping
+ gently back with ever-narrowing bounds until it reaches the
+ foot-hills of lofty Pentelicus. The wooded heights of Parnes
+ enclose it on the north, while bald Hymettus rears an
+ impassable barrier along the south. In front of the gently
+ recurved shore stretch the smooth waters of the Gulf of
+ Salamis, while beyond rises range upon range of lofty
+ mountain-peaks with strikingly varied outline, terminating on
+ the one hand in the towering cone of Egina, and on the other in
+ the pyramidal, fir-clad summit of Cithaeron. Upon the plain, at
+ the distance of three or four miles from the sea, are several
+ small rocky hills of picturesque appearance, isolated and
+ seemingly independent, but really parts of a low range parallel
+ to Hymettus. Upon one of the most considerable of these, whose
+ precipitous sides make it a natural fortress, stood the
+ Acropolis, and upon the group of lesser heights around and in
+ the valleys between clustered the dwellings of ancient
+ Athens.</p><a name="image-0007"
+ id="image-0007"><!--IMG--></a>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/0227.jpg"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/0227.jpg"
+ alt="View of the Acropolis and The Columns Of The Temple Of Jupiter Olympus." />
+ </a> View of the Acropolis and The Columns Of The Temple Of
+ Jupiter Olympus.
+ </div><!--IMAGE END-->
+
+ <p>It was a fitting site for the capital of a people keenly
+ sensitive to beauty, and destined to become the leaders of the
+ world in matters of taste, especially in the important
+ department of the Fine Arts. Nowhere are there more charming
+ contrasts of mountain, sea and plain&mdash;nowhere a more
+ perfect harmony of picturesque effect. The sea is not a dreary
+ waste of waters without bounds, but a smiling gulf mirroring
+ its mountain-walls and winding about embosomed isles, yet ever
+ broadening as it recedes, and suggesting the mighty flood
+ beyond from which it springs. The plain is not an illimitable
+ expanse over which the weary eye ranges in vain in quest of
+ some resting-place, but is so small as to be embraced in its
+ whole contour in a single view, while its separate
+ features&mdash;the broad, dense belt of olives which marks the
+ bed of its principal stream, the ancient Cephissus, the
+ vineyards, the grain-fields and the sunny hillside
+ pastures&mdash;are made to produce their full impression. The
+ mountains are not near enough to be obtrusive, much less
+ oppressive; neither are they so distant as to be indistinct or
+ to seem insignificant. Seen through the clear air, their naked
+ summits are so sharply defined and so individual in appearance
+ as to seem almost like sculptured forms chiseled out of the
+ hard rock.</p>
+
+ <p>The city which rose upon this favored spot was worthy of its
+ surroundings. The home of a free and enterprising race endowed
+ with rare gifts of intellect and sensibility, and ever on the
+ alert for improvement, it became the nurse of letters and of
+ arts, while the luxury begotten of prosperity awakened a taste
+ for adornment, and the wealth acquired by an extended commerce
+ furnished the means of gratifying it. The age of Pericles was
+ the period of the highest national development. At that time
+ were reared the celebrated structures in honor of the
+ virgin-goddess who was the patron of Athens&mdash;the
+ Parthenon, the Propylaea, the Erechtheum&mdash;which crowned
+ the Acropolis, and were the glory of the city as they were the
+ masterpieces of Grecian architecture. During the preceding half
+ century many works of utility and of splendor had been
+ constructed, and the city now became renowned not only in
+ Greece, but throughout the ancient world, for the magnificence
+ of its public buildings. Thucydides, writing about this time,
+ says that should Athens be destroyed, posterity would infer
+ from its ruins that the city had been twice as populous as it
+ actually was. Demosthenes speaks of the strangers who came to
+ visit its attractions. But the changes of twenty-three
+ centuries have passed upon this splendor&mdash;a sad story of
+ violence and neglect&mdash;and the queenly city has long been
+ in the condition of ruin imagined by Thucydides. Still, the
+ spell of her influence is not broken, and the charm which once
+ drew so many visitors to her shrines still acts powerfully on
+ the hearts of scholars in all lands, who, having looked up to
+ her poets, orators and philosophers as teachers and loved them
+ as friends, long to visit their haunts, to stand where they
+ stood, to behold the scenes which they were wont to view, and
+ to gaze upon what may remain of the great works of art upon
+ which their admiration was bestowed.</p>
+
+ <p>So the student-pilgrim from the Western World with native
+ ardor strains his sight to catch the first glimpse of the
+ Athenian plain and city. He is fresh from his studies, and
+ familiar with what books teach of the geography of Greece and
+ the topography of Athens. He needs not to be informed which
+ mountain-range is Parnes, and which Pentelicus&mdash;which
+ island is Salamis, and which Egina. Yet much of what he sees is
+ a revelation to him. The mountains are higher, more varied and
+ more beautiful than he had supposed, Lycabettus and the
+ Acropolis more imposing, Pentelicus farther away, and the plain
+ larger, the gulf narrower, and Egina nearer and more
+ mountainous, than he had fancied. He is astonished at the
+ smallness of the harbor at Peiraeus, having insensibly formed
+ his conception of its size from the notices of the mighty
+ fleets which sailed from it in the palmy days when Athens was
+ mistress of the seas. He is not prepared to see the southern
+ shore of Salamis so near to the Peiraeus, though it explains
+ the close connection between that island and Athens, and throws
+ some light upon the great naval defeat of the Persians. In
+ short, while every object is recognized as it presents itself,
+ yet a more correct conception is formed of its relative
+ position and aspect from a single glance of the eye than had
+ been acquired from books during years of study.</p>
+
+ <p>Arrived at the city, his experience is the same. He needs no
+ guide to conduct him to its antiquities, nor cicerone to
+ explain in bad French or worse English their names and history.
+ Still, unexpected appearances present themselves not
+ unfrequently. Hastening toward the Acropolis, he will first
+ inspect the remains of the great theatre of Dionysus, so
+ familiar to him as the place where, in the presence of all the
+ people and many strangers, were acted the plays of his favorite
+ poets, Eschylus and Sophocles, and where they won many prizes.
+ Hurrying over the eastern brow of the hill, he comes suddenly
+ upon the spot, enters at the summit, as many an Athenian did in
+ the olden time, and is smitten with amazement at the first
+ glance, and led to question whether this be indeed the site of
+ the ancient theatre. He finds, it is true, the topmost seats
+ cut in the solid rock, row above row, stripped now of their
+ marble lining and weather-worn, but yet the genuine ancient
+ seats of the upper tier. These he expected to find. But whence
+ are those fresh seats which fill the lower part of the hollow,
+ arranged as neatly as if intended for immediate use? and whence
+ the massive stage beyond? He bethinks himself that he has heard
+ of recent excavations under the patronage of the government,
+ and closer inspection shows that these are actually the lower
+ seats of the theatre in the time of the emperor Hadrian, whose
+ favorite residence was Athens, and who did so much to embellish
+ the city. The front seats consist of massive stone chairs, each
+ inscribed with the name of its occupant, generally the
+ priestess of some one of the numerous gods worshiped by that
+ people so given to idolatry. In the centre of the second row is
+ an elevated throne inscribed with the name of Hadrian. The
+ stage is seen to be the ancient Greek stage enlarged to the
+ Roman size to suit the demands of a later style of theatrical
+ representation.</p><a name="image-0008"
+ id="image-0008"><!--IMG--></a>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/0229.jpg"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/0229.jpg"
+ alt="Theatre of Dionysus (Bacchus)." /></a> Theatre of
+ Dionysus (Bacchus).
+ </div><!--IMAGE END-->
+
+ <p>After looking in vain for the seat occupied by the priestess
+ of the Unknown God, our traveler passes on and enters with a
+ beating heart the charmed precincts of the Acropolis itself.
+ The Propylaea, which he has been accustomed to regard too
+ exclusively as a mere entrance-gate to the glories beyond,
+ impresses him with its size and grandeur, and the little temple
+ of Victory by its side with its elegance.<a id="footnotetag1"
+ name="footnotetag1"></a><a href="#footnote1"><sup>1</sup></a>
+ But the steepness of the ascent perplexes him. It seems
+ impracticable for horses, yet he knows by unexceptionable
+ testimony that the Athenian youth prided themselves upon
+ driving their matched steeds in the great Panathenaic
+ procession which once every four years wound up the hill,
+ bearing the sacred peplus to the temple of the goddess. A
+ closer examination reveals the transverse creases of the
+ pavement designed to give a footing to the beasts, as well
+ as the marks of the chariot-wheels. Nevertheless, the ascent
+ (and much more the descent) must have been a perilous
+ undertaking, unless the teams were better broken than the
+ various accounts of chariot-races furnished by the poets
+ would indicate. Entering beneath the great gate, a little
+ distance forward to the left may readily be found the site
+ of the colossal bronze statue of the warrior-goddess in
+ complete armor, formed by Phidias out of the spoils taken at
+ Marathon. The square base, partly sunk in the uneven rock,
+ is as perfect as if just put in readiness to receive the
+ pedestal of that famous work. A road bending to the right
+ and slightly hollowed out of the rock leads to the
+ Parthenon. The outer platform which sustains this celebrated
+ temple is partly cut from the rock of the hill and partly
+ built up of common limestone. The inner one of three
+ courses, as well as the whole superstructure, is formed of
+ Pentelic marble of a compact crystalline structure and of
+ dazzling whiteness. Long exposure has not availed to destroy
+ its lustre, but only to soften its tone. The visitor,
+ planting himself at the western front, is in a position to
+ gain some adequate idea of the perfection of the noble
+ building. The interior and central parts suffered the
+ principal injury from the explosion of the Turkish powder
+ magazine in 1687. The western front remains nearly entire.
+ It has been despoiled, indeed, of its movable ornaments. The
+ statues which filled the pediment are gone, with the
+ exception of a fragment or two. The sculptured slabs have
+ been removed from the spaces between the triglyphs, and the
+ gilded shields which hung beneath have been taken down. Of
+ the magnificent frieze, representing the procession of the
+ great quadrennial festival, only the portion surrounding the
+ western vestibule is still in place.<a id="footnotetag2"
+ name="footnotetag2"></a><a href="#footnote2"><sup>2</sup></a></p><a name="image-0009"
+ id="image-0009"><!--IMG--></a>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/0230.jpg"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/0230.jpg"
+ alt="Victory Untying Her Sandals." /></a> Victory
+ Untying Her Sandals.
+ </div><!--IMAGE END-->
+ <a name="image-0010"
+ id="image-0010"><!--IMG--></a>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/0231.jpg"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/0231.jpg"
+ alt="Temple of Victory" /></a> Temple of Victory
+ </div><!--IMAGE END-->
+ <a name="image-0011"
+ id="image-0011"><!--IMG--></a>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/0232.jpg"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/0232.jpg"
+ alt="The Parthenon." /></a> The Parthenon.
+ </div><!--IMAGE END-->
+
+ <p>Still, as these were strictly decorations, and wholly
+ subordinate to the organic parts of the structure, their
+ presence, while it would doubtless greatly enhance the effect
+ of the whole, is not felt to be essential to its completeness.
+ The whole Doric columns still bear the massive entablature
+ sheltered by the covering roof. The simple greatness of the
+ conception, the just proportion of the several parts, together
+ with the elaborate finishing of the whole work, invest it with
+ a charm such as the works of man seldom possess&mdash;the pure
+ and lasting pleasure which flows from apparent perfection
+ Entering the principal apartment of the building, traces are
+ seen of the stucco and pictures with which the walls were
+ covered when it was fitted up as a Christian church in the
+ Byzantine period. Near the centre of the marble pavement is a
+ rectangular space laid with dark stone from the Peirseus or
+ from Eleusis. It marks the probable site of the colossal
+ precious statue of the goddess in gold and ivory&mdash;one of
+ the most celebrated works of Phidias. The smaller apartment
+ beyond, accessible only from the opposite front of the temple,
+ was used by the state as a place of deposit and safekeeping for
+ bullion and other valuables in the care of the state
+ treasurer.</p><a name="image-0012"
+ id="image-0012"><!--IMG--></a>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/0233.jpg"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/0233.jpg"
+ alt="Bas Relief of the Gods (Frieze Of The Parthenon)." />
+ </a> Bas Relief of the Gods (Frieze Of The Parthenon).
+ </div><!--IMAGE END-->
+
+ <p>Having examined the great temple, and tested the curvature
+ of its seemingly horizontal lines by sighting along the
+ unencumbered platform, and having stopped at several points of
+ the grand portico to admire the fine views of the city and
+ surrounding country, the traveler picks his way northward,
+ across a thick layer of fragments of columns, statues and
+ blocks of marble, toward the low-placed, irregular but elegant
+ Erechtheum, the temple of the most ancient worship and statue
+ of the patron-goddess of the city. This building sits close by
+ the northern as the Parthenon does by the southern wall of the
+ enclosure. It has suffered equally with the other from the
+ ravages of time, and its ruins, though less grand, are more
+ beautiful. Most of the graceful Ionic columns are still
+ standing, but large portions of the roof and entablature have
+ fallen. Fragments of decorated cornice strew the ground, some
+ of them of considerable length, and afford a near view of that
+ delicate ornamentation and exquisite finish so rare outside the
+ limits of Greece. The elevated porch of the Caryatides, lately
+ restored by the substitution of a new figure in place of the
+ missing statue now in the British Museum, attracts attention as
+ a unique specimen of Greek art, and also as showing how far a
+ skillful treatment will overcome the inherent difficulties of a
+ subject. The row of fair maidens looking out toward the
+ Parthenon do not seem much oppressed by the burden which rests
+ upon them, while their graceful forms lend a pleasing variety
+ to the scene. Passing out by the northern wing of the
+ Propylaea, a survey is had of the numerous fragments of
+ sculpture discovered among the ruins upon the hill, and
+ temporarily placed in the ancient Pinacotheca. The eye rests
+ upon sweet infant faces and upon rugged manly ones. Sometimes a
+ single feature only remains, which, touched by the finger of
+ genius, awakens admiration. A naked arm severed from the trunk,
+ of feminine cast, but with muscles tightly strained and hand
+ clenched as in agony, will arrest attention and dwell in the
+ memory.</p>
+
+ <p>North-west of the Acropolis, across a narrow chasm, lies the
+ low, rocky height of the Areopagus, accessible at the southeast
+ angle by a narrow flight of sixteen rudely-cut steps, which
+ lead to a small rectangular excavation on the summit, which
+ faces the Acropolis, and is surrounded upon three sides by a
+ double tier of benches hewn out of the rock. Here undoubtedly
+ the most venerable court of justice at Athens had its seat and
+ tried its cases in the open air. Here too, without doubt, stood
+ the great apostle when, with bold spirit and weighty words, he
+ declared unto the men of Athens that God of whom they confessed
+ their ignorance; who was not to be represented by gold or
+ silver or stone graven by art and man's device; who dwelt not
+ in temples made with hands, and needed not to be worshiped with
+ men's hands. In no other place can one feel so sure that he
+ comes upon the very footsteps of the apostle, and on no other
+ spot can one better appreciate his high gifts as an orator or
+ the noble devotion of his whole soul to the work of the Master.
+ How poor in comparison with his life-work appear the
+ performances of the greatest of the Athenian thinkers or
+ doers!</p>
+
+ <p>A little more than a quarter of a mile west of the Acropolis
+ is another rocky hill&mdash;the Pnyx&mdash;celebrated as the
+ place where the assembly of all the citizens met to transact
+ the business of the state. A large semicircular area was
+ formed, partly by excavation, partly by building up from
+ beneath, the bounds of which can be distinctly traced.
+ Considerable remains of the terrace-wall at the foot of the
+ slope exist&mdash;huge stones twelve or fourteen feet in length
+ by eight or ten in breadth. The chord of the semicircle is near
+ the top of the hill, formed by the perpendicular face of the
+ excavated rock, and is about four hundred feet in length by
+ twenty in depth. Projecting from it at the centre, and hewn out
+ of the same rock, is the bema or stone platform from which the
+ great orators from the time of Themistocles and Aristides, and
+ perhaps of Solon, down to the age of Demosthenes and the Attic
+ Ten, addressed the mass of their fellow-citizens. It is a
+ massive cubic block, with a linear edge of eleven feet,
+ standing upon a graduated base of nearly equal height, and is
+ mounted on either side by a flight of nine stone steps. From
+ its connection with the most celebrated efforts of some of the
+ greatest orators our race has yet seen, it is one of the most
+ interesting relics in the world, and its solid structure will
+ cause it to endure as long as the world itself shall stand,
+ unless, as there is some reason to apprehend will be the case,
+ it is knocked to pieces and carried off in the carpet-bags of
+ travelers. No traces of the Agora, which occupied the shallow
+ valley between the Pnyx and the Acropolis, remain. It was the
+ heart of the city, and was adorned with numerous public
+ buildings, porticoes, temples and statues. It was often
+ thronged with citizens gathered for purposes of trade,
+ discussion, or to hear and tell some new
+ thing.</p><a name="image-0013"
+ id="image-0013"><!--IMG--></a>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/0235.jpg"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/0235.jpg"
+ alt="Porch of the Caryatides." /></a> Porch of the
+ Caryatides.
+ </div><!--IMAGE END-->
+
+ <p>Half a mile or more to the south-east, on the banks of the
+ Ilissus, stood a magnificent structure dedicated to Olympian
+ Zeus&mdash;one of the four largest temples of Greece, ranking
+ with that of Demeter at Eleusis and that of Diana at Ephesus.
+ Its foundations remain, and sixteen of the huge Corinthian
+ columns belonging to its majestic triple colonnade. One of
+ these is fallen. Breaking up into the numerous disks of which
+ it was composed&mdash;six and a half feet in diameter by two or
+ more in thickness&mdash;and stretching out to a length of over
+ sixty feet, it gives an impressive conception of the size of
+ these columns, said to be the largest standing in Europe. The
+ level area of the temple is now used as a training-ground for
+ soldiers. Close by, and almost in the bed of the stream, which
+ is dry the larger part of the year, issues from beneath a ledge
+ of rock the copious fountain of sweet waters known to the
+ ancients as Calirrhoe. It furnished the only good
+ drinking-water of the city, and was used in all the sacrifices
+ to the gods. A little way above, on the opposite bank of the
+ Ilissus, is the site of the Panathenaic stadium, whose shape is
+ perfectly preserved in the smooth grass-grown hollow with
+ semicircular extremity which here lies at right angles to the
+ stream, between parallel ridges partly artificial.</p>
+
+ <p>Northward from the Acropolis, on a slight elevation, is the
+ best-preserved and one of the most ancient structures of
+ Athens&mdash;the temple of Theseus, built under the
+ administration of Cimon by the generation preceding Pericles
+ and the Parthenon. It is of the Doric order, and shaped like
+ the Parthenon, but considerably inferior to it in size as well
+ as in execution. It has been roofed with wood in modern times,
+ and was long used as a church, but is now a place of deposit
+ for the numerous statues and sculptured stones of various
+ kinds&mdash;mostly sepulchral monuments&mdash;which have been
+ recently discovered in and about the city. They are for the
+ most part unimportant as works of art, though many are
+ interesting from their antiquity or historic associations.
+ Among these is the stone which once crowned the burial-mound on
+ the plain of Marathon. It bears a single figure, said to
+ represent the messenger who brought the tidings of victory to
+ his countrymen.</p>
+
+ <p>Near the Theseium was the double gate (Dipylum) in the
+ ancient wall of the city whence issued the Sacred Way leading
+ to Eleusis, and bordered, like the Appian Way at Rome, with
+ tombs, many of them cenotaphs of persons who died in the public
+ service and were deemed worthy of a monument in the public
+ burying-ground. Within a few years an excavation has been made
+ through an artificial mound of ashes, pottery and other refuse
+ emptied out of the city, and a section of a few rods of this
+ celebrated road has been laid bare. The sepulchral monuments
+ are ranged on one side rather thickly, and crowd somewhat
+ closely upon the narrow pavement. They are, for the most part,
+ simple, thick slabs of white marble, with a triangular or
+ pediment-shaped top, beneath which is sculptured in low relief
+ the closing scene of the person commemorated, followed by a
+ short inscription. The work is done in an artistic style worthy
+ of the publicity its location gave it. On one of these slabs
+ you recognize the familiar full-length figure of Demosthenes,
+ standing with two companions and clasping in a parting grasp
+ the hand of a woman, who is reclining upon her deathbed. The
+ inscription is, <i>Collyrion, wife of Agathon</i>. On another
+ stone of larger size is a more imposing piece of sculpture. A
+ horseman fully armed is thrusting his spear into the body of
+ his fallen foe&mdash;a hoplite. The inscription relates that
+ the unhappy foot-soldier fell at Corinth <i>by reason of those
+ five words of his</i>!&mdash;a record intelligible enough,
+ doubtless, to his contemporaries, but sufficiently obscure and
+ provocative of curiosity to later generations.</p>
+
+ <p>There are other noted structures at Athens, such as the
+ Choragic Monument of Lysicrates&mdash;the highest type of the
+ Corinthian order of architecture, as the Erechtheum is of the
+ Ionic and the Parthenon of the Doric&mdash;but want of space
+ forbids any further description of them. Let the American
+ traveler visit Athens with the expectation of finding a city
+ occupying the most charming of sites, and containing by far the
+ most interesting and important monuments of antiquity, in their
+ original position, to be found in the whole world.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">J.L.T. PHILLIPS.</p><a name="image-0014"
+ id="image-0014"><!--IMG--></a>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/0237.jpg"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/0237.jpg"
+ alt="Monument of Lysicrates." /></a> Monument of
+ Lysicrates.
+ </div><!--IMAGE END-->
+ <a name="H_4_0003"
+ id="H_4_0003"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h2>COMMONPLACE.</h2>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i10">My little girl is commonplace, you
+ say?</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">Well, well, I grant it, as you use the
+ phrase</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">Concede the whole; although there was a
+ day</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">When I too questioned words, and from a
+ maze</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">Of hairsplit meanings, cut with
+ close-drawn line,</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">Sought to draw out a language
+ superfine,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Above the common, scarify with words and
+ scintillate with pen;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">But that time's over&mdash;now I am
+ content to stand with other men.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i10">It's the best place, fair youth. I see
+ your smile&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">The scornful smile of that ambitious
+ age</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">That thinks it all things knows, and all
+ the while</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">It nothing knows. And yet those smiles
+ presage</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">Some future fame, because your aim is
+ high;</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">As when one tries to shoot into the
+ sky,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">If his rash arrow at the moon he aims, a
+ bolder flight we see,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Though vain, than if with level poise it
+ safely reached the nearest tree.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i10">A common proverb that! Does it
+ disjoint</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">Your graceful terms? One more you'll
+ understand:</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">Cut down a pencil to too fine a
+ point,</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">Lo, it breaks off, all useless, in your
+ hand!</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">The child is fitted for her present
+ sphere:</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">Let her live out her life, without the
+ fear</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">That comes when souls, daring the heights
+ of dread infinity, are tost,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Now up, now down, by the great winds,
+ their little home for ever lost.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i10">My little girl seems to you
+ commonplace</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">Because she loves the daisies, common
+ flowers;</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">Because she finds in common pictures
+ grace,</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">And nothing knows of classic music's
+ powers:</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">She reads her romance, but the mystic's
+ creed</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">Is something far beyond her simple
+ need.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">She goes to church, but the mixed doubts
+ and theories that thinkers find</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">In all religious truth can never enter
+ her undoubting mind.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i10">A daisy's earth's own
+ blossom&mdash;better far</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">Than city gardener's costly hybrid
+ prize:</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">When you're found worthy of a higher
+ star,</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">'Twill then be time earth's daisies to
+ despise;</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">But not till then. And if the child can
+ sing</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">Sweet songs like "Robin Gray," why
+ should I fling</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">A cloud over her music's joy, and set for
+ her the heavy task</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Of learning what Bach knew, or finding
+ sense under mad Chopin's mask?</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i10">Then as to pictures: if her taste
+ prefers</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">That common picture of the
+ "Huguenots,"</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">Where the girl's heart&mdash;a tender
+ heart like hers&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">Strives to defeat earth's greatest
+ powers' great plots</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">With her poor little kerchief, shall I
+ change</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">The print for Turner's riddles wild and
+ strange?</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Or take her stories&mdash;simple tales
+ which her few leisure hours beguile&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And give her Browning's _Sordello_, a
+ Herbert Spencer, a Carlyle?</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i10">Her creed, too, in your eyes is
+ commonplace,</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">Because she does not doubt the Bible's
+ truth</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">Because she does not doubt the saving
+ grace</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">Of fervent prayer, but from her rosy
+ youth,</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">So full of life, to gray old age's
+ time,</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">Prays on with faith half ignorant, half
+ sublime.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Yes, commonplace! But if I spoil this
+ common faith, when all is done</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Can deist, pantheist or atheist invent a
+ better one?</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i10">Climb to the highest mountain's highest
+ verge,</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">Step off: you've lost the petty height
+ you had;</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">Up to the highest point poor reason
+ urge,</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">Step off: the sense is gone, the mind is
+ mad.</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">"Thus far, and yet no farther, shalt
+ thou go,"</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">Was said of old, and I have found it
+ so:</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">This planet's ours, 'tis all we have;
+ here we belong, and those are wise</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Who make the best of it, nor vainly try
+ above its plane to rise.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i10">Nay, nay: I know already your reply;</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">I have been through the whole long years
+ ago;</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">I have soared up as far as soul can
+ fly,</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">I have dug down as far as mind can
+ go;</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">But always found, at certain depth or
+ height,</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">The bar that separates the infinite</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">From finite powers, against whose
+ strength immutable we beat in vain,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Or circle round only to find ourselves at
+ starting-point again.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i10">If you must for yourself find out this
+ truth,</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">I bid you go, proud heart, with
+ blessings free:</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">'Tis the old fruitless quest of ardent
+ youth,</p>
+
+ <p class="i12">And soon or late you will come back to
+ me.</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">You'll learn there's naught so common as
+ the breath</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">Of life, unless it be the calm of
+ death:</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">You'll learn that with the Lord
+ Omnipotent there's nothing commonplace,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And with such souls as that poor child's,
+ humbled, abashed, you'll hide your face.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p class="center">CONSTANCE FENIMORE
+ WOOLSON.</p><a name="H_4_0004"
+ id="H_4_0004"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h2>PROBATIONER LEONHARD;<br />
+ OR,<br />
+ THREE NIGHTS IN THE HAPPY VALLEY.</h2>
+
+ <h3><a name="HCH0001"
+ id="HCH0001"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> CHAPTER IV.</h3>
+
+ <h3>THE TEST&mdash;WITH MENTAL RESERVATIONS.</h3>
+
+ <p>Elise went out to gather willow-twigs, as her mother had
+ said when her father asked for her.</p>
+
+ <p>A little later in the afternoon, Mr. Albert Spener walked
+ swiftly down the street toward the house occupied by the Rev.
+ Mr. Wenck. While he was yet at a distance Elise saw him
+ approaching, and possibly she thought, "He has seen me and
+ comes to meet me;" and many a pleasant stroll on many an
+ afternoon would have justified the thought.</p>
+
+ <p>But it was not until he had, as it were, stumbled upon Elise
+ that he noticed her. He carried in his hand a letter, and when
+ suddenly he stopped upon the sidewalk and looked at her, the
+ changeful aspects of his face were marvelous to behold.</p>
+
+ <p>"Where are you going?" he asked.</p>
+
+ <p>"I was going home," she answered, not a little surprised by
+ the abrupt and authoritative manner of his address.</p>
+
+ <p>"I want to talk with you," said he. "Is it to-day that I am
+ to begin to leave off loving you, Elise?"</p>
+
+ <p>"That you are&mdash;What do you say, Albert?" she asked.</p>
+
+ <p>"Have you not seen Brother Wenck's letter to your father,
+ Elise?"</p>
+
+ <p>She shook her head.</p>
+
+ <p>"The lot&mdash;the lot&mdash;" he repeated, but his voice
+ refused to help him tell the tale.</p>
+
+ <p>"Albert, may I see the letter?" Father and Mother Loretz
+ might have rejoiced in their daughter could they have seen and
+ heard her in those trying moments. Her gentleness and her
+ serene dignity said for her that she would not be over-thrown
+ by the storm which had burst upon her in a moment, unlocked for
+ as tempest and whirlwind out of a clear sky.</p>
+
+ <p>Spener thrust into her hands the letter addressed to him
+ that morning by the minister. It contained an announcement of
+ the decision rendered by the lot, couched in terms more brief,
+ perhaps, than those which conveyed the same intelligence to the
+ father of Elise.</p>
+
+ <p>She gave it back to him without a word.</p>
+
+ <p>"If Brother Wenck is going to stand by it," said he,
+ "there'll be no room for him in this place. I was just going to
+ his house to tell him so. Will you go with me? I should like to
+ have a witness. I'll make short work of it."</p>
+
+ <p>"No," said Elise, shrinking back amazed from her companion.
+ "I will not go with you to insult that good man."</p>
+
+ <p>"You will go with me&mdash;<i>not</i> to his house, then!
+ Come, Elise, we must talk about this. You must help me untie
+ this knot. I cannot imagine how I ever permitted things to take
+ their chance. I have never heard of a sillier superstition than
+ I seem to have encouraged. Talk about faith! Let a man act up
+ to light and take the consequences. I can see clear enough now.
+ <i>You</i> never looked for this to happen, Elise?"</p>
+
+ <p>She shook her head. Indeed, she never had&mdash;no, not for
+ a moment.</p>
+
+ <p>"To think I should have permitted it to go on!"</p>
+
+ <p>"But you did let it go on&mdash;and I&mdash;consented. Do
+ not let me forget that," she exclaimed. "I will go home,
+ Albert."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ha, Elise! I wish I could feel more confidence in your
+ teachers when you get there."</p>
+
+ <p>"I need no one to tell me what my duty is just here," she
+ answered.</p>
+
+ <p>"Have you ever loved me, child? <i>Child</i>! I am talking
+ to a rock. You do not yield to this?" He waved the letter
+ aloft, and as if he would dash it from him. Elise looked at
+ him, and did not speak. "Sister Benigna will of course feel
+ called upon to bless the Lord," said he. "But Wenck shall find
+ a way out of this difficulty. Then we will have done with them
+ both, my own."</p>
+
+ <p>"Am I to have no voice in this matter?" she asked. "What if
+ I say&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>Spener grasped her hand so suddenly that, as if in her
+ surprise she had forgotten what she was about to say, Elise
+ added, "Sister Benigna is my best friend. She knows nothing
+ about the lot."</p>
+
+ <p>"Does not?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I told you, Albert, that it was to be so. And&mdash;you do
+ not mean to threaten Mr. Wenck?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I mean to have him find a way out of this difficulty. He
+ ought to have said to your father that this lot business
+ belongs to a period gone by. He did hint at it. I supposed, of
+ course, that he would see the thing came out right, since he
+ let it go on."</p>
+
+ <p>"Did you then believe it was only a play or a trick?"
+ exclaimed Elise indignantly.</p>
+
+ <p>"Not quite, but I did not suppose that we were a company who
+ would stand by an adverse decision. You know, if you are the
+ Elise I have loved so long, that I must love you
+ always&mdash;that I am not going to give you up. Your father
+ was bent on the test, but look at him and tell me if he
+ expected this turn. He is twenty years older than he was
+ yesterday. Folks used to resort to the lot in deciding about
+ marriages, and it was all well enough if they didn't care how
+ it turned out, or hadn't faith to believe in their own ability
+ to choose. A pretty way of doing business, though! Suppose I
+ had tried it on this place! I have always asked for God's
+ blessing, and tried to act so that I need not blush when I
+ asked it; but a man must know his own mind, he must act with
+ decision. I say again, I don't like your teachers, Elise.
+ Between Sister Benigna and Mr. Wenck, now, what would be my
+ chances if I could submit to such a pair?"</p>
+
+ <p>"You and I have no quarrel," said Elise gently. "I suppose
+ that you acted in good faith. You know how much I
+ care&mdash;how humiliated I shall feel if you attack in any way
+ a man so good as Mr. Wenck. You do not understand Sister
+ Benigna."</p>
+
+ <p>It was well that she had these to speak of, and that she
+ need not confine herself to the main thought before them, for
+ Albert could do anything he attempted. Had not her father
+ always said, "Let Spener alone for getting what he wants: he'll
+ have it, but he's above-board and honest;" and what hopes,
+ heaven-cleaving, had spread wing the instant her eyes met
+ his!</p>
+
+ <p>"It is easy to say that I do not understand," said he. "One
+ has only to assume that another is so excellent and virtuous a
+ character as to be beyond your comprehension, and then your
+ mouth is stopped."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, how bitter you are!" exclaimed Elise. Her voice was
+ full of pain.</p>
+
+ <p>Spener silently reproached himself, and said, with a
+ tenderness that was irresistible, "You don't know what
+ temptations beset a man in business and everywhere, Elise. It
+ would be easier far to lie down and die, I have thought
+ sometimes, than to stand up and meet the enemy like a man. You
+ will never convince me that my duty is to let you go, to give
+ you up. I can think of nothing so wicked."</p>
+
+ <p>These words, which had a joyful sound to which she could not
+ seal her ears, made Elise stop suddenly, afraid of Albert,
+ afraid of herself. "I think," she said after a moment, "we had
+ best not walk together any longer. There is nothing we can say
+ that will satisfy ourselves or ought to satisfy each
+ other."</p>
+
+ <p>"Do you mean that you accept this decision?" said he.</p>
+
+ <p>"I promised, Albert. So did you."</p>
+
+ <p>"We will not talk about it. But we can at least walk
+ together, Elise. You need not speak. What you confessed just
+ now is true&mdash;you cannot say anything to the purpose."</p>
+
+ <p>So they walked on together. Silently, past all Spenersberg's
+ dwelling-places they walked, till they came to the cemetery,
+ and ascending the hill they strolled about that pleasant place
+ among the graves, and thought, perhaps, How blessed are the
+ dead! and oh to be lying there in a dreamless sleep beneath the
+ blooming wild roses, and where dirges were sounding through the
+ cedars day and night! Elise might have thought thus, but not
+ her companion. He was the last man to wish to pass from the
+ scene of his successes merely because a great failure
+ threatened him. Looking upon the slight young figure beside him
+ and her grave sweet face, a wrathful contempt was aroused
+ within him that he should have allowed himself to be placed in
+ a situation so absurd. As they walked down the hill again, he
+ startled his companion by a merry outbreak. "Tell me you are
+ not mine!" he said: "there never was a joke like it!"</p>
+
+ <h3><a name="HCH0002"
+ id="HCH0002"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> CHAPTER V.</h3>
+
+ <h3>SISTER BENIGNA.</h3>
+
+ <p>On her return home Elise found Sister Benigna seated at the
+ piano, attuning herself, as she said, after her work among the
+ restive children of her school.</p>
+
+ <p>When she looked upon her friend and recalled the bitter
+ words Albert had spoken against her, Elise felt their
+ injustice. It was true, as she had told him, he did not
+ understand Sister Benigna.</p>
+
+ <p>Sitting down beside the window, Elise began to busy herself
+ over the dainty basket she was elaborately decorating. After a
+ few moments Sister Benigna left the piano and stood looking at
+ Elise and her work. She had something to say, but how should
+ she say it? how approach the heart which had wrapped itself up
+ in sorrow and surrounded itself with the guards of silence?</p>
+
+ <p>Presently Elise looked at her, but not until she had so long
+ resisted the inclination to do so that there was something like
+ violence in the effort. When her eyes met the gaze of Sister
+ Benigna the warm blood rushed to her cheeks, and she looked
+ quickly down again. Did Sister Benigna know yet about the
+ letter Mr. Wenck had written?</p>
+
+ <p>A sad smile appeared on Benigna's face. She shook her head.
+ If she did not know what had happened, she no doubt understood
+ that some kind of trouble had entered the house.</p>
+
+ <p>Drawing a roll of needlework from her pocket, she quietly
+ occupied herself with it until Elise, unable to endure the
+ silence longer, said, "Oh, Sister Benigna, is it not time we
+ did something about the Sisters' House? I have been reading
+ about one: I forget where it is. What a beautiful Home you and
+ I could make for poor people, and sick girls not able to work,
+ and old women! We ought to have such a Home in Spenersberg. I
+ have been thinking all day it is what we must have, and it is
+ time we set about it."</p>
+
+ <p>"I do not agree with you," was the quiet answer. "There is
+ no real need for it here, and perhaps there never will be. Work
+ that is so unnecessary might better be avoided. In Spenersberg
+ it is better that the poor and the old and the sick should be
+ cared for in their homes, by their own households: there is no
+ want here."</p>
+
+ <p>"Will you read what I have been reading?" said Elise,
+ hesitating, not willing yet to give up the project which looked
+ so full of promise.</p>
+
+ <p>"I know all about Sisters' Houses, and they are excellent
+ institutions, but if you will go from house to house here you
+ will find that you would probably keep house by yourself a long
+ time if you opened such an establishment. No, no: you have your
+ work all prepared for you, and I certainly have mine. There is
+ a good deal to be done yet for the festival. Tomorrow, after
+ five, come to the schoolroom and we will practice a while. And
+ we might do something here tonight. The children surprise me: I
+ seem to be surrounded by a little company of angels while they
+ sing."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, Sister Benigna," exclaimed Elise throwing down her work
+ in despair, "I don't in the least care about the festival. I
+ should be glad to know it was all given up. I cannot sing at
+ it. I think I have lost my voice: I do, indeed. I tried it this
+ afternoon, and I croaked worse than anything you ever
+ heard."</p>
+
+ <p>"Croaked? We must see to that," said Sister Benigna; but,
+ though her voice was so cheerful, she closed her eyes as she
+ spoke, and passed her hands over them, and in spite of herself
+ a look of pain was for an instant visible on her always pale
+ face. She rose quickly and walked across the room, and crossed
+ it twice before she came again to the window.</p>
+
+ <p>"You don't understand me to-day," said Elise impetuously;
+ "and I don't want you to." But Elise would not have spoken at
+ all had she looked at Sister Benigna.</p>
+
+ <p>A silence of many seconds, which seemed much longer to
+ Elise, followed her words. She did not dare to go on. What was
+ Sister Benigna thinking? Would she never speak? Had she nothing
+ to say? Elise was about to rise also, because to sit still in
+ that silence or to break it by words had become equally
+ impossible, when Sister Benigna, approaching gently, laid her
+ hand upon her and said, "Wait one moment: I have something to
+ tell you, Elise."</p>
+
+ <p>And so Elise sat down. She could not summon the strength to
+ go with that voice in her ear and the touch of that hand
+ arresting her.</p>
+
+ <p>"I once had a friend as young as you are, of whom you often
+ remind me," said Benigna. "She had a lover, and their faith led
+ them to seek a knowledge of the Lord's will concerning their
+ marriage. It was inquired for them, and it was found against
+ the union. You often remind me of her, I said, but your
+ fortunes are not at all like hers."</p>
+
+ <p>"Sister Benigna, why do you tell me this?" asked Elise
+ quickly, in a voice hardly audible. She was afraid to listen.
+ She recalled Albert's words. She did not know if she might
+ trust the friendly voice that spoke.</p>
+
+ <p>"Because I have always thought that some time it would be
+ well for you to hear it; but if you do not wish to hear it, I
+ will go no farther."</p>
+
+ <p>Elise looked at Benigna&mdash;not trust her! "Please go on,"
+ she said.</p>
+
+ <p>"I knew the poor child very well. She had grown up in an
+ unhappy home, and had never known what it was to have comfort
+ and peace in the house, or even plenty to eat and to wear. She
+ was expected to go out and earn her living as soon as she had
+ learned the use of her hands and feet. Poor child! she felt her
+ fortune was a hard one, but God always cared for her. In one
+ way and another she in time picked up enough knowledge of music
+ to teach beginners. The first real friend she had was the
+ friend who became so dear to her that&mdash;I need not try to
+ find words to tell you how dear he was.</p>
+
+ <p>"She was soon skilled enough to be able to take more
+ intelligent and advanced pupils, and in the church-music she
+ had the leading parts. By and by the music was put into her
+ hands for festivals and the great days, Christmas and Easter,
+ as it has been put into mine here in Spenersberg. One day
+ <i>he</i> said to her, 'It seems to us the best thing in life
+ to be near each other. Would it might be God's will that we
+ should never part!' She responded to that prayer from the
+ depths of her heart, and a great gulf seemed to open before
+ her, for she thought what would her life be worth if they were
+ destined to part? Then he said, 'Let us inquire the will of our
+ Lord;' and she said, 'Let it be so;' and they had faith that
+ would enable them to abide by the decision. The lot pronounced
+ against them. I do not believe that it had entered the heart of
+ either of them to understand how necessary they had become to
+ each other, and when they saw that all was over it was a sad
+ awaking. For a little while it was with both as if they had
+ madly thrown a birthright away; for, though they had faith,
+ they were not yet perfect in it. Not soon did either see that
+ this life had a blessing for them every day&mdash;new every
+ morning, fresh every evening&mdash;and that from everlasting to
+ everlasting are the mercies of God. But at last he said, 'I am
+ afraid, my darling'" (Elise started at this word of endearment.
+ It was like a revelation to think that there had been lovers in
+ the world before her time), "'it will go harder with me than
+ with you. I cannot stay here and go on with my work. I must go
+ among new people, and begin again.' And so he went away, and at
+ last, when by the grace of God they met again&mdash;surely,
+ surely by no seeking of their own&mdash;they were no less true
+ friends because they had for their lifetime been led into
+ separate paths. Their faith saved them."</p>
+
+ <p>Low though the voice was in which these last words were
+ spoken, there was a strength and inspiration in them which
+ Elise felt. She looked at Sister Benigna with steady, wondering
+ eyes. Such a story from her lips, and told so, and told now!
+ And her countenance! what divine beauty glowed in it! The
+ moment had a vision that could never be forgotten.</p>
+
+ <p>Elise did not speak, but neither, having heard this tale,
+ did she now rise to depart. She folded her hands and bowed her
+ head upon them, and so they sat silent until the first chords
+ of the "Pastoral Symphony" drew the souls of both away up into
+ a realm which is entered only by the pure in heart.</p>
+
+ <p>About this time it was that Leonhard Marten, while passing,
+ heard that recitative of a soprano voice which so amazed him.
+ Dropping quickly into the shade of the trees opposite Loretz's
+ house, he listened to the announcement, "There were shepherds
+ abiding in the field, keeping watch over their flocks by
+ night," and there remained until he saw two men advancing
+ toward the house, one of them evidently approaching his
+ home.</p>
+
+ <p>Through the sleepless night Elise's thoughts were constantly
+ going over the simple incidents of the story Sister Benigna had
+ told her. But they had not by morning yielded all the
+ consolations which the teller of the tale perceived among their
+ possibilities, for the reason, perhaps, that Elise's sympathies
+ had been more powerfully excited by the tale than her faith. It
+ was not upon the final result of the severance effected by the
+ lot that her mind rested dismayed: her heart was full of pain,
+ thinking of that poor girl's early life, and that at last, when
+ all the recollection of it was put far from her by the joy
+ which shone upon her as the sun out of darkness, she must look
+ forward and by its light behold a future so dreary. "How
+ fearful!" she moaned once; and her closed eyes did not see the
+ face that turned toward her full of pain, full of love.</p>
+
+ <p>Of all doubts that could afflict the soul of Sister Benigna,
+ none more distracting than this was conceivable: Had she proved
+ the best instructor to this child of her spirit? Had she even
+ been <i>capable</i> of teaching her truest truth? Was it the
+ truth or herself to which Elise was always deferring? Was
+ obedience a duty when not impelled and sanctified by faith? In
+ what did the prime virtue of resignation consist? Would not
+ obedience without faith be merely a debasing superstitious
+ submission to the will of the believing? Her reflections were
+ not suggested by a shrewd guess. She knew that the lot had been
+ resorted to, and that the letters had been written to Elise and
+ Albert which acquainted them with the result; and the peace of
+ her prayerful soul was rent by the thought that a joyless
+ surrender of human will to a higher was, perhaps, no better
+ than the poor helpless slave's extorted sacrifice. The
+ happiness of the household seemed to Benigna in her keeping. If
+ they had gone lightly seeking the oracle of God, as they would
+ have sought a fortune-teller, was not the Most High dishonored?
+ She could not say this to Elise, but could she say it to Albert
+ Spener? Ought she not to say it to him? There was no other to
+ whom it could be said. Had the coming day any duty so
+ imperative as this? She arose to perform it, but Spener, as we
+ know, had gone away the day before.</p>
+
+ <h3><a name="HCH0003"
+ id="HCH0003"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> CHAPTER VI.</h3>
+
+ <h3>THE MEN OF SPENERSBERG.</h3>
+
+ <p>This Spenersberg, about which Leonhard was not a little
+ eager to know more when he shut the door of the apartment into
+ which his host had ushered him&mdash;for he must remain all
+ night&mdash;what was it?</p>
+
+ <p>A colony, or a brotherhood, or a community, six years old.
+ Such a fact does not lie ready for observation every
+ day&mdash;such a place does not lie in the hand of a man at his
+ bidding. What, then, was its history? We need not wait to find
+ out until morning, when Leonhard will proceed to discover. He
+ is satisfied when he lies down upon the bed, which awaited him,
+ it seems, as he came hither on the way-train&mdash;quite
+ satisfied that Spener of Spenersberg must be a man worth
+ seeing. Breathing beings possessed of ideas and homes here must
+ have been handled with power by a master mind to have brought
+ about this community, if so it is to be called, in six short
+ years, thinks Leonhard. He recalls his own past six years, and
+ turns uneasily on his bed, and finds no rest until he reminds
+ himself of the criticism he has been enabled to pass on Miss
+ Elise's rendering of "He is a righteous Saviour," and the
+ suggestion he made concerning the pitch of "Ye shall find rest
+ for your souls." The recollection acts upon him somewhat as the
+ advancing wave acts on the sand-line made by the wave
+ preceding. When he made the first suggestion, Sister Benigna
+ stood for a moment looking at him, surprised by his remark;
+ but, less than a second taken up with a thought of him, she had
+ passed instantly on to say, "Try it so, Elise: 'He is a
+ righteous Saviour.' We will make it a slower movement. Ah! how
+ impressive! how beautiful! It is the composer's very thought!
+ Again&mdash;slow: it is perfect!"</p>
+
+ <p>Was this kind of praise worth the taking? a source of praise
+ worth the seeking? Leonhard had said ungrateful things about
+ his prize-credentials to Miss Marion Ayres, and I do believe
+ that these very prizes, awarded for his various drawings, were
+ never so valued by him as the look with which priestly Benigna
+ seemed to admit him at least so far as into the fellowship of
+ the Gentiles' Court.</p>
+
+ <p>He would have fallen asleep just here with a pleasant
+ thought but for the recollection of Wilberforce's letter, which
+ startled him hardly less than the apparition of his friend in
+ the moonlight streaming through his half-curtained window would
+ have done. Is it always so pleasant a thought that for ever and
+ ever a man shall bear his own company?</p>
+
+ <p>But this Spenersberg? Seven years ago, on the day when he
+ came of age, Albert Spener, then a young clerk in a fancy-goods
+ store, went to look at the estate which his grandfather had
+ bequeathed to him the year preceding. Not ten years ago the old
+ man made his will and gave the property, on which he had not
+ quite starved, to his only grandson, and here was this
+ worthless gorge which stretched between the fields more
+ productive than many a famous gold-mine.</p>
+
+ <p>The youth had seen at once that if he should deal with the
+ land as his predecessors had done, he would be able to draw no
+ more from the stingy acres than they. He had shown the bent of
+ his mind and the nature of his talent by the promptness with
+ which he put things remote together, and by the directness with
+ which he reached his conclusions.</p>
+
+ <p>He had left his town-lodgings, having obtained of his
+ employer leave of absence for one week, and within twenty-four
+ hours had come to his conclusion and returned to his post. Of
+ that estate which he had inherited but a portion, and a very
+ small portion, offered to the cultivator the least
+ encouragement. The land had long ago been stripped of its
+ forest trees, and, thus defrauded of its natural fertilizers,
+ lay now, after successive seasons of drain and waste, as barren
+ as a desert, with the exception of that narrow strip between
+ the hills which apparently bent low that inland might look upon
+ river.</p>
+
+ <p>Along the banks of the stream, which flowed, a current of
+ considerable depth and swiftness, toward its outlet, the river,
+ willows were growing. Albert's employer was an importer to a
+ small extent, and fancy willow-ware formed a very considerable
+ share of his importations. The conclusion he had reached while
+ surveying his land was an answer to the question he had asked
+ himself: Why should not this land be made to bring forth the
+ kind of willow used by basket-weavers, and why should not
+ basket-weavers be induced to gather into a community of some
+ sort, and so importers be beaten in the market by domestic
+ productions? The aim thus clearly defined Spener had
+ accomplished. His Moravians furnished him with a willow-ware
+ which was always quoted at a high figure, and the patriotic
+ pride the manufacturer felt in the enterprise was abundantly
+ rewarded: no foreign mark was ever found on his home-made
+ goods.</p>
+
+ <p>But <i>his</i> Moravians: where did these people come from,
+ and how came they to be known as his?</p>
+
+ <p>The question brings us to Frederick Loretz. In those days he
+ was a porter in the establishment where Spener was a clerk. He
+ had filled this situation only one month, however, when he was
+ attacked with a fever which was scourging the neighborhood, and
+ taken to the hospital. Albert followed him thither with kindly
+ words and care, for the poor fellow was a stranger in the town,
+ and he had already told Spener his dismal story. Afar from wife
+ and child, among strangers and a pauper, his doom, he believed,
+ was to die. How he bemoaned his wasted life then, and the husks
+ which he had eaten!</p>
+
+ <p>In his delirium Loretz would have put an end to his life.
+ Spener talked him out of this horror of himself, and showed him
+ that there was always opportunity, while life lasted, for
+ wanderers to seek again the fold they had strayed from; for
+ when the delirium passed the man's conscience remained, and he
+ confessed that he had lived away from the brethren of his
+ faith, and was an outcast. Oh, if he could but be transported
+ to Herrnhut and set down there a well man in that sanctuary of
+ Moravianism, how devoutly would he return to the faith and
+ practice of his fathers!</p>
+
+ <p>When Spener returned from his trip of investigation he
+ hastened immediately to the hospital, sought out poor half-dead
+ Loretz, laid his hand on his shoulder, and said, "Come, get up:
+ I want you." And he explained his project: "I will build a
+ house for you, send for your wife and child, put you all
+ together, and start you in life. I am going into the basket
+ business, and I want you to look after my willows. After they
+ are pretty well grown you shall get in some
+ families&mdash;Simon-Pure Moravians, you know&mdash;and we will
+ have a village of our own. D'ye hear me?"</p>
+
+ <p>The poor fellow did hear: he struggled up in his bed, threw
+ his arms around Spener's neck, tried to kiss him, and
+ fainted.</p>
+
+ <p>"This is a good beginning," said Spener to himself as he
+ laid the senseless head upon the pillow and felt for the
+ beating heart. The beating heart was there. In a few moments
+ Loretz was looking, with eyes that shone with loving gratitude
+ and wondering admiration, on the young man who had saved his
+ life.</p>
+
+ <p>"I have no money," said this youth in further explanation of
+ his project&mdash;for he wanted his companion to understand his
+ circumstances from the outset&mdash;"but I shall borrow five
+ thousand dollars. I can pay the interest on that sum out of my
+ salary. Perhaps I shall sell a few lots on the river, if I can
+ turn attention to the region. It will all come out right,
+ anyhow. Now, how soon can you be ready? I will write to your
+ wife to-day if you say so, and tell her to come on with the
+ little girl."</p>
+
+ <p>"Wait a week," said Loretz in a whisper; and all that night
+ and the following day his chances for this world and the next
+ seemed about equal.</p>
+
+ <p>But after that he rallied, and his recovery was certain. It
+ was slow, however, hastened though it was by the hope and
+ expectation which had opened to him when he had reached the
+ lowest depth of despair and covered himself with the ashes of
+ repentance.</p>
+
+ <p>The letter for the wife and little girl was written, and
+ money sent to bring them from the place where Loretz had left
+ them when he set out in search of occupation, to find
+ employment as a porter, and the fever, and Albert Spener.</p>
+
+ <p>During the first year of co-working Loretz devoted himself
+ to the culture of the willow, and then, as time passed on and
+ hands were needed, he brought one family after another to the
+ place&mdash;Moravians all&mdash;until now there were at least
+ five hundred inhabitants in Spenersberg, a large factory and a
+ church, whereof Spener himself was a member "in good and
+ regular standing."</p>
+
+ <p>Seven years of incessant labor, directed by a wise
+ foresight, which looked almost like inspiration and miracle,
+ had resulted in all this real prosperity. Loretz never stopped
+ wondering at it, and yet he could have told you every step of
+ the process. All that had been <i>done</i> he had had a hand
+ in, but the devising brain was Spener's; and no wonder that, in
+ spite of his familiarity with the details, the sum-total of the
+ activities put forth in that valley should have seemed to
+ Loretz marvelous, magical.</p>
+
+ <p>He had many things to rejoice over besides his own
+ prosperity. His daughter was in all respects a perfect being,
+ to his thinking. For six years now she had been under the
+ instruction of Sister Benigna, not only in music, but in all
+ things that Sister Benigna, a well-instructed woman, could
+ teach. She sang, as Leonhard Marten would have told you,
+ "divinely," she was beautiful to look upon, and Albert Spener
+ desired to marry her.</p>
+
+ <p>Surely the Lord had blessed him, and remembered no more
+ those years of wanderings when, alienated from the brethren, he
+ sought out his own ways and came close upon destruction. What
+ should he return to the beneficent Giver for all these
+ benefits?</p>
+
+ <p>Poor Loretz! In his prosperity he thought that he should
+ never be moved, but he would not basely use that conviction and
+ forget the source of all his satisfaction. He remembered that
+ it was when he repented of his misdeeds that Spener came to him
+ and drew him from the pit. He could never look upon Albert as
+ other than a divine agent; and when Spener joined himself to
+ the Moravians, led partly by his admiration of them, partly by
+ religious impulse, and partly because of his conviction that to
+ be wholly successful he and his people must form a unit, his
+ joy was complete.</p>
+
+ <p>The proposal for Elise's hand had an effect upon her father
+ which any one who knew him well might have looked for and
+ directed. The pride of his life was satisfied. He remembered
+ that he and his Anna, in seeking to know the will of the Lord
+ in respect to their marriage, had been answered favorably by
+ the lot. He desired the signal demonstration of heavenly will
+ in regard to the nuptials proposed. Not a shadow of a doubt
+ visited his mind as to the result, and the influence of his
+ faith upon Spener was such that he acquiesced in the measure,
+ though not without remonstrance and misgiving and mental
+ reservation.</p>
+
+ <p>To find his way up into the region of faith, and quiet
+ himself there when the result of the seeking was known, was
+ almost impossible for Loretz. He could fear the Judge who had
+ decreed, but could he trust in Him? He began to grope back
+ among his follies of the past, seeking a crime he had not
+ repented, as the cause of this domestic calamity. But ah! to
+ reap such a harvest as this for any youthful folly! Poor soul!
+ little he knew of vengeance and retribution. He was at his
+ wit's end, incapable alike of advancing, retreating or of
+ peaceful surrender.</p>
+
+ <p>It was pleasant to him to think, in the night-watches, of
+ the young man who occupied the room next to his. He did not
+ see&mdash;at least had not yet seen&mdash;in Leonhard a
+ messenger sent to the house, as did his wife; but the presence
+ of the young stranger spoke favorable things in his behalf; and
+ then, as there was really nothing to be <i>done</i> about this
+ decision, anything that gave a diversion to sombre thoughts was
+ welcome. Sister Benigna had spoken very kindly to Leonhard in
+ the evening, and he had pointed out a place in one of Elise's
+ solos where by taking a higher key in a single passage a
+ marvelous effect could be produced. That showed knowledge; and
+ he said that he had taught music. Perhaps he would like to
+ remain until after the congregation festival had taken
+ place.</p>
+
+ <h3><a name="HCH0004"
+ id="HCH0004"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> CHAPTER VII.</h3>
+
+ <h3>THE BOOK.</h3>
+
+ <p>In the morning the master of the house rapped on Leonhard's
+ door and said: "When you come down I have something to show
+ you." The voice of Mr. Loretz had almost its accustomed
+ cheerfulness of tone, and he ended his remark with a brief "Ha!
+ ha!" peculiar to him, which not only expressed his own
+ good-humor, but also invited good-humored response.</p>
+
+ <p>Leonhard answered cheerily, and in a few moments he had
+ descended the steep uncovered stair to the music-room.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now for the book," Loretz called out as Leonhard
+ entered.</p>
+
+ <p>How handsome our young friend looked as he stood there
+ shaking hands with the elderly man, whose broad, florid face
+ now actually shone with hospitable feeling!</p>
+
+ <p>"Is father going to claim you as one of us, Mr. Marten?"
+ asked the wife of Loretz, who answered her husband's call by
+ coming into the room and bringing with her a large volume
+ wrapped in chamois skin.</p>
+
+ <p>"What shall I be, then?" asked Leonhard. "A wiser and a
+ better man, I do not doubt."</p>
+
+ <p>"What! you do not know?" the good woman stayed to say. "Has
+ nobody told you where you are, my young friend?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I never before found myself in a place I should like to
+ stay in always; so what does the rest signify?" answered
+ Leonhard. "What's in a name?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Not much perhaps, yet something," said Loretz. "We are all
+ Moravians here. I was going to look in this book here for the
+ names of your ancestors. I thought perhaps you knew about
+ Spenersberg."</p>
+
+ <p>"I am as new to it all as Christopher Columbus was to the
+ West India islands. If you find the names of my kinsmen down in
+ your book, sir, it&mdash;it will be a marvelous, happy sight
+ for me," said Leonhard.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll try my hand at it," said Loretz. "Ha! ha!" and he
+ opened the volume, which was bound in black leather, the leaves
+ yellowed with years. "This book," he continued, "is one hundred
+ and fifty years old. You will find recorded in it the names of
+ all my grandfather's friends, and all my father's. See, it is
+ our way. There are all the dates. Where they lived, see, and
+ where they died. It is all down. A man cannot feel himself cut
+ off from his kind as long as he has a volume like that in his
+ library. I have added a few names of my own friends, and their
+ birthdays. Here, you see, is Sister Benigna's, written with her
+ own hand. A most remarkable woman, sir. True as
+ steel&mdash;always the same. But"&mdash;he paused a moment and
+ looked at Leonhard with his head inclined to one side, and an
+ expression of perplexity upon his face&mdash;"there's something
+ out of the way here in this country. I have not more than one
+ name down to a dozen in my father's record, and twenty in my
+ grandfather's. We do not make friends, and we do not keep them,
+ as they did in old time. We don't trust each other as men ought
+ to. Half the time we find ourselves wondering whether the folks
+ we're dealing with are <i>honest</i>. Now think of that!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Are men any worse than they were in the old time?" asked
+ Leonhard, evidently not entering into the conversation with the
+ keenest enjoyment.</p>
+
+ <p>"I do not know how it is," said Loretz with a sigh,
+ continuing to turn the leaves of the book as he spoke.</p>
+
+ <p>"Perhaps we have less imagination, and don't look at every
+ new-comer as a friend until we have tried him," suggested
+ Leonhard. "We decide that everybody shall be tested before we
+ accept him. And isn't it the best way? Better than to be
+ disappointed, when we have set our heart on a man&mdash;or a
+ woman."</p>
+
+ <p>"I do not know&mdash;I cannot account for it," said Mr.
+ Loretz. Then with a sudden start he laid his right hand on the
+ page before him, and with a great pleased smile in his
+ deep-set, small blue eyes he said: "Here is your name. I felt
+ sure I should find it: I felt certain it was down. See here, on
+ my grandfather's page&mdash;<i>Leonhard Marten, Herrnhut</i>,
+ 1770. How do you like that?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I like it well," said Leonhard, bending over the book and
+ examining the close-fisted autograph set down strongly in
+ unfading ink. Had he found an ancestor at last? What could have
+ amazed him as much?</p>
+
+ <p>"What have you found?" asked Mrs. Loretz, who had heard
+ these remarks in the next room, where she was actively making
+ preparations for the breakfast, which already sent forth its
+ odorous invitations.</p>
+
+ <p>"We have found the name," answered her husband. "Come and
+ see. I have read it, I dare say, a hundred times: that was what
+ made me feel that an old friend had come."</p>
+
+ <p>"That means," said the good woman, hastening in at her
+ husband's call, and reading the name with a pleased
+ smile&mdash;"that means that you belong to us. I thought you
+ did. I am glad."</p>
+
+ <p>Were these folk so intent on securing a convert that in
+ these various ways they made the young stranger feel that he
+ was not among strangers in this unknown Spenersberg? Nothing
+ was farther from their thought: they only gave to their kindly
+ feeling hearty utterance, and perhaps spoke with a little extra
+ emphasis because the constraint they secretly felt in
+ consequence of their household trouble made them unanimous in
+ the effort to put it out of sight&mdash;not out of this
+ stranger's sight, but out of their own.</p>
+
+ <p>"Perhaps you will stop with us a while, and maybe write your
+ name on my page before you go," said Loretz, afraid that his
+ wife had gone a little too far.</p>
+
+ <p>"Without a single test?" Leonhard answered. "Haven't we just
+ agreed that we wise men don't take each other on trust, as they
+ did in our grandfathers' day?"</p>
+
+ <p>"A man living in Herrnhut in 1770 would not have for a
+ descendant a&mdash;a man I could not trust," said Loretz,
+ closing the book and placing it in its chamois covering again.
+ "Breakfast, mother, did you say?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Have you wanted ink?" asked Sister Benigna, entering at
+ that instant. "Are we writing in the sacred birthday book?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Not yet," said Leonhard hastily, the color rising to his
+ face in a way to suggest forked lightning somewhere beyond
+ sight.</p>
+
+ <p>"You have wanted ink, and are too kind to let me know," she
+ said. "I emptied the bottle copying music for the children
+ yesterday."</p>
+
+ <p>"The ink was put to a better use then than I could have
+ found for it this morning," said Leonhard.</p>
+
+ <p>And Mrs. Loretz, who looked into the room just then, said to
+ herself, as her eyes fell on him, "Poor soul! he is in
+ trouble."</p>
+
+ <p>In fact, this thought was in Leonhard's mind as he went into
+ breakfast with the family: "A deuced good friend I have
+ proved&mdash;to Wilberforce! Isn't there anybody here
+ clear-eyed enough to see that it would be like forgery to write
+ my name down in a book of friendship?"</p>
+
+ <p>The morning meal was enlivened by much more than the usual
+ amount of talk. Leonhard was curious to know about Herrnhut,
+ that old home of Moravianism, and the interest which he
+ manifested in the history Loretz was so eager to communicate
+ made him in turn an object of almost affectionate attention.
+ That he had no facts of private biography to communicate in
+ turn did net attract notice, because, however many such facts
+ he might have ready to produce, by the time Loretz had done
+ talking it was necessary that the day's work should
+ begin.</p><a name="HCH0005"
+ id="HCH0005"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h3><a name="HCH0008"
+ id="HCH0008"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> CHAPTER VIII.</h3>
+
+ <h3>CONFERENCE MEETING.</h3>
+
+ <p>The school-room was a large apartment in the basement of the
+ factory which had been used as a drying-room until it became
+ necessary to find for the increasing numbers of the little
+ flock more spacious accommodations. The basement was entered by
+ a door at the end of the building opposite that by which the
+ operatives entered the factory, and the hours were so timed
+ that the children went and came without disturbance to
+ themselves or others. The path that led to the basement door
+ was neatly bordered with flowering plants and bushes, and
+ sunlight was always to be found there, if anywhere in the
+ valley, from eight o'clock till two.</p>
+
+ <p>Leonhard walked to the factory with Sister Benigna, to whose
+ conduct Loretz had consigned him when called away by the tower
+ bell.</p>
+
+ <p>At the door of the basement Mr. Wenck was standing with a
+ printed copy of Handel's sacred oratorio of <i>The Messiah</i>
+ in his hand. Evidently he was waiting for Sister Benigna.</p>
+
+ <p>But when she had said to Leonhard, "Pass on to the other end
+ of the building and you will find the entrance, and Mr.
+ Spener's office in the corner as you enter," and Leonhard had
+ thanked her, and bowed and passed on, and she turned to Mr.
+ Wenck, it was very little indeed that he said or had to say
+ about the music which he held in his hand.</p>
+
+ <p>"I have no doubt that all the preparation necessary for
+ to-morrow evening is being made," he said. "You may need this
+ book. But I did not come to talk about it. Sister Benigna," he
+ continued in a different tone, and a voice not quite under his
+ control, "is it not unreasonable to have passed a sleepless
+ night thinking of Albert and Elise?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Very unreasonable." But he had not charged her, as she
+ supposed, with that folly, as his next words showed.</p>
+
+ <p>"It is, and yet I have done it&mdash;only because all this
+ might have been so easily avoided."</p>
+
+ <p>"And yet it was unavoidable," said she, looking toward the
+ school-room door as one who had no time to waste in idle
+ talk.</p>
+
+ <p>"Not that I question the wisdom of the resort if all were of
+ one mind," said Mr. Wenck, who had the dreary all-day before
+ him, and was not in the least pressed for time. "But I can see
+ that even on the part of Brother Loretz the act was not a
+ genuine act of faith."</p>
+
+ <p>Startled by the expression the minister was giving to her
+ secret thoughts, Benigna exclaimed, "And yet what can be
+ done?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Nothing," he answered. "If Loretz should yield to Spener,
+ and if I should&mdash;do you not see he has had everything his
+ own way here?&mdash;he would feel that nothing could stand in
+ opposition to him. If he were a different man! And they are
+ both so young!"</p>
+
+ <p>"I know that Elise has a conscience that will hold her fast
+ to duty," said Benigna, but she did not speak hopefully: she
+ spoke deliberately, however, thinking that these words
+ <i>conscience</i> and <i>duty</i> might arrest the minister's
+ attention, and that he would perhaps, by some means, throw
+ light upon questions which were constantly becoming more
+ perplexing to her. Was conscience an unfailing guide? Was one
+ person's duty to be pronounced upon by another without scruple,
+ and defined with unfaltering exactness? But the words had not
+ arrested the minister's attention.</p>
+
+ <p>"If they could only see that there is nothing to be done!"
+ said he. "Oh, they will, Benigna! Had they only the faith,
+ Benigna!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yet how vain their sacrifice, for they have it not!" said
+ she. And as if she would not prolong an interview which must be
+ full of pain, because no light could proceed from any words
+ that would be given them to speak, Sister Benigna turned
+ abruptly toward the basement door when she had said this, and
+ entered it without bestowing a parting glance even on the
+ minister.</p>
+
+ <p>He walked away after an instant's hesitation: indeed there
+ was nothing further to be said, and she did well to go.</p>
+
+ <p>Going homeward by a path which led along the hillside above
+ the village street, he must pass the small house separated from
+ all others&mdash;the house which was the appointed
+ resting-place of all who lived in Spenersberg to die
+ there&mdash;known as the Corpse-house. To it the bodies of
+ deceased persons were always taken after death, and there they
+ remained until the hour when they were carried forth for
+ burial.</p>
+
+ <p>As Mr. Wenck approached he saw that the door stood open: a
+ few steps farther, and this fact was accounted for. A bent and
+ wrinkled old woman stood there with a broom in her hand, which
+ she had been using in a plain, straight-forward manner.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, Mary," he said, "what does this mean, my good
+ woman?"</p>
+
+ <p>"It is the minister," she answered in a low voice,
+ curtseying. "I was moved to come here this morning, sir, and
+ see to things. It was time to be brushing up a little, I
+ thought. It is a month now since the last."</p>
+
+ <p>"I will take down the old boughs then, and garnish the walls
+ with new ones. And have you looked at the lamp too, Mary?"</p>
+
+ <p>"It is trimmed, sir," said the woman; and the minister's
+ readiness to assist her drew forth the confession: "I was
+ thinking on my bed in the night-watches that it must be done.
+ There will one be going home soon. And it may be myself, sir. I
+ could not have been easy if I had not come up to tidy the
+ house."</p>
+
+ <p>Having finished her task, which was a short one and easily
+ performed, the woman now waited to watch the minister as he
+ selected cedar boughs and wove them into wreaths, and suspended
+ them from the walls and rafters of the little room; and it
+ comforted the simple soul when, standing in the doorway, the
+ good man lifted his eyes toward heaven and said in the words of
+ the church litany:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">From error and misunderstanding,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">From the loss of our glory in Thee,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">From self-complacency,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">From untimely projects,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">From needless perplexity,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">From the murdering spirit and devices of
+ Satan,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">From the influence of the spirit of this
+ world,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">From hypocrisy and fanaticism,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">From the deceitfulness of sin,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">From all sin,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2"><i>Preserve us, gracious Lord and
+ God</i>&mdash;</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>and devoutly she joined in with him in the solemn responsive
+ cry.</p>
+
+ <p>It was very evident that the minister's work that day was
+ not to be performed in his silent home among his books.</p>
+
+ <p>On the brightest day let the sun become eclipsed, and how
+ the earth will pine! What melancholy will pervade the busy
+ streets, the pleasant fields and woods! How disconsolately the
+ birds will seek their mates and their nests!</p>
+
+ <p>The children came together, but many a half hour passed
+ during which the shadow of an Unknown seemed to come between
+ them and their teacher. The bright soul, was she too suffering
+ from an eclipse? Does it happen that all souls, even the most
+ valiant, most loving, least selfish, come in time to passes so
+ difficult that, shrinking back, they say, "Why should I
+ struggle to gain the other side? What is there worth seeking?
+ Better to end all here. This life is not worth enduring"? And
+ yet, does it also come to pass as certainly that these valiant,
+ unselfish, loving ones will struggle, fight, climb, wade, creep
+ on, on while the breath of life remains in them, and never
+ surrender? It seemed as if Sister Benigna had arrived at a
+ place where her baffled spirit stood still and felt its
+ helplessness. Could she do nothing for Elise, the dear child
+ for whose happiness she would cheerfully give her life, and not
+ think the price too dear?</p>
+
+ <p>By and by the children were aware that Sister Benigna had
+ come again among them: the humblest little flower lifted up its
+ head, and the smallest bird began to chirp and move about and
+ smooth its wings.</p>
+
+ <p>Sister Benigna! what had she recollected?&mdash;that but a
+ single day perhaps was hers to live, and here were all these
+ children! As she turned with ardent zeal to her
+ work&mdash;which indeed had not failed of accustomed conduct so
+ far as routine went&mdash;tell me what do you find in those
+ lovely eyes if not the heavenliest assurances? Let who will
+ call the scene of this life's operations a vale of tears, a
+ world of misery, a prison-house of the spirit, here is one who
+ asks for herself nothing of honors or riches or pleasures, and
+ who can bless the Lord God for the glory of the earth he has
+ created, and for those everlasting purposes of his which
+ mortals can but trust in, and which are past finding out.
+ Children, let us do our best to-day, and wait until to-morrow
+ for to-morrow's gifts. This exhortation was in the eyes, mien,
+ conduct of the teacher, and so she led them on until, when they
+ came to practice their hymns for the festival, every little
+ heart and voice was in tune, and she praised them with voice so
+ cheerful, how should they guess that it had ever been choked by
+ anguish or had ever fainted in despair?</p>
+
+ <p>O young eyes saddening over what is to you a painful,
+ insoluble problem! yet a little while and you shall see the
+ mists of morning breaking everywhere, and the great conquering
+ sun will enfold you too in its warm embrace: the humble laurels
+ of the mountain's side, even as the great pines and cedars of
+ the mountain's crest, have but to receive and use what the
+ sterile rock and the blinding cloud, the wintry tempest and the
+ rain and the summer's heat bestow, and lo! the heights are
+ alive with glory. But it is not in a day.</p><a name="HCH0006"
+ id="HCH0006"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h3><a name="HCH0009"
+ id="HCH0009"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> CHAPTER IX.</h3>
+
+ <h3>WILL THE ARCHITECT HAVE EMPLOYMENT?</h3>
+
+ <p>On entering the factory, Leonhard met Loretz near the door
+ talking with Albert Spener. When he saw Leonhard, Loretz said,
+ "I was just saying to Mr. Spener that I expected you, sir, and
+ how he might recognize you; but you shall speak for yourself.
+ If you will spend a little time looking about, I shall be back
+ soon: perhaps Mr. Spener&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Leonhard Marten, I believe," said Mr. Albert Spener
+ with a little exaggeration of his natural stiffness. Perhaps he
+ did not suspect that all the morning he had been manifesting
+ considerable loftiness toward Loretz, and that he spoke in a
+ way that made Leonhard feel that his departure from Spenersberg
+ would probably take place within something less than
+ twenty-four hours.</p>
+
+ <p>Yet within half an hour the young men were walking up and
+ down the factory, examining machinery and work, and talking as
+ freely as if they had known each other six months. They were
+ not in everything as unlike as they were in person. Spener was
+ a tall, spare man, who conveyed an impression of mental
+ strength and physical activity. He could turn his hand to
+ anything, and <i>attempt</i> anything that was to be done by
+ skillful handicraft; and whether he could use his wits well in
+ shaping men, let Spenersberg answer. His square-shaped head was
+ covered with bright brown hair, which had a reddish tinge, and
+ his moustache was of no stinted growth: his black eyes
+ penetrated and flashed, and could glow and glare in a way to
+ make weakness and feebleness tremble. His quick speech did not
+ spare: right and left he used his swords of thought and will.
+ Fall in! or, Out of the way! were the commands laid down by him
+ since the foundations of Spenersberg were laid. In the
+ fancy-goods line he might have made of himself a spectacle,
+ supposing he could have remained in the trade; but set apart
+ here in this vale, the centre of a sphere of his own creation,
+ where there was something at stake vast enough to justify the
+ exercise of energy and authority, he had a field for the fair
+ play of all that was within him&mdash;the worst and the best.
+ The worst that he could be he was&mdash;a tyrant; and the best
+ that he could be he was&mdash;a lover. Hitherto his tyrannies
+ had brought about good results only, but it was well that the
+ girl he loved had not only spirit and courage enough to love
+ him, but also faith enough to remove mountains.</p>
+
+ <p>If Leonhard had determined that he would make a friend of
+ Spener before he entered the factory, he could not have
+ proceeded more wisely than he did. First, he was interested in
+ the works, and intent on being told about the manufacture of
+ articles of furniture from a product ostensibly of such small
+ account as the willow; then he was interested in the designs
+ and surprised at the ingenious variety, and curious to learn
+ their source, and amazed to hear that Mr. Spener had himself
+ originated more than half of them. Then presently he began to
+ suggest designs, and at the end of an hour he found himself at
+ a table in Spener's office drawing shapes for baskets and
+ chairs and tables and ornamental devices, and making Spener
+ laugh so at some remark as to be heard all over the
+ building.</p>
+
+ <p>"You say you are an architect," he said after Leonhard had
+ covered a sheet of paper with suggestions written and outlined
+ for him, which he looked at with swiftly-comprehending and
+ satisfied eyes. "What do you say to doing a job for me?"</p>
+
+ <p>"With all my heart," answered Leonhard, "if it can be done
+ at once."</p>
+
+ <p>These words were in the highest degree satisfactory. Here
+ was a man who knew the worth of a minute. He was the man for
+ Spener. "Come with me," he said, "and I'll show you a
+ building-site or two worth putting money on;" and so they
+ walked together out of the factory, crossed a rustic
+ foot-bridge to the opposite side, ascended a sunny half-cleared
+ slope and passed across a field; and there beneath them, far
+ below, rolled the grand river which had among its notable ports
+ this little Spenersberg.</p>
+
+ <p>"What do you think of a house on this site, sir?" asked
+ Spener, looking with no small degree of satisfaction around him
+ and down the rocky steep.</p>
+
+ <p>"I think I should like to be commissioned to build a castle
+ with towers and gates of this very granite which you could hew
+ out by the thousand cord from the quarry yonder. What a perfect
+ gray for building!"</p>
+
+ <p>"I have always thought I would use the material on the
+ ground&mdash;the best compliment I could pay this place which I
+ have raised my fortune out of," said Spener.</p>
+
+ <p>"There's no better material on the earth," said
+ Leonhard.</p>
+
+ <p>"But I don't want a castle: I want a house with room enough
+ in it&mdash;high ceilings, wide halls, and a piazza fifteen or
+ twenty feet wide all around it."</p>
+
+ <p>"Must I give up the castle? There isn't a better site on the
+ Rhine than this."</p>
+
+ <p>"But I'm not a baron, and I live at peace with my
+ neighbors&mdash;at least with outsiders." That last remark was
+ an unfortunate one, for it brought the speaker back consciously
+ to confront the images which were constantly lurking round
+ him&mdash;only hid when he commanded them out of sight in the
+ manfulness of a spirit that would not be interfered with in its
+ work. He sat looking at Leonhard opposite to him, who had
+ already taken a note-book and pencil from his pocket, and,
+ planting his left foot firmly against one of the great rocks of
+ the cliff, he said, "Loretz tells me you stayed all night at
+ his house."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, he invited me in when I inquired my way to the
+ inn."</p>
+
+ <p>"Sister Benigna was there?"</p>
+
+ <p>"She wasn't anywhere else," said Leonhard, looking up and
+ smiling. "Excuse the slang. If you are where she is, you may
+ feel very certain about her being there."</p>
+
+ <p>"Not at all," said Albert, evidently nettled into argument
+ by the theme he had introduced. "She is one of those persons
+ who can be in several places at the same time. You heard them
+ sing, I suppose. They are preparing for the congregation
+ festival. It is six years since we started here, but we only
+ built our church last year: this year we have the first
+ celebration in the edifice, and of course there is great
+ preparation."</p>
+
+ <p>"I have been wondering how I could go away before it takes
+ place ever since I heard of it."</p>
+
+ <p>"If you wonder less how you can stay, remain of course,"
+ said Spener with no great cordiality: he owed this stranger
+ nothing, after all.</p>
+
+ <p>"It will only be to prove that I am really music-mad, as
+ they have been telling me ever since I was born. If that is the
+ case, from the evidences I have had since I came here I think I
+ shall recover."</p>
+
+ <p>"What do you mean?" asked Spener.</p>
+
+ <p>"I mean that I see how little I really know about the
+ science. I never heard anything to equal the musical knowledge
+ and execution of Loretz's daughter and this Sister Benigna you
+ speak of."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah! I am not a musician. I tried the trombone, but lacked
+ the patience. I am satisfied to admire. And so you liked the
+ singers? Which best?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Both."</p>
+
+ <p>"Come, come&mdash;what was the difference?"</p>
+
+ <p>"The difference?" repeated Leonhard reflecting.</p>
+
+ <p>Spener also seemed to reflect on his question, and was so
+ absorbed in his thinking that he seemed to be startled when
+ Leonhard, from his studies of the square house with the wide
+ halls and the large rooms with high ceilings, turned to him and
+ said, "The difference, sir, is between two women."</p>
+
+ <p>"No difference at all, do you mean? Do you mean they are
+ alike? They are not alike."</p>
+
+ <p>"Not so alike that I have seen anything like either of
+ them."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah! neither have I. For that reason I shall marry one of
+ them, while the other I would not marry&mdash;no, not if she
+ were the only woman on the continent."</p>
+
+ <p>"You are a fortunate man," said Leonhard.</p>
+
+ <p>"I intend to prove that. Nothing more is necessary than the
+ girl's consent&mdash;is there?&mdash;if you have made up your
+ mind that you must have her."</p>
+
+ <p>"I should think you might say that, sir."</p>
+
+ <p>"But you don't hazard an opinion as to which, sir."</p>
+
+ <p>"Not I."</p>
+
+ <p>"Why not?"</p>
+
+ <p>"It might be Miss Elise, if&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"If what?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I am not accustomed to see young ladies in their homes. I
+ have only fancied sometimes what a pretty girl might be in her
+ father's house."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, sir?" said Spener impatiently.</p>
+
+ <p>"A young lady like Miss Elise would have a great deal to
+ say, I should suppose."</p>
+
+ <p>"Is she dumb? I thought she could talk. I should have said
+ so."</p>
+
+ <p>"I should have guessed, too, that she would always be
+ singing about the house."</p>
+
+ <p>"And if not&mdash;what then?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Something must be going wrong somewhere. So you see it
+ can't be Miss Elise, according to my judgment."</p>
+
+ <p>Spener laughed when this conclusion was reached.</p>
+
+ <p>"Come here again within a month and see if she can talk and
+ sing," said he with eyes flashing. "Perhaps you have found that
+ it is as easy to frighten a bugbear out of the way as to be
+ frightened by one. I never found, sir, that I couldn't put a
+ stumbling-block out of my path. We have one little man here who
+ is going to prove himself a nuisance, I'm afraid. He is a good
+ little fellow, too. I always liked him until he undertook to
+ manage my affairs. I don't propose to give up the reins yet a
+ while, and until I do, you see, he has no chance. I am sorry
+ about it, for I considered him quite like a friend; but a
+ friend, sir, with a flaw in him is worse than an enemy. I know
+ where to find my enemies, but I can't keep track of a man who
+ pretends to be a friend and serves me ill. But pshaw! let me
+ see what you are doing."</p>
+
+ <p>Leonhard was glad when the man ceased from discoursing on
+ friendship&mdash;a favorite theme among Spenersbergers, he
+ began to think&mdash;and glad to break away from his work, for
+ he held his pencil less firmly than he should have done.</p>
+
+ <p>Spener studied the portion completed, and seemed surprised
+ as well as pleased. "You know your business," said he. "Be so
+ good as to finish the design."</p>
+
+ <p>Then returning the book to Leonhard, he looked at his watch.
+ "It is time I went to dinner," he said. "Come with me. Loretz
+ knows you are with me, and will expect you to be my guest
+ to-day." So they walked across the field, but did not descend
+ by the path along which they had ascended. They went farther to
+ the east, and Spener led the way down the rough hillside until
+ he came to a point whence the descent was less steep and
+ difficult. There he paused. A beautiful view was spread before
+ them. Little Spenersberg lay on the slope opposite: between ran
+ the stream, which widened farther toward the east and narrowed
+ toward the west, where it emptied into the river. Eastward the
+ valley also widened, and there the willows grew, and looked
+ like a great garden, beautiful in every shade of green.</p>
+
+ <p>"I should not have the river from this point," said Spener,
+ "but I should have a great deal more, and be nearer the people:
+ I do not think it would be the thing to appear even to separate
+ myself from them. I have done a great deal not so agreeable to
+ me, I assure you, in order to bring myself near to them. One
+ must make sacrifices to obtain his ends: it is only to count
+ the cost and then be ready to put down the money. Suppose you
+ plant a house just here."</p>
+
+ <p>"How could it be done?"</p>
+
+ <p>"You an architect and ask me!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Things can be planted anywhere," answered Leonhard, "but
+ whether the cost of production will not be greater than the
+ fruit is worth, is the question. You can have a platform built
+ here as broad as that the temple stood on if you are willing to
+ pay for the foundations."</p>
+
+ <p>"That is the talk!" said Spener. "Take a square look, and
+ let me know what you can do toward a house on the hillside. You
+ see there is no end of raw material for building, and it is a
+ perfect prospect. But come now to dinner."</p>
+
+ <p class="author">CAROLINE CHESEBRO.</p>
+
+ <p class="center">[TO BE CONTINUED.]</p><a name="H_4_0011"
+ id="H_4_0011"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h2>COUNTRY-HOUSE LIFE IN ENGLAND.</h2>
+
+ <p>The love for country life is, if possible, stronger in
+ England now than at any previous period in her history. There
+ is no other country where this taste has prevailed to the same
+ extent. It arose originally from causes mainly political. In
+ France a similar condition of things existed down to the
+ sixteenth century, and was mainly brought to an end by the
+ policy of ministers, who dreaded the increasing power of petty
+ princes in remote provinces becoming in combination formidable
+ to the central power. It was specially the object of Richelieu
+ and Mazarin to check this sort of baronial <i>imperium in
+ imperio</i>, and it became in the time of Louis XIV the
+ keystone of that monarch's domestic policy. This tended to
+ encourage the "hanging on" of <i>grands seigneurs</i> about the
+ court, where many of the chief of them, after having exhausted
+ their resources in gambling or riotous living, became dependent
+ for place or pension on the Crown, and were in fact the
+ creatures of the king and his minister. Of course this did not
+ apply to all. Here and there in the broad area of France were
+ to be found magnificent ch&acirc;teaux&mdash;a few of which,
+ especially in Central France, still survive&mdash;where the
+ marquis or count reigned over his people an almost absolute
+ monarch.</p>
+
+ <p>There is a passage in one of Horace Walpole's letters in
+ which that virtuoso expresses his regret, after a visit to the
+ ancestral "h&ocirc;tels" of Paris, whose contents had afforded
+ him such intense gratification, that the nobility of England,
+ like that of France, had not concentrated their treasures of
+ art, etc. in London houses. Had he lived a few years longer he
+ would probably have altered his views, which were such as his
+ sagacious and manly father, who dearly loved his Norfolk home,
+ Houghton, would never have held.</p>
+
+ <p>In England, from the time that anything like social life, as
+ we understand the phrase, became known, the power of the Crown
+ was so well established that no necessity for resorting to a
+ policy such as Richelieu's for diminishing the influence of the
+ noblesse existed.</p>
+
+ <p>In fact, a course distinctly the reverse came to be adopted
+ from the time of Elizabeth down to even a later period than the
+ reign of Charles II.</p>
+
+ <p>In the reign of Elizabeth an act was passed, which is to
+ this hour probably on the statute book, restricting building in
+ or near the metropolis. James I appears to have been in a
+ chronic panic on this subject, and never lost an opportunity of
+ dilating upon it. In one of his proclamations he refers to
+ those swarms of gentry "who, through the instigation of their
+ wives, or to new model and fashion their daughters who, if they
+ were unmarried, marred their reputations, and if married, lost
+ them&mdash;did neglect their country hospitality and cumber the
+ city, a general nuisance to the kingdom." He desired the Star
+ Chamber "to regulate the exorbitancy of the new buildings about
+ the city, which were but a shelter for those who, when they had
+ spent their estates in coaches, lacqueys and fine clothes like
+ Frenchmen, lived miserably in their houses like Italians; but
+ the honor of the English nobility and gentry is to be
+ hospitable among their tenants.</p>
+
+ <p>"Gentlemen resident on their estates," said he, very
+ sensibly, "were like ships in port: their value and magnitude
+ were felt and acknowledged; but when at a distance, as their
+ size seemed insignificant, so their worth and importance were
+ not duly estimated."</p>
+
+ <p>Charles I., with characteristic arbitrariness, carried
+ matters with a still higher hand. His Star Chamber caused
+ buildings to be actually razed, and fined truants heavily. One
+ case which is reported displays the grim and costly humor of
+ the illegal tribunal which dealt with such cases. Poor Mr.
+ Palmer of Sussex, a gay bachelor, being called upon to show
+ cause why he had been residing in London, pleaded in
+ extenuation that he had no house, his mansion having been
+ destroyed by fire two years before. This, however, was held
+ rather an aggravation of the offence, inasmuch as he had failed
+ to rebuild it; and Mr. Palmer paid a penalty of one thousand
+ pounds&mdash;equivalent to at least twenty thousand dollars
+ now.</p>
+
+ <p>A document which especially serves to show the manner of
+ life of the ancient noblesse is the earl of Northumberland's
+ "Household Book" in the early part of the sixteenth century. By
+ this we see the great magnificence of the old nobility, who,
+ seated in their castles, lived in a state of splendor scarcely
+ inferior to that of the court. As the king had his privy
+ council, so the earl of Northumberland had his council,
+ composed of his principal officers, by whose advice and
+ assistance he established his code of economic laws. As the
+ king had his lords and grooms of the chamber, who waited in
+ their respective turns, so the earl was attended by the
+ constables of his several castles, who entered into waiting in
+ regular succession. Among other instances of magnificence it
+ may be remarked that not fewer than eleven priests were kept in
+ the household, presided over by a doctor or bachelor of
+ divinity as dean of the chapel.</p>
+
+ <p>An account of how the earl of Worcester lived at Ragland
+ Castle before the civil wars which began in 1641 also exhibits
+ his manner of life in great detail: "At eleven o'clock the
+ Castle Gates were shut and the tables laid: two in the
+ dining-room; three in the hall; one in Mrs. Watson's
+ appartment, where the chaplains eat; two in the housekeeper's
+ room for my ladie's women. The Earl came into the Dining Room
+ attended by his gentlemen. As soon as he was seated, Sir Ralph
+ Blackstone, Steward of the House, retired. The Comptroller, Mr.
+ Holland, attended with his staff; as did the Sewer, Mr.
+ Blackburn, and the daily waiters with many gentlemen's sons,
+ from two to seven hundred pounds a year, bred up in the Castle;
+ my ladie's Gentleman Usher, Mr. Harcourt; my lord's Gentlemen
+ of the Chamber, Mr. Morgan and Mr. Fox.</p>
+
+ <p>"At the first table sat the noble family and such of the
+ nobility as came there. At the second table in the Dining-room
+ sat Knights and honorable gentlemen attended by footmen.</p>
+
+ <p>"In the hall at the first table sat Sir R. Blackstone,
+ Steward, the Comptroller, Secretary, Master of the Horse,
+ Master of the Fishponds, my Lord Herbert's Preceptor, with such
+ gentlemen as came there under the degree of knight, attended by
+ footmen and plentifully served with wine.</p>
+
+ <p>"At the third table in the hall sate the Clerk of the
+ Kitchen, with the Yeomen, officers of the House, two Grooms of
+ the Chamber, etc.</p>
+
+ <p>"Other officers of the Household were the Chief Auditor,
+ Clerk of Accounts, Purveyor of the Castle, Usher of the Hall,
+ Closet Keeper, Gentleman of the Chapel, Keeper of the Records,
+ Master of the Wardrobe, Master of the Armoury, Master Groom of
+ the Stable for the 12 War-horses, Master of the Hounds, Master
+ Falconer, Porter and his men, two Butchers, two Keepers of the
+ Home Park, two Keepers of the Red Deer Park, Footmen, Grooms
+ and other Menial Servants to the number of 150. Some of the
+ footmen were Brewers and Bakers.</p>
+
+ <p>"<i>Out offices</i>.&mdash;Steward of Ragland, Governor of
+ Chepstow Castle, Housekeeper of Worcester House in London,
+ thirteen Bailiffs, two Counsel for the Bailiffs&mdash;who
+ looked after the estate&mdash;to have recourse to, and a
+ Solicitor."</p>
+
+ <p>In a delicious old volume now rarely to be met with, called
+ <i>The Olio</i>, published eighty years ago, Francis Grose the
+ antiquary thus describes certain characters typical of the
+ country life of the earlier half of the seventeenth century:
+ "When I was a young man there existed in the families of most
+ unmarried men or widowers of the rank of gentlemen, resident in
+ the country, a certain antiquated female, either maiden or
+ widow, commonly an aunt or cousin. Her dress I have now before
+ me: it consisted of a stiff-starched cap and hood, a little
+ hoop, a rich silk damask gown with large flowers. She leant on
+ an ivory-headed crutch-cane, and was followed by a fat
+ phthisicky dog of the pug kind, who commonly reposed on a
+ cushion, and enjoyed the privilege of snarling at the servants,
+ and occasionally biting their heels, with impunity. By the side
+ of this old lady jingled a bunch of keys, securing in different
+ closets and corner-cupboards all sorts of cordial waters,
+ cherry and raspberry brandy, washes for the complexion, Daffy's
+ elixir, a rich seed-cake, a number of pots of currant jelly and
+ raspberry jam, with a range of gallipots and phials and purges
+ for the use of poorer neighbors. The daily business of this
+ good lady was to scold the maids, collect eggs, feed the
+ turkeys and assist at all lyings-in that happened within the
+ parish. Alas! this being is no more seen, and the race is, like
+ that of her pug dog and the black rat, totally extinct.</p>
+
+ <p>"Another character, now worn out and gone, was the country
+ squire: I mean the little, independent country gentleman of
+ three hundred pounds a year, who commonly appeared in a plain
+ drab or plush coat, large silver buttons, a jockey cap, and
+ rarely without boots. His travels never exceeded the distance
+ to the county-town, and that only at assize- and session-time,
+ or to attend an election. Once a week he commonly dined at the
+ next market-town with the attorneys and justices. This man went
+ to church regularly, read the weekly journal, settled the
+ parochial disputes between the parish officers at the vestry,
+ and afterward adjourned to the neighboring ale-house, where he
+ usually got drunk for the good of his country. He never played
+ at cards but at Christmas, when a family pack was produced from
+ the mantelpiece. He was commonly followed by a couple of
+ greyhounds and a pointer, and announced his arrival at a
+ friend's house by cracking his whip or giving the view-halloo.
+ His drink was generally ale, except on Christmas, the Fifth of
+ November or some other gala-day, when he would make a bowl of
+ strong brandy punch, garnished with a toast and nutmeg. A
+ journey to London was by one of these men reckoned as great an
+ undertaking as is at present a voyage to the East Indies, and
+ undertaken with scarcely less precaution and preparation. The
+ mansion of one of these squires was of plaster striped with
+ timber, not unaptly called calimanco-work, or of red brick;
+ large casemented bow-windows, a porch with seats in it, and
+ over it a study, the eaves of the house well inhabited by
+ swallows, and the court set round with hollyhocks. The hall was
+ furnished with flitches of bacon, and the mantelpiece with guns
+ and fishing-rods of different dimensions, accompanied by the
+ broadsword, partisan and dagger borne by his ancestors in the
+ Civil Wars. The vacant spaces were occupied by stags' horns.
+ Against the wall was posted King Charles's <i>Golden Rules</i>,
+ Vincent Wing's <i>Almanack</i> and a portrait of the duke of
+ Marlborough: in his window lay Baker's <i>Chronicle</i>, Fox's
+ <i>Book of Martyrs</i>, Glanvil on <i>Apparitions</i>,
+ Quincey's <i>Dispensatory</i>, the <i>Complete Justice</i> and
+ a <i>Book of Farriery</i>. In the corner, by the fireside,
+ stood a large wooden two-armed chair with a cushion; and within
+ the chimney-corner were a couple of seats. Here, at Christmas,
+ he entertained his tenants assembled round a glowing fire made
+ of the roots of trees and other great logs, and told and heard
+ the traditionary tales of the village respecting ghosts and
+ witches till fear made them afraid to move. In the mean time
+ the jorum of ale was in continual circulation. The best parlor,
+ which was never opened but on particular occasions, was
+ furnished with Turk-worked chairs, and hung round with
+ portraits of his ancestors&mdash;the men, some in the character
+ of shepherds with their crooks, dressed in full suits and huge
+ full-bottomed perukes, and others in complete armor or
+ buff-coats; the females, likewise as shepherdesses with the
+ lamb and crook, all habited in high heads and flowing robes.
+ Alas! these men and these houses are no more! The luxury of the
+ times has obliged them to quit the country and become humble
+ dependants on great men, to solicit a place or commission, to
+ live in London, to rack their tenants and draw their rents
+ before due. The venerable mansion is in the mean time suffered
+ to tumble down or is partly upheld as a farm-house, till after
+ a few years the estate is conveyed to the steward of the
+ neighboring lord, or else to some nabob, contractor or limb of
+ the law."</p>
+
+ <p>It is unquestionably owing to the love of country life
+ amongst the higher classes that England so early attained in
+ many respects what may be termed an even civilization. In
+ almost all other countries the traveler beyond the confines of
+ a few great cities finds himself in a region of comparative
+ semi-barbarism. But no one familiar with English country life
+ can say that this is the case in the rural districts of
+ England, whilst it is most unquestionably so in Ireland, simply
+ because she has through absenteeism been deprived of those
+ influences which have done so much for her wealthy sister. Go
+ where you will in England to-day, and you will find within five
+ miles of you a good turnpike road, leading to an inn hard by,
+ where you may get a clean and comfortable though simple dinner,
+ good bread, good butter, and a carriage&mdash;"fly" is the term
+ now, as in the days of Mr. Jonathan Oldbuck&mdash;to convey you
+ where you will. And this was the case long before railways came
+ into vogue.</p>
+
+ <p>The influence of the great house has very wide
+ ramifications, and extends far beyond the radius of park,
+ village and estate. It greatly affects the prosperity of the
+ country and county towns. Go into Exeter or Shrewsbury on a
+ market-day in the autumn months, and you will find the streets
+ crowded with carriages. If a local herald be with you, he will
+ tell you all about their owners by glancing at the liveries and
+ panels. They belong, half of them, to the old county gentry,
+ who have shopped here&mdash;always at the same shops, according
+ as their proprietors are Whigs or Tories&mdash;for generations.
+ It may well be imagined what a difference the custom of twenty
+ gentlemen spending on an average twenty-five thousand dollars a
+ year makes to a grocer or draper. Besides, this class of
+ customer demands a first-rate article, and consequently it is
+ worth while to keep it in stock. The fishmonger knows that
+ twenty great houses within ten miles require their handsome
+ dish of fish for dinner as regularly as their bread and butter.
+ It becomes worth his while therefore to secure a steady supply.
+ In this way smaller people profit, and country life becomes
+ pleasant to them too, inasmuch as the demands of the rich
+ contribute to the comfort of those in moderate
+ circumstances.</p>
+
+ <p>Let us pass to the daily routine of an affluent country
+ home. The breakfast hour is from nine to eleven, except where
+ hunting-men or enthusiasts in shooting are concerned. The
+ former are often in the saddle before six, and young
+ partridge-slayers may, during the first fortnight of
+ September&mdash;after that their ardor abates a bit&mdash;be
+ found in the stubbles at any hour after sunrise.</p>
+
+ <p>A country-house breakfast in the house of a gentlemen with
+ from three thousand a year upward, when several guests are in
+ the house, is a very attractive meal. Of course its degree of
+ excellence varies, but we will take an average case in the
+ house of a squire living on his paternal acres with five
+ thousand pounds a year and knowing how to live.</p>
+
+ <p>It is 10 A.M. in October: family prayers, usual in nine
+ country-houses out of ten, which a guest can attend or not as
+ he pleases, are over. The company is gradually gathering in the
+ breakfast-room. It is an ample apartment, paneled with oak and
+ hung with family pictures. If you have any appreciation for
+ fine plate&mdash;and you are to be pitied if you have
+ not&mdash;you will mark the charming shape and exquisite
+ chasing of the antique urn and other silver vessels, which
+ shine as brilliantly as on the day they left the silversmiths
+ to Her Majesty, Queen Anne. No "Brummagem" patterns will you
+ find here.</p>
+
+ <p>On the table at equidistant points stand two tiny tables or
+ dumb-waiters, which are made to revolve. On these are placed
+ sugar, cream, butter, preserves, salt, pepper, mustard, etc.,
+ so that every one can help himself without troubling
+ others&mdash;a great desideratum, for many people are of the
+ same mind on this point as a well-known English family, of whom
+ it was once observed that they were very nice people, but
+ didn't like being bored to pass the mustard.</p>
+
+ <p>On the sideboard are three beautiful silver dishes with
+ spirit-lamps beneath them. Let us look under their covers.
+ Broiled chicken, fresh mushrooms on toast, and stewed kidney.
+ On a larger dish is fish, and ranged behind these hot viands
+ are cold ham, tongue, pheasant and game-pie. On huge platters
+ of wood, with knives to correspond, are farm-house brown bread
+ and white bread, whilst on the breakfast-table itself you will
+ find hot rolls, toast&mdash;of which two or three fresh relays
+ are brought in during breakfast&mdash;buttered toast, muffins
+ and the freshest of eggs. The hot dishes at breakfast are
+ varied almost every morning, and where there is a good cook a
+ variety of some twenty dishes is made.</p>
+
+ <p>Marmalade (Marie Malade) of oranges&mdash;said to have been
+ originally prepared for Mary queen of Scots when ill, and
+ introduced by her into Scotland&mdash;and "jams" of apricot and
+ other fruit always form a part of an English or Scotch
+ breakfast. The living is just as good&mdash;often
+ better&mdash;among the five-thousand-pounds-a-year gentry as
+ among the very wealthy: the only difference lies in the number
+ of servants and guests.</p>
+
+ <p>The luncheon-hour is from one to two. At luncheon there will
+ be a roast leg of mutton or some such <i>pi&egrave;ce de
+ r&eacute;sistance</i>, and a made dish, such as minced
+ veal&mdash;a dish, by the way, not the least understood in this
+ country, where it is horribly mangled&mdash;two hot dishes of
+ meat and several cold, and various sorts of pastry. These, with
+ bread, butter, fruit, cheese, sherry, port, claret and beer,
+ complete the meal.</p>
+
+ <p>Few of the men of the party are present at this meal, and
+ those who are eat but little, reserving their forces until
+ dinner. All is placed on the table at once, and not, as at
+ dinner, in courses. The servants leave the room when they have
+ placed everything on the table, and people wait on themselves.
+ Dumb-waiters with clean plates, glasses, etc. stand at each
+ corner of the table, so that there is very little need to get
+ up for what you want.</p>
+
+ <p>The afternoon is usually passed by the ladies alone or with
+ only one or two gentlemen who don't care to shoot, etc., and is
+ spent in riding, driving and walking. Englishwomen are great
+ walkers. With their skirts conveniently looped up, and boots
+ well adapted to defy the mud, they brave all sorts of weather.
+ "Oh it rains! what a bore! We can't go out," said a young lady,
+ standing at the breakfast-room window at a house in Ireland; to
+ which her host rejoined, "If you don't go out here when it
+ rains, you don't go out at all;" which is pretty much the
+ truth.</p>
+
+ <p>About five o'clock, as you sit over your book in the
+ library, you hear a rapid firing off of guns, which apprises
+ you that the men have returned from shooting. They linger a
+ while in the gun-room talking over their sport and seeing the
+ record of the killed entered in the game-book. Then some,
+ doffing the shooting-gear for a free-and-easy but scrupulously
+ neat attire, repair to the ladies' sitting-room or the library
+ for "kettledrum."</p>
+
+ <p>On a low table is placed the tea equipage, and tea in
+ beautiful little cups is being dispensed by fair hands. This is
+ a very pleasant time in many houses, and particularly favorable
+ to fun and flirtation. In houses where there are children, the
+ cousins of the house and others very intimate adjourn to the
+ school-room, where, when the party is further reinforced by
+ three or four boys home for the holidays, a scene of fun and
+ frolic, which it requires all the energies of the staid
+ governess to prevent going too far, ensues.</p>
+
+ <p>So time speeds on until the dressing-bell rings at seven
+ o'clock, summoning all to prepare for the great event of the
+ day&mdash;dinner. Every one dons evening-attire for this meal;
+ and so strong a feeling obtains on this point that if, in case
+ of his luggage going wrong or other accident, a man is
+ compelled to join the party in morning-clothes, he feels
+ painfully "fish-out-of-waterish." We know, indeed, of a case in
+ which a guest absurdly sensitive would not come down to dinner
+ until the arrival of his things, which did not make their
+ appearance for a week.</p>
+
+ <p>Ladies' dress in country-houses depends altogether upon the
+ occasion. If it be a quiet party of intimate friends, their
+ attire is of the simplest, but in many fashionable houses the
+ amount of dressing is fully as great as in London. English
+ ladies do not dress nearly as expensively or with so much taste
+ as Americans, but, on the other hand, they have the subject
+ much less in their thoughts; which is perhaps even more
+ desirable.</p>
+
+ <p>There is a degree of pomp and ceremony, which, however, is
+ far from being unpleasant, at dinner in a large country-house.
+ The party is frequently joined by the rector and his wife, a
+ neighboring squire or two, and a stray parson, so that it
+ frequently reaches twenty. Of course in this case the
+ pleasantness of the prandial period depends largely upon whom
+ you have the luck to get next to; but there's this advantage in
+ the situation over a similar one in London&mdash;that you have,
+ at all events, a something of local topics in common, having
+ picked up a little knowledge of places and people during your
+ stay, or if you are quite a new-comer, you can easily set your
+ neighbor a-going by questions about surroundings. Generally
+ there is some acquaintance between most of the people staying
+ in a house, as hosts make up their parties with the view of
+ accommodating persons wishing to meet others whom they like.
+ Young men will thus frequently get a good-natured hostess to
+ ask some young lady whose society they especially affect, and
+ thus country-houses become proverbially adapted for
+ match-making.</p>
+
+ <p>There are few houses now-a-days in which the gentlemen
+ linger in the dining-room long after the ladies have left it.
+ Habits of hard drinking are now almost entirely confined to
+ young men in the army and the lower classes. The evenings are
+ spent chiefly in conversation: sometimes a rubber of whist is
+ made up, or, if there are a number of young people, there is
+ dancing.</p>
+
+ <p>A rather surprising step which occasioned something of a
+ scandalous sensation in the social world was resorted to some
+ years ago at a country-house in Devonshire. Two or three fast
+ young ladies, finding the evening somewhat heavy, and lamenting
+ a dearth of dancing men, rang the bell, and in five minutes the
+ lady of the house, who was in another room, was aghast at
+ seeing them whirling round in their Jeames's arms. It was
+ understood that the ringleader in this enterprise, the daughter
+ of an Irish earl, was not likely to be asked to repeat her
+ visit.</p>
+
+ <p>About eleven wine and water and biscuits are brought into
+ the drawing-room, and a few minutes later the ladies retire.
+ The wine and water, with the addition of other stimulants, are
+ then transferred to the billiard- and smoking-rooms, to which
+ the gentlemen adjourn so soon as they have changed their black
+ coats for dressing-gowns or lounging suits, in which great
+ latitude is given to the caprice of individual fancy.</p>
+
+ <p>The sittings in these apartments are protracted until any
+ hour, as the servants usually go to bed when they have provided
+ every one with his flat candle-stick&mdash;that emblem of
+ gentility which always so prominently recurred to the mind of
+ Mrs. Micawber when recalling the happy days when she "lived at
+ home with papa and mamma." In some fast houses pretty high play
+ takes place at such times.</p>
+
+ <p>It not unfrequently happens that the master of the house
+ takes but a very limited share in the recreations of his
+ guests, being much engrossed by the various avocations which
+ fall to the lot of a country proprietor. After breakfast in the
+ morning he will make it his business to see that each gentleman
+ is provided with such recreation as he likes for the day. This
+ man will shoot, that one will fish; Brown will like to have a
+ horse and go over to see some London friends who are staying
+ ten miles off; Jones has heaps of letters which must be written
+ in the morning, but will ride with the ladies in the afternoon;
+ and when all these arrangements are completed the squire will
+ drive off with his old confidential groom in the dog-cart, with
+ that fast-trotting bay, to attend the county meeting in the
+ nearest cathedral town or dispense justice from the bench at
+ Pottleton; and when eight o'clock brings all together at dinner
+ an agreeable diversity is given to conversation by each man's
+ varied experiences during the day.</p>
+
+ <p>Of course some houses are desperately dull, whilst others
+ are always agreeable. Haddo House, during the lifetime of Lord
+ Aberdeen, the prime minister, had an exceptional reputation for
+ the former quality. It was said to be the most silent house in
+ England; and silence in this instance was regarded as quite the
+ reverse of golden. The family scarcely ever spoke, and the
+ guest, finding that his efforts brought no response, became
+ alarmed at the echoes of his own voice. Lord Aberdeen and his
+ son, Lord Haddo&mdash;an amiable but weak and eccentric man,
+ father of the young earl who dropped his title and was drowned
+ whilst working as mate of a merchantman&mdash;did not get on
+ well together, and saw very little of each other for some
+ years. At length a reconciliation was effected, and the son was
+ invited to Haddo. Anxious to be pleasant and conciliatory, he
+ faltered out admiringly, "The place looks nice, the trees are
+ very green." "Did you expect to see 'em blue, then?" was the
+ encouraging paternal rejoinder.</p>
+
+ <p>The degree of luxury in many of these great houses is less
+ remarkable than its completeness. Everything is in keeping,
+ thus presenting a remarkable contrast to most of our rich men's
+ attempts at the same. The dinner, cooked by a <i>cordon
+ bleu</i> of the cuisine<a id="footnotetag3"
+ name="footnotetag3"></a><a href="#footnote3"><sup>3</sup></a>&mdash;whose
+ resources in the way of "hot plates" and other accessories
+ for furnishing a superlative dinner are unrivaled&mdash;is
+ often served on glittering plate, or china almost equally
+ valuable, by men six feet high, of splendid figure, and
+ dressed with the most scrupulous neatness and cleanliness.
+ Gloves are never worn by servants in first-rate English
+ houses, but they carry a tiny napkin in their hands which
+ they place between their fingers and the plates. Nearly all
+ country gentlemen are hospitable, and it very rarely happens
+ that guests are not staying in the house. A county ball or
+ some other such gathering fills it from garret to
+ cellar.</p>
+
+ <p>The best guest-rooms are always reserved for the married:
+ bachelors are stowed away comparatively "anywhere." In winter
+ fires are always lit in the bedrooms about five o'clock, so
+ that they may be warm at dressing-time; and shortly before the
+ dressing-bell rings the servant deputed to attend upon a guest
+ who does not bring a valet with him goes to his room, lays out
+ his evening-toilette, puts shirt, socks, etc. to air before the
+ fire, places a capacious pitcher of boiling water on the
+ washing-stand, and having lit the candles, drawn the easy-chair
+ to the fire, just ready on provocation to burst into a blaze,
+ lights the wax candles on the dressing-table and withdraws.</p>
+
+ <p>In winter the guest is asked whether he likes a fire to get
+ up by, and in that event a housemaid enters early with as
+ little noise as possible and lights it. On rising in the
+ morning you find all your clothes carefully brushed and put in
+ order, and every appliance for ample ablutions at hand.</p>
+
+ <p>A guest gives the servant who attends him a tip of from a
+ dollar and a quarter to five dollars, according to the length
+ of his stay. If he shoots, a couple of sovereigns for a week's
+ sport is a usual fee to a keeper. Some people give absurdly
+ large sums, but the habit of giving them has long been on the
+ decline. The keeper supplies powder and shot, and sends in an
+ account for them. Immense expense is involved in these shooting
+ establishments. The late Sir Richard Sutton, a great celebrity
+ in the sporting world, who had the finest shooting in England,
+ and therefore probably in the world, used to say that every
+ pheasant he killed cost him a guinea. On some estates the sale
+ of the game is in some degree a set-off to the cost of
+ maintaining it, just as the sale of the fruit decreases the
+ cost of pineries, etc. Nothing but the fact that the possession
+ of land becomes more and more vested in those who regard it as
+ luxury could have enabled this sacrifice of farming to sport to
+ continue so long. It is the source of continual complaint and
+ resentment on the part of the farmers, who are only pacified by
+ allowance being made to them out of their rent for damage done
+ by game.</p>
+
+ <p>The expense of keeping up large places becomes heavier every
+ year, owing to the constantly-increasing rates of wages, etc.,
+ and in some cases imposes a grievous burden, eating heavily
+ into income and leaving men with thousands of acres very poor
+ balances at their bankers to meet the Christmas bills. Those
+ who have large families to provide for, and get seriously
+ behindhand, usually shut up or let their places&mdash;which
+ latter is easily done if they be near London or in a good
+ shooting country&mdash;and recoup on the Continent; but of late
+ years prices there have risen so enormously that this plan of
+ restoring the equilibrium between income and expenditure is far
+ less satisfactory than it was forty years ago. The encumbrances
+ on many estates are very heavy. A nobleman who twenty years ago
+ succeeded to an entailed estate, with a house almost gutted,
+ through having had an execution put in it, and a heavy
+ debt&mdash;some of which, though not legally bound to
+ liquidate, he thought it his duty to settle&mdash;acted in a
+ very spirited manner which few of his order have the courage to
+ imitate. He dropped his title, went abroad and lived for some
+ years on about three thousand dollars a year. He has now paid
+ off all his encumbrances, and has a clear income, steadily
+ increasing, of a hundred thousand dollars a year. In another
+ case a gentleman accomplished a similar feat by living in a
+ corner of his vast mansion and maintaining only a couple of
+ servants.</p>
+
+ <p>In Ireland, owing to the lower rates of wages and far
+ greater&mdash;in the remoter parts&mdash;cheapness of
+ provisions, large places can be maintained at considerably less
+ cost, but they are usually far less well kept, partly owing to
+ their being on an absurdly large scale as compared with the
+ means of the proprietors, and partly from the slovenly habits
+ of the country. And in some cases people who could afford it
+ will not spend the money. There are, however, notable
+ exceptions. Powerscourt in Wicklow, the seat of Viscount
+ Powerscourt, and Woodstock in Kilkenny, the beautiful demesne
+ of Mr. Tighe, are probably in as perfect order as any seats in
+ England. A countryman was sent over to the latter one day with
+ a message from another county. "Well, Jerry," said the master
+ on his return, "what did you think of Woodstock?" "Shure, your
+ honor," was the reply, "I niver seed such a power of girls
+ a-swaping up the leaves."</p>
+
+ <p>Country-house life in Ireland and Scotland is almost
+ identical with that in England, except that, in the former
+ especially, there is generally less money. Scotland has of late
+ years become so much the fashion, land has risen so enormously
+ in value, and properties are so very large, that some of the
+ establishments, such as those at Drumlanrig, Dunrobin, Gordon
+ Castle and Floors, the seats respectively of the dukes of
+ Buccleuch, Sutherland, Richmond and Roxburghe, are on a
+ princely scale. The number of wealthy squires is far fewer than
+ in England. It is a curious feature in the Scottish character
+ that notwithstanding the radical politics of the
+ country&mdash;for scarcely a Conservative is returned by
+ it&mdash;the people cling fondly to primogeniture and their
+ great lords, who, probably to a far greater extent than in
+ England, hold the soil. The duke of Sutherland possesses nearly
+ the whole of the county from which he derives his title, whilst
+ the duke of Buccleuch owns the greater part of four.</p>
+
+ <p>Horses are such a very expensive item that a large stable is
+ seldom found unless there is a very large income, for otherwise
+ the rest of the establishment must be cut down to a low figure.
+ Hunting millionaires keep from ten to twenty, or even thirty,
+ hacks and hunters, besides four or five carriage-horses. Three
+ or four riding-horses, three carriage-horses and a pony or two
+ is about the usual number in the stable of a country gentleman
+ with from five to six thousand pounds a year. The stable-staff
+ would be coachman, groom and two helpers. The number of
+ servants in country-houses varies from seven or eight to
+ eighty, but probably there are not ten houses in the country
+ where it reaches so high a figure as the last: from fifteen to
+ twenty would be a common number.</p>
+
+ <p>There are many popular bachelors and old maids who live
+ about half the year in the country-houses of their friends. A
+ gentleman of this sort will have his chambers in London and his
+ valet, whilst the lady will have her lodgings and maid. In
+ London they will live cheaply and comfortably, he at his club
+ and dining out with rich friends, she in her snug little room
+ and passing half her time in friends' houses. There is not the
+ slightest surrender of independence about these people. They
+ would not stay a day in a house which they did not like, but
+ their pleasant manners and company make them acceptable, and
+ friends are charmed to have them.</p>
+
+ <p>One of the special recommendations of a great country-house
+ is that you need not see too much of any one. There is no
+ necessary meeting except at meals&mdash;in many houses then
+ even only at dinner&mdash;and in the evening. Many sit a great
+ deal in their own rooms if they have writing or work to do;
+ some will be in the billiard-room, others in the library,
+ others in the drawing-room: the host's great friend will be
+ with him in his own private room, whilst the hostess's will
+ pass most of the time in that lady's
+ boudoir.<a id="footnotetag4"
+ name="footnotetag4"></a><a href="#footnote4"><sup>4</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>In some respects railroads have had a very injurious effect
+ on the sociability of English country life. They have rendered
+ people in great houses too apt to draw their supplies of
+ society exclusively from town. English trains run so fast that
+ this can even be done in places quite remote from London. The
+ journey from London to Rugby, for instance, eighty miles, is
+ almost invariably accomplished in two hours. Leaving at five in
+ the afternoon, a man reaches that station at 7.10: his friend's
+ well-appointed dog-cart is there to meet him, and that
+ exquisitely neat young groom, with his immaculate buckskins and
+ boots in which you may see yourself, will make the thoroughbred
+ do the four miles to the hall in time to enable you to dress
+ for dinner by 7.45. Returning on Tuesday morning&mdash;and all
+ the lines are most accommodating about return tickets&mdash;the
+ barrister, guardsman, government clerk can easily be at his
+ post in town by eleven o'clock. Thus the actual "country
+ people" get to be held rather cheap, and come off badly,
+ because Londoners, being more in the way of hearing, seeing and
+ observing what is going on in society, are naturally more
+ congenial to fine people in country-houses who live in the
+ metropolis half the year.</p>
+
+ <p>It is evident from the following amusing squib, which
+ appeared in one of the Annuals for 1832, how far more dependent
+ the country gentleman was upon his country neighbors in those
+ days, when only idle men could run down from town:</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. J., having frequently witnessed with regret country
+ gentlemen, in their country-houses, reduced to the dullness of
+ a domestic circle, and nearly led to commit suicide in the
+ month of November, or, what is more melancholy, to invite the
+ ancient and neighboring families of the Tags, the Rags and the
+ Bobtails, has opened an office in Spring Gardens for the
+ purpose of furnishing country gentlemen in their country-houses
+ with company and guests on the most moderate terms. It will
+ appear from the catalogue that Mr. J. has a choice and elegant
+ assortment of six hundred and seventeen guests, ready to start
+ at a moment's warning to any country gentleman at any house.
+ Among them will be found three Scotch peers, several ditto
+ Irish, fifteen decayed baronets, eight yellow admirals,
+ forty-seven major-generals on half pay (who narrate the whole
+ Peninsular War), twenty-seven dowagers, one hundred and
+ eighty-seven old maids on small annuities, and several
+ unbeneficed clergymen, who play a little on the fiddle. All the
+ above play at cards, and usually with success if partners. No
+ objection to cards on Sunday evenings or rainy mornings. The
+ country gentleman to allow the guests four feeds a day, and to
+ produce claret if a Scotch or Irish peer be present."</p>
+
+ <p>A country village very often has no inhabitants except the
+ parson holding the rank of gentry. The majority of ladies in
+ moderate or narrow circumstances live in county-towns, such as
+ Exeter, Salisbury, etc., or in watering-places, which abound
+ and are of all degrees of fashion and expense. County-town and
+ watering-place society is a thing <i>per se</i>, and has very
+ little to do with "county" society, which means that of the
+ landed gentry living in their country-houses. Thus, noblemen
+ and gentlemen within a radius of five miles of such
+ watering-places as Bath, Tonbridge Wells and Weymouth would not
+ have a dozen visiting acquaintances resident in those
+ towns.</p>
+
+ <p>To get into "county" society is by no means easy to persons
+ without advantages of position or connection, even with ample
+ means, and to the wealthy manufacturer or merchant is often a
+ business of years. The upper class of Englishmen, and more
+ especially women, are accustomed to find throughout their
+ acquaintance an almost identical style and set of manners.
+ Anything which differs from this they are apt to regard as
+ "ungentlemanlike or unladylike," and shun accordingly. The
+ dislike to traders and manufacturers, which is very strong in
+ those counties, such as Cheshire and Warwickshire, which
+ environ great commercial centres, arises not from the folly of
+ thinking commerce a low occupation, but because the county
+ gentry have different tastes, habits and modes of thought from
+ men who have worked their way up from the counting-room, and do
+ not, as the phrase goes, "get on" with them, any more than a
+ Wall street broker ordinarily gets on with a well-read,
+ accomplished member of the Bar.</p>
+
+ <p>A result of this is that a large number of wealthy
+ commercial men, in despair of ever entering the charmed circle
+ of county society, take up their abode in or near the
+ fashionable watering-places, where, after the manner of those
+ at our own Newport, they build palaces in paddocks, have acres
+ of glass, rear the most marvelous of pines and peaches, and
+ have model farms which cost them thousands of pounds a year. To
+ this class is owing in a great degree the extraordinary
+ increase of Leamington, Torquay, Tonbridge Wells,
+ etc.&mdash;places which have made the fortunes of the lucky
+ people who chanced to own them.</p>
+
+ <p>English ladies, as a rule, take a great deal of interest in
+ the poor around them, and really know a great deal of them. The
+ village near the hall is almost always well attended to, but it
+ unfortunately happens that outlying properties sometimes come
+ off far less well. The classes which see nothing of each other
+ in English rural life are the wives and daughters of the gentry
+ and those of the wealthier farmers and tradesmen: between these
+ sections a huge gulf intervenes, which has not as yet been in
+ the least degree bridged over. In former days very great people
+ used to have once or twice in the year what were called "public
+ days," when it was open house for all who chose to come, with a
+ sort of tacit understanding that none below the class of
+ substantial yeomen or tradesmen would make their appearance.
+ This custom has now fallen into disuse, but was maintained to
+ the last by the Hon. Doctor Vernon-Harcourt, who was for more
+ than half a century archbishop of York, and is yet retained by
+ Earl Fitzwilliam at Wentworth House, his princely seat in
+ Yorkshire. There, once or twice a year, a great gathering takes
+ place. Dinner is provided for hundreds of guests, and care is
+ taken to place a member of the family at every table to do his
+ or her part toward dispensing hospitality to high and low.</p>
+
+ <p>During the summer and early autumn croquet and archery offer
+ good excuses for bringing young people together, and reunions
+ of this kind palliate the miseries of those who cannot afford
+ to partake of the expensive gayeties of the London season. The
+ archery meetings are often exceedingly pretty f&ecirc;tes.
+ Somtimes they are held in grounds specially devoted to the
+ purpose, as is the case at St. Leonard's, near Hastings, where
+ the archery-ground will well repay a visit. The shooting takes
+ place in a deep and vast excavation covered with the smoothest
+ turf, and from the high ground above is a glorious view of the
+ old castle of Hastings and the ocean. In Devonshire these
+ meetings have an exceptional interest from the fact that they
+ are held in the park of Powderham Castle, the ancestral seat of
+ the celebrated family of Courtenay. All the county flocks to
+ them, some persons coming fifty miles for this purpose. Apropos
+ of one of these meetings, we shall venture to interpolate an
+ anecdote which deserves to be recorded for the sublimity of
+ impudence which it displays. The railway from London to
+ Plymouth skirts the park of Powderham, running so close beside
+ it that each train sends a herd of deer scampering down the
+ velvety glades. One afternoon a bouncing young lady, who
+ belonged to a family which had lately emerged from the class of
+ yeoman into that of gentry, and whose "manners had not the
+ repose which stamps the caste of Vere de Vere," found herself
+ in a carriage with two fashionably-attired persons of her own
+ sex. As the train ran by the park, one of these latter
+ exclaimed to her companion, "Oh look, there's Powderham! Don't
+ you remember that archery-party we went to there two years
+ ago?" "To be sure," was the rejoinder. "I'm not likely to
+ forget it, there were some such queer people. Who were those
+ vulgarians whom we thought so particularly objectionable? I
+ can't remember." "Oh, H&mdash;&mdash;: H&mdash;&mdash; of
+ P&mdash;&mdash;! That was the name." Upon this the other young
+ lady in the carriage bounced to her feet with the words, "Allow
+ me to tell you, madam, that I am Miss H&mdash;&mdash; of
+ P&mdash;&mdash;!" Neither of those she addressed deigned to
+ utter a word in reply to this announcement, nor did it appear
+ in the least to disconcert them. One slowly drew out a gold
+ double eye-glass, leisurely surveyed Miss H&mdash;&mdash; of
+ P&mdash;&mdash; from head to foot, and then proceeded to talk
+ to her companion in French. Perhaps the best part of the joke
+ was that Miss H&mdash;&mdash; made a round of visits in the
+ course of the week, and detailed the disgusting treatment to
+ which she had been subjected to a numerous acquaintance, who,
+ it is needless to say, appeared during the narration as
+ indignant and sympathetic as she could have wished, but who are
+ declared by some ill-natured persons to have been precisely
+ those who in secret chuckled over the insult with the greatest
+ glee.</p>
+
+ <p>English gentlemen experience an almost painful sensation as
+ they journey through our land and observe the utter
+ indifference of its wealthier classes to the charms of such a
+ magnificent country. "Pearls before swine," they say in their
+ hearts. "God made the country and man made the town." "Yes, and
+ how obviously the American prefers the work of man to the work
+ of the Almighty!" These and similar reflections no doubt fill
+ the minds of many a thoughtful English traveler as the train
+ speeds over hill and dale, field and forest. What sites are
+ here! he thinks. What a perfect park might be made out of that
+ wild ground! what cover-shooting there ought to be in that
+ woodland! what fishing and boating on that lake! And then he
+ groans in spirit as the cars enter a forest where tree leans
+ against tree, and neglect reigns on all sides, and he thinks of
+ the glorious oaks and beeches so carefully cared for in his own
+ country, where trees and flowery are loved and petted as much
+ as dogs and horses. And if anything can increase the contempt
+ he feels for those who "don't care a rap" for country and
+ country life, it is a visit to such resorts as Newport and
+ Saratoga. There he finds men whose only notion of country life
+ is what he would hold to be utterly destitute of all its
+ ingredients. They build palaces in paddocks, take actually no
+ exercise, play at cards for three hours in the forenoon, dine,
+ and then drive out "just like ladies," we heard a young Oxonian
+ exclaim&mdash;"got up" in the style that an Englishman adopts
+ only in Hyde Park or Piccadilly.</p>
+
+ <p>When an American went to stay with Lord Palmerston at
+ Broadlands, the great minister ordered horses for a ride in the
+ delicious glades of the New Forest. When they came to the door
+ his guest was obliged to confess himself no horseman. The
+ premier, with ready courtesy, said, "Oh, then, we'll walk: it's
+ all the same to me;" but it wasn't quite the same. The incident
+ was just one of those which separate the Englishman of a
+ certain rank from the American.</p>
+
+ <p>There is of course a certain class of Americans, more
+ especially among the <i>jeunesse dor&eacute;e</i> of New York,
+ who greatly affect sport: they "run" horses and shoot pigeons,
+ but these are not persons who commend themselves to real
+ gentlemen, English or American. They belong to the bad style of
+ "fast men," and are as thoroughly distasteful to a Devonshire
+ or Cheshire squire as to one who merits "the grand old
+ name"&mdash;which they conspicuously defame&mdash;in their own
+ country.</p>
+
+ <p>The English country-loving gentleman to whom we have been
+ referring is, for the most part, of a widely different
+ mould&mdash;a man of first-rate education, frequently of high
+ attainments, and often one whose ends and aims in life are for
+ far higher things than pleasure, even of the most innocent
+ kind, but who, when he takes it, derives it chiefly from the
+ country. Many of this kind will instantly occur to those
+ acquainted with English worthies: to mention two&mdash;John
+ Evelyn and Sir Fowell Buxton.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">REGINALD WYNFORD.</p><a name="H_4_0012"
+ id="H_4_0012"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h2>THE FOREST OF ARDEN.</h2>
+
+ <p>A girl of seventeen&mdash;a girl with a "missish" name, with
+ a "missish" face as well, soft skin, bright eyes, dark hair,
+ medium height and a certain amount of coquetry in her attire.
+ This completes the "visible" of Nellie Archer. And the
+ invisible? With an exterior such as this, what thoughts or
+ ideas are possible within? Surely none worth the trouble of
+ searching after. It is a case of the rind being the better part
+ of the fruit, the shell excelling the kernel; and with a slight
+ effort we can imagine her acquirements. Some scraps of
+ geography, mixed up with the topography of an embroidery
+ pattern; some grammar, of much use in parsing the imperfect
+ phrases of celebrated authors, to the neglect of her own; some
+ romanticism, finding expression in the arrangement of a spray
+ of artificial flowers on a spring bonnet; some idea of duty,
+ resulting in the manufacture of sweet cake or "seeing after"
+ the dessert for dinner; and a conception of "woman's mission"
+ gained from Tennyson&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Oh teach the orphan-boy to read,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Or teach the orphan-girl to sew.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>No! no! no! not so fast, please. In spite of Nellie's name,
+ of her face, of her attire, that little head is filled quite
+ otherwise. It is not her fault that this is so: is it her
+ misfortune? But to give the history of this being entire, it is
+ necessary to begin seventeen years back, at the very beginning
+ of her life, for in our human nature, as in the inanimate
+ world, a phenomenon is better understood when we know its
+ producing causes.</p>
+
+ <p>Nellie's father was a business-man of a type common in
+ America&mdash;one whose affairs led him here, there and
+ everywhere. Never quiet while awake, and scarcely at rest
+ during slumber, he resembled Bedreddin Hassan in frequently
+ going to sleep in one town, to awake in another far distant,
+ but without the benighted Oriental's surprise at the transfer,
+ the afrit who performed this prodigy being a steam-engine, and
+ the magician it obeyed the human mind.</p>
+
+ <p>In these rapid peregrinations it would not have been easy
+ for Mr. Archer to carry an infant with him; so, when his wife
+ died and left Nellie to his sole care at six months old, he
+ speedily cast about in his mind to rid himself of the
+ encumbrance.</p>
+
+ <p>Having heard that country air is good for children, he sent
+ the little one to the interior, and quite admired himself for
+ giving her such an advantage: then, too, the house in the city
+ could be sold.</p>
+
+ <p>But to whom did he entrust his child? For a while this had
+ been the great difficulty. In vain he thought over the years he
+ had lived, to find a friend: he had been too busy to make
+ friends. For an honest person he had traversed the world too
+ hurriedly to perceive the deeper, better part of mankind; he
+ had floated on the surface with the scum and froth, and could
+ recall no one whom he could trust. At last, away back in the
+ years of his childhood, he saw a face&mdash;that of a young but
+ motherly Irishwoman, who had lived in his father's family as a
+ faithful servant, and had been a fond partisan of his in his
+ fickle troubles when a boy.</p>
+
+ <p>He sought and found her in his need. She had married, borne
+ children and grown old: her offspring, after much struggling
+ and little help from the parent birds, had learned to fly
+ alone, and had left the home-nest to try their own fortunes. It
+ was not hard for Mr. Archer to persuade Nurse Bridget and her
+ husband to inhabit his house in the country and take charge of
+ the baby. In a short time the arrangements were complete, and
+ the three were installed in comfort, for the busy man did not
+ grudge money.</p>
+
+ <p>If in the long years that followed a thought of the
+ neglected little one did at times reproach him, he dismissed it
+ with the resolution of doing something for her when she should
+ be grown up; but at what date this event was to take place, or
+ what it was that he intended to do, he did not definitely
+ settle.</p>
+
+ <p>The mansion in the country was an old rambling house, in
+ which there were enough deserted rooms to furnish half a dozen
+ ghosts with desirable lodgings, without inconvenience to the
+ living dwellers. The front approach was through an avenue of
+ hemlocks, dark and untrimmed. Under the closed windows lay a
+ tangled garden, where flowers grew rank, shadowed by high ash
+ and leafy oak, outposts of the forest behind&mdash;a forest
+ jealous of cultivation, stealthily drawing nearer each year,
+ and threatening to reconquer its own.</p>
+
+ <p>There was an unused well in a corner that looked like the
+ habitation of a fairy&mdash;of a good fairy, I am sure, because
+ the grass grew greenest and best about the worn curb, and the
+ tender mosses and little plants that could not support the heat
+ in summer found a refuge within its cool circle and flourished
+ there.</p>
+
+ <p>On the other side of the house, and dividing it from level
+ fields, were the kitchen-garden and orchard. In springtime you
+ might have imagined the latter to be a grove of singing trees,
+ bearing song for fruit: in autumn, had you seen it when the sun
+ was low, glinting through leaves and gilding apples and stem,
+ you would have been reminded of the garden of the
+ Hesperides.</p>
+
+ <p>Below the fields lay a broad river&mdash;in summer, languid
+ and clear; in winter, turbid and full. The child often wondered
+ (as soon as she could wonder) if, when it was lying so tranquil
+ under the summer clouds, it was thinking of the frolic it would
+ have with the great blocks of ice in the winter; whether it
+ loved best the rush and struggle of the floods or the quiet of
+ low water; and, above all, whither it was going.</p>
+
+ <p>The homely faces and bent, ungainly forms of the old nurse
+ and her husband harmonized well with the mellow gloom about
+ them; and the infant Nellie completed the scene, like the spot
+ of sunlight in the foreground of a picture by Rembrandt.</p>
+
+ <p>Now, Nellie inherited her father's active disposition, and,
+ left to her own amusement, her occupations were many and
+ various. At three years of age she was turned loose in the
+ orchard, with three blind puppies in lieu of toys. Day by day
+ she augmented her store, until she had two kittens, one little
+ white pig with a curly tail, half a dozen soft piepies, one
+ kid, and many inanimate articles, such as broken bottles,
+ dishes, looking-glass and gay bits of calico. When the little
+ thing became sleepy she would toddle through the long grass to
+ a corner, whence the river could be heard fretting against its
+ banks, and lie there: she said the water sang to her. Finding
+ that this was her favorite spot, the old nurse placed there a
+ bright quilt for her to rest on, and in case she should awake
+ hungry there stood a tin of milk hard by. This was all the
+ attention she received, unless the fairy of the well took her
+ under her protection, but for that I cannot vouch. Sometimes
+ the puppies drank her milk before she awoke; then she went
+ contentedly and ate green apples or ripe cherries. Thus she
+ lived and grew.</p>
+
+ <p>By the time Nellie was seven she had seen whole generations
+ of pets pass away. It was wonderful what knowledge she gained
+ in this golden orchard. She knew that piepies became
+ chickens&mdash;that they were killed and eaten; so death came
+ into her world. She knew that the kid grew into a big goat, and
+ became very wicked, for he ran at her one day, throwing her to
+ the ground and hurting her severely; so sin came into her
+ world. She saw innate depravity exemplified in the conduct of
+ her innocent white pig, that would take to puddles and filth in
+ spite of her gentle endeavors to restrain its wayward impulses.
+ Her puppies too bit each other, would quarrel over a bone,
+ growl and get generally unmanageable. None of her animals
+ fulfilled the promise of their youth, and her care was returned
+ with base ingratitude. Even the little wrens bickered with the
+ blue-birds, and showed their selfishness and jealousy in
+ chasing them from the crumbs she impartially spread for all in
+ common.</p>
+
+ <p>So at seven she was a wise little woman, and said to her
+ nurse one day, "I do not care for pets any more: they all grow
+ up nasty."</p>
+
+ <p>Was Solomon's "All is vanity" truer?</p>
+
+ <p>With so much experience Nellie felt old, for life is not
+ counted by years alone: it is the loss of hope, the mistrust of
+ appearance, the vanishing of illusion, that brings age. A
+ hopeful heart is young at seventy, and youth is past when hope
+ is dead. But, in spite of all, hope was not dead in the heart
+ of the little maid, and though deceived she was quite ready to
+ be deceived a second time, as was Solomon, and as we are
+ all.</p>
+
+ <p>It was now that the girl began to be fond of flowers. She
+ made herself a bed for them in a sunny corner of the
+ kitchen-garden, and transplanted daisy roots and
+ spring-beauties, with other wood- and field-plants as they
+ blossomed. She watched the ferns unroll their worm-like fronds,
+ made plays with the nodding violets, and ornamented her head
+ with dandelion curls. This was indeed a happy summer. Her
+ rambles were unlimited, and each day she was rewarded by new
+ discoveries and delightful secrets&mdash;how the May-apple is
+ good to eat, that sassafras root makes tea, that birch bark is
+ very like candy, though not so sweet, and slippery elm a
+ feast.</p>
+
+ <p>Her new playmates were as lovely and perfect as she could
+ desire. <i>They</i> did not "grow up nasty," but in the autumn,
+ alas! they died.</p>
+
+ <p>One day at the end of the Indian summer, after having
+ wandered for hours searching for her favorites, she found them
+ all withered. The trees also looked forlorn, shivering in the
+ chill air, with scarce a leaf to cover them: the wind moaned,
+ and the sky was gray instead of the bright summer blue. The
+ little one, tired and disappointed, touched by this mighty
+ lesson of decay, threw herself on a friendly bank and wept.</p>
+
+ <p>It is true the beautiful face of Nature had grown sad each
+ winter, and her flowers and lovely things had yearly passed
+ away, but Nellie had not then loved them.</p>
+
+ <p>Here she was found by a boy rosy-cheeked and bright, who all
+ his life had been loved and caressed to the same extent that
+ Nellie had been neglected. He lived beyond the forest, and had
+ come this afternoon to look for walnuts. Seeing the girl
+ unhappy, he essayed some of the blandishing arts his mother had
+ often lavished on him, speaking to her in a kindly tone and
+ asking her why she cried.</p>
+
+ <p>The child looked up at the sound of this new voice, and her
+ astonishment stopped her tears. After gazing at him for some
+ time with her eyes wide open, she remarked, wonderingly, "You
+ are little, like me."</p>
+
+ <p>"I am not very small," replied the boy, straightening
+ himself.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, but you <i>are</i> young and little," she insisted.</p>
+
+ <p>"I am young, but not little. Come stand up beside me. See!
+ you don't more than reach my shoulder."</p>
+
+ <p>"Shall you ever get bigger?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Of course I shall."</p>
+
+ <p>"Shall you grow up nasty?" she continued, trying to bring
+ her stock of experience to bear on this new phenomenon.</p>
+
+ <p>"No, I sha'n't!" he answered very decidedly.</p>
+
+ <p>"Shall you die?"</p>
+
+ <p>"No, not until I am old, old, old."</p>
+
+ <p>"I am very glad: I will take you for a pet, All my little
+ animals get nasty, and my flowers have died, but I don't care,
+ now that you have come: I think I shall like you best."</p>
+
+ <p>"But I won't be your pet," said the boy, offended.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why not?" she asked, looking at him beseechingly. "I should
+ be very good to you;" and she smoothed his sleeve with her
+ brown hand as if it were the fur of one of her late
+ darlings.</p>
+
+ <p>"Who are you?" he demanded inquisitively.</p>
+
+ <p>"I am myself," she innocently replied.</p>
+
+ <p>"What is your name?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I am Nellie. Have you a name?" she eagerly went on. "If you
+ haven't, I'll give you a pretty one. Let me see: I will call
+ you&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"You need not trouble yourself, thank you: I have a name of
+ my own, Miss Nellie. I am Danby Overbeck."</p>
+
+ <p>"Dan&mdash;by&mdash;o&mdash;ver&mdash;beck!" she repeated
+ slowly. "Why, you have an awful long name, Beck, for such a
+ little fellow."</p>
+
+ <p>"I am not little, and I will not have you call me Beck: that
+ is no name."</p>
+
+ <p>"I forgot all but the last. Don't get nasty, please;" and
+ she patted his arm soothingly. "What does your nurse call
+ you?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I am no baby to have a nurse," he said disdainfully.</p>
+
+ <p>"You have no nurse? Poor thing! What do you do? who feeds
+ you?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I feed myself."</p>
+
+ <p>"Where do you live," she asked, looking about curiously, as
+ if she thought he had some kind of a nest near at hand.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, far away&mdash;at the other side of the woods."</p>
+
+ <p>"Won't you come and live with me? Do!"</p>
+
+ <p>"No indeed, gypsy: I must go home. See, the sun is almost
+ down. You had better go too: your mother will be anxious."</p>
+
+ <p>"I have no mother, and my flowers are all dead. I wish you
+ would be my pet&mdash;I wish you would come with me;" and her
+ lip trembled.</p>
+
+ <p>"My gracious, child! what would the old lady at home say?
+ Why, there would be an awful row."</p>
+
+ <p>"Never mind, come," she answered coaxingly, rubbing her head
+ against his sleeve like a kitten. "Come, I will love you so
+ much."</p>
+
+ <p>"You go home," he said, patting her head, "and I will come
+ again some day, and will bring you flowers."</p>
+
+ <p>"The flowers are all dead," she replied, shaking her
+ head.</p>
+
+ <p>"I can make some grow. Go now, run away: let me see you
+ off."</p>
+
+ <p>She looked for a moment at this superior being, who could
+ make flowers grow and could live without the care of a nurse,
+ and then, obeying the stronger intelligence, she trotted off
+ toward home.</p>
+
+ <p>And now life contained new pleasure for Nellie, for the boy
+ was large-hearted and kind, coming almost daily to take her
+ with him on his excursions. Indeed, he was as lonely as the
+ child, companions being difficult to find in that
+ out-of-the-way neighborhood, and the odd little thing amused
+ him. She would trudge bravely by his side when he went to fish,
+ or carry his bag when he went gunning; and his promise of
+ flowers was redeemed with gifts from the conservatory, which
+ enhanced her opinion of this divinity, seeing that they were
+ even more beautiful than those of her own fields. Often, when
+ tired of sport, Danby would read to her, sitting in the shade
+ of forest trees, stories of pirates and robbers or of wonderful
+ adventures: these were the afternoons she enjoyed the most.</p>
+
+ <p>One day, seeing her lips grow bright and her eyes dark from
+ her intense interest in the story, he offered her the book as
+ he was preparing to go, saying, "Take it home, Nellie, and read
+ it."</p>
+
+ <p>She took the volume in her hand eagerly, looked at the page
+ a little while, a puzzled expression gradually passing over her
+ face, until finally she turned to him open-eyed and
+ disappointed, saying simply, "I can't."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh try!"</p>
+
+ <p>"How shall I try?"</p>
+
+ <p>"It begins <i>there</i>: now go on, it is easy.
+ <i>There</i>" he repeated, pointing to the word, "go on," he
+ added impatiently.</p>
+
+ <p>"Where shall I go?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Why read, Stupid! Look at it."</p>
+
+ <p>She bent over and gazed earnestly where the end of his
+ finger touched the book. "I look and look," she said, shaking
+ her head, "but I do not see the pretty stories that you do.
+ They seem quite gone away, and nothing is left but little
+ crooked marks."</p>
+
+ <p>"I do believe you can't read."</p>
+
+ <p>"I do believe it too," said Nellie.</p>
+
+ <p>"But you must try; such a big girl as you are getting to
+ be!"</p>
+
+ <p>"I try and I look, but it don't come to me."</p>
+
+ <p>"You must learn."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes."</p>
+
+ <p>"Do you intend to do it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Why should I? You can read to me."</p>
+
+ <p>"You will never know anything," exclaimed the boy severely.
+ "How do you spend your time in the morning, when I am not
+ here?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I do nothing."</p>
+
+ <p>"Nothing?"</p>
+
+ <p>"That is, I wait until you come," in an explanatory
+ tone.</p>
+
+ <p>"What do you do while you are waiting?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I think about you, and wonder how soon you will be here;
+ and I walk about, or lie on the grass and look at the
+ clouds."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, did I ever hear of such an idle girl? I shall not
+ come again if you don't learn to read." Nellie was not much
+ given to laughter or tears. She had lived too much alone for
+ such outward appeals for sympathy. Why laugh when there is no
+ one near to smile in return? Why weep when there is no one to
+ give comfort? She only regarded him with a world of reproach in
+ her large eyes.</p>
+
+ <p>"Nellie," he said, in reply to her eyes, "you ought to learn
+ to read, and you <i>must</i>. Did no one ever try to teach
+ you?"</p>
+
+ <p>She shook her head.</p>
+
+ <p>"Have you no books?"</p>
+
+ <p>Again a negative shake.</p>
+
+ <p>"Just come along with me to the house. I'll see about this
+ thing: it must be stopped." And Danby rose and walked off with
+ a determined air, while the girl, abashed and wondering,
+ followed him. When they arrived he plunged into the subject at
+ once: "Nurse Bridget, can you read?"</p>
+
+ <p>"An' I raly don't know, as I niver tried."</p>
+
+ <p>"Fiddlesticks! Of course Maurice is too blind, and very
+ likely he never tried either. Are there no books in the
+ house?"</p>
+
+ <p>"An' there is, then&mdash;a whole room full of them, Master
+ Danby. We are not people of no larnin' here, I can tell you.
+ There is big books, an' little books, an' some awful purty
+ books, an' some," she added doubtfully, "as is not so
+ purty."</p>
+
+ <p>"You know a great deal about books!" said the boy
+ sarcastically.</p>
+
+ <p>"An' sure I do. Haven't I dusted them once ivery year since
+ I came to this blessed place? And tired enough they made me,
+ too. I ain't likely to forgit them."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, let us see them."</p>
+
+ <p>"Sure they're locked."</p>
+
+ <p>"Open them," said the impatient boy.</p>
+
+ <p>"Do open them," added Nellie timidly.</p>
+
+ <p>But it required much coaxing to accomplish their design, and
+ after nurse did consent time was lost in looking for the keys,
+ which were at last found under a china bowl in the cupboard.
+ Then the old woman led the way with much importance, opening
+ door after door of the unused part of the house, until she came
+ to the library. It was a large, sober-looking room, with worn
+ furniture and carpet, but rich in literature, and even art, for
+ several fine pictures hung on the walls. The ancestor from whom
+ the house had descended must have been a learned man in his
+ day, and a wise, for he had gathered about him treasures. Danby
+ shouted with delight, and Nellie's eyes sparkled as she saw his
+ pleasure.</p>
+
+ <p>"Open all the windows, nurse, please, and then leave us.
+ Why, Nellie, there is enough learning here to make you the most
+ wonderful woman in the world! Do you think you can get all
+ these books into your head?" he asked mischievously, "because
+ that is what I expect of you. We will take a big one to begin
+ with." The girl looked on while he, with mock ceremony, took
+ down the largest volume within reach and laid it open on a
+ reading-desk near. "Now sit;" and he drew a chair for her
+ before the open book, and another for himself. "It is nice big
+ print. Do you see this word?" and he pointed to one of the
+ first at the top of the page.</p>
+
+ <p>She nodded her head gravely.</p>
+
+ <p>"It is <i>love</i>: say it."</p>
+
+ <p>She repeated the word after him.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now find it all over the page whereever it occurs."</p>
+
+ <p>With some mistakes she finally succeeded in recognizing the
+ word again.</p>
+
+ <p>"Don't you forget it."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes."</p>
+
+ <p>"No, you must <i>not</i>."</p>
+
+ <p>"I mean I won't."</p>
+
+ <p>"All right! Here is another: it is called <i>the</i>. Now
+ find it."</p>
+
+ <p>Many times she went through the same process. In his pride
+ of teaching Danby did not let his pupil flag. When he was going
+ she asked timidly, "Shall you come again?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Of course I shall, Ignoramus, but don't you forget your
+ lesson."</p>
+
+ <p>"No, no," she answered brightening. "I will think of it all
+ the time I am asleep."</p>
+
+ <p>"That is a good girl," he said patronizingly, and bade her
+ good-bye.</p>
+
+ <p>It was thus she learned to read, not remarkably well, but
+ well enough to content Danby, which was sufficient to content
+ Nellie also; and the ambitious boy was not satisfied until she
+ could write as well.</p>
+
+ <p>An end came to this peaceful life when the youth left home
+ for college. The girl's eyes seemed to grow larger from intense
+ gazing at him during the last few weeks that preceded his
+ departure, but that was her only expression of feeling. The
+ morning after he left, the nurse, not finding her appear at her
+ usual time, went to her chamber to look for her. She lay on the
+ bed, as she had been lying all the night, sleepless, with pale
+ face and red lips. Nurse asked her what was the matter.</p>
+
+ <p>"Nothing," was the reply.</p>
+
+ <p>"Come get up, Beauty," coaxed the nurse.</p>
+
+ <p>But Nellie turned her face to the wall and did not answer.
+ She lay thus for a week, scarcely eating or sleeping, sick in
+ mind and body, struggling with a grief that she hardly knew was
+ grief. At the end of that time she tottered from the bed, and,
+ clothing herself with difficulty, crept to the library.</p>
+
+ <p>The instinct that sends a sick animal to the plant that will
+ cure it seemed to teach Nellie where to find comfort. Danby was
+ gone, but memory remained, and the place where he had been was
+ to her made holy and possessed healing power, as does the
+ shrine of a saint for a believer. Her shrine was the
+ reading-desk, and the chair on which he had sat during those
+ happy lessons. To make all complete, she lifted the heavy book
+ from the shelf and opened it at the page from which she had
+ first learned. She put herself in his chair and caressed the
+ words with her thin hand, her fingers trembling over the place
+ that his had touched, then dropping her head on the desk where
+ his arm had lain, she smiling slept.</p>
+
+ <p>She awoke with the nurse looking down on her, saying,
+ "Beauty, you are better."</p>
+
+ <p>And so she was: she drank the broth and ate the bread and
+ grapes that had been brought her, and from that day grew
+ stronger. But the shadow in her eyes was deeper now, and the
+ veins in her temples were bluer, as if the blood had throbbed
+ and pained there. Every morning found her at her post: she had
+ no need to roam the woods and fields now&mdash;her world lay
+ within her. It was sad for one so young to live on memory.</p>
+
+ <p>For many days her page and these few words were sufficient
+ to content her, and to recall them one after another, as Danby
+ had taught, was her only occupation. But by and by the words
+ themselves began to interest her, then the context, and finally
+ the sense dawned upon her&mdash;dawned not less surely that it
+ came slowly, and that she was now and then compelled to stop
+ and think out a word.</p>
+
+ <p>And what did she learn? Near the top of the large page the
+ first word, "love." It ended a sentence and stood conspicuous,
+ which was the reason it had caught the eye of the eager boy
+ when he began to teach. What did it mean? What went before?
+ What after? It was a long time before she asked herself these
+ questions, for her understanding had not formed the habit of
+ being curious. Previously her eyes alone had sight, now her
+ intellect commenced seeing. What was the web of which this word
+ was the woof, knitting together, underlying, now appearing, now
+ hidden, but always there? She turned the leaves and counted
+ where it recurred again and again, like a bird repeating one
+ sweet note, of which it never tires. Then the larger type in
+ the middle of each page drew her attention: she read, <i>As You
+ Like It</i>. "What do I like? This story is perhaps as I like
+ it. I wonder what it is about? I don't care now for pirates and
+ robbers: I liked them when <i>he</i> read to me, but not now."
+ Her thoughts then wandered off to Danby, and she read no more
+ that day.</p>
+
+ <p>However, Nellie had plenty of time before her, and when her
+ thinking was ended she would return to her text. I do not know
+ how long a time it required for her to connect the sentence
+ that followed the word "love;" but it became clear to her
+ finally, just as a difficult puzzle will sometimes resolve
+ itself as you are idly regarding it. And this is what she saw:
+ "Love! But it cannot be sounded: my affection hath an unknown
+ bottom, like the bay of Portugal." The phrase struck her as if
+ it was her own, and for the first time in her life she blushed.
+ She did not know much about the bay of Portugal, it is true,
+ but she understood the rest. From that time forth the book
+ possessed a strange interest for her. Much that she did not
+ comprehend she passed by. Often for several days she would not
+ find a passage that pleased her, but when such a one was
+ discovered her slow perusal of it and long dwelling on it gave
+ a beauty and power to the sentiment that more expert students
+ might have lost. I cannot describe the almost feverish effect
+ upon her of that poetical quartette beginning with&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ Good shepherd, tell this youth what 'tis to love.
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>How she hung over it, smiled at it, brightening into delight
+ at the echo of her own feelings! In the raillery of Rosalind
+ her heart found words to speak; and her sense and wit were
+ awakened by the sarcasm of the same character. "Pray you, no
+ more of this: 'tis like the howling of Irish wolves against the
+ moon," came like a healthy tonic after a week of ecstasy spent
+ over the preceding lines.</p>
+
+ <p>Her mind grew in such companionship. She lived no more
+ alone: she had found friends who sympathized with her. Smiles
+ and tears became frequent on her face, making it more
+ beautiful. <i>As You Like It</i> was just as she liked it. The
+ forest of Arden was her forest. Rosalind's banished father was
+ her father: that busy man she had never seen. With the book for
+ interpreter she fell in love with her world over again. Sunset
+ and dawn possessed new charms; the little flowers seemed
+ dignified; moonlight and fairy-land unveiled their mysteries;
+ nothing was forgotten. It appeared as if all the knowledge of
+ the world was contained in those magic pages, and the
+ master-key to this treasure, the dominant of this harmony, was
+ <i>love</i>&mdash;the word that Danby had taught her. The word?
+ The feeling as well, and with the feeling&mdash;<i>all</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>Circling from this passion as from a pole-star, all those
+ great constellations of thought revolved. With Lear's madness
+ was Cordelia's affection; with the inhumanity of Shylock was
+ Jessica's trust; with the Moor's jealousy was Desdemona's
+ devotion. The sweet and bitter of life, religion, poetry and
+ philosophy, ambition, revenge and superstition, controlled,
+ created or destroyed by that little word. And <i>how</i> they
+ loved&mdash;Perdita, Juliet, Miranda&mdash;quickly and
+ entirely, without shame, as she had loved Danby&mdash;as buds
+ bloom and birds warble. Oh it was sweet, sweet, sweet! Amid
+ friends like these she became gay, moved briskly, grew rosy and
+ sang. This was her favorite song, to a melody she had caught
+ from the river:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i6">Under the greenwood tree</p>
+
+ <p class="i6">Who loves to lie with me,</p>
+
+ <p class="i6">And turn his merry note</p>
+
+ <p class="i6">Unto the sweet bird's throat,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Come hither, come hither, come
+ hither:</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">Here shall he see</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">No enemy</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">But winter and rough weather.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Four years passed by&mdash;not all spent with one book,
+ however. Nellie's desire for study grew with what it fed on.
+ This book opened the way for many. Reading led to reflection;
+ reflection, to observation; observation, to Nature; and thus in
+ an endless round.</p>
+
+ <p>About this time her busy father remembered he possessed a
+ "baby," laid away somewhere, like an old parchment, and he
+ concluded he would "look her up." His surprise was great when
+ he saw the child a woman&mdash;still greater when he observed
+ her self-possession, her intelligence, and a certain quaint way
+ she had of expressing herself that was charming in connection
+ with her fresh young face. She was neither diffident nor
+ awkward, knowing too little of the world to fear, and having
+ naturally that simplicity of manner which touches nearly upon
+ high breeding. But Mr. Archer being one of those men who think
+ that "beauty should go beautifully," her toilette shocked him.
+ Under the influence of her presence he felt that he had
+ neglected her. The whole house reproached him: the few rooms
+ that had been furnished were dilapidated and worn.</p>
+
+ <p>"I did not know things looked so badly down here," he said
+ apologetically. "I am sure I must have had everything properly
+ arranged when Nurse Bridget came. Your cradle was comfortable,
+ was it not?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I scarcely remember," answered his daughter demurely.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh! ah! yes! It is some time ago, I believe?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Seventeen years."</p>
+
+ <p>"Y-e-s: I had forgotten."</p>
+
+ <p>He had an idea, this man of a hundred schemes, that his
+ "baby" was laughing at him, and, singularly enough, it raised
+ her in his estimation. He even asked her to come and live with
+ him in the city, but she refused, and he did not insist.</p>
+
+ <p>Then he set about making a change, which was soon
+ accomplished. He sent for furniture and carpets, and cleared
+ the rubbish from without and within. Under his decided orders a
+ complete outfit "suitable for his daughter" soon arrived, and
+ with it a maid. Nellie, whose ideas of maids were taken from
+ Lucetta, was much disappointed in the actual being, and the
+ modern Lucetta was also disappointed when she saw the "howling
+ wilderness" to which she had been inveigled; so the two parted
+ speedily. But Mr. Archer remained: he was one of those men who
+ do things thoroughly which they have once undertaken. When he
+ was satisfied with Nellie's appearance he took her to call on
+ all the neighboring families within reach.</p>
+
+ <p>Among others, they went to see Mrs. Overbeck, Danby's
+ mother, whom Mr. Archer had known in his youth. Nellie wore her
+ brave trappings bravely, and acted her part nicely until Mrs.
+ Overbeck gave her a motherly kiss at parting, when she grew
+ pale and trembled. Why should she? Her hostess thought it was
+ from the heat, and insisted on her taking a glass of wine.</p>
+
+ <p>In the autumn of this year Danby graduated and returned
+ home. Nellie had not seen him during all this interval: he had
+ spent his vacations abroad, and had become quite a traveled
+ man. While she retained her affection for him unchanged, he
+ scarcely remembered the funny little girl who had been so
+ devoted to him in the years gone by. A few days after he
+ arrived, his mother, in giving him the local news, mentioned
+ the charming acquaintance she had made of a young lady who
+ lived in the neighborhood. On hearing her name the young man
+ exclaimed, "Why, that must be Nellie!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Do you know her?" asked his mother in surprise.</p>
+
+ <p>"Of course I do, and many a jolly time I have had with her.
+ Odd little thing, ain't she?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I should not call her odd," remarked his mother.</p>
+
+ <p>"You do not know her as I do."</p>
+
+ <p>"Perhaps not. I suppose you will go with me when I return
+ her visit."</p>
+
+ <p>"Certainly I will&mdash;just in for that sort of thing. A
+ man feels the need of some relaxation after a four years' bore,
+ and there is nothing like the society of the weaker sex to give
+ the mind repose."</p>
+
+ <p>"Shocking boy!" said the fond mother with a smile.</p>
+
+ <p>In a short time the projected call was made.</p>
+
+ <p>"You will frighten her with all that finery, my handsome
+ mother," remarked Danby as they walked to the carriage.</p>
+
+ <p>"I think she will survive it, but I shall not answer for the
+ effect of those brilliant kids of yours."</p>
+
+ <p>"The feminine eye is caught by display," said her son
+ sententiously.</p>
+
+ <p>They chatted as they drove rapidly through the forest to the
+ old house, entered the front gate and rolled up the broad
+ avenue.</p>
+
+ <p>"I had no idea the place looked so well," remarked Danby,
+ <i>en connaisseur</i>, as they approached. "I always entered by
+ the back way;" and he gave his moustache a final twirl.</p>
+
+ <p>After a loud knock from a vigorous hand the door was opened
+ by a small servant, much resembling Nellie some four years
+ before. Danby was going to speak to her, but recalling the time
+ that had elapsed, he knew it could not be she. All within was
+ altered. Three rooms <i>en suite</i>, the last of which was the
+ library, had been carefully refurnished. He looked about him.
+ Could this be the place in which he had passed so many days?
+ But he forgot all in the figure that advanced to receive them.
+ With a pretty grace she gave her hand to his mother and
+ welcomed "Mr. Overbeck." How she talked&mdash;talked like a
+ babbling brook! It was now his turn to open big eyes and be
+ silent. He tried to recall the girl he had left. Vain endeavor!
+ This bright creature, grave and gay, silent but ready,
+ respectful yet confident, how could he follow her? The visit
+ came to an end, but was repeated again and again by Danby, and
+ each time with new astonishment, new delight. She had the
+ coquetry of a dozen women, yet her eyes looked so true. She was
+ a perfect elf for pranks and jokes, yet demure as a nun. When
+ he tried to awe her with his learning, she was saucy; if he was
+ serious, she was gay; if he wished to teach, she rebelled. She
+ was self-willed as a changeling, refractory yet gentle,
+ seditious but just,&mdash;only waiting to strike her colors and
+ proclaim him conqueror; but this he did not know, for she kept
+ well hid in her heart what "woman's fear" she had. She was all
+ her favorite heroines in turn, with herself added to the
+ galaxy.</p>
+
+ <p>One day he penetrated into the library, notwithstanding some
+ very serious efforts on her part to prevent him: by this time
+ he would occasionally assert himself. The furniture there was
+ not much altered. A few worn things had been replaced, but the
+ room looked so much the same that the scene of that first
+ reading-lesson came vividly to his mind. He turned to the side
+ where the desk had stood. It was still there, with the two
+ chairs before it, and on it was the book. She would not for the
+ world have had it moved, but it was, as it were, glorified. Mr.
+ Archer had wished "these old things cleared away," but Nellie
+ had besought him so earnestly that he allowed them to stay,
+ stipulating, however, that they should be upholstered anew. To
+ this she assented, saying, "Send me the best of everything and
+ <i>I</i> will cover them&mdash;the very best, mind;" and her
+ father, willing to please her, did as she desired.</p>
+
+ <p>So the old desk became smart in brocade and gold-lace, the
+ book received a cushion all bullion and embroidery, and the
+ chairs emulated the splendor. It required a poet or a girl in
+ love to clothe a fancy so beautifully, and Nellie was both. It
+ was her shrine: why should she not adorn it?</p>
+
+ <p>I cannot follow the process of thought in Danby's mind as he
+ looked at this and at Nellie&mdash;Nellie blushing with the
+ sudden guiltiness that even the discovery of a harmless action
+ will bring when we wish to conceal it. Sometimes a moment
+ reveals much.</p>
+
+ <p>"Nellie"&mdash;it was the first time he had called her so
+ since his return&mdash;"I must give you a reading-lesson: come,
+ sit here."</p>
+
+ <p>Mechanically she obeyed him, all the rebel fading away: she
+ looked like the Nellie of other days. She felt she had laid
+ bare her soul, but in proportion as her confusion overcame her
+ did he become decided. It is the slaves that make tyrants, it
+ is said.</p>
+
+ <p>Under the impulse of his hand the book opened at the
+ well-worn page.</p>
+
+ <p>"Read!"</p>
+
+ <p>For a little while she sat with downcast eyes. Well she knew
+ the passage to which he was pointing: "Love! But it cannot be
+ sounded: my affection hath an unknown bottom, like the bay of
+ Portugal."</p>
+
+ <p>The sentence seemed to dance and grow till it covered the
+ page&mdash;grow till in her sight it assumed the size of a
+ placard, and then it took life and became her
+ accuser&mdash;told in big letters the story of her devotion to
+ the mocking boy beside her.</p>
+
+ <p>"There is good advice on the preceding page," he whispered
+ smiling. "Orlando says he would kiss before he spoke: may
+ I?"</p>
+
+ <p>She started up and looked at his triumphant face a moment,
+ her mouth quivering, her eyes full of tears. "How can
+ you&mdash;" she began.</p>
+
+ <p>But before she could finish he was by her side: "Because I
+ love you&mdash;love you, all that the book says, and a thousand
+ times more. Because if you love me we will live our own
+ romance, and I doubt if we cannot make our old woods as
+ romantic as the forest of Arden. Will you not say," he asked
+ tenderly, "that there will be at least one pair of true lovers
+ there?"</p>
+
+ <p>I could not hear Nellie's answer: her head was so near
+ his&mdash;on his shoulder, in fact&mdash;that she whispered it
+ in his ear. But a moment after, pushing him from her with the
+ old mischief sparkling from her eyes, she said, "'Til frown and
+ be perverse, and say thee nay, so thou wilt woo,'" and looked a
+ saucy challenge in his face.</p>
+
+ <p>"Naughty sprite!" he exclaimed, catching her in his arms and
+ shutting her mouth with kisses.</p>
+
+ <p>It was not long after, perhaps a year, that a happy bride
+ and groom might have been seen walking up the hemlock avenue
+ arm in arm.</p>
+
+ <p>"Do you remember," she asked, smiling thoughtfully&mdash;"do
+ you remember the time I begged you to come home with me and be
+ my pet?"</p>
+
+ <p>The young husband leaned down and said something the
+ narrator did not catch, but from the expression of his face it
+ must have been very spoony: with a bride such as that charming
+ Nellie, how could he help it?</p>
+
+ <p>Yes, she had brought him home. Mr. Archer had given the
+ house with its broad acres as a dowry to his daughter, and
+ Nellie had desired that the honeymoon should be spent in her
+ "forest of Arden."</p>
+
+ <p class="author">ITA ANIOL PROKOP.</p><a name="H_4_0013"
+ id="H_4_0013"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h2>JACK, THE REGULAR.</h2>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">In the Bergen winter night, when the
+ hickory fire is roaring,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Flickering streams of ruddy light on the
+ folk before it pouring&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">When the apples pass around, and the
+ cider follows after,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And the well-worn jest is crowned by the
+ hearers' hearty laughter&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">When the cat is purring there, and the
+ dog beside her dozing,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And within his easy-chair sits the
+ grandsire old, reposing,&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Then they tell the story true to the
+ children, hushed and eager,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">How the two Van Valens slew, on a time,
+ the Tory leaguer,</p>
+
+ <p class="i20">Jack, the Regular.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Near a hundred years ago, when the
+ maddest of the Georges</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Sent his troops to scatter woe on our
+ hills and in our gorges,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Less we hated, less we feared, those he
+ sent here to invade us</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Than the neighbors with us reared who
+ opposed us or betrayed us;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And amid those loyal knaves who rejoiced
+ in our disasters,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">As became the willing slaves of the worst
+ of royal masters,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Stood John Berry, and he said that a
+ regular commission</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Set him at his comrades' head; so we
+ called him, in derision,</p>
+
+ <p class="i20">"Jack, the Regular."</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">When he heard it&mdash;"Let them fling!
+ Let the traitors make them merry</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">With the fact my gracious king deigns to
+ make me Captain Berry.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">I will scourge them for the sneer, for
+ the venom that they carry;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">I will shake their hearts with fear as
+ the land around I harry:</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">They shall find the midnight raid waking
+ them from fitful slumbers;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">They shall find the ball and blade daily
+ thinning out their numbers:</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Barn in ashes, cattle slain, hearth on
+ which there glows no ember,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Neatless plough and horseless wain; thus
+ the rebels shall remember</p>
+
+ <p class="i20">Jack, the Regular!"</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Well he kept his promise then with a
+ fierce, relentless daring,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Fire to rooftrees, death to men, through
+ the Bergen valleys bearing:</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">In the midnight deep and dark came his
+ vengeance darker, deeper&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">At the watch-dog's sudden bark woke in
+ terror every sleeper;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Till at length the farmers brown, wasting
+ time no more on tillage,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Swore those ruffians of the Crown, fiends
+ of murder, fire and pillage,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Should be chased by every path to the
+ dens where they had banded,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And no prayers should soften wrath when
+ they caught the bloody-handed</p>
+
+ <p class="i20">Jack, the Regular.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">One by one they slew his men: still the
+ chief their chase evaded.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">He had vanished from their ken, by the
+ Fiend or Fortune aided&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Either fled to Powles Hoek, where the
+ Briton yet commanded,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Or his stamping-ground forsook, waiting
+ till the hunt disbanded;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">So they checked pursuit at length, and
+ returned to toil securely:</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">It was useless wasting strength on a
+ purpose baffled surely.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">But the two Van Valens swore, in a
+ patriotic rapture,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">_They_ would never give it o'er till
+ they'd either kill or capture</p>
+
+ <p class="i20">Jack, the Regular.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Long they hunted through the wood, long
+ they slept upon the hillside;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">In the forest sought their food, drank
+ when thirsty at the rill-side;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">No exposure counted hard&mdash;theirs was
+ hunting border-fashion:</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">They grew bearded like the pard, and
+ their chase became a passion:</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Even friends esteemed them mad, said
+ their minds were out of balance,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Mourned the cruel fate and sad fallen on
+ the poor Van Valens;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">But they answered to it all, "Only wait
+ our loud view-holloa</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">When the prey shall to us fall, for to
+ death we mean to follow</p>
+
+ <p class="i20">Jack, the Regular."</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Hunted they from Tenavlieon to where the
+ Hudson presses</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">To the base of traprocks high; through
+ Moonachie's damp recesses;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Down as far as Bergen Hill; by the Ramapo
+ and Drochy,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Overproek and Pellum Kill&mdash;meadows
+ flat and hilltops rocky&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Till at last the brothers stood where the
+ road from New Barbadoes,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">At the English Neighborhood, slants
+ toward the Palisadoes;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Still to find the prey they sought left
+ no sign for hunter eager:</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Followed steady, not yet caught, was the
+ skulking, fox-like leaguer</p>
+
+ <p class="i20">Jack, the Regular.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Who are they that yonder creep by those
+ bleak rocks in the distance,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Like the figures born in sleep, called by
+ slumber to existence?&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Tories doubtless from below, from the
+ Hoek, sent out for spying.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">"No! the foremost is our foe&mdash;he so
+ long before us flying!</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Now he spies us! see him start! wave his
+ kerchief like a banner!</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Lay his left hand on his heart in a
+ proud, insulting manner.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Well he knows that distant spot's past
+ our ball, his low scorn flinging.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">If you cannot feel the shot, you shall
+ hear the firelock's ringing,</p>
+
+ <p class="i20">Jack, the Regular!"</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Ha! he falls! An ambuscade? 'Twas
+ impossible to strike him!</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Are there Tories in the glade? Such a
+ trick is very like him.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">See! his comrade by him kneels, turning
+ him in terror over,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Then takes nimbly to his heels. Have they
+ really slain the rover?</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">It is worth some risk to know; so, with
+ firelocks poised and ready,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Up the sloping hills they go, with a
+ quick lookout and steady.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Dead! The random shot had struck, to the
+ heart had pierced the Tory&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Vengeance seconded by luck! Lies there,
+ cold and stiff and gory,</p>
+
+ <p class="i20">Jack, the Regular.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">"Jack, the Regular, is dead! Honor to the
+ man who slew him!"</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">So the Bergen farmers said as they
+ crowded round to view him;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">For the wretch that lay there slain had
+ with wickedness unbending</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">To their roofs brought fiery rain, to
+ their kinsfolk woeful ending.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Not a mother but had prest, in a sudden
+ pang of fearing,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Sobbing darlings to her breast when his
+ name had smote her hearing;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Not a wife that did not feel terror when
+ the words were uttered;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Not a man but chilled to steel when the
+ hated sounds he muttered&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i20">Jack, the Regular.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Bloody in his work was he, in his purpose
+ iron-hearted&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Gentle pity could not be when the
+ pitiless had parted.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">So, the corse in wagon thrown, with no
+ decent cover o'er it&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Jeers its funeral rites alone&mdash;into
+ Hackensack they bore it,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">'Mid the clanging of the bells in the old
+ Brick Church's steeple,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And the hooting and the yells of the
+ gladdened, maddened people.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Some they rode and some they ran by the
+ wagon where it rumbled,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Scoffing at the lifeless man, all elate
+ that death had humbled</p>
+
+ <p class="i20">Jack, the Regular.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Thus within the winter night, when the
+ hickory fire is roaring,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Flickering streams of ruddy light on the
+ folk before it pouring&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">When the apples pass around, and the
+ cider follows after,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And the well-worn jest is crowned by the
+ hearers' hearty laughter&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">When the cat is purring there, and the
+ dog beside her dozing,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And within his easy-chair sits the
+ grandsire old, reposing,&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Then they tell the story true to the
+ children, hushed and eager,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">the two Van Valens slew, on a time, the
+ Tory leaguer,</p>
+
+ <p class="i20">Jack, the Regular.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p class="center">THOMAS DUNN ENGLISH.</p><a name="H_4_0014"
+ id="H_4_0014"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h2>OBSERVATIONS AND ADVENTURES IN SUBMARINE DIVING.</h2>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ [Greek: &mdash;liphon eponumon te reuma kai
+ petraerephae autoktit' antra.]
+
+ <p class="i10">&#198;SCHYLUS: <i>Prometheus Bound</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Did you ever pause before a calm, bright little pool in the
+ woods, and look steadily at the picture it presents, without
+ feeling as if you had peeped into another world? Every outline
+ is preserved, every tint is freshened and purified, in the
+ cool, glimmering reflection. There is a grace and a softness in
+ the prismatic lymph that give a new form and color to the
+ common and familiar objects it has printed in its still,
+ pellucid depths. Every little basin of clear water by the
+ roadside is a magic mirror, and transforms all that it
+ encloses. There is a vastness of depth, too, in that concave
+ hemisphere, through which the vision sinks like a falling star,
+ that excites and fills the imagination. What it shows is only a
+ shadow, but all things seen are mere shadows painted on the
+ retina, and you have, at such times, a realistic sense of the
+ beautiful and bold imagery which calls a favorite fountain of
+ the East the Eye of the Desert.</p>
+
+ <p>The alluring softness of this mimic world increases to
+ sublimity when, instead of some rocky basin, dripping with
+ mossy emeralds and coral berries, you look upon the deep
+ crystalline sea. Each mates to its kind. This does not gather
+ its imagery from gray, mossy rock or pendent leaf or flower,
+ but draws into its enfolding arms the wide vault of the
+ cerulean sky. The richness of the majestic azure is deepened by
+ that magnificent marriage. The pale blue is darkened to violet.
+ Far through the ever-varying surface of the curious gelatinous
+ liquid breaks the phosphorescence, sprinkled into innumerable
+ lights and cross-lights. As you look upon those endless
+ pastures thought is quickened with the conception of their
+ innumerable phases of vitality. The floating weed, whose meshes
+ measure the spaces of continents and archipelagoes, is
+ everywhere instinct with animal and vegetable life. The builder
+ coral, glimmering in its softer parts with delicate hues and
+ tints, throws up its stony barrier through a thousand miles of
+ length and a third as much in breadth, fringing the continents
+ with bays and sounds and atoll islands like fairy rings of the
+ sea. Animate flowers&mdash;sea-nettles, sea anemones,
+ plumularia, campanularia, hydropores, confervae, oscillatoria,
+ bryozoa&mdash;people the great waters. Sea-urchins, star-fish,
+ sea-eggs, combative gymnoti, polypes, struggle and thrive with
+ ever-renewing change of color; gelatinous worms that shine like
+ stars cling to every weed; glimmering animalcules,
+ phosphorescent medusae, the very deep itself is vivid with
+ sparkle and corruscation of electric fire. So through every
+ scale, from the zoophyte to the warm-blooded whale, the sea
+ teems with life, out of which fewer links have been dropped
+ than from sub-a&euml;rial life. It is a matter for curious
+ speculation that the missing species belong not to the lower
+ subsidiary genera, as in terrene animals, but to the highest
+ types of marine life. In the quarries of Lyme Regis, among the
+ accumulations of a sea of the Liassic period, lay the huge
+ skeleton of the Ichthyosaurus, a warm-blooded marine existence,
+ with huge saucer eyes of singular telescopic power, that
+ gleamed radiant "with the eyelids of the morning," "by whose
+ neesings alight doth shine"&mdash;the true leviathan of Job. In
+ the same extinct sea is found the skeleton of the Plesiosaurus,
+ a marine lizard of equal size, and warm-blooded, whose
+ swan-like neck and body graced the serene seas of the
+ pre-adamite world. Another was that of the Pterodactyl, the
+ antique aragon, a winged fish. The task of sustaining these
+ existences was too great for old Ocean, and the monsters
+ dropped from the upper end of the chain into the encrusting
+ mud, the petrified symbols of failure. So one day man may drop
+ into the limbo of vanities, among the abandoned tools in the
+ Creator's workshop.</p>
+
+ <p>But, however high or low the degree in the scale, one
+ distinguishing feature marks the vital creation in vegetable or
+ animal&mdash;an intelligence capable of adjusting itself to the
+ elements about it, and electing its food. The sunflower, even,
+ does not follow the sun by a mechanical law, but, growing by a
+ fair, bright sheet of water, looks as constantly at that
+ shining surface for the beloved light as ever did the fabled
+ Greek boy at his own image in the fountain. The tendrils of the
+ vine seek and choose their own support, and the thirsty
+ spongioles of the root find the nourishing veins of water.
+ Growth, says a naturalist, is the conscious motion of vegetable
+ life. But this theory of kinship, imperfect in the plant,
+ becomes plain and distinct in the animate creation. However far
+ removed, the wild dolphin at play and the painted bird in the
+ air are cousins of man, with a responsive chord of sympathy
+ connecting them.</p>
+
+ <p>It is this feeling that sends an exhilarating thrill through
+ the submarine explorer when a school of porpoises frisk by with
+ undulating grace, the marine type of a group of frolicking
+ children. It is the instinctive perception that it is a pure
+ enjoyment to the fish, the healthy glow and laugh of submarine
+ existence. But for that sense of sympathetic nature the
+ flying-fish, reeling porpoise and dolphin would be no more to
+ him than the skipping shuttle in a weaver's loom, the dull
+ impetus of senseless machinery. Self-generated motion is the
+ outward and visible sign of vitality&mdash;its wanton exercise
+ the symbol and expression of enjoyment. The poor philosopher
+ who distinguished humanity as singular in the exhibition of
+ humor had surely never heard a mocking-bird sing, watched a
+ roguish crow or admired a school of fish.</p>
+
+ <p>This keen appreciation of a kindred life in the sea has
+ thrown its charm over the poetry and religion of all races.
+ Ocean us leaves the o'erarching floods and rocky grottoes at
+ the call of bound Prometheus; Cyrene, with her nymphs, sits in
+ the cool Peneus, where comes Aristaeus mourning for his stolen
+ bees; the Druid washed his hedge-hyssop in the sacred water,
+ and priestesses lived on coral reefs visited by remote lovers
+ in their sundown seas; Schiller's diver goes into the purpling
+ deep and sees the Sea-Horror reaching out its hundred arms; the
+ beautiful Undine is the vivid poetry of the sea. Every fountain
+ has its guardian saint or nymph, and to this day not only the
+ German peasant and benighted English boor thrill at the sight
+ of some nymph-guarded well, but the New Mexican Indian offers
+ his rude pottery in propitiation of the animate existence, the
+ deity of the purling spring.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>"Der Taucher," for all the rhythm and music that clothes his
+ luckless plunge, was but a caitiff knight to some of our
+ submarine adventurers. A diver during the bay-fight in Mobile
+ harbor had reason to apprehend a more desperate encounter. A
+ huge cuttle-fish, the marine monster of Pliny and Victor Hugo,
+ had been seen in the water. His tough, sinuous, spidery arms,
+ five fathoms long, wavered visibly in the blue transparent
+ gulf,</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Und schaudernd dacht ich's&mdash;da
+ kroch's heran,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Regte hundert Gelenke zugleich,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Will schnappen nach mir.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>A harpoon was driven into the leathery, pulpy body of the
+ monster, but with no other effect than the sudden snapping of
+ the inch line like thread. It was subsequent to this that, as
+ the diver stayed his steps in the unsteady current, his staff
+ was seized below. The water was murky with the river-silt above
+ the salt brine, and he could see nothing, but after an effort
+ the staff was rescued or released. Curious to know what it was,
+ he probed again, and the stick was wrenched from his hand. With
+ a thrill he recognized in such power the monster of the sea,
+ the devil-fish. He returned anxious, doubtful, but resolute.
+ Few like to be driven from a duty by brute force. He armed
+ himself, and descended to renew the hazardous encounter in the
+ gloomy solitude of the sea-bottom. I would I had the wit to
+ describe that tournament beneath the sea; the stab, thrust,
+ curvet, plunge&mdash;the conquest and capture of the unknown
+ combatant. A special chance preserves the mediaeval character
+ of the contest, saving it from the sulphurous associations of
+ modern warfare that might be suggested by the name of
+ devil-fish. No: the antagonist wore a coat-of-mail and arms of
+ proof, as became a good knight of the sea, and was besides
+ succulent, digestible&mdash;a veritable prize for the
+ conqueror. It was a monstrous crab.</p>
+
+ <p>The constant encounter of strange and unforeseen perils
+ enables the professional diver to meet them with the same
+ coolness with which ordinary and familiar dangers are
+ confronted on land. On one occasion a party of such men were
+ driven out into the Gulf by a fierce "norther," were tossed
+ about like chips for three days in the vexed element, scant of
+ food, their compass out of order, and the horizon darkened with
+ prevailing storm. At another time a party wandered out in the
+ shallows of one of the keys that fringe the Gulf coast. They
+ amused themselves with wading into the water, broken into
+ dazzling brilliance. A few sharks were seen occasionally, which
+ gradually and unobserved increased to, a squadron. The waders
+ meanwhile continued their sport until the evening waned away.
+ Far over the dusk violet Night spread her vaporous shadows:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">The blinding mist came up and hid the
+ land,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And round and round the land,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And o'er and o'er the land,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">As far as eye could see.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>At last they turned their steps homeward, crossing the
+ little sandy key, between which and the beach lay a channel
+ shoulder-deep, its translucent waves now glimmering with
+ phosphorescence. But here they were met by an unexpected
+ obstacle. The fleet of sharks, with a strategical cunning
+ worthy of admiration, had flanked the little island, and now in
+ the deeper water formed in ranks and squadrons, and, with their
+ great goggle eyes like port-fires burning, lay ready to dispute
+ the passage. Armed with such weapons as they could clutch, the
+ men dashed into the water with paeans and shouts and the broken
+ pitchers of fallen Jericho. The violet phosphorescence lighted
+ them on their way, and tracked with luminous curve and star
+ every move of the enemy. The gashed water at every stroke of
+ club or swish of tail or fin bled in blue and red fire, as if
+ the very sea was wounded. The enemy's line of battle was broken
+ and scattered, but not until more than one of the assailants
+ had looked point-blank into the angry eyes of a shark and
+ beaten it off with actual blows. It was the Thermopylae of
+ sharkdom, with numbers reversed&mdash;a Red Sea passage
+ resonant with psalms of victory.</p>
+
+ <p>There are novel difficulties as well as dangers to be
+ encountered. The native courage of the man must be tempered,
+ ground and polished. On land it is the massing of numbers that
+ accomplishes the result&mdash;the accumulation of vital forces
+ and intelligence upon the objective point. The innumerable
+ threads of individual enterprise, like the twist of a Manton
+ barrel, give the toughest tensile power. Under the sea,
+ however, it is often the strength of the single thread, the wit
+ of the individual pitted against the solid impregnability of
+ the elements, the <i>vis inertiae</i> of the sea. It looks as
+ if uneducated Nature built her rude fastnesses and rocky
+ battlements with a special I view to resistance, making the
+ fickle and I unstable her strongest barricade. An example of
+ the skill and address necessary to conquer obstacles of the
+ latter kind was illustrated in Mobile Bay. There lay about a
+ sunken vessel an impenetrable mail of quicksand. It became
+ necessary to sink piles into this material. The obstacle does
+ not lie in its fickle, unstable character, but its elastic
+ tension. It swallows a nail or a beam by slow, serpent-like
+ deglutition. It is hungry, insatiable, impenetrable. Try to
+ force it, to drive down a pile by direct force: it resists. The
+ mallet is struck back by reverberating elasticity with an equal
+ force, and the huge pointed stake rebounds. Brute force beats
+ and beats in vain. The fickle sand will not be driven&mdash;no,
+ not an inch.</p>
+
+ <p>Wit comes in where weight breaks down. A force-pump, a
+ common old-style fire-engine, was rigged up, the nozzle and
+ hose bound to a huge pile,</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i10">to equal which the tallest pine</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Hewn on Norwegian hills, to be the
+ mast</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Of some great ammiral, were but a
+ wand.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The pump was set to work. The water tore through the
+ nostril-pipe, boring a hole with such rapidity that the tall
+ beam dropped into the socket with startling suddenness. Still
+ breathing torrents, the pipe was withdrawn: the clutching sand
+ seized, grappled the stake. It is cemented in.</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">You may break, you may shatter the
+ <i>stake</i>, if you will,</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>but&mdash;you can never pull it out.</p>
+
+ <p>Perhaps the most singular and venturesome exploit ever
+ performed in submarine diving was that of searching the sunken
+ monitor Milwaukee during the bay-fight in Mobile harbor. This
+ sea-going fortress was a huge double-turreted monitor, with a
+ ponderous, crushing projectile force in her. Her battery of
+ four fifteen-inch guns, and the tough, insensible solidity of
+ her huge wrought-iron turrets and heavy plated hulk, burdened
+ the sleepy waters of the bay. Upon a time she braced her iron
+ jacket about her, girded her huge sides with fifteen-inch
+ pistolry, and went rolling her clumsy volume down the bay to
+ mash Fort Taylor to rubbish and d&eacute;bacle. The sea
+ staggered under her ponderous gliding and groaned about her
+ massive bulk as she wended her awkward course toward the
+ bay-shore over against the fort. She sighted her blunderbusses,
+ and, rolling, grunting, wheezing in her revolving towers like a
+ Falstaff ill at ease, spat her gobbets of flame and death. The
+ poor little water-spaniel fort ran down to the shore and barked
+ at her of course. <i>Cui bono</i> or <i>malo?</i> Why, like
+ Job's mates, fill its poor belly with the east wind, or try to
+ draw out leviathan with a hook, or his tongue with a cord thou
+ lettest down? Yet who treads of the fight between invulnerable
+ Achilles and heroic Hector, and admires Achilles? The admiral
+ of the American fleet, sick of the premature pother, signaled
+ the lazy solidity to return. The loathly monster, slowly, like
+ a bull-dog wrenched from his victim, rolled snarling, lazily,
+ leisurely down the bay, not obeying and yet not disobeying the
+ signal.</p>
+
+ <p>All along the sunny coast, like flowers springing up in a
+ battle-field, were rows of little white cottages, tenanted by
+ women and children&mdash;love, life and peace in the midst of
+ ruin and sudden death. At the offending spectacle of homely
+ peace among its enemies the unglutted monster eased its huge
+ wrath. Tumbling and bursting among the poor little pasteboard
+ shells of cottages, where children played and women gossiped of
+ the war, and prayed for its end, no matter how, fell the huge
+ globes and cones of murder. Shrieks and cries, slain babes and
+ wounded women on shore; surly, half-mutinous officers and crew
+ on that iron hulk, shocked at the fell work they were set to
+ do; and the glimmer and wash of the bay-water below&mdash;that
+ sweet, tranquil, half-transparent liquid, with idle weeds and
+ chips upon it, empty crates and boxes of dead merchandise,
+ sacked of their life and substance by the war, as one might
+ swallow an oyster; the soft veils of shadowy ships and the
+ distant city spires; umbrageous fires and slips of shining sand
+ all mirrored in the soft and quiet sea, while this devilish
+ pother went on. There is a buoy adrift! No, it is a sodden
+ cask, perhaps of spoiling meat, while the people in the town
+ yonder are starving; and still the huge iron, gluttonous
+ monster bursts its foam of blood and death, while the surly
+ crew curse and think of mothers and babes at home. Better to
+ look at the bay, the idle, pleasing summer water, with chips
+ and corks and weeds upon it; better to look at the bubbling
+ cask yonder&mdash;much better, captain, if you only knew it!
+ But the reluctant, heavy iron turret groans and wheezes on its
+ pivotal round, and it will be a minute or half a minute before
+ the throated hell speaks again. But it <i>will</i> speak:
+ machinery is fatally accurate to time and place. Can nothing
+ stay it, or stop the trembling of those bursting iron spheres
+ among yon pretty print-like homes? No: look at the buoy,
+ wish-wash, rolling lazily, bobbing in the water, a lazy, idle
+ cask, with nothing in the world to do on this day of busy
+ mischief. What hands coopered it in the new West? what farmer
+ filled it? There is the grunting of swine, lowing of cattle, in
+ the look of the staves. But the turret groans and wheezes and
+ goes around, whether you look at it or not. What cottage this
+ time? The soft lap-lap of the water goes on, and the tedious
+ cask gets nearer: it will slide by the counter. You have a
+ curious interest in that. No: it grates under the bow;
+ it&mdash;Thunder and wreck and ruin! Has the bay burst open and
+ swallowed us? The huge, invulnerable iron monster&mdash;not
+ invulnerable after all&mdash;has met its master in the idle
+ cask. It is blind, imprisoned Samson pulling down the pillars
+ of the temple. The tough iron plates at the bow are rent and
+ torn and twisted like wet paper. A terrible hole is gashed in
+ the hull. The monster wobbles, rolls, gasps, and drinks huge
+ gulps of water like a wounded man&mdash;desperately wounded,
+ and dying in his thirsty veins and arteries. The swallowed
+ torrent rushes aft, hissing and quenching the fires; beats
+ against the stern, and comes forward with the rush of that
+ repulse to meet the incoming wave. Into the boats, the
+ water&mdash;anywhere but here. She reels again and groans; and
+ then, as a desperate hero dies, she slopes her huge warlike
+ beak at the hostile water and rushes to her own ruin with a
+ surge and convulsion. The victorious sea sweeps over it and
+ hides it, laughing at her work. She will keep it safely. That
+ is the unsung epic of the Milwaukee, without which I should
+ have little to say of the submarine diving during the
+ bay-fight.</p>
+
+ <p>The harbor of Mobile is shaped like a rude Innuit boot. At
+ the top, Tensaw and Mobile Rivers, in their deltas, make,
+ respectively, two and three looplike bands, like the straps.
+ The toe is Bonsecour Bay, pointing east. The heel rests on
+ Dauphin Island, while the main channel flows into the hollow of
+ the foot between Fort Morgan and Dauphin Island. In the
+ north-west angle, obscured by the foliage, lay the devoted
+ city, suffering no less from artificial famine, made
+ unnecessarily, than the ligatures that stopped the vital
+ current of trade. Tons of meat were found putrefying while the
+ citizens, and even the garrison, had been starving on scanty
+ rations. Food could be purchased, but at exorbitant rates, and
+ the medium of exchange, Confederate notes, all gone to water
+ and waste paper. The true story of the Lost Cause has yet to be
+ written. North of Mobile, in the Trans-Mississippi department,
+ thousands whose every throb was devoted to the enterprise,
+ welcomed the Northern invaders, not as destroyers of a hope
+ already dead by the act of a few entrusted with its defence,
+ but as something better than the anarchy that was not Southern
+ independence or anything else human.</p>
+
+ <p>Such were the condition, period and place&mdash;the people
+ crushed between the upper and nether millstones of two hostile
+ and contending civilizations&mdash;when native thrift evoked a
+ new element, that set in sharp contrast the heroism of life and
+ the heroism of death, the courage that incurs danger to save
+ against the courage that accepts danger to destroy. The work
+ was the saving of the valuable arms&mdash;costing the
+ government thirty thousand dollars per gun&mdash;and the
+ machinery of the sunken Milwaukee.<a id="footnotetag5"
+ name="footnotetag5"></a><a href="#footnote5"><sup>5</sup></a>
+ By a curious circumstance this party of divers was composed
+ partly, if not principally or entirely, of mechanics and
+ engineers who were exempt from military service under the
+ economic laws of the Confederacy, yet who in heart and soul
+ sympathized with the rebellion. They had worked to save for
+ the South: now they were to work and save for the North. It
+ was a service of superadded danger. All the peril incurred
+ from missile weapons was increased by the hidden danger of
+ the secret under-sea and the presence of the terrible
+ torpedoes. These floated everywhere, in all innocent,
+ unsuspicious shapes. One monster, made of boiler iron, a
+ huge cross, is popularly believed to be still hidden in the
+ bay. The person possessing the chart wherein the masked
+ battery's place was set down is said to have destroyed it
+ and fled. Let us hope, however, that this is an error.</p>
+
+ <p>Keep in mind, in reading this account, the contrasted
+ picture of peace in Nature and war in man&mdash;the calm blue
+ sky; the soft hazy outlines of woods and bay-shore dropping
+ their soft veils in the water; the cottages, suggesting
+ industry and love; the distant city; the delicate and graceful
+ spars of the Hartford; the busy despatch-steamers plying to and
+ fro; the bursting forts and huge ugly monitors; the starry
+ arches of flying shells by night and flying cloud by day; the
+ soft lap of the water; the sensuous, sweet beauty of that
+ latitude of eternal spring; and the soft dark violet of the
+ outer sea, glassing itself in calm or broken into millioned
+ frets of blue, red and starry fire; the danger above and the
+ danger below; the dark mysterious caverns of the sea, rich with
+ coral grots and grove and abounding marine life; the
+ impenetrable gloom of the ship's hold, whose unimaginable
+ darkness and labyrinthine intricacy of machinery set obstacles
+ at every turn and move and step; the darkness; the fury; the
+ hues and shape, all that art can make or Nature fashion, gild
+ or color wrought into one grand tablature of splendor and
+ magnificence. War and peaceful industry met there in novel
+ rivalry, and each claimed its privileges. The captain of the
+ Search said to the officers, while crowding his men behind the
+ turret, with sly, dry humor, "Come, you are all <i>paid</i> to
+ be shot at: my men are not."</p>
+
+ <p>More than once the accuracy of the enemy's fire drove the
+ little party to shelter. Though the diver was shielded by the
+ impenetrable fickle element that gave Achilles invulnerability,
+ the air-pump above was exposed, and thus the diver might be
+ slain by indirection. There lay Achilles' heel, the exposed
+ vulnerable part that Mother Thetis's baptism neglected.</p>
+
+ <p>The work below was arduous: the hulk crowded with the
+ entangling machinery of sixteen engines, cuddies, ports, spars,
+ levers, hatches, stancheons, floating trunks, bibulous boxes
+ heavy with drink, and the awful, mysterious gloom of the water,
+ which is not night or darkness, but the absence of any ray to
+ touch the sensitive optic nerve. The sense of touch the only
+ reliance, and the life-line his guide.</p>
+
+ <p>But the peril incurred can be better understood through an
+ illustrative example of a perilous adventure and a poor return.
+ Officers and men of the unfortunate monitor asked for the
+ rescue of their property, allowing a stipulated sum in lieu of
+ salvage. Among these was a petty officer, anxious for the
+ recovery of his chest. It involved peculiar hazards, since it
+ carried the diver below the familiar turret-chamber, through
+ the <i>inextricabilis error</i> of entangling machinery in the
+ engine-room, groping among floating and sunken objects, into a
+ remote state-room, the Acheron of the cavernous hold. He was to
+ find by touch a seaman's chest; handle it in that thickening
+ gloom; carry it, push it, move it through that labyrinthine
+ obscurity to a point from which it could be raised. To add
+ immeasurably to the intricacy of this undertaking, there was
+ the need of carrying his life-line and air-hose through all
+ that entanglement and obscurity. Three times in that horror of
+ thick darkness like wool the line tangled in the web of
+ machinery, and three times he had, by tedious endeavor, to
+ follow it up, find the knot and release it. Then the door of
+ the little state-room, the throat of exit, was shut to, and
+ around and around the dense chamber he groped as if in a dream,
+ and could find no vent. All was alike&mdash;a smooth, slimy
+ wall, glutinous with that gelatinous liquid, the sea-water. The
+ tangled line became a blind guide and fruitful source of error;
+ the hours were ebbing away, drowning life and vital air in that
+ horrible watery pit;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Aut hoc inclusi ligno occultantur
+ Achivi,</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>or, a worse enemy than the subtle Greek's, death from the
+ suspended air-current. Speed, nimbleness, strength and activity
+ were worthless: with tedious fingers he must follow the
+ life-line, find its entanglements and slowly loosen them,
+ carefully taking up the slack, and so follow the straightened
+ cord to the door. Then the chest: he must not forget that.
+ Slowly he heaves and pushes, now at this, now at the life-line
+ hitching on knob, handle, lever or projecting peg&mdash;on
+ anything or nothing in that maze of machinery; by involution
+ and evolution, like the unknown quantity in a cubic equation,
+ through all the twists, turns, assumptions and substitutions,
+ and always with that unmanageable, indivisible coefficient the
+ box, until he reaches the upper air.</p>
+
+ <p>In Aesop's fable, when the crane claimed the reward of the
+ wolf for using his long neck and bill as a forceps in
+ extracting a bone from the latter's oesophagus, Lupus suggests
+ that for the crane to have had his head down in the lupine
+ throat and <i>not</i> get it snapped off was reward enough for
+ any reasonable fowl. The petty officer was sufficiently learned
+ in the Lyceum to administer a like return. The stipulated
+ salvage was never paid or offered.<a id="footnotetag6"
+ name="footnotetag6"></a><a href="#footnote6"><sup>6</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>The monitors had small square hatches or man-ports let into
+ the deck, admitting one person conveniently.</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Hinc via, Tartanii quae fert Acherontis
+ ad undas.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>A swinging ladder, whose foot was clear of the floor, led
+ down into the recesses. A diver, having completed his task,
+ ascended the treacherous staircase to escape, and found the
+ hatch blocked up. A floating chest or box had drifted into the
+ opening, and, fitting closely, had firmly corked the man up in
+ that dungeon, tight as a fly in a bottle. From his doubtful
+ perch on the ladder he endeavored to push the obstacle from its
+ insertion. Two or more equal difficulties made this impossible.
+ The box had no handle, and it was slippery with the ooze and
+ mucus of the sea. The leverage of pushing only wedged it faster
+ in the orifice. The inconstant ladder swayed from it as a
+ fulcrum. Again and again by art and endeavor and angle of push
+ he essayed, and the ladder made sport of it. It was deadly
+ sport, that swing and seesaw on the slippery rungs in the
+ immeasurable loneliness of the silent, shrouded cabin. It was
+ no rush of air, sending life tingling in the blood made
+ brilliant with carmine of oxidation, but the dense, mephitic
+ sough of the thick wool of water. He descended and sat upon the
+ floor to think. Feasible methods had failed, and the sands of
+ his life were running out like the old physician's. Now to try
+ the impracticable. There are heaps of wisdom in the wrong way
+ sometimes, which, I suppose, is the reason some of us like it.
+ The box was out of his reach, choked in the gullet of that
+ life-hole. No spring or leap from floor or ladder could reach
+ its slippery side or bear it from its fixture. The sea had
+ caught him prowling in its mysteries, and blocked him up, as
+ cruel lords of ancient days walled up the intruder on their
+ domestic privacy. Wit after brute force: man and Nature were
+ pitted against each other in the uncongenial gloom&mdash;life
+ the stake.</p>
+
+ <p>He groped about his prison, glutinous with infusoriae and
+ the oily consistence of the sea. Here a nail, there a block or
+ lever, shaped out mentally by the touch, theorized, studied
+ upon and thrown down. Now a hatchet, monkey-wrench,
+ monkey's-tail, or gliding fish or wriggling eel, companions of
+ his imprisonment. At last the cold touch of iron: the hand
+ encloses and lifts it; its weight betrays its length; he feels
+ it to the end&mdash;blunt, square, useless. He tries the other
+ end&mdash;an edge or spike. That will do. Standing under the
+ hatch, guided by the ladder to the position, and with a strong
+ swinging, upward blow, the new tool is driven into the soft,
+ fibrous and adhesive pine bottom of the box. On the principle
+ on which your butler's practiced elbow draws the twisted screw
+ sunk into the cobwebbed seal of your '48 port, he uncorks
+ himself. The box pulled out of the hatch, the sea-gods threw up
+ the sponge, that zoophyte being handy.</p>
+
+ <p>These few incidents, strung together at random, and
+ embracing only limited experiences out of many in one
+ enterprise, are illustrative, in their variety and character,
+ of this hardy pursuit, and the fascination of danger which is
+ the school of native hardihood. But they give the reader a very
+ imperfect idea of the nature and appearance of the new element
+ into which man has pushed his industry. The havoc and spoil,
+ the continued danger and contention, darken the gloom of the
+ submarine world as a flash of lightning leaves blacker the
+ shadow of the night and storm.</p>
+
+ <p>The first invention to promote subaqueous search was the
+ diving-bell, a clumsy vessel which isolates the diver. It is
+ embarrassing, if not dangerous, where there is a strong current
+ or if it rests upon a slant deck. It limits the vision, and in
+ one instance it is supposed the wretched diver was taken from
+ the bell by a shark. It permits an assistant, however, and a
+ bold diver will plunge from the deck above and ascend in the
+ vessel, to the invariable surprise of his companion. An example
+ of one of its perils, settling in the mud, occurred, I think,
+ in the port of New York. A party of amateurs, supported by
+ champagne flasks and a reporter, went down. The bell settled
+ and stuck like a boy's sucker. One of the party proposed
+ shaking or rocking the bell, and doing so, the water was forced
+ under and the bell lifted from the ooze.</p>
+
+ <p>But a descent in submarine armor is the true way to visit
+ the world under water. The first sensation in descending is the
+ sudden bursting roar of furious, Niagarac cascades in the ears.
+ It thunders and booms upon the startled nerve with the rush and
+ storm of an avalanche. The sense quivers with it. But it is not
+ air shaken by reflected blows: it is the cascades driven into
+ the enclosing helmet by the force-pump. As the flexile hose has
+ to be stiffly distended to bear an aqueous gravity of
+ twenty-five to fifty pounds to the square inch, the force of
+ the current can be estimated. The tympanum of the ear yields to
+ the fierce external pressure. The brain feels and multiplies
+ the intolerable tension as if the interior was clamped in a
+ vice, and that tumultuous, thunderous torrent pours on.
+ Involuntarily the mouth opens: the air rushes in the Eustachian
+ tube, and with sudden velocity strikes the intruded tension of
+ the drum, which snaps back to its normal state with a sharp,
+ pistol-like crack. The strain is momently relieved to be
+ renewed again, and again relieved by the same attending
+ salutes.</p>
+
+ <p>In your curious dress you must appear monstrous, even to
+ that marine world, familiar with abnormal creations. The whale
+ looks from eyes on the top of his head; the flat-fish, sole,
+ halibut have both eyes on the same side; and certain Crustacea
+ place the organ on a foot-stalk, as if one were to hold up his
+ eye in his hand to include a wider horizon. But the monster
+ which the fish now sees differs from all these. It has four
+ great goggle eyes arranged symmetrically around its head.
+ Peering through these plate-glass optics, the diver sees the
+ curious, strange beauty of the world around him, not as the
+ bather sees it, blurred and indistinct, but in the calm
+ splendor of its own thallassphere. The first thought is one of
+ unspeakable admiration of the miraculous beauty of everything
+ around him&mdash;a glory and a splendor of refraction,
+ interference and reflection that puts to shame the Arabian
+ story of the kingdom of the Blue Fish. Above him is that pure
+ golden canopy with its rare glimmering
+ lustrousness&mdash;something like the soft, dewy effulgence
+ that comes with sun-breaks through showery afternoons. The soft
+ delicacy of that pure straw-yellow that prevails everywhere is
+ crossed and lighted by tints and glimmering hues of accidental
+ and complementary color indescribably elegant. The floor of the
+ sea rises like a golden carpet in gentle incline to the
+ surface; but this incline, experience soon teaches, is an
+ ocular deception, the effect of refraction, such as a tumbler
+ of water and a spoon can exhibit in petty. It is perhaps the
+ first observable warning that you are in a new medium, and that
+ your familiar friend, the light, comes to you altered in its
+ nature; and it is as well to remember this and "make a note on
+ it."</p>
+
+ <p>Raising your eyes to the horizontal and looking straight
+ forward, a new and beautiful wealth of color is developed. It
+ is at first a delicate blue, as if an accidental color of the
+ prevailing yellow. But soon it deepens into a rich violet. You
+ feel as if you had never before appreciated the loveliness of
+ that rich tint. As your eye dwells upon it the rich lustrous
+ violet darkens to indigo, and sinking into deeper hues becomes
+ a majestic threat of color. It is ominous, vivid
+ blue-black&mdash;solid, adamantine, a crystal wall of amethyst.
+ It is all around you. You are cased, dungeoned in the solid
+ masonry of the waters. It is beauty indeed, but the sombre and
+ awful beauty of the night and storm. The eye turns for relief
+ and reassurance to the paly-golden lustrous roof, and watches
+ that tender penciling which brightens every object it touches.
+ The hull of the sunken ship, lying slant and open to the sun,
+ has been long enough submerged to be crusted with barnacles,
+ hydropores, crustacea and the labored constructions of the
+ microscopic existences and vegetation that fill the sea. The
+ song of Ariel becomes vivid and realistic in its rich
+ word-power:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Full fathom five thy father lies;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Of his bones are coral made;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Those are pearls that were his eyes:</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Nothing of him that doth fade</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">But doth suffer a sea-change</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Into something rich and strange.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The transfiguration of familiar objects is indeed curious
+ and wonderful. The hulk, once gaudy with paint and gilding, has
+ come under the skill of the lapidary and sea-artist. It is
+ crusted with emerald and flossy mosses, and glimmers with
+ diamond, jacinth, ruby, topaz, sapphire and gold. Every
+ jewel-shape in leaf, spore, coral or plume, lying on a greenish
+ crystalline ground, is fringed with a soft radiance of silver
+ fire, and every point is tipped in minute ciliate flames of
+ faint steely purple. It is spotted with soft velvety black
+ wherever a shadow falls, that mingles and varies the wonderful
+ display of color. It is brilliant, vivid, changeable with the
+ interferences of light from the fluctuating surface above,
+ which transmogrifies everything&mdash;touches the coarsest
+ objects with its pencil, and they become radiant and spiritual.
+ A pile of brick, dumped carelessly on the deck, has become a
+ huge hill of crystal jewelry, lively with brilliant prismatic
+ radiance. Where the light falls on the steps of the staircase
+ it shows a ladder of silver crusted with emeralds. The
+ round-house, spars, masts, every spot where a peak or angle
+ catches the light, have flushed into liquid, jeweled beauty;
+ and each point, a prism and mirror, catches, multiplies and
+ reflects the other splendor. A rainbow, a fleecy mist over the
+ lake, made prismal by the sunlight, a bunch of sub-aqueous
+ moss, a soap-bubble, are all examples in our daily experience
+ of that transforming power of water in the display of color.
+ The prevailing tone is that soft, golden effulgence which, like
+ the grace of a cheerful and loving heart, blends all into one
+ harmonious whole.</p>
+
+ <p>But observation warns the spectator of the delusive
+ character of all that splendor of color. He lifts a box from
+ the ooze: he appears to have uncorked the world. The hold is a
+ bottomless chasm. Every indentation, every acclivity that casts
+ a shadow, gives the impression of that soundless depth. The
+ bottom of the sea seems loopholed with cavities that pierce the
+ solid globe and the dark abysses of space beyond. The diver is
+ surrounded by pitfalls, real and imaginary. There is no
+ graduation. The shallow concave of a hand-basin is as the
+ shadow of the bottomless well.</p>
+
+ <p>If the exploration takes place in the delta of a great
+ river, the light is affected by the various densities of the
+ double refracting media. At the proper depth one can see
+ clearly the line where these two meet, clean cut and as sharply
+ defined as the bottom of a green glass tumbler through the pure
+ water it contains. The salt brine or gelatinous sea-water sinks
+ weighted to the bottom, and over it flows the fresh
+ river-water. If the latter is darkened with sediment, it
+ obscures the silent depths with a heavy, gloomy cloud. In
+ seasons of freshet this becomes a total darkness.</p>
+
+ <p>But even on a bright, sunshiny day, under clear water, the
+ shadow of any object in the sea is unlike any shade in the
+ upper atmosphere. It draws a black curtain over everything
+ under it, completely obscuring it. Nor is this peculiarity lost
+ when the explorer enters the shadow; but, as one looking into a
+ tunnel from without can see nothing therein, though the open
+ country beyond is plainly visible, so, standing in that
+ submarine shadow, all around is dark, though beyond the sable
+ curtain of the shadow the view is clear. Apply this optical
+ fact to the ghastly story of a diver's alleged experience in
+ the cabin of a sunken ship. It is narrated that there was
+ revealed to his appalled sight the spectacle of the drowned
+ passengers in various attitudes of alarm or devotion when the
+ dreadful suffocation came. The story is told with great effect
+ and power, but unless a voltaic lantern is included in the
+ stage furniture, the ghastly tableaux must sink into the limbo
+ of incredibilities.</p>
+
+ <p>The cabin of a sunken vessel is dark beyond any supernal
+ conception of darkness. Even a cabin window does not alter this
+ law, though it may be itself visible, with objects on its
+ surface, as in a child's magic-lantern. As the rays of light
+ pass through an object flatwise, like the blade of a knife
+ through the leaves of a book, and may be admitted through
+ another of like character in the plane of the first, so a ray
+ of light can penetrate with deflection through air and water.
+ But becoming polarized, the interposition of a third medium
+ ordinarily transparent will stop it altogether. Hence the
+ plate-glass window under water admits no light into the
+ interior of a cabin. The distrust of sight grows with the
+ diver's experience. The eye brings its habit of estimating
+ proportion and distance from an attenuated atmosphere into
+ another and denser medium, and the seer is continually deceived
+ by the change. He hesitates, halts, and is observant of the
+ pitfalls about him. A gang-plank slightly above the surface of
+ the deck is bordered, where its shadow falls, by dismal
+ trenches. There is a range of hills crossing the deck before
+ him. As he approaches he estimates the difficulty of the
+ ascent. At its apparent foot he reaches to clamber the steep
+ sides, and the sierra is still a step beyond his reach. Drawing
+ still nearer, he prepares to crawl up; his hand touches the
+ top; it is less than shoulder-high.</p>
+
+ <p>But perhaps the strongest illustration of the differing
+ densities of these two media is furnished by an attempt to
+ drive a nail under water. By an absolute law such an effort, if
+ guided by sight independent of calculation, must fail. Habit
+ and experience, tested in atmospheric light, will control the
+ muscles, and direct the blow at the very point where the
+ nail-head is not. For this reason the ingenious expedient of a
+ voltaic lantern under water has proved to be impracticable. It
+ is not the light alone which is wanted, but that sweet familiar
+ atmosphere through which we are habituated to look. The
+ submarine diver learns to rely wholly on the truer sense of
+ touch, and guided by that he engages in tasks requiring labor
+ and skill with the easy assurance of a blind man in the crowded
+ street.</p>
+
+ <p>The conveyance of sound through the inelastic medium of
+ water is so difficult that it has been called the world of
+ silence. This is only comparatively true. The fish has an
+ auditory cavity, which, though simple in itself, certifies the
+ ordinary conviction of sound, but it is dull and imperfect; and
+ perhaps all marine creatures have other means of communication.
+ There is an instance, however, of musical sounds produced by
+ marine animals, which seems to show an appreciation of harmony.
+ In one of the lakes of Ceylon, Sir Emerson Tennent heard soft
+ musical sounds, like the first faint notes of the aeolian harp
+ or the faint vibrations of a wineglass when its rim is rubbed
+ by a wet finger. This curious harmony is supposed to be
+ produced by a species of testaceous mollusk. A similar
+ intonation is heard at times along the Florida coast.</p>
+
+ <p>Interesting as this may be, as indicating an appreciation of
+ that systematic order in arrangement which in music is harmony,
+ it does not alter the fact that to the ears of the diver, save
+ the cascade of the air through the life-hose, it is a sea of
+ silence. No shout or spoken word reaches him. Even a
+ cannon-shot comes to him dull and muffled, or if distant it is
+ unheard. But a sharp, quick sound, that appears to break the
+ air, like ice, into sharp radii, can be heard, especially if
+ struck against anything on the water. The sound of driving a
+ nail on the ship above, for example, or a sharp tap on the
+ diving-bell below, is distinctly and reciprocally audible.
+ Conversation below the surface by ordinary methods is out of
+ the question, but it can be sustained by placing the metal
+ helmets of the interlocutors together, thus providing a medium
+ of conveyance.</p>
+
+ <p>The effort to clothe with intelligence subaqueous life must
+ have been greatly strengthened among primitive nations by the
+ musical sounds to which I have referred. Those mysterious
+ breathings were associated with a human will, and gave
+ forebodings from their very sweetness. Everywhere they are
+ associated with a passionate or pathetic mystery, and the
+ widely-spread area over which their island home is portrayed as
+ existing strengthens the conclusion that the strange music of
+ the sea belongs not to Ceylon or Florida or the Mediterranean
+ alone. It affords us another instance, by that common enjoyment
+ of sweet sounds, of the chain of sympathy between all
+ intelligent creatures, and better prepares us for familiar
+ acquaintance with the beings which people the sea. We have
+ prejudices and preconceived ideas to get rid of, whose strength
+ has crystallized into aphorisms. "Cold as a fish" and
+ "fish-eyed" are ordinary expressions. Then the touch of a fish,
+ cold, slippery, serpent-like, causes an involuntary
+ shrinking.</p>
+
+ <p>But the submarine diver has a new revelation of piscine
+ character and beauty, and perhaps can better understand the
+ enticings of a siren or fantastic Lurlei than the classical
+ scholar. In the flush of aureal light tinging their pearly
+ glimmering armor are the radiant, graceful, frolicsome
+ inhabitants of the sea. The glutinous or oily exudation that
+ covers them is a brilliant varnish. Their lustrous colors,
+ variety of crystalline tints and beautiful markings and spots,
+ attract the eye of the artist even in the fish-market; but when
+ glowing with full life, lively, nimble, playful, surely the
+ most graceful living creatures of earth, air or sea, the soul
+ must be blind indeed that can look upon them unmoved.</p>
+
+ <p>The dull optic seen glazing in the death-throes upon the
+ market-stall, with coarse vulgar surroundings, becomes, in its
+ native element, full of intelligence and light. In even the
+ smaller fry the round orb glitters like a diamond star. One
+ cannot see the fish without seeing its eye. It is positive,
+ persistent, prevalent, the whole animate existence expressed in
+ it. As far as the fish can be seen its eye is visible. The
+ glimmer of scales, the grace of perfect motion, the rare golden
+ pavilion with its jeweled floor and heavy violet curtains,
+ complete a scene whose harmony of color, radiance and animal
+ life is perfect. The minnow and sun-perch are the pages of the
+ tourney on the cloth of gold. There is a fearless familiarity
+ in these playful little things, a social, frank intimacy with
+ their novel visitor, that astonishes while it pleases. They
+ crowd about him, curiously touch him, and regard all his
+ movements with a frank, lively interest. Nor are the larger
+ fish shy. The sheeps-head, red and black groper, sea-trout and
+ other, familiar fish of the sportsman, receive him with frank
+ bonhommie or fearless curiosity. In their large round beautiful
+ eyes the diver reads evidence of intelligence and curious
+ wonder that sometimes startles him with its entirely human
+ expression. There is a look of interest mixed with curiosity,
+ leading to the irresistible conclusion of a kindred nature. No
+ faithful hound or pet doe could express a franker interest in
+ its eyes. Curiosity, which I take to be expressly destructive
+ of the now-exploded theory of instinct, is expressed not only
+ by the eye, but by the movements. As in man there is an eager
+ passion to handle that which is novel, so these curious
+ denizens of the sea are persistent in their efforts to touch
+ the diver. An instance of this occurred, attended with
+ disagreeable results to one of the parties, and that not the
+ fish. The Eve of this investigation was a large catfish. These
+ fish are the true rovers of the water. They have a large round
+ black eye, full of intelligence and fire: their warlike spines
+ and gaff-topsails give them the true buccaneer build. One of
+ these, while the diver was engaged, incited by its fearless
+ curiosity, slipped up and touched him with its cold nose. The
+ man involuntarily threw back his hand, and the soft palm
+ striking the sharp gaff, it was driven into the flesh. There
+ was an instant's struggle before the fish wrenched itself loose
+ from the bleeding member, and then it only swung off a little,
+ staring with its bold black eyes at the intruder, as if it
+ wished to stay for further question. It is hard to translate
+ the expression of that look of curious wonder and surprise
+ without appearing to exaggerate, but the impression produced
+ was that if the fish did not speak to him, it was from no lack
+ of intelligent emotions to be expressed in language.</p>
+
+ <p>A prolonged stay in one place gave a diver an opportunity to
+ test this intelligence further, and to observe the trustful
+ familiarity of this variety of marine life. He was continually
+ surrounded at his work by a school of gropers, averaging a foot
+ in length. An accident having identified one of them, he
+ observed it was a daily visitor. After the first curiosity the
+ gropers apparently settled into the belief that the novel
+ monster was harmless and clumsy, but useful in assisting them
+ to their food. The species feed on Crustacea and marine worms,
+ which shelter under rocks, mosses and sunken objects at the
+ sea-bottom. In raising anything out of the ooze a dozen of
+ these fish would thrust their heads into the hollow for their
+ food before the diver's hand was removed. They would follow him
+ about, eyeing his motions, dashing in advance or around in
+ sport, and evidently with a liking for their new-found friend.
+ Pleased with such an unexpected familiarity, the man would
+ bring them food and feed them from his hand, as one feeds a
+ flock of chickens. The resemblance, in their familiarity and
+ some of their ways, to poultry was, in fact, very striking. As
+ a little chick will sometimes seize a large crumb and scurry
+ off, followed by the flock, so a fish would sometimes snatch a
+ morsel and fly, followed by the school. If he dropped it or
+ stopped to enjoy his <i>bonne bouche</i>, his mates would be
+ upon him. Sometimes two would get the same morsel, and there
+ would be a trial of strength, accompanied with much flash and
+ glitter of shining scales. But no matter how called off, their
+ interest and curiosity remained with the diver. They would
+ return, pushing their noses about him, caressingly in
+ appearance if not intent, and bob into the treasures of worm
+ and shell-fish his labor exposed. He became convinced that they
+ were sportive, indulging in dash and play for the fun of it,
+ rather than for any grosser object to be attained.</p>
+
+ <p>This curious intimacy was continued for weeks: the fish,
+ unless driven away by some rover of prey of their kind, were in
+ regular attendance during his hours of work. Perhaps the
+ solitude and silence of that curious submarine world
+ strengthened the impression of recognition and intimacy, but by
+ every criterion we usually accept in terrestrial creation these
+ little creatures had an interest and a friendly feeling for one
+ who furnished them food, and who was always careful to avoid
+ injuring them or giving them any unnecessary alarm. He could
+ not, of course, take up a fish in his hand, any more than a
+ chicken will submit to handling; but as to the comparative
+ tameness of the two, the fish is more approachable than the
+ chicken. That they knew and expected the diver at the usual
+ hour was a conclusion impossible to deny, as also that they
+ grew into familiarity with him, and were actuated by an
+ intelligent recognition of his service to them. It would be
+ hard to convince this gentleman that a school of fish cannot be
+ as readily and completely tamed as a flock of chickens.</p>
+
+ <p>Why not? The fear of man is no instinctive feeling in the
+ invertebrate creation. The pioneer who penetrates into the
+ uninhabited wilds of our Western frontier finds bird and beast
+ fearless and familiar. Man's cruelty is a lesson of experience.
+ The timid and fearful of the lower creation belong to creatures
+ of prey. The shark, for example, is as cowardly as the
+ wolf.</p>
+
+ <p>I thought to speak of other marine creations with which the
+ diver grows acquainted, finding in them only a repetition of
+ the same degree of life he has seen in the upper world. But let
+ it be enough to state the conclusion&mdash;as yet only an
+ impression, and perhaps never to be more&mdash;that in marine
+ existence there is to be found the counterpart always of some
+ animate existence on earth, invertebrate or radiate, in
+ corresponding animals or insects, between whose habits and
+ modes of existence strong analogies are found. The shrimps that
+ hang in clusters on your hand under the water are but winged
+ insects of the air in another frame that have annoyed you on
+ the land.</p>
+
+ <p>Let me dismiss the subject with the brief account of a diver
+ caught in a trap.</p>
+
+ <p>In the passion of blind destruction that followed and
+ attended the breaking out of hostilities between the North and
+ the South, as a child breaks his rival's playthings, the
+ barbarism of war destroyed the useful improvements of
+ civilization. Among the things destroyed by this iconoclastic
+ fury was the valuable dry-dock in Pensacola Bay. It was burned
+ to the water's edge, and sunk. A company was subsequently
+ organized to rescue the wreck, and in the course of the
+ submarine labor occurred the incident to which I refer.</p>
+
+ <p>The dry-dock was built in compartments, to ensure it against
+ sinking, but the ingenuity which was to keep it above water now
+ served effectually to keep it down. Each one of these small
+ water-tight compartments held the vessel fast to the bottom, as
+ Gulliver was bound by innumerable threads to the ground of
+ Lilliput. It was necessary to break severally into the lower
+ side of each of these chambers, and allow the water to flow
+ evenly in all. The interior of the hull was checkered by these
+ boxes. Huge beams and cross-ties intersected each other at
+ right angles, forming the frame for this honeycombed interior,
+ pigeon-holed like a merchant's desk. It was necessary to tear
+ off the skin and penetrate from one to the other in order to
+ effect this.</p>
+
+ <p>It was a difficult and tedious job under water. The net of
+ intersecting beams lay so close together that the passage
+ between was exceedingly narrow and compressed, barely admitting
+ the diver's body. The pens, so framed by intersecting beams,
+ were narrowed and straitened, embarrassing attempts at labor in
+ them, which the cold, slippery, serpent-like touch of the
+ sea-water was not likely to make pleasanter. It folded the
+ shuddering body in its coils, and a most ancient and fish-like
+ smell did not improve the situation. The toil was multiplied by
+ the innumerable pigeon-holes, as if they fitted into one
+ another like a Chinese puzzle, with the unlucky diver in the
+ middle box. It was a nightmare of the sea, the furniture of a
+ dream solidified in woody fibre.</p>
+
+ <p>Into one of these crowding holes the diver crawled. There
+ was the tedious work of tearing off the casing to occupy an
+ hour or more, and when it was accomplished he endeavored to
+ back out of his situation. He was stopped fast and tight in his
+ regression. The arrangement of the armor about the head and
+ shoulders, making a cone whose apex was the helmet, prevented
+ his exit. It was like the barb of a harpoon, and caught him
+ fast in the wood. Such a danger is not sudden in its
+ revelation. There is at first only a feeling of impatience at
+ the embarrassment, a disposition to "tear things." In vain
+ attempts at doubling and other gymnastic feats the diver wasted
+ several hours, until his companions above became alarmed at the
+ delay. They renewed and increased their labors at the
+ force-pump, and the impetuous torrent came surging about the
+ diver's ears. It served to complete his danger. It sprung the
+ trap in which he lay enclosed. The inflated armor swelled and
+ filled up the crowded spaces. It stiffened out the casing of
+ the helmet to equal the burden of fifty pounds to the square
+ inch, and made it as hard as iron. He was caught like the
+ gluttonous fox. The bulky volume of included air made exit
+ impossible. It was no longer a labyrinth as before, where
+ freedom of motion incited courage: he was in the fetters of
+ wind and water, bound fast to the floor of his dungeon den. He
+ signaled for the pump to stop. It was the only alternative. He
+ might die without that life-giving air, but he would certainly
+ die if its volume was not reduced. The cock at the back of the
+ helmet for discharging the vessel was out of his reach. The
+ invention never contemplated a case in which the diver would
+ perish from the presence of air.</p>
+
+ <p>As the armor worn was made tight at the sleeves with elastic
+ wristbands, his remedy was to insert his fingers under it, and
+ slowly and tediously allow the bubbling air to escape. In this
+ he persevered steadily, encouraged by the prospect of escape.
+ The way was long and difficult, but release certain with the
+ reduction of that huge bulk.</p>
+
+ <p>But a new and subtler danger attacked him&mdash;the very wit
+ of Nature brought to bear upon his force and ingenuity. It was
+ as if the mysterious sirens of the sea saw in that intellectual
+ force the real strength of their prisoner, and sought to steal
+ it from him while they lulled him to indifference. Inhaling and
+ reinhaling the reduced volume of air, it became carbonized and
+ foul, not with the warning of sudden oppression, but</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Sly as April melts to May,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And May slips into June.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The senses, intoxicated by the new companion sent them by
+ the lungs, began to sport with it, as ignorant children with a
+ loaded shell, forgetful of duty and the critical condition of
+ the man. They began to wander in vagaries and delusions. A soft
+ chime of distant bells rang in his ears with the sweet sleepy
+ service of a Sabbath afternoon; the sound of hymns and the
+ organ mingled with the melody and the chant of the sirens of
+ the sea.</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">There is sweet music here that softer
+ falls</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Than petals from blown roses on the
+ grass,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Or night-dew on still waters, between
+ walls</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Of shadowy granite in a gleaming
+ pass&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Music that gentler on the spirit lies</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Than tired eyelids upon tired eyes.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Here are cool mosses deep,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And through the moss the ivies creep,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And in the stream the long-leaved flowers
+ weep,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And from the craggy ledge the poppy hangs
+ in sleep.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The sensuous beauty, the infinite luxury of repose sung by
+ the poet, filled and steeped his senses. The desire to sleep
+ was intoxicating, delicious, irresistible; and with it ran
+ delicious, restful thrills through all his limbs, the narcotism
+ of the blood. It was partly, no doubt, the effect of inhaling
+ that pernicious air; partly that hibernation of the bear which
+ in the freezing man precedes dissolution; and possibly more
+ than that, something more than any mere physical
+ cause&mdash;life perhaps preparing to lay this tired body down,
+ its future usefulness destroyed.</p>
+
+ <p>This delicious enervation had to be constantly resisted and
+ dominated by a superior will. One more strenuous effort to
+ relieve that straitened garrison, to release that imprisoned
+ and fettered body, and then, if that failed, an unconditional
+ surrender to the armies of eternal steep. But it did not fail.
+ That constant, persevering tugging of the fingers at the
+ wristbands, pursued mechanically in that strange condition of
+ pleasing stupor, had reduced the exaggerated distensions of the
+ bulbous head-gear. A stout, energetic push set the diver free,
+ and he was drawn to the surface dazed, drowsy, and only half
+ conscious of the peril undergone. But with the rush of fresh,
+ untainted air to the lungs came an emotion of gratitude to the
+ Giver of life and the full consciousness of escape.</p>
+
+ <p>And this sums up my sketch illustrative of the peculiar
+ character of marine life, and the hazards of submarine
+ adventure, hitherto known to few, for&mdash;well, for
+ <i>divers</i> reasons.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">WILL WALLACE HARNEY.</p><a name="H_4_0015"
+ id="H_4_0015"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h2>CONFIDENTIAL.</h2>
+
+ <p>My ear has ever been considered public property for private
+ usage. I cannot call to mind the time when I was not somebody's
+ confidante, the business beginning as far back as the winter I
+ ran down to Aunt Rally's to receive my birthday-party of sweet
+ or bitter sixteen, as will appear.</p>
+
+ <p>Ralph Romer was the first to spread the news of my arrival
+ in the village among the girls of my own age. Ralph Romer it
+ was who had braved the dangers of "brier and brake" to find the
+ bright holly berries with which Aunt Hally had decorated the
+ cheery little parlor for the occasion; and it was with Ralph
+ Romer I danced the oftenest on that famous night.</p>
+
+ <p>"Wouldn't I just step out on the porch a short little
+ minute," he whispered as he came around in the rear of Aunt
+ Hally to bid me good-night, ending the whisper, according to
+ the style of all boy-lovers, "I've got something to tell
+ you."</p>
+
+ <p>The door stood open and conveniently near, and I suppose I
+ wanted to see how high the snow had drifted since dark; and, a
+ better reason still, I couldn't afford to let Ralph take my
+ hand off with him; and so I had to go out on the porch just
+ long enough to get it back, while he said: "Ettie Moore says
+ she loves me, and we are going to correspond when I go back to
+ college; and as you know all lovers and their sweethearts must
+ have a confidante to smuggle letters and valentines across the
+ lines, we have both chosen you for ours. Oh, I was so afraid
+ you wouldn't come!"</p>
+
+ <p>I found the snow had drifted&mdash;-well, I don't believe I
+ knew how many inches.</p>
+
+ <p>I have not promised a recital of all my auricular
+ experiences. Enough to say, that in time I settled down into
+ the conviction that it was my special mission to be the
+ receptacle of other people's secrets; and they seemed
+ determined to convince me that they thought so too.</p>
+
+ <p>So, when Mr. Tennent Tremont happened along and became a
+ candidate for auricular favors, like a tradesman who has gained
+ the self-sustaining ground which has made him indifferent as to
+ custom-seeking, I could afford to be entirely independent about
+ giving a previous promise to keep his secrets for him; and so,
+ dear reader, they are as much yours as mine.</p>
+
+ <p>When my brother introduced him into our family circle we
+ took him to be a Northern college-chum, met with during his
+ just-returned-from-trip to Washington; for it was in those days
+ when Southern hospitality was as much appreciated as it was
+ liberally bestowed. It was a good time for a modest stranger to
+ come among new faces. We were in the flutter and bustle which a
+ wedding in the family makes, and it gave him an opportunity to
+ get used to us, and left us none to observe him unpleasantly
+ much.</p>
+
+ <p>But when the wedding was over, and I had made up my week of
+ lost sleep, and he and my brother had kept themselves out of
+ the way on a camp-hunt, for my mother to do up her week of
+ house-cleaning,&mdash;it is here that our story proper
+ begins.</p>
+
+ <p>As we were leaving the breakfast-table one morning my
+ brother caught my dress-sleeve, and, dropping in the rear of
+ Mr. Tennent Tremont, allowed him to find the verandah: "Really,
+ sis, I don't think you are doing the clever thing, quite."</p>
+
+ <p>"How?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, in not helping me to entertain my friend."</p>
+
+ <p>"Getting tired of him?"</p>
+
+ <p>"No, he isn't one of that kind; but, to tell the truth, I am
+ too busy just now to give him the whole of my time."</p>
+
+ <p>"Too busy turning your own cakes. Yes, I see."</p>
+
+ <p>"Which is no more than my sister is doing; which reminds me
+ to say that J.B. will call this morning, he desired me to
+ inform you. But, dear sis, we must not be so absorbed in our
+ own love-matters as to give my friend only a moiety of our
+ attention, for, poor fellow! he has one of his own."</p>
+
+ <p>"So I am to bore him for the sake of relieving you? Is that
+ my role?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Now stop! He simply wants a lady confidante."</p>
+
+ <p>I broke away from my brother's hold, and ran up to my room
+ to see if all was right for my expected caller, giving my right
+ ear a pull, by way of saying to that victimized organ, "You are
+ needed."</p>
+
+ <p>And what think you I did next? Got out my
+ embroidery-material bag, and put it in order for action at a
+ moment's warning. I was prepared for a reasonable amount of
+ martyrdom pertaining to my profession, but I was always an
+ economist of time, and not another unemployed hour would I
+ yield to the selfish demands of my forthcoming job.</p>
+
+ <p>The next day was one of November drizzle, the house
+ confinement of which, my adroit brother declared, could only be
+ mitigated by my presence in the sitting-room until the improved
+ state of the weather allowed their escape from it.</p>
+
+ <p>I was in the habit of appropriating such weather to my
+ piano, and I had not touched it for a month. Whether Mr.
+ Tennent Tremont's nerves were in a sound state or not, I was
+ determined to practice until twelve. But when he came in from
+ the library and assisted me in opening the instrument, I was
+ obliged to ask him what he would have. They were my first
+ direct words to him, our three weeks' guest.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, 'Summer Night' is a favorite," he said.</p>
+
+ <p>I gave him the song, and then executed the long variations;
+ then, dropping my tired hands in my lap, inquired whether he
+ liked vocal or instrumental best.</p>
+
+ <p>"Not any more of either, just now, thanking you kindly for
+ what you have given me," he said. "Have you ever been a
+ confidante, Miss &mdash;&mdash;?"</p>
+
+ <p>"That is my vocation, Mr. Tremont," I replied, grasping my
+ bag.</p>
+
+ <p>"Which? your embroidery or&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Both combined," I tried to say pleasantly, "as on this
+ occasion. I am at Mr. Tremont's service;" and I threaded my
+ tapestry-needle.</p>
+
+ <p>Without a prefatory word he began: "Years before your young
+ heart was awakened to 'the sweetest joy, the wildest woe,' I
+ loved."</p>
+
+ <p>"And single yet!" I exclaimed as I let my hands drop and
+ glanced up at his brown hair, to see if all those years had
+ left their silver footprints there.</p>
+
+ <p>"And single yet," he repeated slowly, "and still worshiping
+ at the same shrine; and to no other will I ever bow until this
+ head is silvered o'er, and this strong arm palsied with the
+ infirmities of age&mdash;if a long life is indeed to be
+ mine."</p>
+
+ <p>His ardor startled me, but I managed to stitch away
+ composedly, and he went on:</p>
+
+ <p>"I know it is in the highest degree selfish to inflict on
+ you a recital of what may not interest you; but I have tried to
+ keep my secret buried from human eyes, from all but
+ <i>hers</i>, and you are now the only being on earth to whom I
+ have ever <i>said</i>, 'I love.' As intimate as I have been
+ with your brother, if he knows it, it is by his penetration,
+ for no word of acknowledgment has ever passed my lips before.
+ May I go on?" he asked.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh yes," I answered, taken by surprise. "I suppose so. It
+ is a relief to talk, and to listen, I have told you, is my
+ vocation."</p>
+
+ <p>"How long can you listen?" he questioned in delighted
+ eagerness.</p>
+
+ <p>I fancied he would have to be allowanced, and I held up my
+ paper pattern before me: "This bouquet of flowers is to be
+ transferred. I will give you all the time it will take to do
+ it. Remember, the catastrophe must be reached by that time.
+ Some one else will probably want my ear."</p>
+
+ <p>"But," said he, "listening is not the only duty of a
+ confidante: you must aid me by your counsel. Only a woman may
+ say how a woman may be won."</p>
+
+ <p>"You have my sympathies, Mr. Tremont, on the score of your
+ being a very dear brother's friend. I know nothing of
+ her&mdash;next to nothing of you. I can neither counsel nor aid
+ you."</p>
+
+ <p>"That brother is familiar with every page of my outward
+ life-history. It was in our family he spent his vacation, while
+ you and your father were traveling in Europe."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, then, that will do about yourself. Now about
+ her?"</p>
+
+ <p>The door-bell was rung: the waiter announced&mdash;well, my
+ obliging brother has already given enough of his
+ name&mdash;"Mr. J.B." My confessor withdrew.</p>
+
+ <p>The next morning, as I was bringing the freshened
+ flower-vases into the sitting-room, he brought me my bag,
+ saying, "Now about her."</p>
+
+ <p>I opened the piano, repeated his favorite, kept my seat and
+ cultivated my roses vigorously.</p>
+
+ <p>"Miss &mdash;&mdash; ," he began, "I would not knowingly
+ give pain to a human creature. Yesterday, when your visitor
+ found me by your side, I observed a frown on his face. I detest
+ obtrusiveness, but if there is anything in the relation in
+ which you stand to each other which will make my attentions
+ objectionable to either of you, they shall cease this moment.
+ You are at perfect liberty to repeat to him every word I have
+ said to you."</p>
+
+ <p>"I thank you sincerely for your considerateness," I said. "I
+ am under no obligations of the kind to him or any other
+ gentleman."</p>
+
+ <p>He introduced his topic by saying: "I am glad that I shall
+ have to say little more of myself. Oh, what a strange joy it is
+ to be able to speak unreservedly of her, and of the long
+ pent-up hopes and fears of the past years! And now, if you will
+ assist me in interpreting her conduct toward me&mdash;if you
+ will inspire me with even faint hope of success&mdash;if you
+ will advise me as you would a brother how to
+ proceed,&mdash;gratitude will be too weak a word for my feeling
+ toward you for the remainder of my life."</p>
+
+ <p>"I have not yet sufficient light on her part of the affair
+ to aid you by advice," I answered. "In these slowly-developing
+ love-affairs there is usually but one great hindering cause. Do
+ you know," I said, laughing as much as I dared, looking into
+ his woebegone face, "that you have not told me what has passed
+ between you?"</p>
+
+ <p>His moment or two of death silence made me almost regret my
+ last words.</p>
+
+ <p>"In the first of our acquaintance I was ever tortured by her
+ indifference. My first attentions were quietly received, never
+ encouraged. Then came the still more torturing fear&mdash;agony
+ let me call it&mdash;lest she was pre-engaged. Thank God! that
+ burden was lifted from my poor heart, but only, it seemed, to
+ make room for the very one of all in the catalogue of causes by
+ which a lover's hope dies beyond the possibility of a
+ resurrection. It is the rock&mdash;no, I fear the placid waters
+ of friendship into which my freighted bark is now
+ drifting&mdash;which may lie between it and the bright isle of
+ love, the safe harbor" (he shuddered), "not the blissful
+ possession."</p>
+
+ <p>Reader, the roses were not growing under my needle: my
+ sympathies were at last fully enlisted.</p>
+
+ <p>"You have well said," I answered. "Friendship is the 'nine
+ notch' in which a lover makes 'no count' in the game of hearts.
+ But steer bravely past these dark gulfs of despair. Have you
+ ever had recourse to jealousy in your desperation?" I
+ queried.</p>
+
+ <p>"I scorn such a base ally. Your brother can tell you I am
+ here partly because I would avoid increasing an affection in
+ another which I cannot return."</p>
+
+ <p>"Does she know of that?" I asked, not at all prepared in my
+ own mind to yield the potency of the ally in my sincere desire
+ to aid him by this test of a woman's affection.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes: I have no reason, however, for thinking that the fact
+ has raised her estimate of the article," he said, making a poor
+ attempt to smile.</p>
+
+ <p>I felt ashamed of my suggestion, and said quickly, "You
+ correspond, of course: how are her letters?" Now I was sure of
+ my safest clue in finding her out.</p>
+
+ <p>"It was through the medium of her letters that I first
+ obtained my knowledge of her mind, her temperament, her
+ disposition, her admirable domestic virtues; for they were
+ written without reserve. They excited my highest admiration;
+ they stimulated my desire to know more of her; but they contain
+ no word of love for me."</p>
+
+ <p>His want of boldness almost excited my contempt. My skill
+ was baffled on every side, and, not caring much to conceal my
+ impatience, I said, "You have asked me to advise you as I would
+ my brother. She is cold and selfish: give her up."</p>
+
+ <p>"Give her up!" he said with measured and emphatic
+ slowness&mdash;"give her up, when I have sought her beneath
+ every clime on which the sun shines&mdash;not for months, but
+ for years? Give her up, when her presence gives me all I have
+ ever known of happiness? Give her up!" and he leaned his head
+ on the back of his chair and closed his eyes.</p>
+
+ <p>I had imagined him gifted with wonderful self-control, but
+ when I looked up from my work all color had faded from his
+ cheeks, the lips seemed ready to yield the little blood left
+ there by the clinch of the white-teeth upon them, while every
+ muscle of the face quivered with spasmodic effort to control
+ emotion. When the eyes were opened and fixed on the ceiling, I
+ saw no trace in them of anger, revenge, or even of wounded
+ pride. They were full of tears, ready to gush in one last
+ flood-tide of feeling over a subdued, chastened, but breaking
+ heart.</p>
+
+ <p>It was very evident that my treatment was not adding much
+ comfort to my patient, however salutary it might prove in the
+ end. I knew of his intention to leave the next day: there was
+ little time left me to aid him, and I had come to regard the
+ unknown woman's mysterious nature or strategic warfare as
+ pitted against my superior penetration. That he might be
+ victorious she must be vanquished. <i>She</i> was, then, my
+ antagonist.</p>
+
+ <p>The deepening twilight was producing chilliness. I flooded
+ the room with brilliant light, stirred the grate into glowing
+ warmth, and invited him to a seat near the fire.</p>
+
+ <p>"You will not leave me, will you? This may be&mdash;<i>it
+ will be</i>&mdash;my last demand on you as a confidante. How is
+ the bouquet progressing?" he asked.</p>
+
+ <p>"See," I said, holding my embroidery up before me: "we must
+ hurry. I have but one more tendril to add."</p>
+
+ <p>"Tendrils are clinging things, like hope, are they not?" he
+ said pensively.</p>
+
+ <p>But sentimentalizing was not the business of the hour, and I
+ intimated as much to him. "Yes," I replied, "but hope must now
+ give place to effort. I see you are not going to take my
+ 'give-her-up' advice."</p>
+
+ <p>"No&mdash;only from her who has the right to give it."</p>
+
+ <p>I now considered my patient out of danger.</p>
+
+ <p>"Then why do you torture yourself longer with doubts?
+ Perhaps your irresolution has caused a want of confidence in
+ the strength of your affection. At least give her an
+ opportunity to define her true position toward you. Beard the
+ lions of indifference and friendship in their dens, and do not
+ yield to unmanly cowardice. Strange that I have given you the
+ counsel last which should have been given first! But do not, I
+ beseech you, lose any time in seeking her. Assure her of your
+ long and unwavering devotion. Constancy is the most valued word
+ in a true woman's vocabulary. You have staked too much
+ happiness to lose: you <i>must</i> win."</p>
+
+ <p>"And if I lose," he said&mdash;holding up something before
+ him which I took to be a picture, though it was in the shape of
+ a heart&mdash;"and if I lose, then perish all of earth to me.
+ But leave me only this, and should I hold you thus, and gaze on
+ what I have first and last and only loved until this perishable
+ material on which I have placed you turn to dust, still will
+ you be graven on a heart whose deathless love can know no
+ death; for a thing so holy as the love I bear you was not made
+ to die."</p>
+
+ <p>My work&mdash;now my completed work&mdash;dropped beneath my
+ fingers, for the last stitch was taken.</p>
+
+ <p>If I could not prevent his self-torture, he should not, at
+ least, torture me longer; and snatching the thing from his
+ grasp, I exclaimed as I closed my hands over it, "Now, before I
+ return it, you must, you <i>shall</i>, promise me that you will
+ take the last advice I gave you; or will you allow me to look
+ at it, and then unseal the silent lips and give you the
+ prophetic little 'yes' or 'no' which a professed physiognomist
+ like your confidante can always read in the eye?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I would rather you did the last," he said; and I rose,
+ leaned my elbow on the corner of the mantel nearest the
+ gaslight, rested my head on my empty hand, so as to shade my
+ eyes from the intensity of the brilliant burner near me, and
+ with the awe creeping over me with which the old astrologers
+ read the horoscope of the midnight stars, I looked, and
+ saw&mdash;only a wonderfully faithful copy of the portrait
+ hanging just over me, of which Mr. Tennent Tremont's confidante
+ was the original. I threw it from me, and burst into tears. He
+ stood quite near me. I thought I hated him, but my obtuse,
+ blundering, idiotic self more than him. I waved my hand in
+ token either of his silence or withdrawal, for in all my life
+ long I, with a whole dictionary in my mind of abusive epithets,
+ was never more at a loss for a word. My token was unheeded.</p>
+
+ <p>He only murmured softly,</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">"I had never seen thee weeping:</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">I cannot leave thee now.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>When you snatched my picture from me a moment ago I saw a
+ glistening tear of sympathy in your eye; but what are
+ these?"</p>
+
+ <p>"So cruel! so ungenerous! so unfair!" I said, still pressing
+ my hands tightly over my eyes. "How can I ever forgive
+ you?"</p>
+
+ <p>With softer murmur than the last he repeated the words,</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">"'Tis sweet to let the pardoned in."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>"Astounding presumption that!" I said, now giving him the
+ benefit of my full gaze&mdash;"to speak of pardon before making
+ a confession of your guilt! But before I give you time even for
+ that, the remaining mysteries which still hang around your tale
+ of woe shall be cleared up. Please to inform the court how the
+ original of your purloined sketch could have been the object of
+ years of devotion, when it has been only four weeks to-day
+ since you laid your mortal eyes on her?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah! you may well say mortal; but you know the soul too has
+ its visual organs. I saw and loved and worshiped my ideal in
+ those years, and sought her too&mdash;how
+ unceasingly!&mdash;and I said,</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Only for the real will I with the ideal
+ part:</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Another shall not even tempt my
+ heart.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>When I saw her just four weeks since, I knew her,</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">And my heart responded as, with unseen
+ wings,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">An angel touched its unswept strings,</p>
+
+ <p class="i6">And whispers in its song,</p>
+
+ <p class="i6">Where hast thou strayed so long?"</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>But the avenging demon of curiosity was not to be exorcised
+ by sentimental evasion: "Those letters, sir, of which you
+ spoke, <i>they</i> must have been of a real, tangible
+ form&mdash;not a part of the mythical phantasmagoria of your
+ idealistic vision."</p>
+
+ <p>He laughed as a light-hearted child would, but knitted his
+ brow with a perplexed air as he said, "Why don't the British
+ government send a woman to find the source of the Nile? I must
+ thank your unsophisticated brother's pride in his sister's
+ epistolary accomplishments for my privilege of perusal. What
+ next?"</p>
+
+ <p>I thought a moment. Before, I had fifty other queries to
+ propound, but now as I looked into the glowing anthracite
+ before me which gave us those pleasant Reveries, they very
+ naturally all resolved themselves into explained mysteries
+ without his aid.</p>
+
+ <p>He insists that the "prophetic little yes or no" never
+ came.</p>
+
+ <p>Upon my honor, dear reader, as a confidante, I still think
+ it the most unfair procedure which ever "disgraced the annals
+ of civilized warfare;" but I shall have abundant opportunity
+ for revenge, for we are to make the journey of life
+ together.</p><a name="H_4_0016"
+ id="H_4_0016"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h2>GLIMPSES OF JOHN CHINAMAN.</h2>
+
+ <p>When John Marshall picked up the first golden nugget in
+ California, a call was sounded for the gathering of an immense
+ gold-seeking army made up of many nationalities; and among the
+ rest China sent a battalion some fifty thousand strong.</p>
+
+ <p>John Chinaman has remained with us ever since, despised and
+ abused, being neither a co-worshiper nor a co-sympathizer in
+ aught save the getting of gold. In dress, custom and language
+ his is still a nationality as distinct from ours as are the
+ waters of the Gulf Stream from those of the ocean.</p>
+
+ <p>It is possible that this may be but the second migration of
+ Tartars to the American shore. It is possible that the North
+ American Indian and the Chinaman may be identical in origin and
+ race. Close observers find among the aboriginal tribes resident
+ far up on the north-west American coast peculiar habits and
+ customs, having closely-allied types among the Chinese. The
+ features of the Aleuts, the natives of the Aleutian Islands,
+ are said to approximate closely to those of the Mongolians. The
+ unvarying long black hair, variously-shaded brown skin,
+ beardless face and shaven head are points, natural and
+ artificial, common to the Indian and Mongolian. There is a hint
+ of common custom between the Indian scalplock and Chinese
+ cue.</p>
+
+ <p>"John" has been a thorough gleaner of the mines. The
+ "superior race" allowed him to make no valuable discoveries. He
+ could buy their half-worked-out placers. The "river-bed" they
+ sold him when its chances of yielding were deemed desperate.
+ When the golden fruitage of the banks was reduced to a dollar
+ per day, they became "China diggings." But wherever "John"
+ settled he worked steadily, patiently and systematically, no
+ matter whether his ten or twelve hours' labor brought fifty
+ cents or fifty dollars; for his industry is of an untiring
+ mechanical character. In the earlier and flusher days of
+ California's gold-harvest the white man worked spasmodically.
+ He was ever leaving the five-dollar diggings in hand for the
+ fifty- or hundred-dollar-per-day claims afar off in some
+ imaginary bush. These golden rumors were always on the wing.
+ The country was but half explored, and many localities were
+ rich in mystery. The white vanguard pushed north, south and
+ east, frequently enduring privation and suffering. "John," in
+ comparative comfort, trotted patiently after, carrying his
+ snugly made-up bundle of provisions and blankets at one end of
+ a bamboo pole, his pick, shovel, pan and rocker at the other,
+ to work over the leavings. The leavings sometimes turned out
+ more gold than "new ground," much to the chagrin of the
+ impatient Caucasian. But John, according to his own testimony,
+ never owned a rich claim. Ask him how much it yielded per day,
+ and he would tell you, "sometimes four, sometimes six bittee"
+ (four or six shillings). He had many inducements for
+ prevarication. Nearly every white man's hand was against him.
+ If he found a bit of rich ground, "jumpers" were ready to drive
+ him from it: Mexicans waylaid him and robbed him of his dust.
+ In remote localities he enclosed his camp by strong stockades:
+ even these were sometimes forced and carried at night by bands
+ of desperadoes. Lastly came the foreign miner's tax-collector,
+ with his demand of four dollars monthly per man for the
+ privilege of digging gold. There were hundreds and thousands of
+ other foreign laborers in the mines&mdash;English, German,
+ French, Italian and Portuguese&mdash;but they paid little or
+ none of this tax, for they might soon be entitled to a vote,
+ and the tax-collector was appointed by the sheriff of the
+ county, and the sheriff, like other officials, craved a
+ re-election. But John was never to be a voter, and so he
+ shouldered the whole of this load, and when he could not pay,
+ the official beat him and took away his tools. John often
+ fought this persecutor by strategy. In localities where no
+ white men would betray him he signalized his coming from afar.
+ From the crags of Red Mountain on the Tuolumne River I have
+ often seen the white flag waved as the dreaded collector came
+ down the steep trail to collect his monthly dues. That signal
+ or a puff of smoke told the Chinese for miles along the
+ river-valley to conceal themselves from the "license-man."
+ Rockers, picks and shovels were hastily thrust into clumps of
+ chapparal, and their owners clambered up the hillsides into
+ artificial caves or leafy coverts. Out of companies of fifty
+ the collector finds but twenty men at work. These pay their
+ tax, the official rides on down the river, the hidden thirty
+ Mongolians emerge from cover; and more than once has a keen
+ collector "doubled on them" by coming back unexpectedly and
+ detecting the entire gang on their claim.</p>
+
+ <p>John has been invaluable to the California demagogue,
+ furnishing for him a sop of hatred and prejudice to throw
+ before "enlightened constituencies." It needs but to mention
+ the "filthy Chinaman" to provoke an angry roar from the
+ mass-meeting. Yet the Chinaman is not entirely filthy. He
+ washes his entire person every day when practicable; he loves
+ clean clothes; his kitchen-utensils will bear inspection. When
+ the smallpox raged so severely in San Francisco a few years
+ since, there were very few deaths among his race. But John
+ <i>is</i> not nice about his house. He seems to have none of
+ our ideas concerning home comfort. Smoke has no terror for him;
+ soap he keeps entirely for his clothes and person; floor-and
+ wall-washing are things never hinted at; and the refuse of his
+ table is scarcely thrown out of doors. Privacy is not one of
+ his luxuries&mdash;he wants a house full: where there is room
+ for a bunk, there is room for a man. An anthill, a beehive, a
+ rabbit-warren are his models of domestic comfort: what is
+ stinted room for two Americans is spaciousness for a dozen
+ Chinese. Go into one of their cabins at night, and you are in
+ an oven full of opium- and lamp-smoke. Recumbent forms are
+ dimly seen lying on bunks above and below. The chattering is
+ incessant. Stay there ten minutes, and as your eye becomes
+ accustomed to the smoke you will dimly see blue bundles lying
+ on shelves aloft. Anon the bundles stir, talk and puff smoke.
+ Above is a loft six feet square: a ladder brings it in
+ communication with the ground floor. Mongolians are ever coming
+ down, but the gabble of tongues above shows that a host is
+ still left. Like an omnibus, a Chinese house is never full. Nor
+ is it ever quiet. At all hours of the night may be heard their
+ talk and the clatter of their wooden shoes. A Chinaman does not
+ retire like an American, intending to make a serious business
+ of his night's sleeping. He merely "lops down" half dressed,
+ and is ready to arise at the least call of business or
+ pleasure.</p>
+
+ <p>While at work in his claim his fire is always kindled near
+ by, and over it a tea-pot. This is his beverage every half
+ hour. His tea must be hot, strong and without milk or sugar. He
+ also consumes a terrible mixture sold him by white traders,
+ called indiscriminately brandy, gin or whisky, yet an
+ intoxicated Chinaman is the rarest of rare sights. Rice he can
+ cook elegantly, every grain being steamed to its utmost degree
+ of distension. Soup he makes of no other meat than pork. The
+ poorest among his hordes must have a chicken or duck for his
+ holiday. He eats it merely parboiled. He will eat dog also,
+ providing it is not long past maturity.</p>
+
+ <p>The Chinese grocery-stores are museums to the American.
+ There are strange dried roots, strange dried fish, strange
+ dried land and marine plants, ducks and chickens, split,
+ pressed thin and smoked; dried shellfish; cakes newly made,
+ yellow, glutinous and fatty, stamped with tea-box characters;
+ and great earthen jars filled with rottenness. I speak
+ correctly if perhaps too forcibly, for when those imposing jars
+ are opened to serve a customer with some manner of vegetable
+ cut in long strips, the native-born American finds it expedient
+ to hold his nose. American storekeepers in the mines deal
+ largely in Chinese goods. They know the Mongolian names of the
+ articles inquired for, but of their character, their
+ composition, how they are cooked or how eaten, they can give no
+ information. It is heathenish "truck," by whose sale they make
+ a profit. Only that and nothing more.</p>
+
+ <p>A Chinese miner's house is generally a conglomeration of old
+ boards, mats, brush, canvas and stones. Rusty sheets of tin
+ sometimes help to form the edifice. Anything lying about loose
+ in the neighborhood is certain in time to form a part of the
+ Mongolian mansion.</p>
+
+ <p>When the white man abandons mining-ground he often leaves
+ behind very serviceable frame houses. John comes along to glean
+ the gold left by the Caucasian. He builds a cluster of
+ shapeless huts. The deserted white man's house gradually
+ disappears. A clapboard is gone, and then another, and finally
+ all. The skeleton of the frame remains: months pass away; piece
+ by piece the joists disappear; some morning they are found
+ tumbled in a heap, and at last nothing is left save the cellar
+ and chimneys. Meantime, John's clusters of huts swell their
+ rude proportions, but you must examine them narrowly to detect
+ any traces of your vanished house, for he revels in smoke, and
+ everything about him is soon colored to a hue much resembling
+ his own brownish-yellow countenance. Thus he picks the
+ domiciliary skeleton bare, and then carries off the bones. He
+ is a quiet but skillful plunderer. John No. 1 on his way home
+ from his mining-claim rips off a board; John No. 2 next day
+ drags it a few yards from the house. John No. 3 a week
+ afterward drags it home. In this manner the dissolution of your
+ house is protracted for months. In this manner he distributes
+ the responsibility of the theft over his entire community. I
+ have seen a large boarding-house disappear in this way, and
+ when the owner, after a year's absence, revisited the spot to
+ look after his property, he found his real estate reduced to a
+ cellar.</p>
+
+ <p>John himself is a sort of museum in his character and
+ habits. We must be pardoned for giving details of these,
+ mingled promiscuously, rather after the museum style. His New
+ Year comes in February. For the Chinaman of limited means it
+ lasts a week, for the wealthy it may endure three. His
+ consumption of fire-crackers during that period is immense. He
+ burns strings a yard in length suspended from poles over his
+ balconies. The uproar and sputtering consequent on this
+ festivity in the Chinese quarter at San Francisco is
+ tremendous. The city authorities limit this Celestial
+ Pandemonium to a week.</p>
+
+ <p>He does not forsake the amusement of kite-flying even when
+ arrived at maturity. His artistic imitations of birds and
+ dragons float over our housetops. To these are often affixed
+ contrivances for producing hollow, mournful, buzzing sounds,
+ mystifying whole neighborhoods. His game of shuttlecock is to
+ keep a cork, one end being stuck with feathers, flying in the
+ air as long as possible, the impelling member being the foot,
+ the players standing in a circle and numbering from four to
+ twenty. Some show great dexterity in kicking with the heel. His
+ vocal music to our ears seems a monotonous caterwaul. His
+ violin has but one string: his execution is merely a modified
+ species of saw-filing.</p>
+
+ <p>He loves to gamble, especially in lotteries. He is a
+ diligent student of his own comfort. Traveling on foot during a
+ hot day, he protects himself with an umbrella and refreshes
+ himself with a fan. In place of prosaic signs on his
+ store-fronts, he often inscribes quotations from his favorite
+ authors.</p>
+
+ <p>He is a lover of flowers. His balconies and window-sills are
+ often thickly packed with shrubs and creepers in pots. He is
+ not a speedy and taciturn eater. His tea-table talks are full
+ of noisy jollity, and are often prolonged far into the
+ night.</p>
+
+ <p>He is a lover of the drama. A single play sometimes requires
+ months for representation, being, like a serial story,
+ "continued" night after night. He never dances. There is no
+ melody in the Mongolian foot. Dancing he regards as a species
+ of Caucasian insanity.</p>
+
+ <p>To make an oath binding he must swear by the head of a cock
+ cut off before him in open court. Chinese testimony is not
+ admissible in American courts. It is a legal California axiom
+ that a Chinaman cannot speak the truth. But cases have occurred
+ wherein, he being an eye-witness, the desire to hear what he
+ <i>might</i> tell as to what he had seen has proved stronger
+ than the prejudice against him; and the more effectually to
+ clinch the chances of his telling the truth, the above, his
+ national form of oath, has been resorted to. He has among us
+ some secret government of his own. Before his secret tribunals
+ more than one Mongolian has been hurried in Star-Chamber
+ fashion, and never seen afterward. The nature of the offences
+ thus visited by secret and bloody punishment is scarcely known
+ to Americans. He has two chief deities&mdash;a god and a devil.
+ Most of his prayers are offered to his devil. His god, he says,
+ being good and well-disposed, it is not necessary to propitiate
+ him. But his devil is ugly, and must be won over by offering
+ and petition. Once a year, wherever collected in any number, he
+ builds a flimsy sort of temple, decorates it with ornaments of
+ tinsel, lays piles of fruit, meats and sugared delicacies on an
+ altar, keeps up night and day a steady crash of gongs, and
+ installs therein some great, uncouth wooden idols. When this
+ period of worship is over the "josh-house" disappears, and the
+ idols are unceremoniously stowed away among other useless
+ lumber.</p>
+
+ <p>He shaves with an instrument resembling a butcher's cleaver
+ in miniature. Nature generally denies him beard, so he shaves
+ what a sailor would term the fore and after part of his head.
+ He reaps his hirsute crop dry, using no lather. His cue is
+ pieced out by silken braid, so interwoven as gradually to taper
+ into a slim tassel, something like a Missouri mule-driver's
+ "black snake" whip-lash. To lose this cue is to lose caste and
+ standing among his fellows. No misfortune for him can be
+ greater.</p>
+
+ <p>Coarse cowhide boots are the only articles of American wear
+ that he favors. He inclines to buy the largest sizes, thinking
+ he thereby gets the most for his money, and when his No. 7 feet
+ wobble and chafe in No. 12 boots he complains that they "fit
+ too much."</p>
+
+ <p>He cultivates the vegetables of his native land in
+ California. They are curiosities like himself. One resembles
+ our string-bean, but is circular in shape and from two to three
+ feet in length. It is not in the least stringy, breaks off
+ short and crisp, boils tender very quickly and affords
+ excellent eating. He is a very careful cultivator, and will
+ spend hours picking off dead leaves and insects from the young
+ plants. When he finds a dead cat, rat, dog or chicken, he
+ throws it into a small vat of water, allows it to decompose,
+ and sprinkles the liquid fertilizer thus obtained over his
+ plantation. Watermelon and pumpkin seeds are for him dessert
+ delicacies. He consumes his garden products about half cooked
+ in an American culinary point of view, merely wilting them by
+ an immersion in boiling water.</p>
+
+ <p>There are about fifteen English words to be learned by a
+ Chinaman on arriving in California, and no more. With these he
+ expresses all his wants, and with this limited stock you must
+ learn to convey all that is needful to him. The practice thus
+ forced upon one in employing a Chinese servant is useful in
+ preventing a circumlocutory habit of speech. Many of our
+ letters the Mongolian mouth has no capacity for sounding.
+ <i>R</i> he invariably sounds like <i>l</i>, so that the word
+ "rice" he pronounces "lice"&mdash;a bit of information which
+ may prevent an unpleasant apprehension when you come to employ
+ a Chinese cook. He rejects the English personal pronoun I, and
+ uses the possessive "my" in its place; thus, "My go home," in
+ place of "I go home."</p>
+
+ <p>When he buries a countryman he throws from the hearse into
+ the air handfuls of brown tissue-paper slips, punctured with
+ Chinese characters. Sometimes, at his burial-processions, he
+ gives a small piece of money to every person met on the road.
+ Over the grave he beats gongs and sets off packs of
+ fire-crackers. On it he leaves cooked meats, drink, delicacies
+ and lighted wax tapers. Eventually the bones are disinterred
+ and shipped to his native land. In the remotest
+ mining-districts of California are found Chinese graves thus
+ opened and emptied of their inmates. I have in one instance
+ seen him, so far as he was permitted, render some of these
+ funeral honors to an American. The deceased had gained this
+ honor by treating the Chinese as though they were partners in
+ our common humanity. "Missa Tom," as he was termed by them,
+ they knew they could trust. He acquired among them a reputation
+ as the one righteous American in their California Gomorrah.
+ Chinamen would come to him from distant localities, that he
+ might overlook their bills of sale and other documents used in
+ business intercourse with the white man. Their need of such, an
+ honest adviser was great. The descendants of the Pilgrim
+ Fathers often took advantage of their ignorance of the English
+ language, written or spoken. "Missa Tom" suddenly died. I had
+ occasion to visit his farm a few days after his death, and on
+ the first night of my stay there saw the array of meats, fruit,
+ wine and burning tapers on a table in front of the house, which
+ his Chinese friends told me was intended as an offering to
+ "Missa Tom's" spirit.</p>
+
+ <p>We will dive for a moment into a Chinese wash-cellar. "John"
+ does three-fourths of the washing of California. His lavatories
+ are on every street. "Hip Tee, Washing and Ironing," says the
+ sign, evidently the first production of an amateur in
+ lettering. Two doors above is the establishment of Tong
+ Wash&mdash;two below, that of Hi Sing. Hip Tee and five
+ assistants are busy ironing. The odor is a trinity of steam,
+ damp clothes and opium. More Mongolian tongues are heard from
+ smoky recesses in the rear. As we enter, Hip Tee is blowing a
+ shower of moisture from his mouth, "very like a whale." This is
+ his method of dampening the linen preparatory to ironing. It is
+ a skilled performance. The fluid leaves his lips as fine as
+ mist. If we are on business we leave our bundles, and in return
+ receive a ticket covered with hieroglyphics. These indicate the
+ kind and number of the garments left to be cleansed, and some
+ distinguishing mark (supposing this to be our first patronage
+ of Hip Tee) by which we may be again identified. It may be by a
+ pug nose, a hare lip, red hair, no hair or squint eyes. They
+ never ask one's name, for they can neither pronounce nor write
+ it when it is given. The ticket is an unintelligible tracery of
+ lines, curves, dots and dashes, made by a brush dipped in India
+ ink on a shred of flimsy Chinese paper. It may teem with abuse
+ and ridicule, but you must pocket all that, and produce it on
+ calling again, or your shirts and collars go into the Chinese
+ Circumlocution Wash-house Office. It is very difficult getting
+ one's clothes back if the ticket be lost&mdash;very. Hip Tee
+ now dabs a duplicate of your ticket in a long book, and all is
+ over. You will call on Saturday night for your linen. You do
+ so. There is apparently the same cellar, the same smell of
+ steam, damp clothes and opium, the same sputter of sprinkling
+ water, and apparently the same Hip Tee and assistants with
+ brown shaven foreheads and long cues hanging straight down
+ behind or coiled in snake-like fashion about their craniums.
+ You present your ticket. Hip Tee examines it and shakes his
+ head. "No good&mdash;oder man," he says, and points up the
+ street. You are now perplexed and somewhat alarmed. You say:
+ "John, I want my clothes. I left them here last Monday. You
+ gave me that ticket." "No," replies Hip Tee very decidedly,
+ "oder man;" and again he waves his arm upward. Then you are
+ wroth. You abuse, expostulate, entreat, and talk a great deal
+ of English, and some of it very strong English, which Hip Tee
+ does not understand; and Hip Tee talks a great deal of Chinese,
+ and perhaps strong Chinese, which you do not understand. You
+ commence sentences in broken Chinese and terminate them in
+ unbroken English. Hip Tee commences sentences in broken English
+ and terminates them in pure Chinese, from a like inability to
+ express his indignation in a foreign tongue. "What for you no
+ go oder man? No my ticket&mdash;tung sung lung, ya hip
+ kee&mdash;<i>ping!"</i> he cries; and all this time the
+ assistants are industriously ironing and spouting mist, and
+ leisurely making remarks in their sing-song unintelligibility
+ which you feel have uncomplimentary reference to yourself.
+ Suddenly a light breaks upon you. This is not Hip Tee's cellar,
+ this is not Hip Tee. It is the establishment of Hi Sing. This
+ is Hi Sing himself who for the last half hour has been
+ endeavoring with his stock of fifteen English words to make you
+ understand that you are in the wrong house. But these Chinese,
+ as to faces and their wash-houses, and all the paraphernalia of
+ their wash-houses, are so much alike that this is an easy
+ mistake to make. You find the lavatory of Hip Tee, who
+ pronounces the hieroglyphics all correct, and delivers you your
+ lost and found shirts clean, with half the buttons broken, and
+ the bosoms pounded, scrubbed and frayed into an irregular sort
+ of embroidery.</p>
+
+ <p>"He can only dig, cook and wash," said the American miner
+ contemptuously years ago: "he can't work rock." To work rock in
+ mining parlance is to be skillful in boring Earth's stony husk
+ after mineral. It is to be proficient in sledging, drilling and
+ blasting. The Chinaman seemed to have no aptitude for this
+ labor. He was content to use his pick and shovel in the
+ gravel-banks: metallic veins of gold, silver or copper he left
+ entirely to the white man.</p>
+
+ <p>Yet it was a great mistake to suppose he could not "work
+ rock," or do anything else required of him. John is a most apt
+ and intelligent labor-machine. Show him once your tactics in
+ any operation, and ever after he imitates them as accurately as
+ does the parrot its memorized sentences. So when the Pacific
+ Railroad was being bored through the hard granite of the
+ Sierras it was John who handled the drill and sledge as well as
+ the white laborer. He was hurled by thousands on that immense
+ work, and it was the tawny hand of China that hewed out
+ hundreds of miles for the transcontinental pathway. Nor is this
+ all. He is crowding into one avenue of employment after another
+ in California. He fills our woolen- and silk-mills; he makes
+ slippers and binds shoes; he is skilled in the use of the
+ sewing-machine; cellar after cellar in San Francisco is filled
+ with these Celestial brownies rolling cigars; his fishing-nets
+ are in every bay and inlet; he is employed in scores of the
+ lesser establishments for preserving fruit, grinding salt,
+ making matches, etc. He would quickly jump into the places of
+ the carpenter, mason and blacksmith were he allowed, for there
+ are numbers of them whose knowledge of these and other trades
+ is sufficient at least to render them useful as assistants. He
+ is handy on shipboard: the Panama steamers carry Chinese
+ foremast hands. He is preferred as a house-servant: the Chinese
+ boy of fourteen or sixteen learns quickly to cook and wash in
+ American fashion. He is neat in person, can be easily ruled,
+ does not set up an independent sovereignty in the kitchen, has
+ no followers, will not outshine his mistress in attire; and,
+ although not perfect, yet affords a refreshing change from our
+ Milesian tyrants of the roast and wash-tub. But when you catch
+ this Celestial domestic treasure, be sure that the first
+ culinary operations performed for his instruction are correctly
+ manipulated, for his imitativeness is of a cast-iron rigidity.
+ Once in the mould, it can only with great difficulty be
+ altered. Burn your toast or your pudding, and he is apt to
+ regard the accident as the rule.</p>
+
+ <p>The young Chinese, especially in San Francisco, are anxious
+ to acquire an English education. They may not attend the public
+ schools. A few years since certain Chinese mission-schools were
+ established by the joint efforts of several religious
+ denominations. Young ladies and gentlemen volunteered their
+ services on Sunday to teach these Chinese children to read.
+ They make eager, apt and docile pupils. Great is their pride on
+ mastering a few lines of English text. They become much
+ attached to their teachers, and it is possible, if the vote of
+ the latter were taken, it would evidence more liking for their
+ yellow, long-cued pupils than for any class of white children.
+ But while so assiduous to learn, it is rather doubtful whether
+ much real religious impression is made upon them. It is
+ possible that their home-training negatives that.</p>
+
+ <p>We have spoken entirely of the Chinaman. What of the
+ Chinawoman in America? In California the word "Chinawoman" is
+ synonymous with what is most vile and disgusting. Few, very
+ few, of a respectable class are in the State. The slums of
+ London and New York are as respectable thoroughfares compared
+ with the rows of "China alleys" in the heart of San Francisco.
+ These can hardly be termed "abandoned women." They have had no
+ sense of virtue, propriety or decency to abandon. They are
+ ignorant of the disgrace of their calling: if the term may be
+ allowed, they pursue it innocently. Many are scarcely more than
+ children. They are mere commodities, being by their own
+ countrymen bought in China, shipped and consigned to factors in
+ California, and there sold for a term of years.</p>
+
+ <p>The Chinaman has bitter enemies in San Francisco: they
+ thirst to annihilate him. He is accustomed to blows and
+ brickbats; he is legitimate game for rowdies, both grown and
+ juvenile; and children supposed to be better trained can scarce
+ resist the temptation of snatching at his pig-tail as he passes
+ through their groups in front of the public schools. Even on
+ Sundays nice little boys coming from Sabbath-school, with their
+ catechisms tucked under their jackets, and texts enjoining
+ mercy and gentleness fresh upon their lips, will sometimes
+ salute the benighted heathen as he passes by with a volley of
+ stones. If he turns on his small assailants, he is apt to meet
+ larger ones. Men are not wanting, ready and panting, to take up
+ the quarrel thus wantonly commenced by the offspring of the
+ "superior race." There are hundreds of families, who came over
+ the sea to seek in America the comfort and prosperity denied
+ them in the land of their birth, whose children from earliest
+ infancy are inculcated with the sentiment that the Chinaman is
+ a dog, a pest and a curse. On the occasion of William H.
+ Seward's visit to a San Francisco theatre, two Chinese
+ merchants were hissed and hooted by the gallery mob from a box
+ which they had ventured to occupy. This assumption of style and
+ exclusiveness proved very offensive to the shirt-sleeved,
+ upper-tier representatives of the "superior race," who had
+ assembled in large numbers to catch a glimpse of one of the
+ black man's great champions. Ethiopia could have sat in that
+ box in perfect safety, but China in such a place was the red
+ rag rousing the ire of the Democratic bull. John has a story of
+ his own to carry back home from a Christian land.</p>
+
+ <p>For this prejudice and hostility there are provocative
+ causes, although they may not be urged in extenuation. The
+ Chinaman is a dangerous competitor for the white laborer; and
+ when the latter, with other and smaller mouths to feed, once
+ gets the idea implanted in his mind that the bread is being
+ taken from them by what he deems a semi-human heathen, whose
+ beliefs, habits, appearance and customs are distasteful to him,
+ there are all the conditions ready for a state of mind toward
+ the almond-eyed Oriental which leans far away from brotherly
+ love.</p>
+
+ <p>Brotherly love sometimes depends on circumstances. "Am I not
+ a man and brother?" cries John from his native shore.
+ "Certainly," we respond. Pass round the hat&mdash;let us take
+ up a contribution for the conversion of the poor heathen. The
+ coins clink thickly in the bottom of the charitable chapeau. We
+ return home, feeling ourselves raised an inch higher
+ heavenward.</p>
+
+ <p>"Am I not a man and brother?" cries John in our midst,
+ digging our gold, setting up opposition laundries and wheeling
+ sand at half a dollar per day less wages. "No. Get out, ye
+ long-tailed baste! An' wad ye put me on a livil with
+ that&mdash;that baboon?" Pass round the hat. The coins mass
+ themselves more thickly than ever. For what? To buy muskets,
+ powder and ball. Wherefore? Wait! More than once has the
+ demagogue cried, "Drive them into the sea!"</p>
+
+ <p class="author">PRENTICE MULFORD.</p><a name="H_4_0017"
+ id="H_4_0017"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h2>A WINTER REVERIE.</h2>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">We stood amid the rustling gloom
+ alone</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">That night, while from the blue plains
+ overhead,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">With golden kisses thickly overblown,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">A shooting star into the darkness
+ sped.</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">"'Twas like Persephone, who ran," we
+ said,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">"Away from Love." The grass sprang round
+ our feet,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The purple lilacs in the dusk smelled
+ sweet,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And the black demon of the train sped
+ by,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Rousing the still air with his long, loud
+ cry.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">The slender rim of a young rising
+ moon</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Hung in the west as you leaned on the
+ bar</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And spun a thread of some sweet April
+ tune,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">And wished a wish and named the falling
+ star.</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">We heard a brook trill in the fields
+ afar;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The air wrapped round us that entrancing
+ fold</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Of vanishing sweet stuff that mortal
+ hold</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Can never grasp&mdash;the mist of
+ dreams&mdash;as down</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The street we went in that fair foreign
+ town.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">I might have whispered of my love that
+ night,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">But something wrapped you as a shield
+ around,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And held me back: your quiver of
+ affright,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Your startled movement at some sudden
+ sound&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">A night-bird rustling on the leafy
+ ground&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Your hushed and tremulous whisper of
+ alarm,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Your beating heart pressed close against
+ my arm,&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">All, all were sweet; and yet _my_ heart
+ beat true,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Nor shrined one wish I might not breathe
+ to you.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">So when we parted little had been
+ said:</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">I left you standing just within the
+ door,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">With the dim moonlight streaming on your
+ head</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">And rippling softly on the checkered
+ floor.</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">I can remember even the dress you
+ wore&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Some dainty white Swiss stuff that
+ floated round</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Your supple form and trailed upon the
+ ground,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">While bands of coral bound each slender
+ wrist,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Studded with one great purple
+ amethyst.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <hr />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">My story is not much&mdash;is
+ it?&mdash;to tell:</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">It seems a wandering line of music,
+ faint,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Whose sweet pathetic measures rise and
+ swell,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Then, strangled, fall with curious
+ restraint.</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">'Tis like the pictures that the artists
+ paint,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">With shadows forward thrown into the
+ light</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">From the real figures hidden out of
+ sight.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And is not life crossed in this strange,
+ sad way</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">With dreams whose shadows lengthen day by
+ day?</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">But you, dear heart&mdash;sweet heart
+ loved all these years&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Will recognize the passion of the
+ strain:</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Who eats the lotos-flower of Love with
+ tears,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Will know the rapture of that numb, vague
+ pain</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Which thrills the heart and stirs the
+ languid brain.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">All day amid the toiling throng we
+ strive,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">While in our heart these sacred, sweet
+ loves thrive,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And in choice hours we show them, white
+ and cool</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Like lilies floating on a troubled
+ pool.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p class="center">MILLIE W. CARPENTER.</p><a name="H_4_0018"
+ id="H_4_0018"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h2>"PASSPORTS, GENTLEMEN!"</h2>
+
+ <p>The close of July, 1870, found our party tarrying for a few
+ days at Geneva. We had left home with the intention of "doing"
+ Europe in less than four months. June and July were already
+ gone, but in that time, traveling as only Americans can, Great
+ Britain, Belgium, the Rhine country and portions of Switzerland
+ had been visited and admired. We were now pausing for a few
+ days to take breath and prepare for yet wider flights. Our
+ proposed route from Geneva would lead us through Northern
+ Germany, returning by way of Paris to London and Liverpool.</p>
+
+ <p>We had intentionally left Paris for the last, hoping that
+ the Communist disturbances would be completely quieted before
+ September. At this time their forces had been recently routed,
+ and the Versailles troops were occupying the capital. The
+ leaders of the Commune were scattered in every direction, and,
+ if newspaper accounts were to be believed, were being captured
+ in every city of France. Especially was this true of the
+ custom-house upon the Swiss frontier, where report said that
+ more than one leading Communist had been stopped by the
+ lynx-eyed officials, who would accept no substitute for the
+ signed and countersigned passport, and hold no parley until
+ such a passport had been presented.</p>
+
+ <p>In view of these facts, the American minister in Paris had
+ issued a circular letter to citizens of the United States
+ traveling abroad, requesting them to see that their passports
+ had the official vis&eacute; before attempting to enter France,
+ thus saving themselves and friends a large amount of
+ unnecessary trouble and delay. Nothing was said of those who
+ might think proper to attempt an entrance <i>without</i> a
+ passport, such temerity being in official eyes beyond all
+ advice or protection. Influenced by this letter and several
+ facts which had come under our notice proving the uncertainty
+ of all things, and especially of travel in France, we saw that
+ our passports were made officially correct.</p>
+
+ <p>While at Geneva our party separated for a few days. My
+ friends proposed making an expedition up the lake, while I
+ arranged to spend a day and night at Aix-les-Bains, a small
+ town in the south of France. My object in visiting it was not
+ to enjoy the sulphur-baths for which it is famous, but to see
+ some friends who were spending the summer there. I had written,
+ telling them to expect me by the five o'clock train on
+ Wednesday afternoon. As my stay was to be so brief, I left my
+ valise at the hotel in Geneva, and found myself now, for the
+ first time, separated from that trusty sable friend which had
+ until this hour been my constant companion by day and
+ night.</p>
+
+ <p>The train was just leaving the station when a lady sitting
+ opposite to me, with her back to the locomotive, asked, in
+ French, if I would be willing to change seats. Catching her
+ meaning rather by her gestures than words, I inquired in
+ English if she would like my seat, and found by her reply that
+ I was traveling with an English lady.</p>
+
+ <p>I should here explain that although I had studied the French
+ language as part of my education, I found it impossible to
+ speak French with any fluency or understand it when spoken. My
+ newly-made friend, however (for friend she proved herself),
+ spoke French and English with equal fluency.</p>
+
+ <p>In the process of comparing notes (so familiar to all
+ travelers) mention was made of the recent war and the unwonted
+ strictness and severity of the custom-house officials. In an
+ instant my hand was upon my pocket-book, only to find that I
+ had neglected to take my passport from my valise.</p>
+
+ <p>The embarrassment of the situation flashed upon me, and my
+ troubled countenance revealed to my companion that something
+ unusual had occurred. I answered her inquiring look by saying
+ that I had left my passport in Geneva. Her immediate sympathy
+ was only equaled by her evident alarm. She said there was but
+ one thing to be done&mdash;return instantly for it. I fully
+ agreed with her, but found, to my dismay, upon consulting a
+ guide-book, that our train was an express, which did not stop
+ before reaching Belgarde, the frontier-town.</p>
+
+ <p>I would willingly have pulled the bell-rope had there been
+ any, and stopped the train at any cost, but it was impossible,
+ and nothing remained but to sit quietly while I was
+ relentlessly hurried into the very jaws of the French
+ officials. The misery of the situation was aggravated by the
+ fact that I could not command enough French to explain how I
+ came to be traveling without a passport. As a last resort, I
+ applied to my friend, begging her to explain to the officer at
+ the custom-house that I was a citizen of the United States, and
+ had left my passport in Geneva. This she readily promised to
+ do, although I could see that she had but little faith in the
+ result. After a ride of an hour, during which my reflections
+ were none of the pleasantest, we arrived at Belgarde. Here the
+ doors of the railway carriages were thrown open, and we were
+ politely requested to alight. We stepped out upon a platform
+ swarming with fierce gendarmes, whom I regarded attentively,
+ wondering which of them was destined to become my protector.
+ From the platform we were ushered into a large room
+ communicating by a narrow passage with a second room, into
+ which our baggage was being carried. One by one my
+ fellow-passengers approached the narrow and (to me) gloomy
+ passage and presented their passports. These were closely
+ scanned by the officer in charge, handed to an assistant to be
+ countersigned, and the holder, all being right, was passed into
+ the second room. Our turn soon came, and, accompanied by the
+ English lady, I approached my fate.</p>
+
+ <p>Her passport was declared to be official, and handing it
+ back the officer looked inquiringly at me. My friend then began
+ her explanation. As I stood attentively regarding the officer's
+ face, I could see his puzzled look change into one of
+ comprehension, and then of amusement. To her inquiry he replied
+ that there would be no objection under the circumstances to my
+ returning to Geneva and procuring my passport. Encouraged by
+ the favorable turn my fortunes had taken, I asked, through my
+ friend, if it would be possible for me to go on without a
+ passport. An instantaneous change passed over his countenance,
+ and, shrugging his shoulders, he replied that it was
+ impossible: there was a second custom-house at Culoz, where I
+ should certainly be stopped, forced to explain how I had passed
+ Belgarde, and severely punished for attempting to enter without
+ a passport. I did not, however, wait for him to finish his
+ angry harangue, but passed on to the second room, where I was
+ soon joined by my interpreting friend, who explained to me in
+ full what I had already learned from the officer's countenance
+ and gesture. She thought that I was fortunate in escaping so
+ easily, and advised an immediate return to Geneva. I again
+ consulted my guide-book, and found that there was no return
+ train for several hours, and consequently that I should arrive
+ in Geneva too late to start for Aix-les-Bains that night. This
+ would necessitate waiting until Thursday, and perhaps force me
+ to give up the trip, for our seats were engaged in the Chamouni
+ coach for Friday morning. I imagined my friends in vain
+ awaiting my arrival at Aix, and the smiles of our party when
+ they found me in Geneva upon their return from the lake. But,
+ more than all, the possibility of not reaching Aix at all
+ troubled me, for I was very anxious to see my friends there,
+ and had written home that I intended to see them.</p>
+
+ <p>I found by my guide-book that our train reached Culoz before
+ the Geneva return train; so on the instant I formed the
+ desperate resolve of running the blockade at Belgarde, and if I
+ found it impossible to pass the custom-house at Culoz,
+ <i>there</i> to take the return train for Geneva. I walked to
+ the platform as if merely accompanying my friend, stood for a
+ moment at the door of the carriage conversing with her, and
+ then, as the train started for Culoz, quickly stepped in and
+ shut the door. Her dismay was really pitiable: had I not been
+ somewhat troubled in mind myself, I should have laughed
+ outright. She saw nothing before me but certain destruction,
+ and I am free to confess that the prospect of a telegram
+ flashing over the wires at that moment from Belgarde to Culoz
+ was not reassuring. The die, however, had been cast, and now
+ nothing remained but to endure in silence the interminable hour
+ which must elapse ere we should reach Culoz. There we were to
+ change cars, the Geneva train going on to Paris, while we took
+ the train on the opposite platform for Aix-les-Bains. This
+ necessitated passing through the d&eacute;p&ocirc;t, and
+ passing through the d&eacute;p&ocirc;t was passing through the
+ custom-house. As our train stopped in front of the fatal door,
+ and one by one the passengers filed into it and were lost to
+ sight, I seemed to see written above the door, "All hope
+ abandon, ye who enter here!" It was simply rushing into the
+ jaws of fate: there was not the slightest possibility of my
+ being able to pass through that depot unchallenged. I should be
+ carried on to Paris if I remained in the train; I should be
+ arrested if I remained on the platform; I was discovered if I
+ entered the custom-house. Eagerly I glanced around for some
+ means of escape. Every instant the number of passengers on the
+ platform was decreasing, the danger of discovery rapidly
+ increasing.</p>
+
+ <p>I had feared lest some benevolent French officer, anxious
+ for my safety, would be found waiting to assist me in
+ alighting: I was thankful to find that I should be allowed to
+ assist myself, and that no one paid any particular attention to
+ me. As I stood there hesitating what course to pursue, and
+ feeling how much easier my mind at this moment would be were I
+ waiting on the Belgarde platform, I noticed a door standing
+ open a few steps to the left. Without any further hesitation I
+ walked directly in, to find myself in a railroad restaurant. It
+ proved to be a tower of refuge.</p>
+
+ <p>No one had noticed me. There were other passengers in the
+ room, waiting for the Paris train; so, joining myself to them,
+ I remained there until the custom-house doors were closed and
+ the guards had left the platform. The question now arose, How
+ should I reach the opposite platform? The train might start at
+ any moment: the only legitimate passage was closed. I knew that
+ the attempt would be fraught with danger, yet I felt that it
+ was now too late to draw back. If I remained any length of time
+ in the restaurant, I should be suspected and discovered; and as
+ I thought of that moment a terrific scene arose before my mind
+ in which an excited French official thundered at me in his
+ choicest French, while I stood silent, unable to explain who I
+ was, how I came there, whither I was going; I imagined myself
+ being searched for treasonable documents and none being found;
+ I seemed to see my captors consulting how they could best
+ compel me to tell what I knew. These scenes and others of like
+ nature entertained me while I waited for the coast&mdash;or
+ rather platform&mdash;to be cleared. When at length all the
+ immediate guards were gone, I started out to find my way, if
+ possible, to the train for Aix. I have read of travelers
+ cutting their way through trackless forests, of ice-bound
+ mariners anxiously seeking the North-west passage, and, worse
+ than all, of luckless countrymen wandering bewildered through
+ the streets of Boston; but I am confident that no traveler,
+ mariner or countryman ever sought his way with more
+ circumspection and diligence than I in my search for a passage
+ between those two platforms.</p>
+
+ <p>As I glanced cautiously up and down I saw a door standing
+ open at some little distance. Around that door all my hopes
+ were immediately centred. It might lead directly to the
+ custom-house; it might be the entrance to the barracks of the
+ guards; it might be&mdash;I knew not what; but it might afford
+ a passage to the other platform.</p>
+
+ <p>I walked quickly to the door, glanced in, saw no one and
+ entered. The room was a baggage-room, and at that moment
+ unoccupied. It instantly occurred to me that a baggage-room
+ <i>ought</i> to open on both platforms. I felt as though I
+ could have shouted "Eureka!" and I am confident that the joy of
+ Archimedes as he rushed through the streets of Syracuse was no
+ greater than mine as I felt that I had so unexpectedly
+ discovered the passage I was seeking. Passing through this
+ room, I found myself in a second, like the former unoccupied.
+ It had occurred to me that all the doors might be closed, and
+ the thought had considerably abated my rejoicing; but no! I saw
+ a door which stood invitingly open.</p>
+
+ <p>No guards were stationed on the platform; so I stepped out,
+ and before me stood the train for Aix, into which my
+ fellow-passengers were entering, some of them still holding
+ their passports in their hands. Taking my seat in one of the
+ carriages, in a few moments the train started and I was on my
+ way to Aix. The relief was unspeakably great. An instant before
+ it seemed as if nothing short of a miracle could save me from a
+ French guard-house, and now, by the simplest combination of
+ circumstances, in which a restaurant and baggage-room bore an
+ important part, I had passed unchallenged. I remember that I
+ enjoyed the scenery and views along the route from Culoz to Aix
+ more than while passing from Belgarde to Culoz.</p>
+
+ <p>My friends were found expecting me upon my arrival, and
+ joined in congratulating me upon my happy escape. A night and
+ day were passed very pleasantly, and then arose the question of
+ return.</p>
+
+ <p>I suggested telegraphing to Geneva for my passport, but that
+ was vetoed, and it was decided that I should return as I had
+ come&mdash;passportless. I confess that the attempt seemed
+ somewhat hazardous. If it was dangerous to attempt an entrance
+ into France, how much more so to attempt an exit, especially
+ when the custom-house force had been doubled with the sole
+ object that all possibility of escape might be precluded, and
+ that any one passing Culoz might be stopped at Belgarde! It was
+ urged, however, that our seats had been engaged in the
+ diligence for Friday morning, and to send for the passport
+ would consume considerable time&mdash;would certainly delay the
+ party until Saturday, and perhaps until Monday, which delay
+ would seriously affect all their plans, time being so limited
+ and so many places remaining to be visited. I had passed once,
+ why not again? Influenced by these facts, and thinking what a
+ triumph it would be once more to baffle French vigilance, I
+ determined to attempt the return. There was a train leaving Aix
+ about eight P.M., reaching Geneva at eleven: it was decided
+ that I should take this train. I had arranged a vague plan of
+ action, although I expected to depend rather upon the
+ suggestion of the moment.</p>
+
+ <p>It was quite dark when we reached Culoz. As the train
+ arrived at the platform, and we were obliged again to change
+ cars, I thought of the friendly restaurant; but no! the
+ restaurant was closed, and moreover a company of gendarmes was
+ present to see that every one entered the door leading to the
+ custom-house. There was no room for hesitation or delay. I
+ entered under protest, but still I entered.</p>
+
+ <p>In a moment I perceived the desperate situation. The room
+ had two doors&mdash;one opening upon the platform from which we
+ had just come, and now guarded by an officer; the other leading
+ to the opposite platform, and there stood the custom-house
+ officer receiving and inspecting the passports. It was indeed
+ Scylla and Charybdis. If I attempted to pass the officer
+ without a passport, I was undone; if I remained until all the
+ other passengers had passed out, I was undone. For an instant I
+ felt as if I had better give up the unequal contest. The forces
+ of the enemy were too many for me. I saw that I had been
+ captured: why fight against Fate? A moment's reflection,
+ however, restored my courage. It was evident that one thing
+ alone remained to be done: that was to find my way out of the
+ door by which I had just entered, as speedily as possible. But
+ there stood the guard.</p>
+
+ <p>The train by which we had come was still before the
+ platform: an idea suggested itself. Acting as if I had left
+ some article in the train, I stepped hurriedly up to the guard,
+ who, catching my meaning, made way for me without a word. Once
+ upon the platform, I resolved never again to enter that door
+ except as a prisoner. The guard followed me with his eyes for a
+ moment, and then, seeing me open one of the carriage doors,
+ turned back to his post. As soon as I perceived that I was no
+ longer watched I glided off in the opposite direction under the
+ shadows of the platform. I was looking for a certain door which
+ I remembered well as a friend in need. I knew not in which
+ direction it lay, nor could I have recognized it if shut; but
+ hardly had I gone ten steps when the same door stood open
+ before me. It was the act of an instant to spring through it,
+ out of sight of the guard. Why this door and baggage-room
+ should have been left thus open and unguarded when such evident
+ and scrutinizing care was taken in every other quarter, I have
+ to this day been unable to understand. But for that fact I
+ should have found it utterly impossible to pass that
+ custom-house going or coming.</p>
+
+ <p>Once in the baggage-room, the way was familiar, and, passing
+ into the second room, I found the door open as on the day
+ previous, and in a moment stood undiscovered upon the platform.
+ Entering the waiting train, I was soon on the way to
+ Belgarde.</p>
+
+ <p>My only thought during the ride was, What shall I do when we
+ arrive at Belgarde? I expected to see the doors thrown open as
+ before, and hear again the polite invitation to enter the
+ custom-house. Was it not certain detection to refuse? was it
+ not equally dangerous to obey? The officer at Belgarde had seen
+ me the day before, and warned me not to go to Culoz. What
+ reception would he give me when he saw me attempting to return?
+ Or it might be he would not remember me, and then in the
+ darkness and confusion I should surely be taken for an escaping
+ Communist. That I had passed Culoz was no comfort when I
+ remembered that this would only aggravate my guilt in their
+ eyes.</p>
+
+ <p>The case did indeed seem desperate. Willingly would I have
+ jumped out and walked the entire distance to Geneva, if I might
+ only thus escape that terrible custom-house, which every moment
+ loomed up more terrifically. At length this troubled hour was
+ passed: we had arrived at Belgarde, and the moment for action
+ had come. I had determined to avoid the custom-house at all
+ hazards. When the doors were thrown open I expected to alight,
+ but not to enter. My plan was to find some sheltering door, or
+ even corner, where I could remain until the others had
+ presented their passports and were beginning to return, then
+ join them and take my seat as before. The d&eacute;p&ocirc;t at
+ Belgarde was brilliantly lighted, and the gendarmes pacing to
+ and fro in the gaslight seemed not only to have increased in
+ numbers, but to have acquired an additional ferocity since the
+ day previous.</p>
+
+ <p>As I looked but my spirit sank within me. I could only brace
+ myself for the coming crisis. For several moments nothing was
+ said or done. The doors remained shut, and no one seemed at all
+ concerned about our presence. Each minute appeared an hour as I
+ sat there awaiting my fate. The suspense was becoming too
+ great: I felt that my stock of self-possession was entirely
+ deserting me. At length I began to hope that they were
+ satisfied with the examination at Culoz, and would allow us to
+ pass unchallenged. Just at that moment, as hope was dawning
+ into certainty, the door opened and the custom-house officer
+ entered with a polite bow, while a body of gendarmes drew up
+ behind him upon the platform. He uttered two French words, and
+ I needed no interpreter to tell me that they were "Passports,
+ gentlemen!"</p>
+
+ <p>I shuddered as I saw him standing so near, within reach of
+ my arm. There were six persons besides myself in the carriage,
+ and I was occupying a seat beside the door farthest from the
+ platform. Any one who has seen a European railway-carriage will
+ understand me when I say that I sat next to the right-hand
+ door, while he had entered by the left. One by one the
+ passports were handed up to him until he held six in his
+ hand.</p>
+
+ <p>With the rest of the passengers I had taken out my
+ pocket-book and searched as if for my passport, but had handed
+ none to him, and now I sat awaiting developments. I saw that he
+ would read the six passports, and then turn to me for the
+ seventh.</p>
+
+ <p>The desperate thought flashed upon me of opening the door
+ and escaping into the darkness. The carriage itself was so
+ dimly lighted that I could barely see the face of my opposite
+ neighbor, and I therefore hoped to be able to slip out without
+ any one perceiving it. The attempt was desperate, but so was
+ the situation. The officer was buried in the passports, holding
+ them near his face to catch the dim light. The door was
+ fastened upon the outside, and so, watching him, I leaned far
+ out of the window until I was able to reach the catch and
+ unfasten the door. A slight push, and it swung noiselessly
+ open. I glanced at the officer: he was intently reading the
+ <i>last</i> passport. I had placed one foot upon the outside
+ step, and was about to glide out into the darkness, when he
+ laid the paper down and looked directly at me.</p>
+
+ <p>It would have been madness to attempt an escape with his
+ eyes upon me; so, assuming as nonchalant a look as my present
+ feelings would allow, I answered his inquiring glance with one
+ of confident assurance.</p>
+
+ <p>He saw my nonchalant expression. He saw the open pocket-book
+ in my hand. He had <i>not</i> counted the number of passports.
+ All the passengers were settling themselves to sleep. It must
+ be all right; so, with a polite "Bon soir, messieurs!" he bowed
+ and left the carriage. My sensation of relief may be better
+ imagined than described. Hardly had he left our carriage when
+ we heard the sound of voices and hurrying feet upon the
+ platform, and looking out saw some unfortunate individual
+ carried off under guard. I trembled as I thought how narrowly I
+ had escaped his fate. In a few moments, however, we were safely
+ on our way to Geneva, and as we sped on into the darkness,
+ while congratulating myself upon my fortunate escape, I firmly
+ resolved to be better prepared for the emergency the next time
+ I should hear those memorable words, "Passports,
+ gentlemen!"</p>
+
+ <p class="author">A.H.</p><a name="H_4_0019"
+ id="H_4_0019"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h2>OUR MONTHLY GOSSIP.</h2><a name="H_4_0027"
+ id="H_4_0027"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h3>THE CORNWALLIS FAMILY.</h3>
+
+ <p>The death was lately announced of two of the last
+ survivors&mdash;only one of the name is now left&mdash;of a
+ family whose chief played a very conspicuous, and for himself
+ unfortunate, part in this country a century ago&mdash;the
+ marquis Cornwallis. His only son, who married a daughter of the
+ celebrated match-making duchess of Gordon, left no male issue,
+ but five daughters. Two of them, the countess of St.
+ Germans&mdash;wife of the earl who accompanied the prince of
+ Wales on his visit here&mdash;and Lady Braybrook, died some
+ years ago; and recently Lady Mary Ross, whose husband edited
+ the correspondence of the first marquis, and Lady Louisa, who
+ never married, have also gone to their graves.</p>
+
+ <p>The family of Cornwallis is very ancient, and can point to
+ many distinguished members. Its ancestral seat is at Brome, in
+ Suffolk. This is a fine old mansion, and the hall, which is
+ very lofty and open to the roof, is an excellent specimen of
+ the work of other days. The chapel contains capital oak
+ carving. In the village church there are monuments worth notice
+ of the family.</p>
+
+ <p>Following the fate of so many other places, Brome passed
+ after the death of the second marquis to a <i>novus homo</i>,
+ one Matthias Kerrison, who, having begun life as a carpenter,
+ contrived in various ways to acquire a colossal fortune. His
+ son rose to distinction in the army, obtained a seat in
+ Parliament, which he held for thirty years, and was created a
+ baronet.</p>
+
+ <p>He left at his death a son and three daughters. The former,
+ long married, is childless. The sisters are respectively the
+ wives of Earl Stanhope, the well-known historian; Lord
+ Henniker, a wealthy Suffolk proprietor; and Lord Bateman. It is
+ understood that under the late baronet's will the son of the
+ last will, in the event of the present baronet dying childless,
+ succeed to the property. It will thus be observed that Brome,
+ after having been for four centuries in one family, is destined
+ to change hands repeatedly in a few years.</p>
+
+ <p>When the second Marquis Cornwallis died sonless, the
+ marquisate became extinct, but the earldom passed to his first
+ cousin. This nobleman, by no means an able or admirable person,
+ married twice. By his first marriage he had a daughter, who
+ married Charles Wykeham-Martin, Esq., M.P., whose father, by a
+ concatenation of chances, became the owner of Leeds Castle,
+ near Maidstone, in Kent&mdash;a splendid moated baronial pile,
+ dating from the thirteenth century, but added to and improved
+ in admirable taste. Leeds was formerly the property of the
+ Fairfax family, whose chief, the present lord, resides near
+ Washington. It came to them from the once famous family of
+ Colepepper.</p>
+
+ <p>Earl Cornwallis married a second time late in life, and had
+ an only daughter, Lady Julia. From that time his one idea
+ seemed to be to accumulate for this child, and accordingly at
+ his death she was the greatest heiress in England, her long
+ minority serving to add immensely to her father's hoards. Of
+ course, when the time approached for her entering society under
+ the chaperonage of her cousins, the marquis's daughters,
+ speculation was very rife in the London world as to whom she
+ would marry, and many a mamma of high degree cast sheep's eyes
+ at the heiress, and thought how charmingly her accumulations
+ would serve to clear the encumbrances on certain acres. But
+ they were not kept long in suspense. One night during the
+ London season, when the ladies Cornwallis gave a grand ball, a
+ damper was cast over the proceedings, so far at least as
+ aspirants to the heiress's money-bags were concerned, by the
+ announcement of her engagement. Said a lady to a gentleman in
+ the course of that evening, "Most extraordinary! There seem to
+ be no men in the room to-night." "Why, of course not," was the
+ rejoinder, "after this fatal news." Lady Julia's choice fell
+ upon a young officer in the Guards, Viscount Holmesdale, eldest
+ son of Earl Amherst. Lord Holmesdale was unexceptionable in
+ point of position, but his pecuniary position was such as to
+ make one hundred and fifty thousand dollars a year a very
+ agreeable addition to his income. It may, however, be a
+ satisfaction to those less richly endowed with this world's
+ goods than Lady Holmesdale to reflect that being an heiress
+ generally proves rather the reverse of a passport to
+ matrimonial bliss; and by all accounts she is no exception to
+ the usual fate in this respect. We can't have everything in
+ this world.</p>
+
+ <p>Lady Holmesdale's property was tied up by her old father
+ (whose whole thoughts were given to this end, and who was in
+ the habit of carrying his will on his person) to such a degree
+ that in the event of her death her husband can only derive a
+ very slight benefit from his wife's property beyond the
+ insurances which may have been effected on her life. She is
+ childless, and has very precarious health. Her principal seat
+ is Linton Park, near Maidstone, Kent, in which county she is
+ the largest landowner. In the event of her dying without issue,
+ her estates pass to the son of Major Fiennes Cornwallis, who
+ was second son of the late Mr. Wykeham-Martin by Lady
+ Holmesdale's elder half-sister.</p>
+
+ <p>A cousin of Lady Holmesdale, Miss Cornwallis, the last
+ representative of a third branch, died some years ago. This
+ lady, who possessed rare literary and social acquirements,
+ bequeathed her property to Major Wykeham-Martin, who thereupon
+ changed his name to Cornwallis. The major, a gallant officer,
+ one of those of whom Tennyson says,</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Into the jaws of death</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Rode the six hundred,</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>only survived the Balaklava charge to die a few years later
+ through an accident in the hunting-field. "A fine, modest young
+ officer," was Thackeray's verdict about him, when, after dinner
+ at "Tom Phinn's," a noted bachelor barrister of eminence whose
+ little dinners were not the least agreeable in London, the
+ story of that famous ride had been coaxed out of the young
+ <i>militaire</i>, who, if left to himself, would never have let
+ you have a notion that he had seen such splendid service. The
+ only Cornwallis now left is Lady Elizabeth, granddaughter of
+ the first marquis.</p><a name="H_4_0020"
+ id="H_4_0020"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h3>NOVELTIES IN ETHNOLOGY.</h3>
+
+ <p>Two savants of high reputation have lately undertaken to
+ seek out the origin of that German race which has just put
+ itself at the head of military Europe. One is Wilhelm
+ Oberm&uuml;ller, a German ethnologist, member of the Vienna
+ Geographical Society, whose startling theory nevertheless is
+ that the Germans are the direct descendants of Cain! The other
+ scholar, M. Quatrefages, a man of still greater reputation,
+ devotes himself to a proposition almost as
+ extraordinary&mdash;namely, that the Prussian pedigree is Finn
+ and Slav, with only a small pinch of Teuton, and hence, in an
+ ethnographical view, is anti-German!</p>
+
+ <p>That M. Quatrefages should maintain such a postulate, his
+ patriotism if not his scientific reputation might lead us to
+ expect; but that Oberm&uuml;ller should be so eager to trace
+ German origin back to the first murderer is rather more
+ suprising. Oberm&uuml;ller's work embraces in its general scope
+ the origin of all European nations, but the most striking part
+ is that relating to Germany. He holds that, from the remotest
+ era, the Celto-Aryan race, starting from the plain of Tartary,
+ the probable cradle of mankind, split into two great
+ branches&mdash;one the Oriental Aryans, and the other the
+ Western Aryans, or Celts. The former&mdash;who, as he proceeds
+ to show, were no other than the descendants of
+ Cain&mdash;betook themselves to China, which land they found
+ inhabited by the Mongolians, another great primordial race; and
+ we are told that the Mongolians are indicated when mention is
+ made in Scripture of Cain's marriage in the land of Nod. The
+ intermixture of Cainists and Mongolians produced the Turks,
+ while the pure Cainist tribes formed the German people, under
+ the name of Swabians (Chinese, <i>Siampi</i>), Goths
+ (<i>Yeuten</i> in Chinese) and Ases (<i>Sachsons</i>). Such, in
+ brief, is the curious theory of Oberm&uuml;ller.</p>
+
+ <p>The question next arises, How is it that we find the Germans
+ transplanted from the Hoang-Ho to the Rhine? We are told that,
+ being driven out of China by the Turks, they poured into the
+ European countries which the Celts or Western Aryans had
+ already occupied. These latter had in the mean time gone out
+ from the Asiatic cradle of the race, and following the course
+ of the Indus to Hindostan and Persia, had, under the name of
+ Chaldeans, overrun Armenia, Syria, Arabia, Egypt and North
+ Africa, which latter they found inhabited by certain negro
+ races, whereas in Egypt they discovered red-skins or
+ Atlantides; which latter, by the way, form also our own
+ aborigines. The intermixture of the Celts with these primitive
+ races just named produced the Jews and Semitic people. At the
+ time of the Celtic invasion Western Europe and Northern Africa
+ were occupied by the race of the Atlantides, while the
+ Mongolians, including also the Lapps, Finns and Huns, peopled
+ the north of Europe and of Asia. The Celts pushed in between
+ these two races, and only very much later the German people,
+ driven out of China by the Turks, as we have said, arrived in
+ Europe.</p>
+
+ <p>When, therefore, did these Cainist invasions of Germany take
+ place? Oberm&uuml;ller says that the date must have been toward
+ the epoch of the Roman conquests. Gallia was then inhabited in
+ the south by the primitive Atlantid race of Ligurians and by
+ the Greek colony of Massilia; in the centre by the Gaelags
+ (Celts) or Gauls, who, pouring northward from Spain, had
+ conquered it fifteen hundred years before the Christian era;
+ and in the north by the Belgic Cimbrians, who had come from
+ Germany, and who were designated under the name of Germans
+ (<i>Ghermann</i>) or border-men, and who, though called
+ <i>Germani</i> by Caesar and Tacitus, were yet not of the
+ Cainist stock, but Celts. However, these Germans, whom the
+ Romans encountered to their cost on the Rhine and Danube, were
+ of the genuine Oriental Cainist stock, and these, after
+ centuries of fierce struggle, they failed to conquer, though
+ the Celts of Britain, Gaul and Spain, as well as all the old
+ empires of the East, had fallen an easy prey to their
+ victorious eagles.</p>
+
+ <p>It only remains to add that this invasion of Germany by
+ Cain's progeny was accomplished in three streams. The Ases
+ (Sachsons) directed themselves to the Elbe and Danube, and
+ thence to the north; the Suevi, or Swabians, chose the centre
+ and south of Germany; while the Goths did not rest till they
+ had overrun Italy, Southern France and Spain. But each of these
+ three main streams was composed of many tribes, whom the old
+ writers catalogue without system, mixing both Celtic and
+ Teutonic tribes under the general name of Germans; and it is
+ only in modern days that the careless enumeration of the
+ classic writers has been rejected, and a more scientific method
+ substituted. It will be seen, in fine, that in the main
+ Oberm&uuml;ller does not differ from accepted theories in
+ German ethnology, which have long carefully dissevered the
+ Celts from the Teutons, and assigned to each tribe with
+ approximate accuracy its earliest fixed abode in Europe. It is
+ the tracing back of the German race proper to the first-born of
+ Adam, according to scriptural genealogy, which makes this
+ theory curious and amusing.</p>
+
+ <p>To the work of M. Quatrefages we have only space to devote a
+ paragraph. Originally contributed to the <i>Revue des Deux
+ Mondes</i>, it bears the marks in its inferences, if not in its
+ facts, of being composed for an audience of sympathizing
+ countrymen, rather than for the world of science at large. M.
+ Quatrefages says that the first dwellers in Prussia were Finns,
+ who founded the stock, and were in turn overpowered by the
+ Slavs, who imposed their language and customs on the whole of
+ the Baltic region. The consequent mixture of Finns and Slavs
+ created a population wholly un-German; and what dash of genuine
+ Germanism Prussia now has was subsequently acquired in the
+ persons of sundry traders from Bremen, followed by a class of
+ roving nobility, who entered the half-civilized country with
+ their retainers in quest of spoils. Besides these elements,
+ Prussia, like England and America, received in modern times an
+ influx of French Huguenots; which M. Quatrefages naturally
+ considers a piece of great good fortune for Prussia. Briefly,
+ then, the French savant regards Prussia as German only in her
+ nobility and upper-middle classes, while the substratum of
+ population is a composition of Slav and Finn, and hence
+ thoroughly anti-German. As, according to the old saying, if you
+ scratch a Russian you will find a Tartar beneath, so, according
+ to M. Ouatrefages, we may suppose that scraping a Prussian
+ would disclose a Finn. The political inferences which he draws
+ are very fanciful. He traces shadowy analogies between the
+ tactics of Von Moltke's veterans and the warlike customs of the
+ ancient Slavs, and suggests that the basic origin of the
+ Prussian population may lead it to cultivate a Russian alliance
+ rather than an Austrian, forgetting, apparently, that by his
+ own admission the ruling-classes of Prussia are German in
+ origin, ideas and sympathies.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">L.S.</p><a name="H_4_0021"
+ id="H_4_0021"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h3>THE STEAM-WHISTLE.</h3>
+
+ <p>While Mr. Ruskin was lately bewailing the bell-ringing
+ propensity of mankind, the English Parliament and several
+ American legislatures, city or State, were assaulting the
+ greater nuisance of the steam-whistle, and trying to substitute
+ bell-ringing for it. Mr. Ruskin's particular grievance was,
+ that his own nerves were <i>crisp&eacute;</i> by the incessant
+ ding-dong of the church-bells of Florence summoning the devout
+ to prayer, but he generalized his wrath. Possibly, he would
+ have been less sensitive and fastidious regarding the musical
+ carillons of the Italian city were he wont to dwell within
+ ear-shot of an American factory or railroad-station. Not that
+ Mr. Ruskin fails to appreciate&mdash;or, rather, to
+ depreciate&mdash;railways in their connection with Italian
+ landscapes; for, besides his series of complaints regarding the
+ Florence bells, he denounces the railway from Rome to Naples,
+ and the railway-tunnels under Monts Cenis and St. Gothard, and
+ the railway-bridge leading into Venice, as enemies of the
+ beautiful and picturesque in Nature. But it is the locomotive,
+ independent of the shriek, that is his abomination; whereas a
+ man less sensitive to sights, and (if possible) more sensitive
+ to sounds, might pardon the cutting up of the landscape were
+ his ear-drum spared from splitting.</p>
+
+ <p>Emerson asks, "What is so odious as noise?" But a
+ <i>Saturday Reviewer</i> once devoted an elaborate essay to the
+ eulogy of unmitigated noise, or rather to the keen enjoyment of
+ it by children. People with enviable nerves and unenviable
+ tastes often enjoy sounds in the ratio of their lack of
+ melody&mdash;say, such everyday thoroughfare music as the slap
+ and bang of coach-wheels on the cobble-stones; the creaking of
+ street-cars round a sharp curve, like Milton's infernal doors
+ "grating harsh thunder;" the squeaking falsettos of the cries
+ by old-clothes' men, itinerant glaziers, fishmongers,
+ fruiterers, tinkers and what not; the yells of rival coachmen
+ at the railway-stations, giving one an idea of Bedlam; the
+ street-fiddlers and violinists with horribly untuned
+ instruments; the Italian open-air singers hoarsely shouting,
+ "Shoo Fly" or "Viva Garibaldi! viva l'Italia!" the gongs beaten
+ on steamboats and by hotel-runners at stations on the arrival
+ of trains; the unearthly squeals and shrieks of new "musical
+ instruments" sold cheap by street-peddlers; the horrible
+ noise-producers which boys invent for the torture of nervous
+ people&mdash;such, for example, as this present season's, which
+ is happily styled "the devil's fiddle," or "the chicken-box,"
+ whose simplest form is an emptied tomato-can, with a string
+ passed through the end and pulled with the rosined fingers.
+ Now, that a man may be pleased with a rattle, even if it be
+ only a car-rattle, is conceivable, but it is hard to understand
+ how he can retain a relish for the squeal of a
+ locomotive-whistle. The practice of summoning workmen to
+ factories by this shrill monitor, of using it to announce the
+ dinner-hour, the hour of resuming work after the nooning, and
+ the hour of quitting work for the night, ought to be abolished
+ everywhere. There is not the faintest excuse for it, because
+ clocks and bells will do the same work exactly as well. On the
+ other hand, the whistle causes perpetual irritation to the
+ nervous, feeble and sick, and frequent cases of horses running
+ away with fright at the sudden shriek, smashing property or
+ destroying life.</p>
+
+ <p>Let us give moral aid and comfort to the campaign,
+ Cisatlantic and Transatlantic, against the steam-whistle. In
+ the local councils of Philadelphia, Camden and other cities it
+ has been well opened in our country; in the House of Commons
+ has been introduced a bill providing that "no person shall use
+ or employ in any manufactory or any other place any
+ steam-whistle or steam-trumpet for the purpose of summoning or
+ dismissing workmen or persons employed, without the sanction of
+ the sanitary authorities." They call this whistle, by the way,
+ it would seem, the "American devil," for the Manchester
+ <i>Examiner</i> congratulates its readers that the "American
+ devil" has been taken by the throat, and ere long his yells
+ will be heard no more.</p>
+
+ <p>John Leech, it is said, was actually driven from house to
+ house in a vain effort to escape the nuisance of
+ organ-grinders, whom he has immortalized in Punch by many
+ exquisite sketches, showing that they know "the vally of peace
+ and quietness." Some of his friends declare that this nuisance
+ so worked on his nerves that he may be said to have died of
+ organ-grinders. Holmes has immortalized the same guild of
+ wandering minstrels as a sort of "crusaders sent from infernal
+ clime to dock the ears of melody and break the legs of time."
+ And yet the hand-organ, so often the subject of municipal
+ legislation, is dulcet music compared with the steam-whistle,
+ even when the latter instrument takes its most ambitiously
+ artistic form of the "Calliope."</p><a name="H_4_0022"
+ id="H_4_0022"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h3>SIAMESE NEWS.</h3>
+
+ <p>Letters recently received from Bangkok, Siam, bearing date
+ July 25, 1872, give the following interesting items.</p>
+
+ <p>His Majesty has just appointed an English tutor to his royal
+ brothers, associating with them some of the sons of the higher
+ nobles to the number of twenty. This certainly indicates
+ progress in liberal and enlarged views in a land where hitherto
+ no noble, however exalted his rank or worthy his character, was
+ considered a fit associate for the princes of the royal family,
+ who have always been trained to hold themselves entirely aloof
+ from those about them. The young king now on the throne has
+ changed all this, and says he wishes not only that his brothers
+ shall have the advantage of studying with others of their own
+ age, but that they should thus learn to know their people
+ better, and by mingling with them freely in their studies and
+ sports acquire more liberal views of men and things than their
+ ancestors had. He insists that his young brothers and their
+ classmates shall stand on precisely the same footing, and each
+ be treated by the teacher according to his merits. The king
+ intends to appoint yet other teachers in his family for both
+ boys and girls; and though perhaps the time may not yet have
+ come, it is certainly not far distant, when Siam will sustain
+ high schools and colleges, both literary and scientific.</p>
+
+ <p>The religious aspect of the nation is somewhat less
+ promising. Though the royal edict gives protection to all
+ religions, and permits every man to choose for himself in
+ matters of conscience, it can scarcely be said that the two
+ kings take any real interest in Christianity. They think less
+ of Booddhism, its mystic creed and imposing ceremonies, and
+ have made very many changes in the form of worship; but,
+ apparently, they are no more Christians than were their
+ respective fathers, the late first and second kings. They treat
+ Christianity with outward respect, because they esteem it
+ decorous to do so; and the same is true of the regent and prime
+ minister; but none of them even profess any real regard for the
+ worship of the true God. The concessions made thus far indicate
+ progress in civilization, not in piety; and while the kings and
+ their subjects are assuredly loosing their grasp on Booddhism,
+ they are not reaching out to lay hold on Christianity. It seems
+ rather as if the whole nation were swaying off into the frigid
+ regions of skepticism, and, influenced by the example of many
+ unworthy representatives of Christian countries, they live only
+ for the luxuries and laxities of the present life. Priestly
+ robes are much less frequently seen on the river and in the
+ streets than formerly; and many of the clergy no longer reside
+ at the temples, but with their families in their own houses;
+ thus relinquishing even the pretence of celibacy, which has
+ hitherto been one of the very strongest points of Booddhism,
+ giving it an appearance of sanctity and a hold on the
+ affections of the people that nothing else can do. With this
+ rapidly-increasing renunciation of priestly celibacy and the
+ daily-diminishing ranks of the clergy, Booddhism, the mammoth
+ religion of the world, seems tottering to ruin, and even the
+ present generation may see its utter demolition, at least so
+ far as Siam is concerned. Services at the temples are now held
+ in imitation of English morning and evening prayers; a moral
+ essay is read, at which the body-guards of the kings and the
+ government officers are generally required to be present, and
+ the remainder of the day they are excused from duty, instead of
+ being kept, as formerly, Sundays and week-days, in almost
+ perpetual attendance on His Majesty.</p>
+
+ <p>The supreme king is now in his twentieth year, and will take
+ the reins of government this year. He is tall and slight in
+ person, gentlemanlike in manners, perfectly well bred, and
+ always courteous to strangers, though even more modest and
+ unassuming than was his father, the priest-king, whose praises
+ are still fresh in every heart. His Majesty speaks English
+ quite creditably, wears the English dress most of the time, and
+ keeps himself well informed as to matters and things generally.
+ His reign, thus far, promises well for himself and his
+ kingdom.</p>
+
+ <p>The second king, still called King <i>George Washington</i>,
+ is now about thirty, and a most noble specimen of the courtly
+ Oriental gentleman. His tall, compact figure is admirably
+ developed both for strength and beauty, his face is full and
+ pleasing, and his head finely formed. He is affable in manner,
+ converses readily in English, and is fond of Europeans and
+ their customs. He keeps his father's palace and steamboats in
+ excellent condition, and his body-guard under thorough drill.
+ On a recent visit of the American steamer Moreton he came out
+ on the battlements of his palace, and after watching her
+ progress for some time, he signaled her to lay to, which she
+ did just opposite his palace. He immediately went aboard, and
+ remained for an hour or so, chatting merrily with both ladies
+ and gentlemen, while the steamer puffed up the river a few
+ miles, and then returned for His Majesty to disembark at his
+ own palace. King George occasionally wears the <i>full</i>
+ English dress, either civil or military, but generally only the
+ hat, coat, linen and shoes, with the Siamese
+ <i>p&agrave;h-n&ucirc;ng</i> in lieu of pantaloons. The regent,
+ the minister of foreign affairs and many of the princes and
+ nobles have adopted this mongrel costume, and, to a greater or
+ less extent, our language, manner of living and forms of
+ etiquette. Visitors to the kings now sit on chairs, instead of
+ crouching on cushions before the throne, as formerly; while
+ native princes and ministers of state no longer prostrate
+ themselves with their faces in the dust in the royal presence,
+ but stand at the foot of the throne while holding an audience
+ with their Majesties, each being allowed full opportunity to
+ state his case or present any petition he may desire. The
+ sovereigns are no longer unknown, mysterious personages, whose
+ features their people have never been permitted to look upon;
+ but they may be seen any fine day taking their drives in their
+ own coaches or phaetons, and lifting their hats to passing
+ friends. Nor do they on ordinary occasions deem it necessary to
+ be surrounded by armed soldiers for protection, but go where
+ they list, with only their liveried coachmen and footmen, and
+ perhaps a single companion or secretary inside.</p>
+
+ <p>The city itself has correspondingly improved. Within the
+ walls have just been completed two new streets, meeting at
+ right angles near the mayor's office, where is a public park of
+ circular form very handsomely laid out. The streets radiating
+ from this centre are broad, and lined with new brick houses of
+ two stories and tiled roofs. These are mostly private
+ dwellings, uniformly built; and with their broad sidewalks and
+ shade trees of luxuriant tropical growth present a very
+ picturesque appearance. One wide street, commencing at the
+ royal palace, extends six or seven miles through the city,
+ reaching the river near a little village called Pak-lat-bon.
+ This is the fashionable <i>drive</i>, where may be seen not
+ only their Majesties, the regent, the prime minister and other
+ high dignitaries lounging in stately equipages drawn by two or
+ four prancing steeds, but many private citizens of different
+ nations in their light pony-carriages, palanquins, etc.,
+ instead of the invariable barges and <i>sampans</i> of a few
+ years ago, when the river was the "Broadway" of the city and
+ the canals its cross-streets. Steamers of various dimensions
+ now busily ply the river: the kings own several, which they use
+ for pleasure-boats; eight or ten are fitted up as war-steamers,
+ and others are packets to Singapore, China and elsewhere,
+ carrying passengers and merchandise.</p>
+
+ <p>The regent, <i>Pra-Nai-Wai,</i> is a sedate, dignified,
+ courteous gentleman of sixty-five, who walks erect with firm
+ step and manly form, and with mental and physical powers still
+ unimpaired. His half-brother, who filled the post of minister
+ of foreign affairs at the commencement of the present reign,
+ died blind some little time back, after twice paying ten
+ thousand dollars to a Dutch oculist from Batavia to operate on
+ his eyes for cataract. His successor, the present minister, is
+ one of the finest specimens of a Siamese gentleman in the
+ country. He was first a provincial governor; then went on a
+ special embassy to England; last year attended the supreme king
+ on his visit to Singapore and Batavia; and recently accompanied
+ him again to India, whence the royal party have but just
+ returned. The regal convoy consisted of five or six
+ war-steamers, and His Majesty, besides his own officers, was
+ escorted also by the English consul at Bangkok, the
+ harbor-master and several European officers in the Siamese
+ service. The royal tourist visited Rangoon, Calcutta, Madras,
+ Bombay, Allahabad and Ceylon; and entered with great gusto into
+ the spirit of his travels, seeing everything, asking questions
+ and taking notes as he passed from point to point. The regent,
+ in conjunction with the second king, held the reins of
+ government during the absence of the first king; and in truth
+ the regent has for the most part governed the country since the
+ death of the late king, in 1868, the young heir being then but
+ fifteen years of age. The regent is decidedly a favorite with
+ both kings and people, and his rule has been popular and
+ prosperous.</p><a name="H_4_0023"
+ id="H_4_0023"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h3>MADISON AS A TEMPERANCE MAN.</h3>
+
+ <p>Many years ago, when the temperance movement began in
+ Virginia, ex-President Madison lent the weight of his influence
+ to the cause. Case-bottles and decanters disappeared from the
+ sideboard at Montpelier&mdash;wine was no longer dispensed to
+ the many visitors at that hospitable mansion. Nor was this all.
+ Harvest began, but the customary barrel of whisky was not
+ purchased, and the song of the scythemen in the wheatfield
+ languished. In lieu of whisky, there was a beverage most
+ innocuous, unstimulating and unpalatable to the army of dusky
+ laborers.</p>
+
+ <p>The following morning, Mr. Madison called in his head-man to
+ make the usual inquiry, "Nelson, how comes on the crop?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Po'ly, Mars' Jeems&mdash;monsus po'ly."</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, what's the matter?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Things is seyus."</p>
+
+ <p>"What do you mean by serious?"</p>
+
+ <p>"We gwine los' dat crap."</p>
+
+ <p>"Lose the crop! Why should we lose it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"'Cause dat ar crap ar heap too big a crap to be gethered
+ 'thout whisky. 'Lasses-and-water nuver gethered no crap sence
+ de woil' war' made, ner 'taint gwine to."</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Madison succumbed: the whisky was procured, the "crap"
+ was "gethered," case-bottles and decanters reappeared, and the
+ ancient order was restored at Montpelier, never again to be
+ disturbed.</p>
+
+ <h2><a name="H_NOTE"
+ id="H_NOTE"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> NOTES.</h2>
+
+ <p>Amidst the recent hurly-burly of politics in France,
+ involving the fate of the Thiers government, if not of the
+ republic itself, a minor grievance of the artists has probably
+ been little noticed by the general public. Yet a grievance it
+ was, and one which caused men of taste and sentiment to cry out
+ loudly. The threatened act of vandalism against which they
+ protested was a proposal to fell part of the Forest of
+ Fontainebleau. The castle and forest have long belonged to the
+ state, but why the woods should now be cut down by the
+ government is not clear. The motive is probably to turn the
+ fine timber into cash, though a Paris wit, in pretended despair
+ of other explanation, jokingly alleged, at the time of Prince
+ Napoleon's late expulsion from France, that the government was
+ afraid the prince, taking refuge in its dense recesses, might
+ there conceal himself (<i>&agrave; la</i> Charles II., we
+ presume) in one of its venerable oaks. At any rate, it was
+ arranged to level a part of the timber, and on hearing of this
+ threatened mutilation of a favorite resort the French artists
+ rallied to beg M. Thiers, like the character in General
+ Morris's ballad, to "spare those trees." And well may they
+ petition, for the forest contains nearly thirty-five thousand
+ acres, abounding in beautiful and picturesque scenery. It can
+ boast finer trees than any other French forest, while its
+ meadows, lawns and cliffs furnish specimens of almost every
+ plant and flower to be found in France. Now, when we add that
+ its views are exceedingly varied, its rocks, ravines, plateaus
+ and thickets each offering some entirely different and
+ admirable study to the landscape-painters who frequent it in
+ great numbers during the spring and autumn months (for it is
+ only fourteen or fifteen leagues out of Paris, on the high road
+ to Lyons), we have shown reason enough for the consentaneous
+ action on the part of the men and women of the brush and
+ pencil.</p>
+
+ <p>The traveled reader will hardly need to be told that good
+ judges consider the forest and castle to compose the finest
+ domain in France. But there are also numberless historic
+ reminiscences intertwined with Fontainebleau. And, by the way,
+ it was originally known as the For&ecirc;t de Bierre, until
+ some thirsty huntsmen, who found its spring deliciously
+ refreshing, rebaptized it as Fontaine Belle Eau. Such, at
+ least, is the old story. The first founding of a royal
+ residence there dates at least as far back as the twelfth
+ century, and possibly much farther, while the present
+ ch&acirc;teau was begun by Francis I. in the sixteenth. So many
+ famous historic events, indeed, have taken place within the
+ precincts of the forest that the committee of "Protection
+ Artistique" is pardonable in claiming that "Fontainebleau
+ Forest ought to be ranked with those national historic
+ monuments which must at all hazards be preserved for the
+ admiration of artists and tourists," as well as of patriotic
+ Frenchmen. What illustrations shall we select from among the
+ events connected with it, about which a thousand volumes of
+ history, poetry, art, science and romance have been composed?
+ At Fontainebleau, Charles V. was royally feasted by Francis;
+ there the Edict of Nantes was revoked; there Cond&eacute; died;
+ there the decree of divorce between Napoleon and Josephine was
+ pronounced; and there the emperor afterward signed his own
+ abdication. It is true that nobody proposes to demolish the
+ castle, and that is the historic centre; but the petitioners
+ claim that it is difficult and dangerous to attempt to divide
+ the domain into historic and non-historic, artistic and
+ non-artistic parts, with a view to its mutilation. There is
+ ground for hoping that a favorable response will be given to
+ the eloquent appeal of the artists and amateurs.</p>
+
+ <p>The vanity of Victor Hugo, though always "Olympian," perhaps
+ never mounted to a sublimer height than in the reply he sent to
+ M. Catulle Mendes on receiving from him the news of Gautier's
+ death. It contained but half a dozen lines, yet found space to
+ declare, "Of the men of 1830, <i>I alone am left</i>. It is now
+ my turn." The profound egotism of "<i>il ne reste plus que
+ moi</i>" could not escape being vigorously lashed by V. Hugo's
+ old comrades of the quill, dating back with him to 1830, and
+ now so loftily ignored. "See, even in his epistles of
+ condolence," they cry, "the omnipresent <i>moi</i> of Hugo must
+ appear, to overshadow everything else!" One indignant writer
+ declares the poet to be a mere walking personal pronoun.
+ Another humorously pities those still extant contemporaries of
+ 1830 who, after having for forty years dedicated their songs
+ and romances and dramas to Hugo, now learn from the selfsame
+ maw which has greedily gulped their praises that they
+ themselves do not exist, never did exist. One man of genius
+ slyly writes: "Some of us veterans will find ourselves
+ embarrassed&mdash;Michelet, G. Sand, Janin, Sandeau <i>et un
+ pen moi</i>. Is it possible that we died a long time ago, one
+ after the other, without knowing it? Was it a delusion on our
+ part to fancy ourselves existing, or was our existence only a
+ bad dream?" But to Victor Hugo even these complaints will
+ perhaps seem to smoke like fresh incense on the altar of
+ self-adulation which this great genius keeps ever lighted.</p>
+
+ <p>The reader may remember the story of that non-committal
+ editor who during the late canvass, desiring to propitiate all
+ his subscribers of both parties, hoisted the ticket of
+ "Gr&mdash;&mdash; and &mdash;&mdash;n" at the top of his
+ column, thus giving those who took the paper their choice of
+ interpretations between "Grant and Wilson" and "Grceley and
+ Brown." A story turning on the same style of point (and
+ probably quite as apocryphal, though the author labels it
+ "<i>historique</i>") is told of an army officers' mess in
+ France. A brother-soldier from a neighboring detachment having
+ come in, and a <i>champenoise</i> having been uncorked in his
+ honor, "Gentlemen," said the guest, raising his glass, "I am
+ about to propose a toast at once patriotic and political." A
+ chorus of hasty ejaculations and of murmurs at once greeted
+ him. "Yes, gentlemen," coolly proceeded the orator, "I drink to
+ a thing which&mdash;an object that&mdash;Bah! I will out with
+ it at once. It begins with an <i>R</i> and ends with an
+ <i>e</i>."</p>
+
+ <p>"Capital!" whispers a young lieutenant of Bordeaux
+ promotion. "He proposes the <i>Republique</i>, without
+ offending the old fogies by saying the word."</p>
+
+ <p>"Nonsense! He means the <i>Radicale</i>," replies the other,
+ an old captain from Cassel.</p>
+
+ <p>"Upon my word," says a third as he lifts his glass, "our
+ friend must mean <i>la Royaute</i>."</p>
+
+ <p>"I see!" cries a one-legged veteran of Froschweiler: "we
+ drink to <i>la Revanche</i>."</p>
+
+ <p>In fact, the whole party drank the toast heartily, each
+ interpreting it to his liking.</p>
+
+ <p>In the hands of a Swift even so trivial an incident might be
+ made to point a moral on the facility with which alike in
+ theology and politics&mdash;from Athanasian Creed to Cincinnati
+ or Philadelphia Platform&mdash;men comfortably interpret to
+ their own diverse likings some doctrine that "begins with an
+ <i>R</i> and ends with an <i>e</i>," and swallow it with great
+ unanimity and enthusiasm.</p>
+
+ <p>Possibly the death of Mr. Greeley, after a prolonged
+ delirium induced in part by political excitement, may add for
+ Americans some fresh interest to the theory of a paper which
+ just previous to that pathetic event M. Lunier had read before
+ the Paris Academy of Medicine. The author confessed his
+ statistics to be incomplete, but regarded them as ample for the
+ decisive formulation of the proposition that great political
+ crises tend to increase the number of cases of mental
+ alienation. The leading point of his elaborate argument appears
+ to be the classification of fresh cases of insanity developed
+ since the beginning of the late French war. The strongest
+ comparison is one indicating an excess of seven per cent, in
+ the number of such cases, proportioned to the population in the
+ departments conquered and occupied by the Germans, over those
+ which they did not invade. Finally, M. Lunier reckons the cases
+ of mental alienation induced by the late political and military
+ events in France at from twelve hundred to fifteen hundred.
+ Politics without war may, it is considered, produce the same
+ results&mdash;results not at all surprising, of course, except
+ as to their extent. As to this last, if M. Lunier's figures and
+ deductions be correct, the mental strain of exciting politics
+ is even more destructive than has been generally supposed.</p>
+
+ <h2><a name="H_4_0025"
+ id="H_4_0025"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> LITERATURE OF THE
+ DAY.</h2>
+
+ <p>Gareth and Lynette. By Alfred Tennyson, D.C.L.,
+ Poet-Laureate. Boston: J.R. Osgood &amp; Co.</p>
+
+ <p>"With this poem the author concludes the Idyls of the King."
+ The occasion is a tempting one to review the long series of
+ Arthurian lays written by Tennyson, from the <i>Mort d'
+ Arthur</i>, and the pretty song about Lancelot and Guinevere,
+ and the first casting of "Elaine's" legend in the form of
+ <i>The Lady of Shallot</i>, down to the present tale, flung
+ like a capricious field flower into a wreath complete enough
+ without it. The poet's first adventure into the
+ subject&mdash;the mysterious, shadowy and elevated performance
+ called the <i>Mort d' Arthur</i>&mdash;will probably be always
+ thought the best. Tennyson, when he wrote it, was just trying
+ the peculiarities of his style: he was testing the quality of
+ his cadences, the ring of his long sententious lines repeated
+ continually as refrains, and the trustworthiness of his artful,
+ much-sacrificing simplicity. He put as it were a spot or two of
+ pigment on the end of his painting-knife, and held it up into
+ the air of the vaporous traditions of the Round Table. It stood
+ the test, it had the color; but the artist, uncertain of his
+ style, his public and his own liking, made a number of other
+ tentatives before he could decide to go on in the manner he
+ commenced with. He tried the <i>Guinevere</i>, laughing and
+ galloping in its ballad-movement; he tried the <i>Shallot</i>,
+ with a triple rhyme and a short positive refrain, like a bell
+ rung in an incantation, and brought up every minute by a finger
+ pressed upon the edge. Either of these three&mdash;although the
+ metre of the first was the only one endurable by the ear in the
+ case of a long series of poems&mdash;either of these had, it
+ may be positively said, a general tone more suitable to the
+ ancient feeling, and more consistent with the duty of a modern
+ poet arranging for new ears the legends collected by Sir Thomas
+ Malory, than the general tone of the present Idyls. Those first
+ experiments, charged like a full sponge with the essence and
+ volume of primitive legend, went to their purpose without
+ retrospection or vacillation: each short tale, whether it
+ laughed or moaned, promulgated itself like an oracle. The
+ teller seemed to have been listening to the voice of Fate, and
+ whether, Guinevere swayed the bridle-rein, or Elaine's web flew
+ out and floated wide, or Lancelot sang tirra-lirra by the
+ river, it was asserted with the positiveness of a Hebrew
+ chronicle, which we do not question because it is history. But
+ we hardly have such an illusion in reading the late Idyls. We
+ seem to be in the presence of a constructor who arranges
+ things, of a moralist turning ancient stories with a latent
+ purpose of decorum, of an official Englishman looking about for
+ old confirmations of modern sociology, of a salaried laureate
+ inventing a prototype of Prince Albert. The singleness of a
+ story-teller who has convinced himself that he tells a true
+ story is gone. That this diversion into the region of didactics
+ is accompanied, on our poet's part, with every ingenuity of
+ ornament, and every grace of a style which people have learned
+ to like and which he has made his own, need not be said. The
+ Tennysonian beauties are all there. The work takes its place in
+ literature, obscuring the Arthurian work of Dryden, as Milton's
+ achievement of <i>Paradise Lost</i> obscured the Italian work
+ on the same subject which preceded it. The story is told, and
+ the things of the Round Table can hardly be related again in
+ English, any more than the tale of Troy could be sung again in
+ Greek after the poem of Homer. But beauties do not necessarily
+ compose into perfect Beauty, and the achievement of a task
+ neatly done does not prevent the eye from wandering over the
+ work to see if the material has been used to the best
+ advantage. So, the reader who has allowed himself to rest long
+ in the simple magic evoked by Malory or in the Celtic air of
+ Villemarque's legends, will be fain to ask whether a man of
+ Tennyson's force could not have given to his century a
+ recasting which would have satisfied primitive credulity as
+ well as modern subtility. There is an antique bronze at Naples
+ that has been cleaned and set up in a splendid museum, and
+ perhaps looks more graceful than ever; but the pipe that used
+ to lead to the lips, and the passage that used to communicate
+ with the priest-chamber, are gone, and nothing can compensate
+ for them: it used to be a form and a voice, and now it is
+ nothing but a form.</p>
+
+ <p>We have just observed that in our opinion the first essays
+ made by the Laureate with his Arthurian material had the best
+ ring, or at least had some excellences lost to the later work.
+ <i>Gareth and Lynette</i>, however, by its fluency and
+ simplicity, and by not being overcharged with meaning, seems to
+ part company with some of this overweighted later performance,
+ and to attempt a recovery of the directness and spring of the
+ start. It is, however, far behind all of them in a momentous
+ particular; for in narrating <i>them</i>, the poet, while able
+ to keep up his immediate connection with the source of
+ tradition, and to narrate with the directness of belief, had
+ still some undercurrent of thought which he meant to convey,
+ and which he succeeded in keeping track of: Arthur and
+ Guinevere, in the little song, ride along like primeval beings
+ of the world&mdash;the situation seems the type of all
+ seduction; the Lady of Shallot is not alone the recluse who
+ sees life in a mirror, she is the cloistered Middle Age itself,
+ and when her mirror breaks we feel that a thousand glasses are
+ bursting, a thousand webs are parting, and that the times are
+ coming eye to eye with the actual. In those younger days,
+ Tennyson, possessed with a subject, and as it were floating in
+ it, could pour out a legend with the credulity of a child and
+ the clear convincing insight of a teacher: when he came in
+ mature life to apply himself to the rounded work, he had more
+ of a disposition to teach, and less of that imaginative reach
+ which is like belief; and <i>now</i> he is telling a story
+ again for the sake of the story, but without the deeper
+ meaning. Lynette is a supercilious damsel who asks redress of
+ the knights of the Round Table: Gareth, a male Cinderella,
+ starts from the kitchen to defend her, and after conquering her
+ prejudices by his bravery, assumes his place as a disguised
+ prince. It is a plain little comedy, not much in Tennyson's
+ line: there are places where he tries to imitate the artless
+ disconnected speech of youth; and here, as with the little
+ nun's babble in <i>Guinevere</i>, and with some other passages
+ of factitious simplicity, the poet makes rather queer work:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Gold? said I gold?&mdash;ay then, why he,
+ or she,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Or whosoe'er it was, or half the
+ world,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Had ventured&mdash;<i>had</i> the thing I
+ spake of been</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Mere gold&mdash;but this was all of that
+ true steel</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Whereof they forged the brand
+ Excalibur,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And lightnings played about it in the
+ storm, etc.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>It may be questioned whether hap-hazard talk ever, in any
+ age of human speech, took a form like that, though it is just
+ like Tennyson in many a weary part of his poetry. The blank
+ verse, for its part, is broken with all the old skill, and
+ there are lines of beautiful license, like this:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Camelot, a city of shadowy palaces,</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>or strengthened with the extra quantity, like this:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Stay, felon knight, I avenge me for my
+ friend!</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>or imitating the motion described, as these:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">The hoof of his horse slept in the
+ stream, the stream</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Descended, and the Sun was washed
+ away;</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>but occasionally the effort to give variety leads into mere
+ puzzles and disagreeable fractures of metre, such as the
+ following quatrain:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Courteous or bestial from the moment,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Such as have nor law nor king; and three
+ of these</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Proud in their fantasy, call themselves
+ the Day,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Morning-Star, and Noon-Sun, and
+ Evening-Star.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The first line in this quotation, if it be not a misprint of
+ the American edition, can only be brought to any kind of rule
+ by accenting each polysyllable on the last, and is not, when
+ even that is done, a pleasant piece of caprice. There are
+ plenty of phrases that shock the attention sufficiently to keep
+ it from stagnating on the smooth surface of the verse; such
+ are&mdash;"ever-highering eagle-circles," "there were none but
+ few goodlier than he," "tipt with trenchant steel," and the
+ expression, already famous, of "tip-tilted" for Lynette's nose;
+ to which may be added the object of Gareth's attention,
+ mentioned in the third line of the poem, when he "stared at the
+ <i>spate</i>." But in the matter of descriptive power we do not
+ know that the Laureate has succeeded better for a long time
+ past in his touches of landscape-painting: the pictures of
+ halls, castles, rivers and woods are all felicitous. For
+ example, this in five lines, where the travelers saw</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Bowl-shaped, through tops of many
+ thousand pines,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">A gloomy-gladed hollow slowly sink</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">To westward; in the deeps whereof a
+ mere,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Round as the red eye of an eagle-owl,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Under the half-dead sunset glared; and
+ cries</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Ascended.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Or this simple and beautiful sketch of crescent
+ moonlight:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i12">Silent the silent field</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">They traversed. Arthur's harp tho'
+ summer-wan,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">In counter motion to the clouds,
+ allured</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The glance of Gareth dreaming on his
+ liege.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">A star shot.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>It is still, perfect, and utterly simple sketches like
+ these, thrown off in the repose of power, that form the best
+ setting for a heroic or poetical action: what better device was
+ ever invented, even by Tennyson himself, for striking just the
+ right note in the reader's mind while thinking of a noble
+ primitive knight, than that in another Idyl, where Lancelot
+ went along, looking at a star, "<i>and wondered what it
+ was"?</i> Of a more imaginative kind of beauty are the
+ descriptions of the walls of rock near Castle Dangerous, decked
+ by the hermit with tinted bas-reliefs, and the fine one of
+ Camelot, looking as if "built by fairy kings," with its city
+ gate surmounted by the figures of the three mystic queens, "the
+ friends of Arthur," and decked upon the keystone with the image
+ of the Lady, whose form is set in ripples of stone and crossed
+ by mystic fish, while her drapery weeps from her sides as water
+ flowing away. The most charming part of the character-painting
+ is where the shrewish Lynette, as her estimate of the
+ scullion-knight gradually rises in view of his mighty deeds,
+ evinces her kindlier mood, not directly in speech, but by
+ catches of love-songs breaking out of the midst of her scornful
+ gibes: this is a very subtle and suitable and poetical way of
+ eliciting the under-workings of the damsel's mind, and it is
+ continued through five or six pages in an interrupted carol,
+ until at last the maiden, wholly won, bids him ride by her
+ side, and finishes her lay:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">O trefoil, sparkling on the rainy
+ plain,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">O rainbow, with three colors after
+ rain,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Shine sweetly: thrice my love hath smiled
+ on me.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The allegory by which Gareth's four opponents are made to
+ form a sort of stumbling succession representing Morn, Noon,
+ Evening, and Night or Death, is hardly worth the introduction,
+ but it is not insisted upon: the last of these knights,
+ besieging Castle Perilous in a skull helmet, and clamoring for
+ marriage with Lynette's sister Lyonors, turns out to be a
+ large-sized, fresh-faced and foolish boy, who issues from the
+ skull "as a flower new blown," and fatuously explains that his
+ brothers have dressed him out in burlesque and deposited him as
+ a bugbear at the gate. This is not very salutary allegorizing,
+ but it is soon over, and the poem closed, leaving a pleasant
+ perfume in the reader's mind of chivalry, errantry and the
+ delicious days before the invention of civilization.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>Handbook of the History of Philosophy. By Dr. Albert
+ Schwegler. Translated arid annotated by James Hutchison
+ Stirling, LL.D. New York: Putnam.</p>
+
+ <p>Spinoza teaches that "substance is God;" but, says Mr.
+ Matthew Arnold, "propositions about substance pass by mankind
+ at large like the idle wind, which mankind at large regards
+ not: it will not even listen to a word about these
+ propositions, unless it first learns what their author was
+ driving at with them, and finds that this object of his is one
+ with which it sympathizes." There is no way of getting the
+ multitude to listen to Spinoza's <i>Ethics</i> or Plato's
+ <i>Dialectics</i> but something is gained when a man of science
+ like Dr. Schwegler happens to possess the gift of fluent and
+ easy statement, and can pour into a work like the present,
+ which is the expansion of a hasty encyclopaedia article, the
+ vivacity of current speech, and the impulse which gives unity
+ to a long history while it excludes crabbed digressions. It
+ happens that the American world received the first translation
+ of Schwegler's <i>History</i> <i>of Philosophy</i>; and it may
+ be asked, What need have Americans of a subsequent version by a
+ Scotch doctor of laws? The answer is, that Mr. Seelye's earlier
+ rendering was taken from a first edition, and that the present
+ one includes the variations made in five editions which have
+ now been issued. Even on British ground the work thus
+ translated has reached three editions, and the multitude of
+ "mankind at large," hearing of these repeated editions in
+ Edinburgh and of twenty thousand copies sold in Germany, may
+ begin to prick up its ears, and to think that this is one of
+ the easily-read philosophies of modern times, of which Taine
+ and Michelet have the secret. It is not so: abstractions stated
+ with scientific precision in their elliptic slang or
+ technicality are not and cannot be made easy reading: the
+ strong hands of condensation which Schwegler pressed down upon
+ the material he controlled so perfectly have not left it
+ lighter or more digestible. The reader of this manual, for
+ instance, will be invited to consider the Eleatic argumentation
+ that nothing exists but Identity, "which is the be&euml;nt, and
+ that Difference, the non-be&euml;nt, does not exist; and
+ therefore that he must not only not go on talking about
+ difference, but that he must not allude to difference as being
+ anything but the non-be&euml;nt; for if he casts about for a
+ synonym, and arrives at the notion that he may say non-existent
+ for non-be&euml;nt, he is abjectly wrong, for be&euml;nt does
+ not mean existent, and non-be&euml;nt non-existent, but it must
+ be considered that the be&euml;nt is strictly the non-existent,
+ and the existent the non-be&euml;nt." Such are the amenities of
+ expression into which an eloquent metaphysician, trying his
+ best to speak popularly, is led. Yet the book is readable to
+ that orderly application of the mind which such studies exact,
+ and is the firmest and strictest guide now speaking our English
+ tongue. Its steady attention to the business in hand, from the
+ pre-Socratic philosphies down through the great age of the
+ Greek revival, to Germany and Hegel at last, is most sustained
+ and admirable. Indeed, few thinkers of Anglo-Saxon birth are
+ able even to praise such a book as it deserves. The only real
+ impediment to its acceptance by scholars of our race is that
+ its attention to modern philosophy is rather partial, the
+ French and the Germans getting most of the story, and English
+ philosophers like Locke and Hume receiving scant attention,
+ while Paley is not recognized. This class of omissions is
+ attended to by the Scotch translator in a mass of annotations
+ which lead him into a broad and interesting view of British
+ philosophy, in the course of which he has some severe
+ reflections on the ignorance of Mr. Lewes and Mr. Mill. On
+ account of these valuable notes, and also for the alterations
+ made by Schwegler himself, we feel that we must invite American
+ scholars possessing the Seelye translation to replace it or
+ accompany it by this present version, which is a cheap and
+ compassable volume.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>Joseph Noirel's Revenge. By Victor Cherbuliez. Translated
+ from the French by Wm. F. West, A. M. New York: Holt &amp;
+ Williams.</p>
+
+ <p>M. Victor Cherbuliez belongs to a Genevese family long and
+ honorably connected with literature in the capacity of
+ publishers both at Paris and Geneva. It is in the latter town
+ and the adjacent region that the scene of the present
+ story&mdash;the first, we believe, of the author's works which
+ has found its way into English&mdash;is laid; and much of its
+ charm is derived from the local coloring with which many of the
+ characters and incidents are invested. Even the quiet home-life
+ of so beautiful and renowned a place cannot but be tinted by
+ reflections from the incomparable beauties of its surroundings,
+ and from the grand and vivid passages of its singularly
+ picturesque history. The subordinate figures on the canvas have
+ accordingly an interest greater than what arises from their
+ commonplace individualities and their meagre part in the
+ action&mdash;like barndoor fowls pecking and clucking beside
+ larger bipeds in a walled yard steeped in sunlight. But the
+ sunlight which gives a delicious warmth and brightness to the
+ earlier chapters of the novel is soon succeeded by gloom and
+ tempest. The interest is more and more concentrated on the few
+ principal persons; and the action, which at the outset promised
+ to be light and amusing, with merely so much of tenderness and
+ pathos as may belong to the higher comedy, becomes by degrees
+ deeply tragical, and ends in a catastrophe which is saved from
+ being horrible and revolting only by the shadows that forecast
+ and the softening strains that attend it. In point of
+ construction and skillful handling the story is as effective as
+ French art alone could have made it, while it has an
+ under-meaning rendered all the more suggestive by being left to
+ find its way into the reader's reflections without any obvious
+ prompting. The heroine, sole child of a prosperous bourgeois
+ couple, stands between two lovers&mdash;one the last relic of a
+ noble Burgundian family; the other a workman with socialist
+ tendencies. Marguerite Mirion is invested with all the
+ fascination which beauty of face, simplicity of mind, purity of
+ soul, sweetness of disposition and joyousness of spirit can
+ impart. Yet she is, and feels herself to be, entirely
+ <i>bourgeoise,</i> longing for no ideal heights, worldly or
+ spiritual, ready for all ordinary duties, content with simple
+ and innocent pleasures, rinding in the life, the thoughts, the
+ occupations and enjoyments of her class all that is needed to
+ make the current of her life run smoothly and to satisfy the
+ cravings of her bright but gentle nature. It is in simple
+ obedience to the will of her parents that she marries Count
+ Roger d'Ornis, and is carried from her happy home at
+ Mon-Plaisir to a dilapidated castle in the Jura, where there
+ are no smiling faces or loving hearts to make her
+ welcome&mdash;where, on the contrary, she meets only with
+ haughty, spiteful or morose looks and a chilling and gloomy
+ atmosphere. It is from sheer necessity that she accepts the aid
+ of Joseph Noirel, her father's head-workman, whose ardent
+ spirit, quickened by the consciousness of talent, but rendered
+ morbid by the slights which his birth and position have
+ entailed, has been plunged into blackest night by the loss of
+ the single star that had illumined its firmament. Count Roger
+ is not wholly devoid of honor and generosity; but he has no
+ true appreciation of his wife, and will sacrifice her without
+ remorse to save his own reputation. Joseph, on the other hand,
+ is ready to dare all things to protect her from harm; but he
+ cannot forego the reward which entails upon her a deeper
+ misery. It is Marguerite alone who, in the terrible struggle of
+ fate and of clashing interests and desires, rises to the height
+ of absolute self-abnegation; and this not through any sudden
+ development of qualities or intuitions foreign to her previous
+ modes of thought, but by the simple application of these to the
+ hard and complicated problems which have suddenly confronted
+ her. Herein lies the novelty of the conception and the lesson
+ which the author has apparently intended to convey. See, he
+ seems to say, how the bourgeois nature, equally scorned by the
+ classes above and below it as the embodiment of vulgar ease and
+ selfishness, contains precisely the elements of true heroism
+ which are wanting alike in those who set conventional rules
+ above moral laws and in those who revolt against all
+ restrictions. The book is thus an apology for a class which is
+ no favorite with poets or romancers; but, as we have said, the
+ design is only to be inferred from the story, and may easily
+ pass unnoticed, at least with American readers. The character
+ of Noirel is powerfully drawn, but it is less original than
+ that of the heroine, belonging, for example, to the same type
+ as the hero of <i>Le Rouge et le Noir</i>&mdash;"ce Robespierre
+ de village," as Sainte-Beuve, we believe, calls him.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>Homes and Hospitals; or, Two Phases of Woman's Work, as
+ exhibited in the Labors of Amy Button and Agnes E. Jones.
+ Boston: American Tract Society; New York: Hurd &amp;
+ Houghton.</p>
+
+ <p>Doubtless we should not, though most of us do, feel a
+ tenderness for the Dorcas who proves to be a lady of culture
+ and distinction, rather different from the careless respect we
+ accord to the Dorcas who has large feet and hands, and
+ mismanages her <i>h</i>'s. In this elegant little book "Amy" is
+ the descendant of influential patrons and patronesses, and
+ "Agnes" is the lovely saint whom Miss Nightingale calls "Una,"
+ though her high-bred purity and lowly self-dedication rather
+ recall the character of Elizabeth of Hungary. Agnes, in Crook
+ lane and Abbot's street, encounters old paupers who have
+ already enjoyed the bounty of her ancestress's (Dame Dutton)
+ legacy. When she becomes interested in the old Indian
+ campaigner, Miles, she is able to procure his admission to
+ Chelsea through the influence of "my brother, Colonel Dutton."
+ She lightens her watches by reading Manzoni's novel, <i>I
+ Promessi Sposi,</i> she quotes Lord Bacon, and compares the
+ hospital-nurses to the witches in <i>Macbeth</i>. These mental
+ and social graces do not, perhaps, assist the practical part of
+ her ministrations, but they undoubtedly chasten the influence
+ of her ministrations on her own character. It is as a purist
+ and an aristocrat of the best kind that Miss Dutton forms
+ within her own mind this resolution: "If the details of evil
+ are unavoidably brought under your eye, let not your thoughts
+ rest upon them a moment longer than is absolutely needful.
+ Dismiss them with a vigorous effort as soon as you have done
+ your best to apply a remedy: commit the matter into higher
+ Hands, then turn to your book, your music, your wood-carving,
+ your pet recreation, whatever it is. This is one way, at least,
+ of keeping the mind elastic and pure." And with the discretion
+ of rare breeding she carries into the haunts of vice and
+ miserable intrigue the Italian byword: <i>Orecchie spalancate,
+ e bocca stretta</i>. A similar elevation, but also a sense that
+ responsibility to her caste requires the most tender humility,
+ may be found in "Una." When about to associate with coarse
+ hired London nurses at St. Thomas's Hospital, she asks herself,
+ "Are you more above those with whom you will have to mix than
+ our Saviour was in every thought and sensitive refinement?" It
+ was by such self-teaching that these high-spirited girls made
+ their life-toil redound to their own purification, as it did to
+ the cause of humanity. The purpose served by binding in one
+ volume the district experiences of Miss Dutton and the hospital
+ record of Miss Jones is that of indicating to the average young
+ lady of our period a diversity of ways in which she may serve
+ our Master and His poor. With "Amy" she may retain her
+ connection with society, and adorn her home and her circle, all
+ the while that she reads the Litany with the decayed governess
+ or <i>Golden Deeds</i> to the dying burglar. With "Agnes" she
+ may plunge into more heroic self-abnegation. Leaving the fair
+ attractions of the world as utterly as the diver leaves the
+ foam and surface of the sea, she may grope for moral pearls in
+ the workhouse of Liverpool or train for her sombre avocation in
+ the asylum at Kaiserwerth. Such absolute dedication will
+ probably have some effect on her "tone" as a lady. She can no
+ longer keep up with the current interests of society. Instead
+ of Shakespeare and Italian literature, which we have seen
+ coloring the career of the district visitor, her life will take
+ on a sort of submarine pallor. The sordid surroundings will
+ press too close for any gleam from the outer world to
+ penetrate. The things of interest will be the wretched things
+ of pauperdom and hospital service&mdash;the slight improvement
+ of Gaffer, the spiritual needs of Gammer, the harsh tyranny of
+ upper nurses. "To-day when out walking," says the brave young
+ lady, as superintendent of a boys' hospital, "I could only keep
+ from crying by running races with my boys." The effect of a
+ training so rigid&mdash;training which sometimes includes
+ stove-blacking and floor-washing&mdash;is to try the pure
+ metal, to eject the merely ornamental young lady whose nature
+ is dross, and to consolidate the valuable nature that is
+ sterling. Miss Agnes, plunged in hard practical work, and
+ unconsciously acquiring a little workmen's slang, gives the
+ final judgment on the utility of such discipline: "Without a
+ regular hard London training I should have been nowhere." Both
+ the saints of the century are now dead, and these memoirs
+ conserve the perfume of their lives.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>Songs from the Old Dramatists. Collected and Edited by Abby
+ Sage Richardson, New York: Hurd &amp; Houghton.</p>
+
+ <p>Any anthology of old English lyrics is a treasure if one can
+ depend upon the correctness of printing and punctuating. Mrs.
+ Richardson has found a quantity of rather recondite ones, and
+ most of the favorites are given too. Only to read her long
+ index of first lines is to catch a succession of dainty fancies
+ and of exquisite rhythms, arranged when the language was
+ crystallizing into beauty under the fanning wings of song. That
+ some of our pet jewels are omitted was to be expected. The
+ compiler does not find space for Rochester's most
+ sincere-seeming stanzas, beginning, "I cannot change as others
+ do"&mdash;among the sweetest and most lyrical utterances which
+ could set the stay-imprisoned hearts of Charles II.'s beauties
+ to bounding with a touch of emotion. Perhaps Rochester was not
+ exactly a dramatist, though that point is wisely strained in
+ other cases. We do not get the "Nay, dearest, think me not
+ unkind," nor do we get the "To all you ladies now on land,"
+ though sailors' lyrics, among the finest legacies of the time
+ when gallant England ruled the waves, are not wanting. We have
+ Sir Charles Sedley's</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">"Love still hath something of the sea</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">From which his mother rose,"</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>and the siren's song, fit for the loveliest of Parthenopes,
+ from Browne's <i>Masque of the Inner Temple</i>, beginning,</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">"Steer, hither steer your winged
+ pines,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">All beaten mariners!"&mdash;</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>songs which severally repeat the fatigue of the sea or that
+ daring energy of its Elizabethan followers which by a false
+ etymology we term chivalrous. We do not find the superb lunacy
+ of "Mad Tom of Bedlam" in the catch beginning, "I know more
+ than Apollo," but we have something almost as spirited, where
+ John Ford sings, in <i>The Sun's Darling</i>,</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">"The dogs have the stag in chase!</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">'Tis a sport to content a king.</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">So-ho! ho! through the skies</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">How the proud bird flies,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And swooping, kills with a grace!</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Now the deer falls! hark! how they
+ ring."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>For what is pensive and retrospective in tone we are given a
+ song of "The Aged Courtier," which once in a pageant touched
+ the finer consciousness of Queen Elizabeth. The unemployed
+ warrior, whose "helmet now shall make a hive for bees," treats
+ the virgin sovereign as his saint and divinity, promising,</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">"And when he saddest sits in holy
+ cell,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">He'll teach his swains this carol for a
+ song:</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Blest be the hearts that wish my
+ sovereign well!</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Cursed be the souls that think her any
+ wrong!</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Goddess! allow this aged man his
+ right</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">To be your beadsman now, that was your
+ knight."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The feudal feeling can hardly be more beautifully
+ expressed.</p>
+
+ <p>From the devotion that was low and lifelong we may turn to
+ the devotion that was loud and fleeting. The love-songs are
+ many and well picked: one is the madrigal from Thomas Lodge's
+ <i>Eitphues' Golden Legacy,</i> which "he wrote," he says, "on
+ the ocean, when every line was wet with a surge, and every
+ humorous passion counterchecked with a storm;" and which (the
+ madrigal) had the good fortune to suggest and name
+ Shakespeare's archest character, Rosalind. We cannot dwell upon
+ this perfumed chaplet of love-ditties. Mrs. Richardson is here
+ doubtless in her element, but she does not always lighten
+ counsel with the wisdom of her words; for instance, when, in
+ Beaumont and Fletcher's "Beauty clear and fair," she makes an
+ attempted emendation in the lines&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">"Where to live near,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">And planted there,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Is still to live and still live new;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Where to gain a favor is</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">More than light perpetual bliss;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Oh make me live by serving you."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>On this the editress says: "I have always been inclined to
+ believe that this line should read: 'More than <i>life</i>,
+ perpetual bliss.'" The image here, where the whole figure is
+ taken from flowers, is of being planted and growing in the glow
+ of the mistress's beauty, whose favor is more fructifying than
+ the sun, and to which he immediately begs to be recalled, "back
+ again, to this <i>light</i>." To say that living anywhere is
+ "more than life" is a forced bombastic notion not in the way of
+ Beaumont and Fletcher, but coming later, and rather
+ characteristic of Poe, with his rant about</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i10">"that infinity with which my wife</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Was dearer to my soul than its
+ soul-life."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Mrs. Richardson's notes, in fact, contradict the impression
+ of thoroughness which her selecting, we are glad to say, leaves
+ on the mind. She is aware that the "Ode to Melancholy" in
+ <i>The Nice Valour</i> begins in the same way as Milton's
+ "Pensieroso," but she does not seem to know that the latter is
+ also closely imitated from Burton's poem in his <i>Anatomy of
+ Melancholy</i>. And she quotes John Still's "Jolly Good Ale and
+ Old" as a "panegyric on old sack," sack being sweet wine.</p>
+
+ <p>The publishers have done their part, and made of these drops
+ of oozed gold what is called "an elegant trifle" for the
+ holidays. Mr. John La Farge, a very "advanced" sort of artist
+ and illustrator, has furnished some embellishments which will
+ be better liked by people of broad culture, and especially by
+ enthusiasts for Japanese art, than they will be by ordinary
+ Christmas-shoppers, though the frontispiece to "Songs of
+ Fairies," representing Psyche floating among water-lilies, is
+ beautiful enough and obvious enough for anybody.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <a name="H_4_0028"
+ id="H_4_0028"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+ <h3><i>Books Received</i>.</h3>
+
+ <p>A Concordance to the Constitution of the United States of
+ America. By Charles W. Stearns, M.D. New York: Mason, Baker
+ &amp; Pratt.</p>
+
+ <p>The Standard: A Collection of Sacred and Secular Music. By
+ L.O. Emerson and H. R. Palmer. Boston: Oliver Ditson &amp;
+ Co.</p>
+
+ <p>Gems of Strauss: A Collection of Dance Music for the Piano.
+ By Johann Strauss. Boston: Oliver Ditson &amp; Co.</p>
+
+ <p>The Greeks of To-Day. By Charles K. Tuckerman. New York:
+ G.P. Putnam &amp; Sons.</p>
+
+ <p>The Eustace Diamonds. By Anthony Trollope. New York: Harper
+ &amp; Brothers.</p>
+
+ <p>How to Paint. By F.B. Gardner. New York: Samuel R. Wells.
+ How to Paint. By F.B. Gardner. New York: Samuel R. Wells.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1"
+ name="footnote1"></a> <b>Footnote 1</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag1">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>The latter contains, among other relics of a balustrade
+ which protected and adorned the platform of the temple, the
+ exquisitely graceful torso of Victory untying her sandals,
+ of which casts are to be seen in most of the museums of
+ Europe.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote2"
+ name="footnote2"></a> <b>Footnote 2</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag2">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>Among the figures of this bas-relief, twelve are
+ recognized by their lofty stature and sitting posture as
+ those of divinities. One group is represented in the
+ engraving.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote3"
+ name="footnote3"></a> <b>Footnote 3</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag3">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>Frenchmen say that the best English dinners are now the
+ best in the world, because they combine the finest French
+ <i>entr&eacute;es</i> and <i>entremets</i> with
+ <i>pi&egrave;ces de r&eacute;sistance</i> of unrivaled
+ excellence.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote4"
+ name="footnote4"></a> <b>Footnote 4</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag4">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>Perhaps the most charming idea of a country-house was
+ that conceived by Mr. Mathew of Thomastown--a huge mansion
+ still extant, now the property of the count de Jarnac, to
+ whom it descended. This gentleman, who was an ancestor of
+ the celebrated Temperance leader, probably had as much
+ claret drunk in his house as any one in his country; which
+ is saying a good deal.</p>
+
+ <p>He had an income which would be equivalent to one
+ hundred and twenty-five thousand dollars a year in our
+ money, and for several years traveled abroad and spent very
+ little. On his return with an ample sum of ready money, he
+ carried into execution a long-cherished scheme of country
+ life.</p>
+
+ <p>He arranged his immense mansion after the fashion of an
+ inn. The guests arrived, were shown to their rooms, and
+ treated as though they were in the most perfectly-appointed
+ hotel. They ordered dinner when they pleased, dined
+ together or alone as suited them, hunted, shot, played
+ billiards, cards, etc. at will, and kept their own horses.
+ There was a regular bar, where drinks of the finest quality
+ were always served. The host never appeared in that
+ character: he was just like any other gentleman in the
+ house.</p>
+
+ <p>The only difference from a hotel lay in the choice
+ character of the company, and the fact that not a farthing
+ might be disbursed. The servants were all paid extra, with
+ the strict understanding that they did not accept a
+ farthing, and that any dereliction from this rule would be
+ punished by instant dismissal.</p>
+
+ <p>Unlike most Irish establishments, especially at that
+ date (about the middle of the last century), this was
+ managed with the greatest order, method and economy.</p>
+
+ <p>Among the notable guests was Dean Swift, whose
+ astonishment at the magnitude of the place, with the lights
+ in hundreds of windows at night, is mentioned by Dr.
+ Sheridan.</p>
+
+ <p>It is pleasant to add in this connection that the count
+ and countess de Jarnac worthily sustain the high character
+ earned a century since by their remarkable ancestor, who
+ was one of the best and most benevolent men of his day.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote5"
+ name="footnote5"></a> <b>Footnote 5</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag5">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>The Milwaukee was sunk nearly due east of the city: the
+ Osage, Tecumseh, several despatch-boats and steamers,
+ besides the three monitors, were sunk by torpedoes in the
+ bay.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote6"
+ name="footnote6"></a> <b>Footnote 6</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag6">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>It was a warrant-officer of the Milwaukee: I do not wish
+ to be more definite; but the money (fifty dollars) may be
+ sent to the editor of this Magazine, who will forward it to
+ the diver.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <hr />
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Lippincott's Magazine Of Popular
+Literature And Science, No. 23, February, 1873, Vol. XI. No. 23., by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LIPPINCOTT'S MAGAZINE ***
+
+***** This file should be named 13636-h.htm or 13636-h.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/1/3/6/3/13636/
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Patricia Bennett, Sandra Brown and
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+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
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+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
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+</pre>
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+</body>
+</html>
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@@ -0,0 +1,8349 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Lippincott's Magazine Of Popular Literature
+And Science, No. 23, February, 1873, Vol. XI., by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Lippincott's Magazine Of Popular Literature And Science, No. 23, February, 1873, Vol. XI.
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: October 5, 2004 [EBook #13636]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LIPPINCOTT'S MAGAZINE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Patricia Bennett, Sandra Brown and
+the PG Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LIPPINCOTT'S MAGAZINE
+
+OF
+
+_POPULAR LITERATURE AND SCIENCE_.
+
+
+
+
+FEBRUARY, 1873.
+
+Vol. XI., No. 23.
+
+
+
+
+TABLE OF CONTENTS
+
+
+SEARCHING FOR THE QUININE-PLANT IN PERU.
+ Concluding Paper.
+
+A GLANCE AT THE SITE AND ANTIQUITIES OF ATHENS By J.L.T. PHILLIPS.
+
+COMMONPLACE By CONSTANCE FENIMORE WOOLSON.
+
+PROBATIONER LEONHARD; OR, THREE NIGHTS IN THE HAPPY VALLEY
+ By CAROLINE CHESEBRO.
+
+ Chapter IV.--The Test--With Mental Reservations.
+
+ Chapter V.--Sister Benigna.
+
+ Chapter VI.--The Men Of Spenersberg.
+
+ Chapter VII.--The Book.
+
+ Chapter VIII.--Conference Meeting.
+
+ Chapter IX.--Will The Architect Have Employment?
+
+COUNTRY-HOUSE LIFE IN ENGLAND By REGINALD WYNFORD.
+
+THE FOREST OF ARDEN By ITA ANIOL PROKOP.
+
+JACK, THE REGULAR By THOMAS DUNN ENGLISH.
+
+OBSERVATIONS AND ADVENTURES IN SUBMARINE DIVING By WILL WALLACE HARNEY.
+
+CONFIDENTIAL.
+
+GLIMPSES OF JOHN CHINAMAN By PRENTICE MULFORD.
+
+A WINTER REVERIE By MILLIE W. CARPENTER.
+
+"PASSPORTS, GENTLEMEN!" By A.H.
+
+OUR MONTHLY GOSSIP.
+
+ The Cornwallis Family.
+
+ Novelties In Ethnology.
+
+ The Steam-whistle.
+
+ Siamese News.
+
+ Madison As A Temperance Man.
+
+NOTES.
+
+LITERATURE OF THE DAY.
+
+Books Received.
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+The Cones of Patabamba.
+
+"Pepe Garcia, Who Marched Ahead, Announced the Print Of A South
+ American Tiger."
+
+"Napoleon-like, They Washed Their Dirty Linen in The Family"
+
+"Aragon and his Men Fell Upon the Deserters Without Mercy."
+
+"They Greeted These Indian Relics As Crusoe Did The Footprints of the
+ Savages."
+
+"Another Savage Had Found a Pair of Linen Pantaloons."
+
+View of the Acropolis and The Columns Of The Temple Of Jupiter Olympus.
+
+Theatre of Dionysus (Bacchus).
+
+Victory Untying Her Sandals.
+
+Temple of Victory.
+
+The Parthenon.
+
+Bas Relief of the Gods (Frieze Of The Parthenon).
+
+Porch of the Caryatides.
+
+Monument of Lysicrates.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SEARCHING FOR THE QUININE-PLANT IN PERU.
+
+CONCLUDING PAPER.
+
+
+Early on a brilliant morning, with baggage repacked, and the lessening
+amount of provisions more firmly strapped on the shoulders of the
+Indians, the explorers left their pleasant site on the banks of the
+Maniri. The repose allowed to the bulk of the party during the absence
+of their Bolivian companions had been wholesome and refreshing. The
+success of the bark-hunters in their search for cinchonas had cheered
+all hearts, and the luxurious supper of dried mutton and chuno
+arranged for them on their return gave a reminiscence of splendor to
+the thatched hut on the banks of the stream. This edifice, the last of
+civilized construction they expected to see, had the effect of a home
+in the wilderness. The bivouac there had been enjoyed with a sentiment
+of tranquil carelessness. Little did the travelers think that savage
+eyes had been peeping through the forest upon their fancied security,
+and that the wild people of the valleys who were to work them all
+kinds of mischief were upon their track from this station forth.
+
+The enormous fire kindled for breakfast mingled with the stain of
+sunrise to cast a glow upon their departure. Across the vale of the
+Cconi, as though a pair of sturdy porters had arisen to celebrate
+their leavetaking, the cones of Patabamba caught the first rays of
+the sun and held them aloft like hospitable torches. These huge forms,
+soldered together at the waist like Chang and Eng, and clothed with
+shaggy woods up to the top, had been the guardian watchers over their
+days in the ajoupa at Maniri. The sun just rising empurpled their
+double cones, while the base and the surrounding landscape were washed
+with the neutral tints of twilight.
+
+After passing the narrow affluent after which the camping-ground of
+Maniri was named, the party pursued the course of the Cconi through
+a more level tract of country. The stones and precipices became more
+rare, but in revenge the sandy banks soon began to reflect a heat that
+was hardly bearable. As the implacable sun neared its zenith the party
+walked with bent heads and blinded eyes, now dashing through great
+plains of bamboos, now following the hatchets of the peons through
+thickets of heated shrubbery.
+
+Whenever the country became more wooded in its character, the
+bark-hunters, whose quest obliged them to stray in short flights
+around the wings of the column, redoubled their mazes. The careless
+air of these Bolivian retrievers, their voluntary doublings through
+the most difficult jungles, and their easy way of walking over
+everything with their noses in the air, proved well their indifference
+to the obstacles which were almost insurmountable to the rest.
+
+[Illustration: THE CONES OF PATABAMBA.]
+
+Nothing could be more singular and interesting than to see them
+consulting one by one the indications scattered around them, and
+deciding on their probabilities or promises. Where the height and
+thickness of the foliage prevented them from seeing the sky, or
+even the shade of the surrounding green, they walked bent toward the
+ground, stirring up the rubbish, and choosing among the dead foliage
+certain leaves, of which they carefully examined the two sides and the
+stem. When by accident they found themselves near enough to speak to
+each other--a rare chance, for each peon undertook a separate line of
+search--they asked their friends, showing the leaves they had found,
+whether their discoveries appertained to the neighboring trees or
+whether the wind had brought the pieces from a distance. This kind
+of investigation, pursued by men who had prowled through forests
+all their lives, might seem slightly puerile if the reader does
+not understand that it is often difficult, or even impossible, to
+recognize the growing tree by its bark, covered as it is from base
+to branches with parasitic vegetation of every sort. In those forests
+whatever has a stout stem is used without scruple by the bignonias and
+air-plants, which race over the trunk, plant their root-claws in the
+cracks, leap over the whole tree at a single jet, or strangle it with
+multiplied knots, all the while adorning it with a superb mantle of
+leaves and blossoms. This is a difficulty which the most experienced
+_cascarilleros_ are not able to overcome. As an instance, the history
+is cited of a _practico_ or speculator who led an exploration for
+these trees in the valley of Apolobamba. After having caused to be
+felled, barked, measured, dried and trimmed all the cinchonas of one
+of those natural thickets called _manchas_--an operation which had
+occupied four months--he was about to abandon the spot and pursue
+the exploration elsewhere, when accident led him to discover, in
+the enormous trunk buried in creepers against which he had built his
+cabin, a _Cinchona nitida_, the forefather of all the trees he had
+stripped.
+
+In this kind of search the caravan pursued the borders of the
+river, sometimes on this side and sometimes on that, now passing the
+two-headed mountain Camanti, now sighting the tufted peak of Basiri,
+now crossing the torrent called the Garote. In the latter, where
+the dam and hydraulic works of an old Spanish gold-hunter were still
+visible in a state of ruin, the sacred golden thirst of Colonel Perez
+once more attacked him. Two or three pins' heads of the insane metal
+were actually unearthed by the colonel and displayed in a pie-dish;
+but the business of the party was one which made even the finding of
+gold insignificant, and they pursued their way.
+
+The flanks of these mountains, however, were really of importance to
+the botanical motive of the expedition. Along the side of the Camanti,
+where the yellow Garote leaked downward in a rocky ravine, the
+Bolivians were again successful. They brought to Marcoy specimens of
+half a dozen cinchonas, for him to sketch, analyze and decorate with
+Latin names. The colors of two or three of these barks promised
+well, but the pearl of the collection was a specimen of the genuine
+_Calisaya_, with its silver-gray envelope and leaf ribbed with
+carmine. This proud discovery was a boon for science and for commerce.
+It threw a new light upon the geographical locality of the most
+precious species of cinchona. It was incontestably the plant, and
+the Bolivians appeared amazed rather than pleased to have discovered
+outside of their own country a kind of bark proper only to Bolivia,
+and hardly known to overpass the northern extremity of the valley of
+Apolobamba. This discovery would rehabilitate, in the European market,
+the quinine-plants of Lower Peru, heretofore considered as inferior to
+those of Upper Peru and Bolivia. The latter country has for some time
+secured the most favorable reputation for its barks--a reputation
+ably sustained by the efforts of the company De la Paz, to whom the
+government has long granted a monopoly. This reputation is based on
+the abundance in that country of two species, the _Cinchona calisaya_
+and _Boliviana,_ the best known and most valued in the market. But
+for two valuable cinchonas possessed by Bolivia, Peru can show twenty,
+many of them excellent in quality, and awaiting only the enterprise of
+the government and the natural exhaustion of the forests to the south.
+
+This magnificent bit of luck, the finding of the calisaya, awakened
+in the susceptible bosom of Mr. Marcoy an ardent desire to explore
+for himself the site of its discovery. But Eusebio, the chief of the
+cascarilleros, assuming a mysterious and warning expression, informed
+the traveler that the place was quite inaccessible for a white man,
+and that he had risked his own neck a score of times in descending the
+ravine which separated the route from the hillside where the fortunate
+plants were growing. He promised, however, to point out the locality
+from afar, and to show, by a certain changeable gloss proper to the
+leaf, the precise stratum of the calisaya amongst the belts of the
+forest. This promise he forgot to execute more particularly, but it
+appeared that the locality would never be excessively hard to find,
+marked as it was by Nature with the gigantic finger-post of Mount
+Camanti. Placing, then, in security these precious specimens among
+their baggage, the explorers continued their advance along the valley.
+
+The footing was level and easy. Rocks and precipices were left behind,
+and were displaced by a soft, slippery sort of sand, where from space
+to space were planted, like so many oases in a desert, clumps of giant
+reeds. By a strange but natural caprice these beds of rustling verdure
+were cut in an infinity of well-defined geometric forms. Seen from an
+eminence and at a distance, this arrangement gave a singular effect.
+In the midst of these native garden-beds were cut distinct and narrow
+alleys, where the drifting sands were packed like artificial paths.
+It is unnecessary to add that the soft footways, notwithstanding
+their advertisement of verdure and shade, proved to be of African
+temperature.
+
+The last hours of daylight surprised the travelers among the
+labyrinths of these strange gardens. A suitable spot was chosen for
+the halt. As the porters were preparing to throw down their packs,
+Pepe Garcia, who marched ahead, announced the print of a South
+American tiger. The first care of the Indians, on hearing this news,
+was to send forth a horrible cry and to throng around the marks. The
+footprints disappeared at the thickest part of the jungle. After
+an examination of the traces, which resembled a large trefoil, they
+precipitated themselves on the interpreter-in-chief, representing
+how impossible it was to camp out in the neighborhood of the dreaded
+animal. But Pepe Garcia, accustomed as he was by profession to try his
+strength with the ferocious bear and the wily boar, was not the man to
+be afraid of a tiger, even of a genuine tiger from Bengal. To prove
+to the porters how slight was the estimation he placed on the supposed
+enemy, and also to drill them in the case of similar rencounters, he
+pushed the whole troop pellmell into the thickest part of the reeds,
+with the surly order to cut down the canes for sheds. Drawing his own
+knife, he slashed right and left among the stems, which the Indians,
+trembling with fear, were obliged to make into sheaves on the spot and
+transport to the beach selected for the bivouac. Double rows of these
+_arundos_, driven into the sand, formed the partitions of the cabins,
+for which their interwoven leaves made an appropriate thatch. The
+green halls with matted vaults were picturesque enough; each peon,
+seeing how easily they were constructed, chose to have a house for
+himself; and the Tiger's Beach quickly presented the appearance of a
+camp disposed in a long straight line, of which the timorous Indians
+occupied the extremity nearest the river.
+
+No "tiger" appeared to justify the apprehensions of the porters; but
+what was lacking to their fears from beasts with four feet was made
+up to them by beasts with wings. The night closed in dry and serene.
+Since leaving Maniri, whether because of the broadening of the valley,
+the rarity of the water-courses or the decreasing altitude of the
+hills, the adventurers had been little troubled with fogs at night.
+The fauna of the region, too, had offered nothing of an alarming
+complexion, except the footprints of the tiger in question: an
+occasional tapir or peccary from the woods, and otters and fish from
+the streams, had attracted the shots of the party, but merely as
+welcome additions to their game-bags, not as food for their fears.
+To-night, however, the veritable bugbear of the tropical forest paid
+them a visit, and left a real souvenir of his presence. As the Indian
+servants stretched themselves out in slumber under the bright stars
+and in the partial shelter of their ajoupas, a bat of the vampire
+species, attracted by the emanations of their bodies, came sailing
+over them, and emboldened by the silence reigning everywhere, selected
+a victim for attack. Hovering over the fellow's exposed foot, he bit
+the great toe, and fanning his prey in the traditional yet inevitable
+manner by the natural movement of his wings, he gorged himself with
+blood without disturbing the mozo. The latter, on awakening in the
+morning, observed a slight swelling in the perforated part, and on
+examination discovered a round hole large enough to admit a pea.
+Without rising, the man summoned his companions, who formed a group
+around him for the purpose of furnishing a certain natural remedy in
+the shape of a secretion which each one drew out of his ears. With
+this the patient made himself a plaster for his wound, and appeared to
+think but little of it. Questioned as to his sensations by the white
+travelers, who found themselves a good deal more disturbed with the
+idea of the vampire than they had been by any indications of tigers or
+wild-boars, the fellow explained that he had felt no sensation, unless
+it might have been an agreeable coolness of his sand-baked feet.
+The incident seemed so disagreeable and so likely of recurrence
+that Colonel Perez ever afterward slept with his feet rolled up in a
+variety of fantastic draperies, while Mr. Marcoy for several nights
+retained his boots.
+
+[Illustration: "PEPE GARCIA, WHO MARCHED AHEAD, ANNOUNCED THE PRINT OF
+A SOUTH AMERICAN TIGER."--P. 132.]
+
+The path along the river-sands would have been voluntarily followed by
+all the more irresponsible portion of the party, notwithstanding the
+blinding heats, on account of its smoother footing. The cascarilleros,
+however, objected that its tufts of canes and passifloras offered no
+promise for their researches. A compromise was effected. The porters,
+under the command of Juan of Aragon, were allowed to follow the shore,
+and were armed with a supply of fish-hooks to induce them to add from
+time to time to the alarmingly diminished supply of provisions. The
+grandees of the party followed the Bolivians, whose specialty entitled
+them to control practically the direction of the route, and plunged
+into the woods to botanize, to explore and to search for game.
+A system of conversation by means of shouts and pistol-shots was
+established between the two divisions. The next night proved the
+wisdom of this bifurcation. The united booty of earth, air and water,
+under the form of a squirrel, a pair of toucans and a variety of fish,
+afforded a meal which the porters described as _comida opipara_ or
+a sumptuous festival. Lulled and comforted by the sensation which a
+contented stomach wafts toward the brain, the explorers, after
+washing their hands and rinsing their mouths at the riverside, betook
+themselves to a cheerful repose _sub jove_, the locality offering no
+reeds of the articulated species with which to construct a shelter.
+
+The party, then, betook themselves to slumber with unusual
+contentment, repeating the splendid supper in their dreams, with the
+addition of every famous wine that Oporto and Rheims could dispense,
+when they were awakened by a sudden and terrible storm. A waterspout
+stooped over the forest and sucked up a mass of crackling branches.
+The camp-fire hissed and went out in a fume of smoke. A continuity of
+thunder, far off at first, but approaching nearer and nearer, kept up
+a constant and increasing fusillade, to whose reports was soon added
+the voice of the Cconi, lashed in its bed and bellowing like the sea.
+The surprising tumult went on in a _crescendo_. The hardly-interrupted
+charges of the lightning gave to the eye a strange vision of flying
+woods and soaring branches. Startled, trembling and sitting bolt
+upright, the adventurers asked if their last hour were come. The rain
+undertook to answer in spinning down upon their heads drops that were
+like bullets, and which for some time were taken for hail. Fearing to
+be maimed or blinded as they sat, the party crowded together, placing
+themselves back to back; and, unable to lay their heads under their
+wings like the birds, sheltered them upon their knees under the
+protection of their crossed arms. The fearful deluge of heated shot
+lasted until morning. Then, as if in laughter, the sun came radiantly
+out, the landscape readjusted its disheveled beauties, and the ground,
+covered with boughs distributed by the whirlwind, greedily drank in
+the waters from heaven. Soon there remained nothing of the memorable
+tempest but the diamonds falling in measured cadence from the
+refreshed and stiffened leaves.
+
+Up to sunrise the unfortunates rested stoically silent, their knees in
+their mouths, and receiving the visitation like a group of statuary.
+The rain ceasing with the same promptitude with which it had risen,
+they raised their heads and looked each other in the face, like the
+enemies over the fire in Byron's _Dream_. Each countenance was blue,
+and decorated with long flat locks of adhesive hair. The teeth of the
+whole party were chattering like a concert of castanets. The sun, like
+a practical joker, laughed ironically at the general picture.
+
+The first hours of morning were consecrated to a general examination
+of the stores, especially the precious specimens of cinchona. Bundles
+were restrapped, the damp provisions laid out in the sun, and the
+clothing of the party, even to the most intimate garment, was taken
+down to the river to be refreshed and furbished up. A common disaster
+had created a common cause amongst the whole troop, and with one
+accord everybody--peons, mozos, interpreters, bark-strippers and
+gentlemen--set in motion a grand cleaning-up day. Napoleon-like, they
+washed their dirty linen in the family. Whoever had seen the strangers
+coming and going from the beach to the woods, clothed in most
+abbreviated fashion, and seeming as familiar to the uniform as if they
+had always worn it under the charitable mantle of the woods, would
+have taken them for a savage tribe in the midst of its encampment. It
+is probable they were so seen.
+
+Thanks to the intense heat of the sun-shine, the garments and baggage
+of the expedition were quickly dried. The first were donned, the last
+was loaded on the porters, and the line of march was taken up. Up to
+noon the road lay along the blazing sands under a sun of fire. All the
+members of the party felt fresh and hardy after the involuntary bath,
+except one of the Indians, who was affected with a kind of ophthalmia.
+This attack, which Mr. Marcoy attributed partly to the glare, partly
+to the wet, and partly to a singular hobby peculiar to the individual
+of sleeping with his eyes wide open, was of no long duration. The pain
+which he complained of disappeared with a few hours of exercise and
+with the determination he showed in staring straight at the god of
+day, who, as if in memory of the worship formerly extended toward him
+in the country, deigned to serve as oculist for the sufferer. A little
+before sunset halt was made for the night-camp in the centre of a
+beach protected by clumps of reeds in three quarters of the wind. The
+Indian porters, despatched for fish and firewood, returned suddenly
+with a frightened mien to say that they had fallen into the midst of
+a camp of savages. The white men quickly rejoined them at the spot
+indicated, where they found a single hut in ruins, made of reeds which
+appeared to have been cut for the construction some fortnight before,
+and strewn with fire-brands, banana skins and the tail of a large
+fish. Pepe Garcia, consulted on these indications, explained that it
+was in reality the camping-place of some of the savage Siriniris, but
+that the narrowness of the hut seemed to indicate that not more than
+two of the Indians, probably a man and woman, had resided there during
+a short fishing-excursion.
+
+This discovery cast a shade over the countenances of the porters.
+After having collected the provisions necessary for a slender supper,
+they drew apart, and, while cooking was going on, began to converse
+with each other in a low voice. No notice was taken of their behavior,
+however, though it would have required little imagination to guess
+the subject of their parliament. The tired eyes of the explorers were
+already closed, while their ears, more alert, could hear the confused
+murmur proceeding from the Indians' quarter, where the disposition
+seemed to be to prolong the watch indefinitely.
+
+[Illustration: "NAPOLEON-LIKE, THEY WASHED THEIR DIRTY LINEN IN THE
+FAMILY"--P. 135.]
+
+The dark hours filed past, and jocund day, according to Shakespeare
+and Romeo, stood tiptoe on the mountain-tops of Camanti and Basiri,
+when the travelers were awakened by a fierce and terrible cry. Lifting
+their heads in astonishment, they perceived the faithful Pepe Garcia,
+his face disfigured with rage, and his fist shaking vigorously in the
+direction of the Indians, who sat lowering and sullen in their places.
+Aragon and the cascarilleros, collected around the chief interpreter,
+far from trying to calm his anger, appeared to feed it by their
+suggestions. An explanation of the scene was demanded. Eight of the
+bearers, it appeared, had deserted, leaving to their comrades the
+pleasure of watching over the packages of cinchona, but assuming for
+their part the charge of a good fraction of the provisions, which
+they had disappeared with for the relief of their fellow-porters.
+This copious bleeding of the larder drew from Colonel Perez a terrible
+oath, and occasioned a more vivid sentiment in the entrails of Marcoy
+than the defection of the men. If the evil was grand, the remedy was
+correspondingly difficult. Indolent or mercurial at pleasure, the
+Indians had doubtless threaded the woods with winged feet, and were
+now far away. Mr. Marcoy proposed therefore to continue the march
+without them, but to set down a heavy account of bastinadoes to their
+credit when they should turn up again at Marcapata. This proposition,
+as it erred on the side of mercy, was unanimously rejected, and a
+scouting-party was ordered in pursuit, consisting of the bark-hunters
+and Juan of Aragon, to whom for the occasion Pepe Garcia confided his
+remarkable fowling-piece.
+
+[Illustration: "ARAGON AND HIS MEN FELL UPON THE DESERTERS WITHOUT
+MERCY."--P. 138.]
+
+In the afternoon the extemporized police reappeared. The fugitives had
+been found tranquilly sitting on the banks of the river, distending
+their abdomens with the stolen preserves and chocolate. Aragon and his
+men fell upon the deserters without mercy. The former, battering away
+at them with the stock of his gun, and the latter, exercising upon
+their shoulders whatever they possessed in the way of lassoes,
+axe-handles and sabre-blades, maintained the argument effectually for
+some time in this way, and did not descend to questions until muscular
+fatigue caused them to desist. The catechism subsequently put to the
+porters elicited the reply, from the spokesman of the recusants,
+that they were tired of being afraid of the wild Indians; that they
+objected to marching into the dens of tigers; that, perceiving their
+rations diminished from day to day, they had imagined the time not far
+distant when the same would be withdrawn altogether. It was curious,
+as it seemed to Marcoy when the argument was rehearsed to him
+presently, that the fellows made no complaint of being footsore,
+overcharged with burdens or conducted into paths too difficult for
+them. A lurking admiration for the vigor with which, after all, they
+played their crushing part of beasts of burden, procured them immunity
+from further punishment after their return. Their bivouacs were simply
+watched on the succeeding nights by Bolivian sentinels.
+
+After a few minutes allowed the strayed sheep to rub their bruises,
+the march was continued. The afternoon afforded a succession of the
+same sandy riverbanks, dressed with reeds, false maize, calceolarias
+and purple passion-flowers, and yielding for sole booty a brace of
+wild black ducks, and an opossum holding in her pouch five saucy and
+scolding little ones. The natural civet employed as a cosmetic by this
+animal forbade the notion of using it for food, and it was thrown with
+its family into the river, after being deprived of its glossy skin.
+
+As evening approached, and as all eyes were exploring the banks for a
+suitable camping-ground, a spacious and even beach was fixed upon as
+offering all the requisite conveniences. It was agreed to halt there.
+Attaining the locality, however, they were amazed to find all the
+traces of a previous occupation. Several sheds, formed of bamboo
+hurdles set up against the ground with sticks, like traps, were
+grouped together. Under each was a hearth, a simple excavation,
+two feet across and a few inches deep, and filled with ashes. A few
+arrows, feathers and rude pieces of pottery were scattered around.
+They greeted these Indian relics as Crusoe did the footprints of the
+savages. Nor was it more reassuring to observe, among other callers
+like themselves who had left their visiting-cards at the doors since
+the departure of the proprietors, the sign-manual of jaguars and
+tapirs, whose footprints were plainly visible on the gravel.
+
+A close examination was made of every detail pertaining to the huts
+and their accessories, and the interpreters were asked if it would be
+prudent to encamp in a spot thus leased in advance. Pepe Garcia and
+Aragon were of opinion that it would be better to pass the night
+there, assuring their employers that there would be no danger in
+sleeping among the teraphim of the savages, provided that nothing was
+touched or displaced. Their motion was promptly adopted, to the great
+discomfiture of the porters, who were poised on one foot ready for
+flight. A salute of five shots was fired, with a vague intention
+of giving any listeners the highest possible opinion of the white
+explorers as a military power. An enormous fire was kindled, sentinels
+were posted, and the party turned in, taking care, however, during the
+whole night to close but one eye at a time.
+
+[Illustration: "THEY GREETED THESE INDIAN RELICS AS CRUSOE DID THE
+FOOTPRINTS OF THE SAVAGES."--P. 138.]
+
+Day commenced to blush, when all ears were assaulted by a concerted
+howl, proceeding from behind a bed of canes on the other side of the
+river. "_Alerta! los Chunchos!_" cried the sentinel. The three words
+produced a startling effect: the porters sprang up like frightened
+deer; Mr. Marcoy grasped a sheaf of pencils and a box of water-colors
+with a warlike air, and the colonel's lips were crisped into a
+singular smile, indicative of lively emotions. Hardly were the
+travelers clothed and armed when the reeds parted with a rattling
+noise, and three nude Indians, sepia-colored and crowned with tufts of
+hair like horses' tails, leaped out like jacks-in-the-box. At sight of
+the party standing to receive them they redoubled their clamor, then,
+flourishing their arms and legs and turning continually round, they
+gradually revolved into the presence of the explorers. They selected
+as chiefs and sachems of the party such as bore weapons, being the
+colonel, Marcoy and the two interpreters. These they clasped in a
+warm, fulsome embrace: they were smeared from head to foot with rocoa
+(crude arnotta), and their passage through the river having dissolved
+this pigment, they printed themselves off, in this act of amity, upon
+the persons and clothing of their hosts. While the white men, with a
+very bad grace, were cleaning off these tokens of natural affection,
+the new-comers went on to present their civilities all around. Two of
+the porters they recognized at once, with their eagle eyesight, from
+having relieved them of their shirts while the latter were working
+out some penalty at the governor's farm of Sausipata, and proceeded to
+claim a warm acquaintance on that basis; but the bearers, with equally
+lively memories of the affront, responded simply with a frown and the
+epithet of _Sua-sua_--double thief.
+
+Pepe Garcia undertook a colloquy, and Aragon, not to be behindhand,
+flashed a few words across the conversation, right and left as it
+were, his expressions appearing to be in a different tongue from those
+used by the chief interpreter, and both utterly without perceptible
+resemblance to the rolling consonants and gutturals of the savages.
+Marcoy imbibed a strong impression that the only terms understood in
+common were the words of Spanish with which the palaver was thickly
+interlarded. This was the first time the interpreters were put on
+their mettle in a strictly professional sense, and the test was not
+altogether triumphant. However, by a careful raising of the voice
+in all difficult passages, and a wild, expressive pantomime, an
+understanding was arrived at.
+
+The visitors belonged to the tribe of Siriniris, inhabiting the space
+comprised between the valleys of Ocongate and Ollachea, and extending
+eastwardly as far as the twelfth degree. They lived at peace with
+their neighbors, the Huat-chipayris and the Pukiris. For several days
+the reports of the Christian guns (_tasa-tasa_) had advertised them
+of the presence of white men in the valley, and, curious to judge of
+their numbers, they had approached. They had formed a cunning escort
+to the party, always faithful but never seen, since the encampment
+at Maniri: every camping-ground since that particular bivouac they
+faithfully described. They were, of course, in particular and direful
+need of _sirutas_ and _bambas_ (knives and hatchets), but their fears
+of the _tasa-tasa_, or guns, was still stronger than their desires,
+and their courage had not, until they saw the strangers domiciled as
+guests in their own habitations, attained the firmness and consistency
+necessary for a personal approach. The three dancing ambassadors were
+ministers plenipotentiary on the part of their tribe, located in a
+bamboo metropolis five miles off.
+
+The white men could not well avoid laying down their _tasa-tasa_ and
+disbursing _sirutas_ and _bambas_. The savages, after this triumph
+of diplomacy, suddenly turned, and, thrusting their fingers in their
+mouths, emitted a shrill note, which had the effect of enchanting the
+forest of rushes across the river, and causing it to give birth to a
+whole ballet of naked coryphei. Nine men, seven women and three dogs
+composed the spectacle, of which the masculine part, the human and
+the canine, proceeded to swim the stream and fraternize with the
+strangers. The women rested on the bank like river-nymphs: their
+costume was somewhat less prudish than that of the men, the coat of
+rocoa being confined to their faces, which were further decorated with
+joints of reed thrust through the nose and ears. A glance of curiosity
+darted across the water by the colonel was surprised in its flight by
+the ambassadors, who addressed a hasty word or two to their ladies:
+the latter, with one quick and cat-like gesture, whipped off each a
+branch of the nearest foliage, and were dressed in a single instant.
+
+To reward all these vociferous mendicants with the invaluable cutlery
+was hardly prudent. Seeing the hesitation of their visitors, the
+savages adopted other tactics. Hurling themselves across the river,
+they quickly reappeared, armed with all the temptations they could
+think of to induce the strangers to barter. The scene of these savages
+coming to market was a picturesque one. Entering the water, provided
+with their objects of exchange, which they held high above their
+heads, and swimming with the right arm only, they began to cut the
+river diagonally. The lifting of the waves and the dash of spray
+almost concealed the file of dusky heads. Nothing could be plainly
+seen but the left arms, standing out of the water as stiff and
+inflexible as so many bars of bronze, relieved against the silvery
+brightness of the water. These advancing arms were adorned with the
+material of traffic--bird-skins of variegated colors, bows and arrows,
+and live tamed parrots standing upon perches of bamboo. The white
+spectators could not but admire the native vigor, elegance and
+promptitude of their motions as they rose from the water like Tritons,
+and, throwing their treasures down in a heap, bounded forward to give
+their visitors the conventional signals of friendship. A rapid
+bargain was concluded, in which the sylvan booty of the wild men (not
+forgetting the prudent exaction of their weapons) was entirely made
+over to the custody of the explorers in exchange for a few Birmingham
+knives worth fourpence each.
+
+However curious and amicable might be their new relations with the
+savages, the party were desirous to put an end to them as soon as
+possible. Pepe Garcia announced that the pale chiefs, wishing to
+resume their march, were about to separate from them. This decision
+appeared to be unpleasant or distressful in their estimation, and
+they tried to reverse it by all sorts of arguments. No answer being
+volunteered, they shouted to their women to await them, and betook
+themselves to walking with the party. One of the three ambassadors, a
+graceful rogue of twenty-five, marked all over with rocoa and lote,
+so as to earn for himself the nickname of "the Panther," gamboled
+and caracoled in front of the procession as if to give it an
+entertainment. His two comrades had garroted with their arms the neck
+of the chief interpreter: another held Juan of Aragon by the skirt of
+his blouse, and regulated his steps by those of the youth. This accord
+of barbarism and civilization had in it something decidedly graceful,
+and rather pathetic: if ever the language natural to man was found,
+the medium in circulation before our sickly machinery of speech came
+to be invented, it was in this concert of persuasive action and tender
+cooing notes. The main body of the Siriniris marched pellmell along
+with the porters, whom this vicinage made exceedingly uncomfortable,
+and who were perspiring in great drops.
+
+At the commencement of a wood the whites embraced the occasion to take
+formal leave of their new acquaintances. As they endeavored to turn
+their backs upon them they were at once surrounded by the whole band,
+crying and gesticulating, and opposing their departure with a sort of
+determined playfulness.
+
+At the same time a word often repeated, the word _Huatinmio_, began to
+enter largely into their conversation, and piqued the curiosity of
+the historiographer. Marcoy begged the interpreter to procure him the
+explanation of this perpetual shibboleth. Half by signs, half in the
+polyglot jargon which he had been employing with the Siriniris, Garcia
+managed to understand that the word in question was the name of their
+village, situated at a small distance and in a direction which they
+indicated. In this retreat, they said, no inhabitants remained but
+women, children and old men, the rest of the braves being absent on
+a chase. They proposed a visit to their capital, where the strangers,
+they said, honored and cherished by the tribe, might pass many
+enviable days.
+
+The proposed excursion, which would cause a loss of considerable time
+and a deflection from the intended route, was declined in courteous
+terms by Marcoy through the interpretation of Pepe Garcia. Among
+civilized folk this urbane refusal would have sufficed, but the
+savages, taking such a reply as a challenge to verbal warfare,
+returned to the charge with increased tenacity. It were hard to say
+what natural logic they put in practice or what sylvan persuasions
+they wrought by, but their peculiar mode of stroking the white men's
+backs with their hands, and the softer and still softer inflections
+which they introduced into their voices, would have melted hearts of
+marble. In brief, the civilized portion adopted the more weakly part
+and allowed themselves to be led by the savage portion.
+
+The colonel and Pepe Garcia were still more easily persuaded than Mr.
+Marcoy, and only awaited his adhesion. When it was finally announced
+the Siriniris renewed their gambols and uttered shouts of delight.
+They then took the head of the excursion. A singularity in their
+guides, which quickly attracted the notice of the explorers, was the
+perfect indifference with which they took either the clearings or the
+thickets in their path. Where the strangers were afraid of tearing
+their garments, these unprotected savages had no care whatever for
+their skins. It is true that their ingenuity in gliding through the
+labyrinth resembled magic. However the forest might bristle with
+undergrowth, they never thought of breaking down obstacles or of
+cutting them, as the equally practiced Bolivians did, with a knife.
+They contented themselves with putting aside with one hand the tufts
+of foliage as if they had been curtains or draperies, and that with an
+easy decision of gesture and an elegance of attitude which are hardly
+found outside of certain natural tribes.
+
+The city of Huatinmio proved to be a group of seven large sheds
+perched among plaintains and bananas, divided into stalls, and
+affording shelter for a hundred individuals. The most sordid
+destitution--if ignorance of comfort can be called
+destitution--reigned everywhere around. The women were especially
+hideous, and on receipt of presents of small bells and large needles
+became additionally disagreeable in their antics of gratitude. The
+bells were quickly inserted in their ears, and soon the whole village
+was in tintinnabulation.
+
+A night was passed in the hospitality of these barbarians, who vacated
+their largest cabin for their guests. A repast was served, consisting
+of stewed monkey: no salt was used in the cookery, but on the other
+hand a dose of pimento was thrown in, which brought tears to the eyes
+of the strangers and made them run to the water-jar as if to save
+their lives. The evening was spent in a general conversation with the
+Siriniris, who were completely mystified by the form and properties of
+a candle which Mr. Marcoy drew from his baggage and ignited. The wild
+men passed it from hand to hand, examining it, and singeing themselves
+in turn. Still another marvel was the sheet of paper on which the
+artist essayed a portrait of one of his hosts. The finished sketch
+did not appear to attract them at all, or to raise in their minds
+the faintest association with the human form, but the texture and
+whiteness of the sheet excited their lively admiration, and they
+passed it from one to another with many exclamations of wonder.
+Meantime, a number of questions were suggested and proposed through
+the interpreter.
+
+The formality of marriage among the Siriniris was found to be quite
+unknown; the most rudimentary idea of divine worship could not be
+discovered; the treatment of the aged was shown to be contemptuous
+and neglectful in the extreme; and the lines of demarcation with the
+beasts seemed to be but feebly traced. Finally, Mr. Marcoy begged the
+interpreter to propound the delicate inquiry whether, among the viands
+with which they nourished or had formerly nourished themselves, human
+flesh had found a place. Garcia hesitated, and at first declined
+to push the interrogation, but after some persuasion consented. The
+Siriniris were not in the least shocked at the question, and answered
+that the flesh of man, especially in infancy, was a delicious food,
+far better than the monkey, the tapir or the peccary; that their
+nation, in the days of its power, frequently used it at the great
+feasts; but that the difficulty of procuring such a rarity had
+increased until they were now forced to strike it from their bill of
+fare.
+
+The night passed without disturbance, and the next day's parting was
+accompanied by reiterated requests for a repetition of the visit. The
+Panther, who since their arrival had oppressed the travelers with a
+multitude of officious attentions, escorted them into the woods, and
+there took leave of them with a gesture of his hand, relieving their
+eyes of his slippery, snake-like robe of spots. A knife from their
+stores, slung round his neck like a locket, smote his breast at each
+step as he danced backward, and a couple of large fish-hooks glanced
+in his ears.
+
+With a feeling of relief and satisfied curiosity the exploring party
+left behind them the traces of these children of Nature, and returned
+toward the river. The cascarilleros, all for their business,
+had regretted the waste of time, and now betook themselves to an
+examination of the woods with all their energy. After several hours
+of march their efforts were crowned with success. Eusebio presently
+rejoined his employers, showing leaves and berries of the _Cinchona
+scrobiculata_ and _pubescens_: the peons, on their side, had
+discovered isolated specimens of the _Calisaya_, which, joined with
+those found on Mount Camanti, indicated an extended belt of that
+precious species. This was not the best. A veritable treasure which
+they had unearthed, worth all the others put together, was a line of
+those violet cinchonas which the native exporters call _Cascarilla
+morada_, and the botanists _Cinchona Boliviana_. The trees of this
+kind were grouped in threes and fours, and extended for half a mile.
+This repeated proof that the most valuable of all the cinchonas,
+together with nearly every one of the others, were to be discovered
+in a small radius along the valley of the Cconi, filled the explorers
+with triumph, and demonstrated beyond a doubt the sagacity of Don
+Santo Domingo in organizing the expedition.
+
+The purpose and intention of the journey was now abundantly fulfilled.
+Had the travelers rested satisfied with the liberal indications they
+had found, and consented to place themselves between the haunts of
+the savages and the abodes of civilization, with a tendency and
+determination toward the latter, they might have returned with safety
+as with glory. The estimate made by Eusebio, however, of the trend or
+direction of the calisaya groves, induced him to forsake the bed of
+the Cconi, and strike south-eastwardly, so as to cross the Ollachea
+and the Ayapata.
+
+"But the mountains are disappearing," hazarded Mr. Marcoy. "Will not
+the cinchonas disappear with them?"
+
+"Oh," answered the majordomo, like a pedagogue to a confident
+school-boy, "the senor knows better how to put ink or color on a sheet
+of paper than how to judge of these things. The plain, the _campo
+llano_, is far enough to the east. Before we should see the
+disappearance of the mountains, we should have to cross as many hills
+and ravines as we have left behind us."
+
+"What do you think of doing, then?" naturally demanded Marcoy, who had
+long since begun to feel that the expedition had but one chief, and
+that was the sepia-colored cascarillero from Bolivia,
+
+"Everything and nothing," answered Eusebio.
+
+These enigmas always carry the day. The apparatus of march was
+once more set in motion toward the adjacent water-sheds. After a
+considerable journey--rewarded, it must be said, with a succession of
+cinchona discoveries--they halted near a clearing in the forest, where
+large heaps of stones and pebbles, arranged in semicircles, attracted
+their attention. The cascarilleros explained this appearance as due
+to former arrangements for gold-washing in an old river-bed, the San
+Gavan or the Ayapata, that had now changed its locality.
+
+While examining the unusual appearance an abominable clamor burst from
+the woods around, and a band of Siriniris appeared, led by a lusty
+ruffian crowned with oriole feathers, whom the travelers recognized as
+having been among their previous acquaintances.
+
+The encounter was very disagreeable, but the strangers determined to
+make the best of it. The manner of this band of Indians was somewhat
+different from that of the others. They brought nothing for barter,
+and had an indescribably coarse and hardy style of behavior.
+
+The travelers determined to buy a little information, if nothing
+better, with their knives and fish-hooks. Garcia was accordingly
+instructed to demand the meaning of the heaps and causeways of stones.
+The savages laughed at first, but finally informed the visitors that
+the constructions which puzzled them so had been made by people of
+their own race many years ago, for the purpose of gathering gold from
+the river which used to run along there, but which now flowed seven
+miles off.
+
+This information was dear to the historic instinct of Marcoy. He
+spoke, by his usual proxy, to the Indian of the oriole, commanding him
+not to begin every explanation by laughing, as he had been doing, but
+to answer intelligently, promising a reward of several knives. The
+savage exchanged a rapid glance with his fellows, and then he and they
+stood up as stiff and mute as the trees. Marcoy then asked him if he
+had never heard his father or his grandfather speak of the great city
+of San Gavan, built hereabouts formerly by the Spanish chevaliers, and
+which the Caranga and Suchimani Indians from the Inambari River had
+destroyed by fire.
+
+The evident recognition of this legend by the savages, and their
+rapid exchange among themselves of the words _sacapa huayris Ipanos_,
+induced Marcoy to ask if they could guide them to the site of the
+former city. They answered that a day's march would be sufficient, and
+pointed with their arms in the direction of north-north-west.
+
+The temptation to see the place whose golden renown, after having made
+the tour of the American continent, had reached Spain and the world at
+large, was too strong to be resisted. Colonel Perez, besides the magic
+attraction which the mention of gold had for him, felt his national
+pride touched by the idea of a place where his compatriots had added
+such magnificence to the Spanish name, and gained so many ingots of
+gold by paddling in the streams. The cascarilleros were delighted to
+extend their journey, in hopes of yet larger discoveries. As for the
+porters, since the manifestations of the savages they clung to the
+party with as much anxiety as they had ever shown to escape from it.
+
+In 1767 the city of San Gavan, remaining intact amid the ruin of all
+its neighbors, was the sole disburser of the riches of the Caravaya
+Valley. The gold-dust, collected throughout the whole territory on a
+government monopoly, was brought thither upon the backs of Indians,
+melted into ingots, and distributed to Lima and the world at large.
+On the night of the 15th and 16th of December in that year the
+wealthy city was fired by the Carangas and the Suchimanis, and all the
+inhabitants slain with arrows or clubs. The first lords of the soil
+had resumed their rights.
+
+When the news of the event was brought to Lima, the viceroy of
+the period, Antonio Amat, swore on a piece of the true cross to
+exterminate every Indian in Peru. It is to the persuasions of his
+favorite, Mariquita Gallegas, that the preservation of the native
+tribes from a bloody extirpation is due. This woman, _La Perichola_,
+whose caricatured likeness we see in the most agreeable of Offenbach's
+operas, and whose deeds of mercy and edifying end in a convent entitle
+her to some charitable consideration, persuaded her royal lover to
+operate on the natives with missionaries and teachers rather than with
+fire and sword. Antonio Amat yielded, and the Indians have survived.
+
+[Illustration: "ANOTHER SAVAGE HAD FOUND A PAIR OF LINEN
+PANTALOONS."--P. 146.]
+
+Let no traveler go to South America and cross the Andes with the idea
+of unearthing a Nineveh or a Babylon on the site of San Gavan. The
+emissaries of Don Santo Domingo were quickly standing, among the
+grinning and amused Indians, on the locality of the Golden Depot of
+San Gavan. But Nature had thoroughly reclaimed her own, and the place,
+indicated again and again by the savages with absolute unanimity,
+showed nothing but mounds of fern and moss under canopies of forest
+trees.
+
+A day's rest and a sketch or two were consecrated by Marcoy to this
+historic spot, the grave of a civilization. It had been well if he
+had restrained his feelings of romance, and betaken himself with his
+companions to the homeward track.
+
+As the explorers were breakfasting in the morning on a squirrel and
+a couple of birds shot among the vanished streets of San Gavan, a
+disagreeable incident supervened. The wild Indians had disappeared
+over-night. But now, seemingly born instantaneously from the trees, a
+throng of Siriniris burst upon the scene, rushing up to the travelers,
+straining them repeatedly in a rude embrace, then leaving them, then
+assaulting them again, and accompanying every contact with the eternal
+cry, _Siruta inta menea_--"Give me a knife." Each member of the troop
+had now six savages at his heels, and they were not those of the day
+before, but a new and rougher band. The chiefs of the party rushed
+together and brandished their muskets. This forced the savages
+to retire, but gave to the rencounter that hostile air which, in
+consideration of the disparity of numbers, ought at all hazards to
+have been avoided. The wild men quickly formed a circle around the
+artillery. The latter, fearing for their porters and the precious
+baggage, leaped through this circle and joined their servants, making
+believe to cock their fire-arms. Upon this the Indians, half afraid of
+the guns, vanished into the woods, first picking up whatever clothing
+and utensils they could lay their hands on. In an instant they were
+showing these trophies to their rightful owners from a safe distance,
+laughing as if they would split their sides. One of the naked rascals
+had seized a flannel undershirt of the colonel's, which was drying
+on a branch. His efforts to introduce his great feet into the
+sleeves were excruciating. Another savage had found a pair of linen
+pantaloons, which he was endeavoring to put on like a coat, appearing
+much embarrassed with the posterior portion, which completely masked
+his face. Aragon had seen a young reprobate of his own age make off
+with a pair of socks of his property. Detecting the rogue half hidden
+by a tree, the mozo made a sortie, seized the Indian, and by a
+violent shake brought the property out of his mouth, where it had been
+concealed as in a natural pocket.
+
+The travelers immediately threw themselves into marching order and
+took up their line of route. The savages followed. At the first
+obstacle, a mass of matted trees, they easily rejoined the party of
+whites.
+
+Then, for the first time, the idea of their power seemed to strike
+them, and they precipitated themselves upon the porters, who took to
+flight, rolling from under their packs like animals of burden. In a
+moment every article of baggage, every knife and weapon, was seized,
+and the red-skins, singing and howling, were making off through the
+woods. Among them was now seen the Siriniri with orioles' feathers,
+who must have guided them to their prey.
+
+The expedition was pillaged, and pillaged as a joke. The thieves were
+heard laughing as they scampered off like deer through the woods.
+
+It was hard to realize at once the gravity of the misfortune. No one
+was hurt, no one was insulted. But provisions, clothing, articles of
+exchange and weapons were all gone, except such arms and ammunition as
+the travelers carried on their persons. A collection of cinchonas was
+in possession of one of the Bolivians, though it represented but
+a fraction of the species discovered. The besiegers, however, had
+disappeared, and a westerly march was taken up. Good time was made
+that day, and a heavy night's sleep was the consequence. With the
+morning light came the well-remembered and hateful cry, and the little
+army found itself surrounded by a throng of merry naked demons, among
+whom were some who had not profited by the distribution of the spoils.
+At the magic word _siruta_ all these new-comers rushed in a mass upon
+the white men. Marcoy managed to slip his fine ivory-handled machete
+within his trowser leg, but every other cutting tool disappeared as if
+by magic from the possession of the explorers. The shooting-utensils
+the savages, believing them haunted, would not touch. Then, half
+irritated at the exhaustion of the booty, the amiable children of
+Nature burst out into open derision. The artists of the tribe, filling
+their palms with rocoa, and moistening the same with saliva, went up
+to their late patrons and began to decorate their faces. The latter,
+judging patience their best policy, sat in silence while the delicate
+fancy of the savages expended itself in arabesques and flourishes.
+Perez and Aragon had their eyes surrounded with red spectacles. The
+face of Marcoy, covered with a heavy beard, only allowed room for
+a "W" on the forehead, and Pepe Garcia was quit for a set of
+interfacings like a checkerboard. Having thus signed their marks upon
+their visitors, the aborigines retired, catching up here and there
+a stray ball of cord or a strip of beef, saluting with the hand, and
+vanishing into the woods with the repeated compliment, _Eminiki_--"I
+am off."
+
+The victims rested motionless for fifteen minutes: then pellmell,
+through the thickest of the brush and down the steepest of the hill,
+blotted out under gigantic ferns and covered by umbrageous vines,
+stealing along water-courses and skirting the sides of the mountains,
+they rushed precipitately westward.
+
+Two months after the priest of Marcapata had dismissed with his
+benediction the party of confident and enthusiastic explorers, he
+received again his strayed flock, but this time in rags, armed with
+ammunitionless guns and one poor knife, wasted by hunger, baked by the
+sun, and tattooed like Polynesians by the briers and insects. The
+good man could not repress a tear. "Ah, my son," said he as he clasped
+Marcoy's hand, "see what it costs to go hunting the cascarilla in the
+land of the infidels!"
+
+The explorations started by Don Juan Sanz de Santo Domingo came to
+profitable result, but not to his advantage. Three weeks after the
+pioneers arrived again in Cuzco, Don Juan started another expedition,
+on a much larger scale, to accomplish the working of the cinchona
+valleys, under charge of the same Bolivians, who could make like a bee
+for every tree they had discovered. A detachment of soldiers was
+to protect the party, and the working force was more than double.
+Finally, the night before the intended start, the Bolivian
+cascarilleros, with their examinador, disappeared together. It is
+probable that Don Juan's scheme, nursed, according to custom, with too
+much publicity, had attracted the attention of the merchants of Cuzco,
+who had found it profitable to buy off the bark-searchers for their
+own interest.
+
+The crash of this immense enterprise was too much for Don Juan.
+Threatened with creditors, Jews, _escribanos_ and the police, he
+retired to a silver-mine he was opening in the province of Abancay.
+This mine, in successful operation, he depended on for satisfying his
+creditors. He found it choked up, destroyed with a blast of powder by
+some enemy. Unable to bear the disappointment, Don Juan blew out his
+brains in the office belonging to his mine. A month afterward, Don
+Eugenic Mendoza y Jara, the bishop of Cuzco, sent a couple of Indians
+for the body, with instructions to throw it into a ditch: the men
+attached a rope to the feet and dragged it to a ravine, where dogs and
+vultures disposed of the unhallowed remains.
+
+
+
+
+A GLANCE AT THE SITE AND ANTIQUITIES OF ATHENS.
+
+
+The day is a happy one to the student-traveler from the Western World
+in which he first looks upon the lovely plain of Athens. Rounding the
+point where Hymettus thrusts his huge length into the sea, the long,
+featureless mountain-wall of Southern Attica suddenly breaks down, and
+gives place to a broad expanse of fertile, and well-cultivated soil,
+sloping gently back with ever-narrowing bounds until it reaches the
+foot-hills of lofty Pentelicus. The wooded heights of Parnes enclose
+it on the north, while bald Hymettus rears an impassable barrier along
+the south. In front of the gently recurved shore stretch the smooth
+waters of the Gulf of Salamis, while beyond rises range upon range of
+lofty mountain-peaks with strikingly varied outline, terminating on
+the one hand in the towering cone of Egina, and on the other in
+the pyramidal, fir-clad summit of Cithaeron. Upon the plain, at the
+distance of three or four miles from the sea, are several small rocky
+hills of picturesque appearance, isolated and seemingly independent,
+but really parts of a low range parallel to Hymettus. Upon one of the
+most considerable of these, whose precipitous sides make it a natural
+fortress, stood the Acropolis, and upon the group of lesser heights
+around and in the valleys between clustered the dwellings of ancient
+Athens.
+
+[Illustration: VIEW OF THE ACROPOLIS AND THE COLUMNS OF THE TEMPLE OF
+JUPITER OLYMPUS.]
+
+It was a fitting site for the capital of a people keenly sensitive to
+beauty, and destined to become the leaders of the world in matters
+of taste, especially in the important department of the Fine Arts.
+Nowhere are there more charming contrasts of mountain, sea and
+plain--nowhere a more perfect harmony of picturesque effect. The sea
+is not a dreary waste of waters without bounds, but a smiling gulf
+mirroring its mountain-walls and winding about embosomed isles, yet
+ever broadening as it recedes, and suggesting the mighty flood beyond
+from which it springs. The plain is not an illimitable expanse over
+which the weary eye ranges in vain in quest of some resting-place, but
+is so small as to be embraced in its whole contour in a single view,
+while its separate features--the broad, dense belt of olives which
+marks the bed of its principal stream, the ancient Cephissus, the
+vineyards, the grain-fields and the sunny hillside pastures--are made
+to produce their full impression. The mountains are not near enough to
+be obtrusive, much less oppressive; neither are they so distant as to
+be indistinct or to seem insignificant. Seen through the clear air,
+their naked summits are so sharply defined and so individual in
+appearance as to seem almost like sculptured forms chiseled out of the
+hard rock.
+
+The city which rose upon this favored spot was worthy of its
+surroundings. The home of a free and enterprising race endowed with
+rare gifts of intellect and sensibility, and ever on the alert for
+improvement, it became the nurse of letters and of arts, while the
+luxury begotten of prosperity awakened a taste for adornment, and
+the wealth acquired by an extended commerce furnished the means of
+gratifying it. The age of Pericles was the period of the highest
+national development. At that time were reared the celebrated
+structures in honor of the virgin-goddess who was the patron of
+Athens--the Parthenon, the Propylaea, the Erechtheum--which crowned
+the Acropolis, and were the glory of the city as they were the
+masterpieces of Grecian architecture. During the preceding half
+century many works of utility and of splendor had been constructed,
+and the city now became renowned not only in Greece, but throughout
+the ancient world, for the magnificence of its public buildings.
+Thucydides, writing about this time, says that should Athens be
+destroyed, posterity would infer from its ruins that the city had
+been twice as populous as it actually was. Demosthenes speaks of
+the strangers who came to visit its attractions. But the changes of
+twenty-three centuries have passed upon this splendor--a sad story
+of violence and neglect--and the queenly city has long been in the
+condition of ruin imagined by Thucydides. Still, the spell of her
+influence is not broken, and the charm which once drew so many
+visitors to her shrines still acts powerfully on the hearts of
+scholars in all lands, who, having looked up to her poets, orators
+and philosophers as teachers and loved them as friends, long to visit
+their haunts, to stand where they stood, to behold the scenes which
+they were wont to view, and to gaze upon what may remain of the great
+works of art upon which their admiration was bestowed.
+
+So the student-pilgrim from the Western World with native ardor
+strains his sight to catch the first glimpse of the Athenian plain and
+city. He is fresh from his studies, and familiar with what books teach
+of the geography of Greece and the topography of Athens. He needs
+not to be informed which mountain-range is Parnes, and which
+Pentelicus--which island is Salamis, and which Egina. Yet much of what
+he sees is a revelation to him. The mountains are higher, more varied
+and more beautiful than he had supposed, Lycabettus and the Acropolis
+more imposing, Pentelicus farther away, and the plain larger, the gulf
+narrower, and Egina nearer and more mountainous, than he had fancied.
+He is astonished at the smallness of the harbor at Peiraeus, having
+insensibly formed his conception of its size from the notices of the
+mighty fleets which sailed from it in the palmy days when Athens was
+mistress of the seas. He is not prepared to see the southern shore
+of Salamis so near to the Peiraeus, though it explains the close
+connection between that island and Athens, and throws some light upon
+the great naval defeat of the Persians. In short, while every object
+is recognized as it presents itself, yet a more correct conception is
+formed of its relative position and aspect from a single glance of the
+eye than had been acquired from books during years of study.
+
+Arrived at the city, his experience is the same. He needs no guide to
+conduct him to its antiquities, nor cicerone to explain in bad
+French or worse English their names and history. Still, unexpected
+appearances present themselves not unfrequently. Hastening toward the
+Acropolis, he will first inspect the remains of the great theatre of
+Dionysus, so familiar to him as the place where, in the presence
+of all the people and many strangers, were acted the plays of his
+favorite poets, Eschylus and Sophocles, and where they won many
+prizes. Hurrying over the eastern brow of the hill, he comes suddenly
+upon the spot, enters at the summit, as many an Athenian did in the
+olden time, and is smitten with amazement at the first glance, and led
+to question whether this be indeed the site of the ancient theatre. He
+finds, it is true, the topmost seats cut in the solid rock, row above
+row, stripped now of their marble lining and weather-worn, but yet the
+genuine ancient seats of the upper tier. These he expected to find.
+But whence are those fresh seats which fill the lower part of the
+hollow, arranged as neatly as if intended for immediate use? and
+whence the massive stage beyond? He bethinks himself that he has
+heard of recent excavations under the patronage of the government, and
+closer inspection shows that these are actually the lower seats of the
+theatre in the time of the emperor Hadrian, whose favorite residence
+was Athens, and who did so much to embellish the city. The front seats
+consist of massive stone chairs, each inscribed with the name of its
+occupant, generally the priestess of some one of the numerous gods
+worshiped by that people so given to idolatry. In the centre of the
+second row is an elevated throne inscribed with the name of Hadrian.
+The stage is seen to be the ancient Greek stage enlarged to the
+Roman size to suit the demands of a later style of theatrical
+representation.
+
+[Illustration: THEATRE OF DIONYSUS (BACCHUS).]
+
+After looking in vain for the seat occupied by the priestess of the
+Unknown God, our traveler passes on and enters with a beating heart
+the charmed precincts of the Acropolis itself. The Propylaea, which he
+has been accustomed to regard too exclusively as a mere entrance-gate
+to the glories beyond, impresses him with its size and grandeur, and
+the little temple of Victory by its side with its elegance.[A] But
+the steepness of the ascent perplexes him. It seems impracticable for
+horses, yet he knows by unexceptionable testimony that the Athenian
+youth prided themselves upon driving their matched steeds in the great
+Panathenaic procession which once every four years wound up the hill,
+bearing the sacred peplus to the temple of the goddess. A closer
+examination reveals the transverse creases of the pavement designed
+to give a footing to the beasts, as well as the marks of the
+chariot-wheels. Nevertheless, the ascent (and much more the descent)
+must have been a perilous undertaking, unless the teams were better
+broken than the various accounts of chariot-races furnished by the
+poets would indicate. Entering beneath the great gate, a little
+distance forward to the left may readily be found the site of the
+colossal bronze statue of the warrior-goddess in complete armor,
+formed by Phidias out of the spoils taken at Marathon. The square
+base, partly sunk in the uneven rock, is as perfect as if just put in
+readiness to receive the pedestal of that famous work. A road bending
+to the right and slightly hollowed out of the rock leads to the
+Parthenon. The outer platform which sustains this celebrated temple
+is partly cut from the rock of the hill and partly built up of common
+limestone. The inner one of three courses, as well as the whole
+superstructure, is formed of Pentelic marble of a compact crystalline
+structure and of dazzling whiteness. Long exposure has not availed to
+destroy its lustre, but only to soften its tone. The visitor, planting
+himself at the western front, is in a position to gain some adequate
+idea of the perfection of the noble building. The interior and central
+parts suffered the principal injury from the explosion of the Turkish
+powder magazine in 1687. The western front remains nearly entire.
+It has been despoiled, indeed, of its movable ornaments. The statues
+which filled the pediment are gone, with the exception of a fragment
+or two. The sculptured slabs have been removed from the spaces between
+the triglyphs, and the gilded shields which hung beneath have been
+taken down. Of the magnificent frieze, representing the procession
+of the great quadrennial festival, only the portion surrounding the
+western vestibule is still in place.[B]
+
+[Footnote A: The latter contains, among other relics of a balustrade
+which protected and adorned the platform of the temple, the
+exquisitely graceful torso of Victory untying her sandals, of which
+casts are to be seen in most of the museums of Europe.]
+
+[Footnote B: Among the figures of this bas-relief, twelve are
+recognized by their lofty stature and sitting posture as those of
+divinities. One group is represented in the engraving.]
+
+[Illustration: VICTORY UNTYING HER SANDALS.]
+
+[Illustration: TEMPLE OF VICTORY]
+
+[Illustration: THE PARTHENON.]
+
+Still, as these were strictly decorations, and wholly subordinate to
+the organic parts of the structure, their presence, while it would
+doubtless greatly enhance the effect of the whole, is not felt to be
+essential to its completeness. The whole Doric columns still bear
+the massive entablature sheltered by the covering roof. The simple
+greatness of the conception, the just proportion of the several parts,
+together with the elaborate finishing of the whole work, invest it
+with a charm such as the works of man seldom possess--the pure and
+lasting pleasure which flows from apparent perfection Entering the
+principal apartment of the building, traces are seen of the stucco and
+pictures with which the walls were covered when it was fitted up as
+a Christian church in the Byzantine period. Near the centre of the
+marble pavement is a rectangular space laid with dark stone from the
+Peirseus or from Eleusis. It marks the probable site of the colossal
+precious statue of the goddess in gold and ivory--one of the most
+celebrated works of Phidias. The smaller apartment beyond, accessible
+only from the opposite front of the temple, was used by the state as
+a place of deposit and safekeeping for bullion and other valuables in
+the care of the state treasurer.
+
+[Illustration: BAS RELIEF OF THE GODS (FRIEZE OF THE PARTHENON).]
+
+Having examined the great temple, and tested the curvature of
+its seemingly horizontal lines by sighting along the unencumbered
+platform, and having stopped at several points of the grand portico
+to admire the fine views of the city and surrounding country, the
+traveler picks his way northward, across a thick layer of fragments
+of columns, statues and blocks of marble, toward the low-placed,
+irregular but elegant Erechtheum, the temple of the most ancient
+worship and statue of the patron-goddess of the city. This building
+sits close by the northern as the Parthenon does by the southern wall
+of the enclosure. It has suffered equally with the other from the
+ravages of time, and its ruins, though less grand, are more beautiful.
+Most of the graceful Ionic columns are still standing, but large
+portions of the roof and entablature have fallen. Fragments of
+decorated cornice strew the ground, some of them of considerable
+length, and afford a near view of that delicate ornamentation and
+exquisite finish so rare outside the limits of Greece. The elevated
+porch of the Caryatides, lately restored by the substitution of a
+new figure in place of the missing statue now in the British Museum,
+attracts attention as a unique specimen of Greek art, and also as
+showing how far a skillful treatment will overcome the inherent
+difficulties of a subject. The row of fair maidens looking out toward
+the Parthenon do not seem much oppressed by the burden which rests
+upon them, while their graceful forms lend a pleasing variety to the
+scene. Passing out by the northern wing of the Propylaea, a survey is
+had of the numerous fragments of sculpture discovered among the ruins
+upon the hill, and temporarily placed in the ancient Pinacotheca.
+The eye rests upon sweet infant faces and upon rugged manly ones.
+Sometimes a single feature only remains, which, touched by the finger
+of genius, awakens admiration. A naked arm severed from the trunk, of
+feminine cast, but with muscles tightly strained and hand clenched as
+in agony, will arrest attention and dwell in the memory.
+
+North-west of the Acropolis, across a narrow chasm, lies the low,
+rocky height of the Areopagus, accessible at the southeast angle by
+a narrow flight of sixteen rudely-cut steps, which lead to a small
+rectangular excavation on the summit, which faces the Acropolis, and
+is surrounded upon three sides by a double tier of benches hewn out
+of the rock. Here undoubtedly the most venerable court of justice at
+Athens had its seat and tried its cases in the open air. Here too,
+without doubt, stood the great apostle when, with bold spirit and
+weighty words, he declared unto the men of Athens that God of whom
+they confessed their ignorance; who was not to be represented by gold
+or silver or stone graven by art and man's device; who dwelt not in
+temples made with hands, and needed not to be worshiped with men's
+hands. In no other place can one feel so sure that he comes upon the
+very footsteps of the apostle, and on no other spot can one better
+appreciate his high gifts as an orator or the noble devotion of his
+whole soul to the work of the Master. How poor in comparison with
+his life-work appear the performances of the greatest of the Athenian
+thinkers or doers!
+
+A little more than a quarter of a mile west of the Acropolis is
+another rocky hill--the Pnyx--celebrated as the place where the
+assembly of all the citizens met to transact the business of the
+state. A large semicircular area was formed, partly by excavation,
+partly by building up from beneath, the bounds of which can be
+distinctly traced. Considerable remains of the terrace-wall at the
+foot of the slope exist--huge stones twelve or fourteen feet in length
+by eight or ten in breadth. The chord of the semicircle is near the
+top of the hill, formed by the perpendicular face of the excavated
+rock, and is about four hundred feet in length by twenty in depth.
+Projecting from it at the centre, and hewn out of the same rock, is
+the bema or stone platform from which the great orators from the time
+of Themistocles and Aristides, and perhaps of Solon, down to the
+age of Demosthenes and the Attic Ten, addressed the mass of their
+fellow-citizens. It is a massive cubic block, with a linear edge of
+eleven feet, standing upon a graduated base of nearly equal height,
+and is mounted on either side by a flight of nine stone steps.
+From its connection with the most celebrated efforts of some of
+the greatest orators our race has yet seen, it is one of the most
+interesting relics in the world, and its solid structure will cause it
+to endure as long as the world itself shall stand, unless, as there is
+some reason to apprehend will be the case, it is knocked to pieces and
+carried off in the carpet-bags of travelers. No traces of the Agora,
+which occupied the shallow valley between the Pnyx and the Acropolis,
+remain. It was the heart of the city, and was adorned with numerous
+public buildings, porticoes, temples and statues. It was often
+thronged with citizens gathered for purposes of trade, discussion, or
+to hear and tell some new thing.
+
+[Illustration: PORCH OF THE CARYATIDES.]
+
+Half a mile or more to the south-east, on the banks of the Ilissus,
+stood a magnificent structure dedicated to Olympian Zeus--one of
+the four largest temples of Greece, ranking with that of Demeter at
+Eleusis and that of Diana at Ephesus. Its foundations remain, and
+sixteen of the huge Corinthian columns belonging to its majestic
+triple colonnade. One of these is fallen. Breaking up into the
+numerous disks of which it was composed--six and a half feet in
+diameter by two or more in thickness--and stretching out to a length
+of over sixty feet, it gives an impressive conception of the size of
+these columns, said to be the largest standing in Europe. The level
+area of the temple is now used as a training-ground for soldiers.
+Close by, and almost in the bed of the stream, which is dry the larger
+part of the year, issues from beneath a ledge of rock the copious
+fountain of sweet waters known to the ancients as Calirrhoe. It
+furnished the only good drinking-water of the city, and was used in
+all the sacrifices to the gods. A little way above, on the opposite
+bank of the Ilissus, is the site of the Panathenaic stadium, whose
+shape is perfectly preserved in the smooth grass-grown hollow with
+semicircular extremity which here lies at right angles to the stream,
+between parallel ridges partly artificial.
+
+Northward from the Acropolis, on a slight elevation, is the
+best-preserved and one of the most ancient structures of Athens--the
+temple of Theseus, built under the administration of Cimon by the
+generation preceding Pericles and the Parthenon. It is of the Doric
+order, and shaped like the Parthenon, but considerably inferior to
+it in size as well as in execution. It has been roofed with wood in
+modern times, and was long used as a church, but is now a place of
+deposit for the numerous statues and sculptured stones of various
+kinds--mostly sepulchral monuments--which have been recently
+discovered in and about the city. They are for the most part
+unimportant as works of art, though many are interesting from their
+antiquity or historic associations. Among these is the stone which
+once crowned the burial-mound on the plain of Marathon. It bears a
+single figure, said to represent the messenger who brought the tidings
+of victory to his countrymen.
+
+Near the Theseium was the double gate (Dipylum) in the ancient wall
+of the city whence issued the Sacred Way leading to Eleusis, and
+bordered, like the Appian Way at Rome, with tombs, many of them
+cenotaphs of persons who died in the public service and were deemed
+worthy of a monument in the public burying-ground. Within a few years
+an excavation has been made through an artificial mound of ashes,
+pottery and other refuse emptied out of the city, and a section of a
+few rods of this celebrated road has been laid bare. The sepulchral
+monuments are ranged on one side rather thickly, and crowd somewhat
+closely upon the narrow pavement. They are, for the most part, simple,
+thick slabs of white marble, with a triangular or pediment-shaped top,
+beneath which is sculptured in low relief the closing scene of the
+person commemorated, followed by a short inscription. The work is done
+in an artistic style worthy of the publicity its location gave it. On
+one of these slabs you recognize the familiar full-length figure of
+Demosthenes, standing with two companions and clasping in a parting
+grasp the hand of a woman, who is reclining upon her deathbed. The
+inscription is, _Collyrion, wife of Agathon_. On another stone of
+larger size is a more imposing piece of sculpture. A horseman fully
+armed is thrusting his spear into the body of his fallen foe--a
+hoplite. The inscription relates that the unhappy foot-soldier fell at
+Corinth _by reason of those five words of his_!--a record intelligible
+enough, doubtless, to his contemporaries, but sufficiently obscure and
+provocative of curiosity to later generations.
+
+There are other noted structures at Athens, such as the Choragic
+Monument of Lysicrates--the highest type of the Corinthian order of
+architecture, as the Erechtheum is of the Ionic and the Parthenon of
+the Doric--but want of space forbids any further description of them.
+Let the American traveler visit Athens with the expectation of finding
+a city occupying the most charming of sites, and containing by far
+the most interesting and important monuments of antiquity, in their
+original position, to be found in the whole world.
+
+J.L.T. PHILLIPS.
+
+[Illustration: MONUMENT OF LYSICRATES.]
+
+
+
+
+COMMONPLACE.
+
+
+ My little girl is commonplace, you say?
+ Well, well, I grant it, as you use the phrase
+ Concede the whole; although there was a day
+ When I too questioned words, and from a maze
+ Of hairsplit meanings, cut with close-drawn line,
+ Sought to draw out a language superfine,
+ Above the common, scarify with words and scintillate with pen;
+ But that time's over--now I am content to stand with other men.
+
+ It's the best place, fair youth. I see your smile--
+ The scornful smile of that ambitious age
+ That thinks it all things knows, and all the while
+ It nothing knows. And yet those smiles presage
+ Some future fame, because your aim is high;
+ As when one tries to shoot into the sky,
+ If his rash arrow at the moon he aims, a bolder flight we see,
+ Though vain, than if with level poise it safely reached the nearest tree.
+
+ A common proverb that! Does it disjoint
+ Your graceful terms? One more you'll understand:
+ Cut down a pencil to too fine a point,
+ Lo, it breaks off, all useless, in your hand!
+ The child is fitted for her present sphere:
+ Let her live out her life, without the fear
+ That comes when souls, daring the heights of dread infinity, are tost,
+ Now up, now down, by the great winds, their little home for ever lost.
+
+ My little girl seems to you commonplace
+ Because she loves the daisies, common flowers;
+ Because she finds in common pictures grace,
+ And nothing knows of classic music's powers:
+ She reads her romance, but the mystic's creed
+ Is something far beyond her simple need.
+ She goes to church, but the mixed doubts and theories that thinkers find
+ In all religious truth can never enter her undoubting mind.
+
+ A daisy's earth's own blossom--better far
+ Than city gardener's costly hybrid prize:
+ When you're found worthy of a higher star,
+ 'Twill then be time earth's daisies to despise;
+ But not till then. And if the child can sing
+ Sweet songs like "Robin Gray," why should I fling
+ A cloud over her music's joy, and set for her the heavy task
+ Of learning what Bach knew, or finding sense under mad Chopin's mask?
+
+ Then as to pictures: if her taste prefers
+ That common picture of the "Huguenots,"
+ Where the girl's heart--a tender heart like hers--
+ Strives to defeat earth's greatest powers' great plots
+ With her poor little kerchief, shall I change
+ The print for Turner's riddles wild and strange?
+ Or take her stories--simple tales which her few leisure hours beguile--
+ And give her Browning's _Sordello_, a Herbert Spencer, a Carlyle?
+
+ Her creed, too, in your eyes is commonplace,
+ Because she does not doubt the Bible's truth
+ Because she does not doubt the saving grace
+ Of fervent prayer, but from her rosy youth,
+ So full of life, to gray old age's time,
+ Prays on with faith half ignorant, half sublime.
+ Yes, commonplace! But if I spoil this common faith, when all is done
+ Can deist, pantheist or atheist invent a better one?
+
+ Climb to the highest mountain's highest verge,
+ Step off: you've lost the petty height you had;
+ Up to the highest point poor reason urge,
+ Step off: the sense is gone, the mind is mad.
+ "Thus far, and yet no farther, shalt thou go,"
+ Was said of old, and I have found it so:
+ This planet's ours, 'tis all we have; here we belong, and those are wise
+ Who make the best of it, nor vainly try above its plane to rise.
+
+ Nay, nay: I know already your reply;
+ I have been through the whole long years ago;
+ I have soared up as far as soul can fly,
+ I have dug down as far as mind can go;
+ But always found, at certain depth or height,
+ The bar that separates the infinite
+ From finite powers, against whose strength immutable we beat in vain,
+ Or circle round only to find ourselves at starting-point again.
+
+ If you must for yourself find out this truth,
+ I bid you go, proud heart, with blessings free:
+ 'Tis the old fruitless quest of ardent youth,
+ And soon or late you will come back to me.
+ You'll learn there's naught so common as the breath
+ Of life, unless it be the calm of death:
+ You'll learn that with the Lord Omnipotent there's nothing commonplace,
+ And with such souls as that poor child's, humbled, abashed, you'll
+ hide your face.
+
+CONSTANCE FENIMORE WOOLSON.
+
+
+
+
+PROBATIONER LEONHARD;
+
+OR, THREE NIGHTS IN THE HAPPY VALLEY.
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE TEST--WITH MENTAL RESERVATIONS.
+
+
+Elise went out to gather willow-twigs, as her mother had said when her
+father asked for her.
+
+A little later in the afternoon, Mr. Albert Spener walked swiftly down
+the street toward the house occupied by the Rev. Mr. Wenck. While
+he was yet at a distance Elise saw him approaching, and possibly she
+thought, "He has seen me and comes to meet me;" and many a pleasant
+stroll on many an afternoon would have justified the thought.
+
+But it was not until he had, as it were, stumbled upon Elise that he
+noticed her. He carried in his hand a letter, and when suddenly he
+stopped upon the sidewalk and looked at her, the changeful aspects of
+his face were marvelous to behold.
+
+"Where are you going?" he asked.
+
+"I was going home," she answered, not a little surprised by the abrupt
+and authoritative manner of his address.
+
+"I want to talk with you," said he. "Is it to-day that I am to begin
+to leave off loving you, Elise?"
+
+"That you are--What do you say, Albert?" she asked.
+
+"Have you not seen Brother Wenck's letter to your father, Elise?"
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"The lot--the lot--" he repeated, but his voice refused to help him
+tell the tale.
+
+"Albert, may I see the letter?" Father and Mother Loretz might have
+rejoiced in their daughter could they have seen and heard her in those
+trying moments. Her gentleness and her serene dignity said for her
+that she would not be over-thrown by the storm which had burst upon
+her in a moment, unlocked for as tempest and whirlwind out of a clear
+sky.
+
+Spener thrust into her hands the letter addressed to him that morning
+by the minister. It contained an announcement of the decision rendered
+by the lot, couched in terms more brief, perhaps, than those which
+conveyed the same intelligence to the father of Elise.
+
+She gave it back to him without a word.
+
+"If Brother Wenck is going to stand by it," said he, "there'll be no
+room for him in this place. I was just going to his house to tell him
+so. Will you go with me? I should like to have a witness. I'll make
+short work of it."
+
+"No," said Elise, shrinking back amazed from her companion. "I will
+not go with you to insult that good man."
+
+"You will go with me--_not_ to his house, then! Come, Elise, we must
+talk about this. You must help me untie this knot. I cannot imagine
+how I ever permitted things to take their chance. I have never heard
+of a sillier superstition than I seem to have encouraged. Talk about
+faith! Let a man act up to light and take the consequences. I can see
+clear enough now. _You_ never looked for this to happen, Elise?"
+
+She shook her head. Indeed, she never had--no, not for a moment.
+
+"To think I should have permitted it to go on!"
+
+"But you did let it go on--and I--consented. Do not let me forget
+that," she exclaimed. "I will go home, Albert."
+
+"Ha, Elise! I wish I could feel more confidence in your teachers when
+you get there."
+
+"I need no one to tell me what my duty is just here," she answered.
+
+"Have you ever loved me, child? _Child_! I am talking to a rock. You
+do not yield to this?" He waved the letter aloft, and as if he would
+dash it from him. Elise looked at him, and did not speak. "Sister
+Benigna will of course feel called upon to bless the Lord," said he.
+"But Wenck shall find a way out of this difficulty. Then we will have
+done with them both, my own."
+
+"Am I to have no voice in this matter?" she asked. "What if I say--"
+
+Spener grasped her hand so suddenly that, as if in her surprise she
+had forgotten what she was about to say, Elise added, "Sister Benigna
+is my best friend. She knows nothing about the lot."
+
+"Does not?"
+
+"I told you, Albert, that it was to be so. And--you do not mean to
+threaten Mr. Wenck?"
+
+"I mean to have him find a way out of this difficulty. He ought to
+have said to your father that this lot business belongs to a period
+gone by. He did hint at it. I supposed, of course, that he would see
+the thing came out right, since he let it go on."
+
+"Did you then believe it was only a play or a trick?" exclaimed Elise
+indignantly.
+
+"Not quite, but I did not suppose that we were a company who would
+stand by an adverse decision. You know, if you are the Elise I have
+loved so long, that I must love you always--that I am not going to
+give you up. Your father was bent on the test, but look at him and
+tell me if he expected this turn. He is twenty years older than he
+was yesterday. Folks used to resort to the lot in deciding about
+marriages, and it was all well enough if they didn't care how it
+turned out, or hadn't faith to believe in their own ability to choose.
+A pretty way of doing business, though! Suppose I had tried it on this
+place! I have always asked for God's blessing, and tried to act so
+that I need not blush when I asked it; but a man must know his own
+mind, he must act with decision. I say again, I don't like your
+teachers, Elise. Between Sister Benigna and Mr. Wenck, now, what would
+be my chances if I could submit to such a pair?"
+
+"You and I have no quarrel," said Elise gently. "I suppose that you
+acted in good faith. You know how much I care--how humiliated I shall
+feel if you attack in any way a man so good as Mr. Wenck. You do not
+understand Sister Benigna."
+
+It was well that she had these to speak of, and that she need not
+confine herself to the main thought before them, for Albert could do
+anything he attempted. Had not her father always said, "Let Spener
+alone for getting what he wants: he'll have it, but he's above-board
+and honest;" and what hopes, heaven-cleaving, had spread wing the
+instant her eyes met his!
+
+"It is easy to say that I do not understand," said he. "One has only
+to assume that another is so excellent and virtuous a character as to
+be beyond your comprehension, and then your mouth is stopped."
+
+"Ah, how bitter you are!" exclaimed Elise. Her voice was full of pain.
+
+Spener silently reproached himself, and said, with a tenderness that
+was irresistible, "You don't know what temptations beset a man in
+business and everywhere, Elise. It would be easier far to lie down
+and die, I have thought sometimes, than to stand up and meet the enemy
+like a man. You will never convince me that my duty is to let you go,
+to give you up. I can think of nothing so wicked."
+
+These words, which had a joyful sound to which she could not seal her
+ears, made Elise stop suddenly, afraid of Albert, afraid of herself.
+"I think," she said after a moment, "we had best not walk together
+any longer. There is nothing we can say that will satisfy ourselves or
+ought to satisfy each other."
+
+"Do you mean that you accept this decision?" said he.
+
+"I promised, Albert. So did you."
+
+"We will not talk about it. But we can at least walk together, Elise.
+You need not speak. What you confessed just now is true--you cannot
+say anything to the purpose."
+
+So they walked on together. Silently, past all Spenersberg's
+dwelling-places they walked, till they came to the cemetery, and
+ascending the hill they strolled about that pleasant place among the
+graves, and thought, perhaps, How blessed are the dead! and oh to be
+lying there in a dreamless sleep beneath the blooming wild roses, and
+where dirges were sounding through the cedars day and night! Elise
+might have thought thus, but not her companion. He was the last man
+to wish to pass from the scene of his successes merely because a great
+failure threatened him. Looking upon the slight young figure beside
+him and her grave sweet face, a wrathful contempt was aroused within
+him that he should have allowed himself to be placed in a situation so
+absurd. As they walked down the hill again, he startled his companion
+by a merry outbreak. "Tell me you are not mine!" he said: "there never
+was a joke like it!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+SISTER BENIGNA.
+
+
+On her return home Elise found Sister Benigna seated at the piano,
+attuning herself, as she said, after her work among the restive
+children of her school.
+
+When she looked upon her friend and recalled the bitter words Albert
+had spoken against her, Elise felt their injustice. It was true, as
+she had told him, he did not understand Sister Benigna.
+
+Sitting down beside the window, Elise began to busy herself over the
+dainty basket she was elaborately decorating. After a few moments
+Sister Benigna left the piano and stood looking at Elise and her work.
+She had something to say, but how should she say it? how approach the
+heart which had wrapped itself up in sorrow and surrounded itself with
+the guards of silence?
+
+Presently Elise looked at her, but not until she had so long resisted
+the inclination to do so that there was something like violence in the
+effort. When her eyes met the gaze of Sister Benigna the warm blood
+rushed to her cheeks, and she looked quickly down again. Did Sister
+Benigna know yet about the letter Mr. Wenck had written?
+
+A sad smile appeared on Benigna's face. She shook her head. If she did
+not know what had happened, she no doubt understood that some kind of
+trouble had entered the house.
+
+Drawing a roll of needlework from her pocket, she quietly occupied
+herself with it until Elise, unable to endure the silence longer,
+said, "Oh, Sister Benigna, is it not time we did something about the
+Sisters' House? I have been reading about one: I forget where it is.
+What a beautiful Home you and I could make for poor people, and sick
+girls not able to work, and old women! We ought to have such a Home in
+Spenersberg. I have been thinking all day it is what we must have, and
+it is time we set about it."
+
+"I do not agree with you," was the quiet answer. "There is no real
+need for it here, and perhaps there never will be. Work that is so
+unnecessary might better be avoided. In Spenersberg it is better that
+the poor and the old and the sick should be cared for in their homes,
+by their own households: there is no want here."
+
+"Will you read what I have been reading?" said Elise, hesitating, not
+willing yet to give up the project which looked so full of promise.
+
+"I know all about Sisters' Houses, and they are excellent
+institutions, but if you will go from house to house here you will
+find that you would probably keep house by yourself a long time if you
+opened such an establishment. No, no: you have your work all prepared
+for you, and I certainly have mine. There is a good deal to be done
+yet for the festival. Tomorrow, after five, come to the school-room and
+we will practice a while. And we might do something here to-night. The
+children surprise me: I seem to be surrounded by a little company of
+angels while they sing."
+
+"Oh, Sister Benigna," exclaimed Elise throwing down her work in
+despair, "I don't in the least care about the festival. I should be
+glad to know it was all given up. I cannot sing at it. I think I have
+lost my voice: I do, indeed. I tried it this afternoon, and I croaked
+worse than anything you ever heard."
+
+"Croaked? We must see to that," said Sister Benigna; but, though her
+voice was so cheerful, she closed her eyes as she spoke, and passed
+her hands over them, and in spite of herself a look of pain was for an
+instant visible on her always pale face. She rose quickly and walked
+across the room, and crossed it twice before she came again to the
+window.
+
+"You don't understand me to-day," said Elise impetuously; "and I don't
+want you to." But Elise would not have spoken at all had she looked at
+Sister Benigna.
+
+A silence of many seconds, which seemed much longer to Elise,
+followed her words. She did not dare to go on. What was Sister Benigna
+thinking? Would she never speak? Had she nothing to say? Elise was
+about to rise also, because to sit still in that silence or to break
+it by words had become equally impossible, when Sister Benigna,
+approaching gently, laid her hand upon her and said, "Wait one moment:
+I have something to tell you, Elise."
+
+And so Elise sat down. She could not summon the strength to go with
+that voice in her ear and the touch of that hand arresting her.
+
+"I once had a friend as young as you are, of whom you often remind
+me," said Benigna. "She had a lover, and their faith led them to
+seek a knowledge of the Lord's will concerning their marriage. It
+was inquired for them, and it was found against the union. You often
+remind me of her, I said, but your fortunes are not at all like hers."
+
+"Sister Benigna, why do you tell me this?" asked Elise quickly, in a
+voice hardly audible. She was afraid to listen. She recalled Albert's
+words. She did not know if she might trust the friendly voice that
+spoke.
+
+"Because I have always thought that some time it would be well for you
+to hear it; but if you do not wish to hear it, I will go no farther."
+
+Elise looked at Benigna--not trust her! "Please go on," she said.
+
+"I knew the poor child very well. She had grown up in an unhappy
+home, and had never known what it was to have comfort and peace in the
+house, or even plenty to eat and to wear. She was expected to go out
+and earn her living as soon as she had learned the use of her hands
+and feet. Poor child! she felt her fortune was a hard one, but God
+always cared for her. In one way and another she in time picked up
+enough knowledge of music to teach beginners. The first real friend
+she had was the friend who became so dear to her that--I need not try
+to find words to tell you how dear he was.
+
+"She was soon skilled enough to be able to take more intelligent and
+advanced pupils, and in the church-music she had the leading parts.
+By and by the music was put into her hands for festivals and the
+great days, Christmas and Easter, as it has been put into mine here in
+Spenersberg. One day _he_ said to her, 'It seems to us the best thing
+in life to be near each other. Would it might be God's will that we
+should never part!' She responded to that prayer from the depths of
+her heart, and a great gulf seemed to open before her, for she thought
+what would her life be worth if they were destined to part? Then he
+said, 'Let us inquire the will of our Lord;' and she said, 'Let it
+be so;' and they had faith that would enable them to abide by the
+decision. The lot pronounced against them. I do not believe that it
+had entered the heart of either of them to understand how necessary
+they had become to each other, and when they saw that all was over it
+was a sad awaking. For a little while it was with both as if they had
+madly thrown a birthright away; for, though they had faith, they were
+not yet perfect in it. Not soon did either see that this life had
+a blessing for them every day--new every morning, fresh every
+evening--and that from everlasting to everlasting are the mercies of
+God. But at last he said, 'I am afraid, my darling'" (Elise started at
+this word of endearment. It was like a revelation to think that there
+had been lovers in the world before her time), "'it will go harder
+with me than with you. I cannot stay here and go on with my work. I
+must go among new people, and begin again.' And so he went away, and
+at last, when by the grace of God they met again--surely, surely by no
+seeking of their own--they were no less true friends because they had
+for their lifetime been led into separate paths. Their faith saved
+them."
+
+Low though the voice was in which these last words were spoken, there
+was a strength and inspiration in them which Elise felt. She looked
+at Sister Benigna with steady, wondering eyes. Such a story from her
+lips, and told so, and told now! And her countenance! what divine
+beauty glowed in it! The moment had a vision that could never be
+forgotten.
+
+Elise did not speak, but neither, having heard this tale, did she now
+rise to depart. She folded her hands and bowed her head upon them, and
+so they sat silent until the first chords of the "Pastoral Symphony"
+drew the souls of both away up into a realm which is entered only by
+the pure in heart.
+
+About this time it was that Leonhard Marten, while passing, heard that
+recitative of a soprano voice which so amazed him. Dropping quickly
+into the shade of the trees opposite Loretz's house, he listened to
+the announcement, "There were shepherds abiding in the field, keeping
+watch over their flocks by night," and there remained until he saw two
+men advancing toward the house, one of them evidently approaching his
+home.
+
+Through the sleepless night Elise's thoughts were constantly going
+over the simple incidents of the story Sister Benigna had told her.
+But they had not by morning yielded all the consolations which the
+teller of the tale perceived among their possibilities, for the
+reason, perhaps, that Elise's sympathies had been more powerfully
+excited by the tale than her faith. It was not upon the final result
+of the severance effected by the lot that her mind rested dismayed:
+her heart was full of pain, thinking of that poor girl's early life,
+and that at last, when all the recollection of it was put far from her
+by the joy which shone upon her as the sun out of darkness, she
+must look forward and by its light behold a future so dreary. "How
+fearful!" she moaned once; and her closed eyes did not see the face
+that turned toward her full of pain, full of love.
+
+Of all doubts that could afflict the soul of Sister Benigna, none
+more distracting than this was conceivable: Had she proved the best
+instructor to this child of her spirit? Had she even been _capable_ of
+teaching her truest truth? Was it the truth or herself to which Elise
+was always deferring? Was obedience a duty when not impelled and
+sanctified by faith? In what did the prime virtue of resignation
+consist? Would not obedience without faith be merely a debasing
+superstitious submission to the will of the believing? Her reflections
+were not suggested by a shrewd guess. She knew that the lot had been
+resorted to, and that the letters had been written to Elise and Albert
+which acquainted them with the result; and the peace of her prayerful
+soul was rent by the thought that a joyless surrender of human will
+to a higher was, perhaps, no better than the poor helpless slave's
+extorted sacrifice. The happiness of the household seemed to Benigna
+in her keeping. If they had gone lightly seeking the oracle of God,
+as they would have sought a fortune-teller, was not the Most High
+dishonored? She could not say this to Elise, but could she say it to
+Albert Spener? Ought she not to say it to him? There was no other to
+whom it could be said. Had the coming day any duty so imperative as
+this? She arose to perform it, but Spener, as we know, had gone away
+the day before.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+THE MEN OF SPENERSBERG.
+
+
+This Spenersberg, about which Leonhard was not a little eager to know
+more when he shut the door of the apartment into which his host had
+ushered him--for he must remain all night--what was it?
+
+A colony, or a brotherhood, or a community, six years old. Such a fact
+does not lie ready for observation every day--such a place does not
+lie in the hand of a man at his bidding. What, then, was its history?
+We need not wait to find out until morning, when Leonhard will proceed
+to discover. He is satisfied when he lies down upon the bed, which
+awaited him, it seems, as he came hither on the way-train--quite
+satisfied that Spener of Spenersberg must be a man worth seeing.
+Breathing beings possessed of ideas and homes here must have been
+handled with power by a master mind to have brought about this
+community, if so it is to be called, in six short years, thinks
+Leonhard. He recalls his own past six years, and turns uneasily on his
+bed, and finds no rest until he reminds himself of the criticism
+he has been enabled to pass on Miss Elise's rendering of "He is a
+righteous Saviour," and the suggestion he made concerning the pitch
+of "Ye shall find rest for your souls." The recollection acts upon him
+somewhat as the advancing wave acts on the sand-line made by the wave
+preceding. When he made the first suggestion, Sister Benigna stood
+for a moment looking at him, surprised by his remark; but, less than a
+second taken up with a thought of him, she had passed instantly on to
+say, "Try it so, Elise: 'He is a righteous Saviour.' We will make it
+a slower movement. Ah! how impressive! how beautiful! It is the
+composer's very thought! Again--slow: it is perfect!"
+
+Was this kind of praise worth the taking? a source of praise worth
+the seeking? Leonhard had said ungrateful things about his
+prize-credentials to Miss Marion Ayres, and I do believe that these
+very prizes, awarded for his various drawings, were never so valued
+by him as the look with which priestly Benigna seemed to admit him at
+least so far as into the fellowship of the Gentiles' Court.
+
+He would have fallen asleep just here with a pleasant thought but for
+the recollection of Wilberforce's letter, which startled him hardly
+less than the apparition of his friend in the moonlight streaming
+through his half-curtained window would have done. Is it always so
+pleasant a thought that for ever and ever a man shall bear his own
+company?
+
+But this Spenersberg? Seven years ago, on the day when he came of age,
+Albert Spener, then a young clerk in a fancy-goods store, went to look
+at the estate which his grandfather had bequeathed to him the year
+preceding. Not ten years ago the old man made his will and gave the
+property, on which he had not quite starved, to his only grandson, and
+here was this worthless gorge which stretched between the fields more
+productive than many a famous gold-mine.
+
+The youth had seen at once that if he should deal with the land as
+his predecessors had done, he would be able to draw no more from the
+stingy acres than they. He had shown the bent of his mind and the
+nature of his talent by the promptness with which he put things remote
+together, and by the directness with which he reached his conclusions.
+
+He had left his town-lodgings, having obtained of his employer leave
+of absence for one week, and within twenty-four hours had come to
+his conclusion and returned to his post. Of that estate which he had
+inherited but a portion, and a very small portion, offered to the
+cultivator the least encouragement. The land had long ago been
+stripped of its forest trees, and, thus defrauded of its natural
+fertilizers, lay now, after successive seasons of drain and waste, as
+barren as a desert, with the exception of that narrow strip between
+the hills which apparently bent low that inland might look upon river.
+
+Along the banks of the stream, which flowed, a current of considerable
+depth and swiftness, toward its outlet, the river, willows were
+growing. Albert's employer was an importer to a small extent,
+and fancy willow-ware formed a very considerable share of his
+importations. The conclusion he had reached while surveying his land
+was an answer to the question he had asked himself: Why should
+not this land be made to bring forth the kind of willow used by
+basket-weavers, and why should not basket-weavers be induced to gather
+into a community of some sort, and so importers be beaten in the
+market by domestic productions? The aim thus clearly defined Spener
+had accomplished. His Moravians furnished him with a willow-ware
+which was always quoted at a high figure, and the patriotic pride
+the manufacturer felt in the enterprise was abundantly rewarded: no
+foreign mark was ever found on his home-made goods.
+
+But _his_ Moravians: where did these people come from, and how came
+they to be known as his?
+
+The question brings us to Frederick Loretz. In those days he was a
+porter in the establishment where Spener was a clerk. He had filled
+this situation only one month, however, when he was attacked with a
+fever which was scourging the neighborhood, and taken to the hospital.
+Albert followed him thither with kindly words and care, for the poor
+fellow was a stranger in the town, and he had already told Spener his
+dismal story. Afar from wife and child, among strangers and a pauper,
+his doom, he believed, was to die. How he bemoaned his wasted life
+then, and the husks which he had eaten!
+
+In his delirium Loretz would have put an end to his life. Spener
+talked him out of this horror of himself, and showed him that there
+was always opportunity, while life lasted, for wanderers to seek again
+the fold they had strayed from; for when the delirium passed the man's
+conscience remained, and he confessed that he had lived away from
+the brethren of his faith, and was an outcast. Oh, if he could but
+be transported to Herrnhut and set down there a well man in that
+sanctuary of Moravianism, how devoutly would he return to the faith
+and practice of his fathers!
+
+When Spener returned from his trip of investigation he hastened
+immediately to the hospital, sought out poor half-dead Loretz, laid
+his hand on his shoulder, and said, "Come, get up: I want you." And
+he explained his project: "I will build a house for you, send for
+your wife and child, put you all together, and start you in life. I
+am going into the basket business, and I want you to look after
+my willows. After they are pretty well grown you shall get in some
+families--Simon-Pure Moravians, you know--and we will have a village
+of our own. D'ye hear me?"
+
+The poor fellow did hear: he struggled up in his bed, threw his arms
+around Spener's neck, tried to kiss him, and fainted.
+
+"This is a good beginning," said Spener to himself as he laid the
+senseless head upon the pillow and felt for the beating heart. The
+beating heart was there. In a few moments Loretz was looking, with
+eyes that shone with loving gratitude and wondering admiration, on the
+young man who had saved his life.
+
+"I have no money," said this youth in further explanation of his
+project--for he wanted his companion to understand his circumstances
+from the outset--"but I shall borrow five thousand dollars. I can pay
+the interest on that sum out of my salary. Perhaps I shall sell a few
+lots on the river, if I can turn attention to the region. It will all
+come out right, anyhow. Now, how soon can you be ready? I will write
+to your wife to-day if you say so, and tell her to come on with the
+little girl."
+
+"Wait a week," said Loretz in a whisper; and all that night and the
+following day his chances for this world and the next seemed about
+equal.
+
+But after that he rallied, and his recovery was certain. It was slow,
+however, hastened though it was by the hope and expectation which
+had opened to him when he had reached the lowest depth of despair and
+covered himself with the ashes of repentance.
+
+The letter for the wife and little girl was written, and money sent to
+bring them from the place where Loretz had left them when he set
+out in search of occupation, to find employment as a porter, and the
+fever, and Albert Spener.
+
+During the first year of co-working Loretz devoted himself to the
+culture of the willow, and then, as time passed on and hands were
+needed, he brought one family after another to the place--Moravians
+all--until now there were at least five hundred inhabitants in
+Spenersberg, a large factory and a church, whereof Spener himself was
+a member "in good and regular standing."
+
+Seven years of incessant labor, directed by a wise foresight, which
+looked almost like inspiration and miracle, had resulted in all this
+real prosperity. Loretz never stopped wondering at it, and yet he
+could have told you every step of the process. All that had been
+_done_ he had had a hand in, but the devising brain was Spener's;
+and no wonder that, in spite of his familiarity with the details,
+the sum-total of the activities put forth in that valley should have
+seemed to Loretz marvelous, magical.
+
+He had many things to rejoice over besides his own prosperity. His
+daughter was in all respects a perfect being, to his thinking. For six
+years now she had been under the instruction of Sister Benigna,
+not only in music, but in all things that Sister Benigna, a
+well-instructed woman, could teach. She sang, as Leonhard Marten would
+have told you, "divinely," she was beautiful to look upon, and Albert
+Spener desired to marry her.
+
+Surely the Lord had blessed him, and remembered no more those years
+of wanderings when, alienated from the brethren, he sought out his
+own ways and came close upon destruction. What should he return to the
+beneficent Giver for all these benefits?
+
+Poor Loretz! In his prosperity he thought that he should never be
+moved, but he would not basely use that conviction and forget the
+source of all his satisfaction. He remembered that it was when he
+repented of his misdeeds that Spener came to him and drew him from the
+pit. He could never look upon Albert as other than a divine agent;
+and when Spener joined himself to the Moravians, led partly by his
+admiration of them, partly by religious impulse, and partly because
+of his conviction that to be wholly successful he and his people must
+form a unit, his joy was complete.
+
+The proposal for Elise's hand had an effect upon her father which any
+one who knew him well might have looked for and directed. The pride of
+his life was satisfied. He remembered that he and his Anna, in seeking
+to know the will of the Lord in respect to their marriage, had been
+answered favorably by the lot. He desired the signal demonstration of
+heavenly will in regard to the nuptials proposed. Not a shadow of
+a doubt visited his mind as to the result, and the influence of his
+faith upon Spener was such that he acquiesced in the measure, though
+not without remonstrance and misgiving and mental reservation.
+
+To find his way up into the region of faith, and quiet himself there
+when the result of the seeking was known, was almost impossible for
+Loretz. He could fear the Judge who had decreed, but could he trust in
+Him? He began to grope back among his follies of the past, seeking a
+crime he had not repented, as the cause of this domestic calamity. But
+ah! to reap such a harvest as this for any youthful folly! Poor soul!
+little he knew of vengeance and retribution. He was at his wit's end,
+incapable alike of advancing, retreating or of peaceful surrender.
+
+It was pleasant to him to think, in the night-watches, of the young
+man who occupied the room next to his. He did not see--at least had
+not yet seen--in Leonhard a messenger sent to the house, as did his
+wife; but the presence of the young stranger spoke favorable things in
+his behalf; and then, as there was really nothing to be _done_ about
+this decision, anything that gave a diversion to sombre thoughts was
+welcome. Sister Benigna had spoken very kindly to Leonhard in the
+evening, and he had pointed out a place in one of Elise's solos where
+by taking a higher key in a single passage a marvelous effect could be
+produced. That showed knowledge; and he said that he had taught music.
+Perhaps he would like to remain until after the congregation festival
+had taken place.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE BOOK.
+
+
+In the morning the master of the house rapped on Leonhard's door and
+said: "When you come down I have something to show you." The voice
+of Mr. Loretz had almost its accustomed cheerfulness of tone, and he
+ended his remark with a brief "Ha! ha!" peculiar to him, which not
+only expressed his own good-humor, but also invited good-humored
+response.
+
+Leonhard answered cheerily, and in a few moments he had descended the
+steep uncovered stair to the music-room.
+
+"Now for the book," Loretz called out as Leonhard entered.
+
+How handsome our young friend looked as he stood there shaking hands
+with the elderly man, whose broad, florid face now actually shone with
+hospitable feeling!
+
+"Is father going to claim you as one of us, Mr. Marten?" asked the
+wife of Loretz, who answered her husband's call by coming into the
+room and bringing with her a large volume wrapped in chamois skin.
+
+"What shall I be, then?" asked Leonhard. "A wiser and a better man, I
+do not doubt."
+
+"What! you do not know?" the good woman stayed to say. "Has nobody
+told you where you are, my young friend?"
+
+"I never before found myself in a place I should like to stay in
+always; so what does the rest signify?" answered Leonhard. "What's in
+a name?"
+
+"Not much perhaps, yet something," said Loretz. "We are all Moravians
+here. I was going to look in this book here for the names of your
+ancestors. I thought perhaps you knew about Spenersberg."
+
+"I am as new to it all as Christopher Columbus was to the West India
+islands. If you find the names of my kinsmen down in your book, sir,
+it--it will be a marvelous, happy sight for me," said Leonhard.
+
+"I'll try my hand at it," said Loretz. "Ha! ha!" and he opened the
+volume, which was bound in black leather, the leaves yellowed with
+years. "This book," he continued, "is one hundred and fifty years
+old. You will find recorded in it the names of all my grandfather's
+friends, and all my father's. See, it is our way. There are all the
+dates. Where they lived, see, and where they died. It is all down.
+A man cannot feel himself cut off from his kind as long as he has a
+volume like that in his library. I have added a few names of my own
+friends, and their birthdays. Here, you see, is Sister Benigna's,
+written with her own hand. A most remarkable woman, sir. True as
+steel--always the same. But"--he paused a moment and looked at
+Leonhard with his head inclined to one side, and an expression of
+perplexity upon his face--"there's something out of the way here in
+this country. I have not more than one name down to a dozen in my
+father's record, and twenty in my grandfather's. We do not make
+friends, and we do not keep them, as they did in old time. We don't
+trust each other as men ought to. Half the time we find ourselves
+wondering whether the folks we're dealing with are _honest_. Now think
+of that!"
+
+"Are men any worse than they were in the old time?" asked Leonhard,
+evidently not entering into the conversation with the keenest
+enjoyment.
+
+"I do not know how it is," said Loretz with a sigh, continuing to turn
+the leaves of the book as he spoke.
+
+"Perhaps we have less imagination, and don't look at every new-comer
+as a friend until we have tried him," suggested Leonhard. "We decide
+that everybody shall be tested before we accept him. And isn't it the
+best way? Better than to be disappointed, when we have set our heart
+on a man--or a woman."
+
+"I do not know--I cannot account for it," said Mr. Loretz. Then with a
+sudden start he laid his right hand on the page before him, and with a
+great pleased smile in his deep-set, small blue eyes he said: "Here is
+your name. I felt sure I should find it: I felt certain it was down.
+See here, on my grandfather's page--_Leonhard Marten, Herrnhut_, 1770.
+How do you like that?"
+
+"I like it well," said Leonhard, bending over the book and examining
+the close-fisted autograph set down strongly in unfading ink. Had he
+found an ancestor at last? What could have amazed him as much?
+
+"What have you found?" asked Mrs. Loretz, who had heard these remarks
+in the next room, where she was actively making preparations for the
+breakfast, which already sent forth its odorous invitations.
+
+"We have found the name," answered her husband. "Come and see. I have
+read it, I dare say, a hundred times: that was what made me feel that
+an old friend had come."
+
+"That means," said the good woman, hastening in at her husband's call,
+and reading the name with a pleased smile--"that means that you belong
+to us. I thought you did. I am glad."
+
+Were these folk so intent on securing a convert that in these various
+ways they made the young stranger feel that he was not among strangers
+in this unknown Spenersberg? Nothing was farther from their thought:
+they only gave to their kindly feeling hearty utterance, and perhaps
+spoke with a little extra emphasis because the constraint they
+secretly felt in consequence of their household trouble made them
+unanimous in the effort to put it out of sight--not out of this
+stranger's sight, but out of their own.
+
+"Perhaps you will stop with us a while, and maybe write your name on
+my page before you go," said Loretz, afraid that his wife had gone a
+little too far.
+
+"Without a single test?" Leonhard answered. "Haven't we just agreed
+that we wise men don't take each other on trust, as they did in our
+grandfathers' day?"
+
+"A man living in Herrnhut in 1770 would not have for a descendant a--a
+man I could not trust," said Loretz, closing the book and placing it
+in its chamois covering again. "Breakfast, mother, did you say?"
+
+"Have you wanted ink?" asked Sister Benigna, entering at that instant.
+"Are we writing in the sacred birthday book?"
+
+"Not yet," said Leonhard hastily, the color rising to his face in a
+way to suggest forked lightning somewhere beyond sight.
+
+"You have wanted ink, and are too kind to let me know," she said. "I
+emptied the bottle copying music for the children yesterday."
+
+"The ink was put to a better use then than I could have found for it
+this morning," said Leonhard.
+
+And Mrs. Loretz, who looked into the room just then, said to herself,
+as her eyes fell on him, "Poor soul! he is in trouble."
+
+In fact, this thought was in Leonhard's mind as he went into breakfast
+with the family: "A deuced good friend I have proved--to Wilberforce!
+Isn't there anybody here clear-eyed enough to see that it would be
+like forgery to write my name down in a book of friendship?"
+
+The morning meal was enlivened by much more than the usual amount of
+talk. Leonhard was curious to know about Herrnhut, that old home
+of Moravianism, and the interest which he manifested in the history
+Loretz was so eager to communicate made him in turn an object of
+almost affectionate attention. That he had no facts of private
+biography to communicate in turn did net attract notice, because,
+however many such facts he might have ready to produce, by the time
+Loretz had done talking it was necessary that the day's work should
+begin.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+CONFERENCE MEETING.
+
+
+The school-room was a large apartment in the basement of the factory
+which had been used as a drying-room until it became necessary to
+find for the increasing numbers of the little flock more spacious
+accommodations. The basement was entered by a door at the end of the
+building opposite that by which the operatives entered the factory,
+and the hours were so timed that the children went and came without
+disturbance to themselves or others. The path that led to the basement
+door was neatly bordered with flowering plants and bushes, and
+sunlight was always to be found there, if anywhere in the valley, from
+eight o'clock till two.
+
+Leonhard walked to the factory with Sister Benigna, to whose conduct
+Loretz had consigned him when called away by the tower bell.
+
+At the door of the basement Mr. Wenck was standing with a printed copy
+of Handel's sacred oratorio of _The Messiah_ in his hand. Evidently he
+was waiting for Sister Benigna.
+
+But when she had said to Leonhard, "Pass on to the other end of the
+building and you will find the entrance, and Mr. Spener's office in
+the corner as you enter," and Leonhard had thanked her, and bowed and
+passed on, and she turned to Mr. Wenck, it was very little indeed that
+he said or had to say about the music which he held in his hand.
+
+"I have no doubt that all the preparation necessary for to-morrow
+evening is being made," he said. "You may need this book. But I
+did not come to talk about it. Sister Benigna," he continued in a
+different tone, and a voice not quite under his control, "is it not
+unreasonable to have passed a sleepless night thinking of Albert and
+Elise?"
+
+"Very unreasonable." But he had not charged her, as she supposed, with
+that folly, as his next words showed.
+
+"It is, and yet I have done it--only because all this might have been
+so easily avoided."
+
+"And yet it was unavoidable," said she, looking toward the school-room
+door as one who had no time to waste in idle talk.
+
+"Not that I question the wisdom of the resort if all were of one
+mind," said Mr. Wenck, who had the dreary all-day before him, and was
+not in the least pressed for time. "But I can see that even on the
+part of Brother Loretz the act was not a genuine act of faith."
+
+Startled by the expression the minister was giving to her secret
+thoughts, Benigna exclaimed, "And yet what can be done?"
+
+"Nothing," he answered. "If Loretz should yield to Spener, and if I
+should--do you not see he has had everything his own way here?--he
+would feel that nothing could stand in opposition to him. If he were a
+different man! And they are both so young!"
+
+"I know that Elise has a conscience that will hold her fast to duty,"
+said Benigna, but she did not speak hopefully: she spoke deliberately,
+however, thinking that these words _conscience_ and _duty_ might
+arrest the minister's attention, and that he would perhaps, by some
+means, throw light upon questions which were constantly becoming more
+perplexing to her. Was conscience an unfailing guide? Was one person's
+duty to be pronounced upon by another without scruple, and defined
+with unfaltering exactness? But the words had not arrested the
+minister's attention.
+
+"If they could only see that there is nothing to be done!" said he.
+"Oh, they will, Benigna! Had they only the faith, Benigna!"
+
+"Yet how vain their sacrifice, for they have it not!" said she. And
+as if she would not prolong an interview which must be full of pain,
+because no light could proceed from any words that would be given them
+to speak, Sister Benigna turned abruptly toward the basement door when
+she had said this, and entered it without bestowing a parting glance
+even on the minister.
+
+He walked away after an instant's hesitation: indeed there was nothing
+further to be said, and she did well to go.
+
+Going homeward by a path which led along the hillside above the
+village street, he must pass the small house separated from all
+others--the house which was the appointed resting-place of all who
+lived in Spenersberg to die there--known as the Corpse-house. To it
+the bodies of deceased persons were always taken after death, and
+there they remained until the hour when they were carried forth for
+burial.
+
+As Mr. Wenck approached he saw that the door stood open: a few steps
+farther, and this fact was accounted for. A bent and wrinkled old
+woman stood there with a broom in her hand, which she had been using
+in a plain, straight-forward manner.
+
+"Ah, Mary," he said, "what does this mean, my good woman?"
+
+"It is the minister," she answered in a low voice, curtseying. "I was
+moved to come here this morning, sir, and see to things. It was time
+to be brushing up a little, I thought. It is a month now since the
+last."
+
+"I will take down the old boughs then, and garnish the walls with new
+ones. And have you looked at the lamp too, Mary?"
+
+"It is trimmed, sir," said the woman; and the minister's readiness to
+assist her drew forth the confession: "I was thinking on my bed in the
+night-watches that it must be done. There will one be going home soon.
+And it may be myself, sir. I could not have been easy if I had not
+come up to tidy the house."
+
+Having finished her task, which was a short one and easily performed,
+the woman now waited to watch the minister as he selected cedar boughs
+and wove them into wreaths, and suspended them from the walls and
+rafters of the little room; and it comforted the simple soul when,
+standing in the doorway, the good man lifted his eyes toward heaven
+and said in the words of the church litany:
+
+ From error and misunderstanding,
+ From the loss of our glory in Thee,
+ From self-complacency,
+ From untimely projects,
+ From needless perplexity,
+ From the murdering spirit and devices of Satan,
+ From the influence of the spirit of this world,
+ From hypocrisy and fanaticism,
+ From the deceitfulness of sin,
+ From all sin,
+ _Preserve us, gracious Lord and God_--
+
+and devoutly she joined in with him in the solemn responsive cry.
+
+It was very evident that the minister's work that day was not to be
+performed in his silent home among his books.
+
+On the brightest day let the sun become eclipsed, and how the earth
+will pine! What melancholy will pervade the busy streets, the pleasant
+fields and woods! How disconsolately the birds will seek their mates
+and their nests!
+
+The children came together, but many a half hour passed during
+which the shadow of an Unknown seemed to come between them and their
+teacher. The bright soul, was she too suffering from an eclipse? Does
+it happen that all souls, even the most valiant, most loving, least
+selfish, come in time to passes so difficult that, shrinking back,
+they say, "Why should I struggle to gain the other side? What is
+there worth seeking? Better to end all here. This life is not worth
+enduring"? And yet, does it also come to pass as certainly that these
+valiant, unselfish, loving ones will struggle, fight, climb, wade,
+creep on, on while the breath of life remains in them, and never
+surrender? It seemed as if Sister Benigna had arrived at a place where
+her baffled spirit stood still and felt its helplessness. Could she
+do nothing for Elise, the dear child for whose happiness she would
+cheerfully give her life, and not think the price too dear?
+
+By and by the children were aware that Sister Benigna had come again
+among them: the humblest little flower lifted up its head, and the
+smallest bird began to chirp and move about and smooth its wings.
+
+Sister Benigna! what had she recollected?--that but a single day
+perhaps was hers to live, and here were all these children! As she
+turned with ardent zeal to her work--which indeed had not failed of
+accustomed conduct so far as routine went--tell me what do you find in
+those lovely eyes if not the heavenliest assurances? Let who will
+call the scene of this life's operations a vale of tears, a world of
+misery, a prison-house of the spirit, here is one who asks for herself
+nothing of honors or riches or pleasures, and who can bless the
+Lord God for the glory of the earth he has created, and for those
+everlasting purposes of his which mortals can but trust in, and which
+are past finding out. Children, let us do our best to-day, and wait
+until to-morrow for to-morrow's gifts. This exhortation was in the
+eyes, mien, conduct of the teacher, and so she led them on until, when
+they came to practice their hymns for the festival, every little heart
+and voice was in tune, and she praised them with voice so cheerful,
+how should they guess that it had ever been choked by anguish or had
+ever fainted in despair?
+
+O young eyes saddening over what is to you a painful, insoluble
+problem! yet a little while and you shall see the mists of morning
+breaking everywhere, and the great conquering sun will enfold you too
+in its warm embrace: the humble laurels of the mountain's side, even
+as the great pines and cedars of the mountain's crest, have but to
+receive and use what the sterile rock and the blinding cloud, the
+wintry tempest and the rain and the summer's heat bestow, and lo! the
+heights are alive with glory. But it is not in a day.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+WILL THE ARCHITECT HAVE EMPLOYMENT?
+
+
+On entering the factory, Leonhard met Loretz near the door talking
+with Albert Spener. When he saw Leonhard, Loretz said, "I was just
+saying to Mr. Spener that I expected you, sir, and how he might
+recognize you; but you shall speak for yourself. If you will spend a
+little time looking about, I shall be back soon: perhaps Mr. Spener--"
+
+"Mr. Leonhard Marten, I believe," said Mr. Albert Spener with a little
+exaggeration of his natural stiffness. Perhaps he did not suspect that
+all the morning he had been manifesting considerable loftiness toward
+Loretz, and that he spoke in a way that made Leonhard feel that his
+departure from Spenersberg would probably take place within something
+less than twenty-four hours.
+
+Yet within half an hour the young men were walking up and down the
+factory, examining machinery and work, and talking as freely as if
+they had known each other six months. They were not in everything
+as unlike as they were in person. Spener was a tall, spare man, who
+conveyed an impression of mental strength and physical activity. He
+could turn his hand to anything, and _attempt_ anything that was to be
+done by skillful handicraft; and whether he could use his wits well
+in shaping men, let Spenersberg answer. His square-shaped head was
+covered with bright brown hair, which had a reddish tinge, and his
+moustache was of no stinted growth: his black eyes penetrated and
+flashed, and could glow and glare in a way to make weakness and
+feebleness tremble. His quick speech did not spare: right and left he
+used his swords of thought and will. Fall in! or, Out of the way! were
+the commands laid down by him since the foundations of Spenersberg
+were laid. In the fancy-goods line he might have made of himself a
+spectacle, supposing he could have remained in the trade; but set
+apart here in this vale, the centre of a sphere of his own creation,
+where there was something at stake vast enough to justify the exercise
+of energy and authority, he had a field for the fair play of all that
+was within him--the worst and the best. The worst that he could be he
+was--a tyrant; and the best that he could be he was--a lover. Hitherto
+his tyrannies had brought about good results only, but it was well
+that the girl he loved had not only spirit and courage enough to love
+him, but also faith enough to remove mountains.
+
+If Leonhard had determined that he would make a friend of Spener
+before he entered the factory, he could not have proceeded more wisely
+than he did. First, he was interested in the works, and intent on
+being told about the manufacture of articles of furniture from a
+product ostensibly of such small account as the willow; then he was
+interested in the designs and surprised at the ingenious variety, and
+curious to learn their source, and amazed to hear that Mr. Spener had
+himself originated more than half of them. Then presently he began to
+suggest designs, and at the end of an hour he found himself at a table
+in Spener's office drawing shapes for baskets and chairs and tables
+and ornamental devices, and making Spener laugh so at some remark as
+to be heard all over the building.
+
+"You say you are an architect," he said after Leonhard had covered a
+sheet of paper with suggestions written and outlined for him, which he
+looked at with swiftly-comprehending and satisfied eyes. "What do you
+say to doing a job for me?"
+
+"With all my heart," answered Leonhard, "if it can be done at once."
+
+These words were in the highest degree satisfactory. Here was a man
+who knew the worth of a minute. He was the man for Spener. "Come with
+me," he said, "and I'll show you a building-site or two worth putting
+money on;" and so they walked together out of the factory, crossed a
+rustic foot-bridge to the opposite side, ascended a sunny half-cleared
+slope and passed across a field; and there beneath them, far below,
+rolled the grand river which had among its notable ports this little
+Spenersberg.
+
+"What do you think of a house on this site, sir?" asked Spener,
+looking with no small degree of satisfaction around him and down the
+rocky steep.
+
+"I think I should like to be commissioned to build a castle with
+towers and gates of this very granite which you could hew out by
+the thousand cord from the quarry yonder. What a perfect gray for
+building!"
+
+"I have always thought I would use the material on the ground--the
+best compliment I could pay this place which I have raised my fortune
+out of," said Spener.
+
+"There's no better material on the earth," said Leonhard.
+
+"But I don't want a castle: I want a house with room enough in
+it--high ceilings, wide halls, and a piazza fifteen or twenty feet
+wide all around it."
+
+"Must I give up the castle? There isn't a better site on the Rhine
+than this."
+
+"But I'm not a baron, and I live at peace with my neighbors--at least
+with outsiders." That last remark was an unfortunate one, for it
+brought the speaker back consciously to confront the images which were
+constantly lurking round him--only hid when he commanded them out of
+sight in the manfulness of a spirit that would not be interfered
+with in its work. He sat looking at Leonhard opposite to him, who had
+already taken a note-book and pencil from his pocket, and, planting
+his left foot firmly against one of the great rocks of the cliff, he
+said, "Loretz tells me you stayed all night at his house."
+
+"Yes, he invited me in when I inquired my way to the inn."
+
+"Sister Benigna was there?"
+
+"She wasn't anywhere else," said Leonhard, looking up and smiling.
+"Excuse the slang. If you are where she is, you may feel very certain
+about her being there."
+
+"Not at all," said Albert, evidently nettled into argument by the
+theme he had introduced. "She is one of those persons who can be in
+several places at the same time. You heard them sing, I suppose. They
+are preparing for the congregation festival. It is six years since
+we started here, but we only built our church last year: this year
+we have the first celebration in the edifice, and of course there is
+great preparation."
+
+"I have been wondering how I could go away before it takes place ever
+since I heard of it."
+
+"If you wonder less how you can stay, remain of course," said Spener
+with no great cordiality: he owed this stranger nothing, after all.
+
+"It will only be to prove that I am really music-mad, as they have
+been telling me ever since I was born. If that is the case, from the
+evidences I have had since I came here I think I shall recover."
+
+"What do you mean?" asked Spener.
+
+"I mean that I see how little I really know about the science. I
+never heard anything to equal the musical knowledge and execution of
+Loretz's daughter and this Sister Benigna you speak of."
+
+"Ah! I am not a musician. I tried the trombone, but lacked the
+patience. I am satisfied to admire. And so you liked the singers?
+Which best?"
+
+"Both."
+
+"Come, come--what was the difference?"
+
+"The difference?" repeated Leonhard reflecting.
+
+Spener also seemed to reflect on his question, and was so absorbed
+in his thinking that he seemed to be startled when Leonhard, from his
+studies of the square house with the wide halls and the large rooms
+with high ceilings, turned to him and said, "The difference, sir, is
+between two women."
+
+"No difference at all, do you mean? Do you mean they are alike? They
+are not alike."
+
+"Not so alike that I have seen anything like either of them."
+
+"Ah! neither have I. For that reason I shall marry one of them, while
+the other I would not marry--no, not if she were the only woman on the
+continent."
+
+"You are a fortunate man," said Leonhard.
+
+"I intend to prove that. Nothing more is necessary than the girl's
+consent--is there?--if you have made up your mind that you must have
+her."
+
+"I should think you might say that, sir."
+
+"But you don't hazard an opinion as to which, sir."
+
+"Not I."
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"It might be Miss Elise, if--"
+
+"If what?"
+
+"I am not accustomed to see young ladies in their homes. I have only
+fancied sometimes what a pretty girl might be in her father's house."
+
+"Well, sir?" said Spener impatiently.
+
+"A young lady like Miss Elise would have a great deal to say, I should
+suppose."
+
+"Is she dumb? I thought she could talk. I should have said so."
+
+"I should have guessed, too, that she would always be singing about
+the house."
+
+"And if not--what then?"
+
+"Something must be going wrong somewhere. So you see it can't be Miss
+Elise, according to my judgment."
+
+Spener laughed when this conclusion was reached.
+
+"Come here again within a month and see if she can talk and sing,"
+said he with eyes flashing. "Perhaps you have found that it is as easy
+to frighten a bugbear out of the way as to be frightened by one. I
+never found, sir, that I couldn't put a stumbling-block out of my
+path. We have one little man here who is going to prove himself a
+nuisance, I'm afraid. He is a good little fellow, too. I always liked
+him until he undertook to manage my affairs. I don't propose to give
+up the reins yet a while, and until I do, you see, he has no chance.
+I am sorry about it, for I considered him quite like a friend; but a
+friend, sir, with a flaw in him is worse than an enemy. I know where
+to find my enemies, but I can't keep track of a man who pretends to be
+a friend and serves me ill. But pshaw! let me see what you are doing."
+
+Leonhard was glad when the man ceased from discoursing on
+friendship--a favorite theme among Spenersbergers, he began to
+think--and glad to break away from his work, for he held his pencil
+less firmly than he should have done.
+
+Spener studied the portion completed, and seemed surprised as well as
+pleased. "You know your business," said he. "Be so good as to finish
+the design."
+
+Then returning the book to Leonhard, he looked at his watch. "It is
+time I went to dinner," he said. "Come with me. Loretz knows you are
+with me, and will expect you to be my guest to-day." So they walked
+across the field, but did not descend by the path along which they had
+ascended. They went farther to the east, and Spener led the way down
+the rough hillside until he came to a point whence the descent was
+less steep and difficult. There he paused. A beautiful view was spread
+before them. Little Spenersberg lay on the slope opposite: between ran
+the stream, which widened farther toward the east and narrowed toward
+the west, where it emptied into the river. Eastward the valley also
+widened, and there the willows grew, and looked like a great garden,
+beautiful in every shade of green.
+
+"I should not have the river from this point," said Spener, "but I
+should have a great deal more, and be nearer the people: I do not
+think it would be the thing to appear even to separate myself from
+them. I have done a great deal not so agreeable to me, I assure you,
+in order to bring myself near to them. One must make sacrifices to
+obtain his ends: it is only to count the cost and then be ready to put
+down the money. Suppose you plant a house just here."
+
+"How could it be done?"
+
+"You an architect and ask me!"
+
+"Things can be planted anywhere," answered Leonhard, "but whether the
+cost of production will not be greater than the fruit is worth, is
+the question. You can have a platform built here as broad as that the
+temple stood on if you are willing to pay for the foundations."
+
+"That is the talk!" said Spener. "Take a square look, and let me know
+what you can do toward a house on the hillside. You see there is no
+end of raw material for building, and it is a perfect prospect. But
+come now to dinner."
+
+CAROLINE CHESEBRO.
+
+[TO BE CONTINUED.]
+
+
+
+
+COUNTRY-HOUSE LIFE IN ENGLAND.
+
+
+The love for country life is, if possible, stronger in England now
+than at any previous period in her history. There is no other country
+where this taste has prevailed to the same extent. It arose originally
+from causes mainly political. In France a similar condition of things
+existed down to the sixteenth century, and was mainly brought to an
+end by the policy of ministers, who dreaded the increasing power of
+petty princes in remote provinces becoming in combination formidable
+to the central power. It was specially the object of Richelieu and
+Mazarin to check this sort of baronial _imperium in imperio_, and
+it became in the time of Louis XIV the keystone of that monarch's
+domestic policy. This tended to encourage the "hanging on" of _grands
+seigneurs_ about the court, where many of the chief of them, after
+having exhausted their resources in gambling or riotous living, became
+dependent for place or pension on the Crown, and were in fact the
+creatures of the king and his minister. Of course this did not apply
+to all. Here and there in the broad area of France were to be found
+magnificent chateaux--a few of which, especially in Central France,
+still survive--where the marquis or count reigned over his people an
+almost absolute monarch.
+
+There is a passage in one of Horace Walpole's letters in which that
+virtuoso expresses his regret, after a visit to the ancestral "hotels"
+of Paris, whose contents had afforded him such intense gratification,
+that the nobility of England, like that of France, had not
+concentrated their treasures of art, etc. in London houses. Had he
+lived a few years longer he would probably have altered his views,
+which were such as his sagacious and manly father, who dearly loved
+his Norfolk home, Houghton, would never have held.
+
+In England, from the time that anything like social life, as we
+understand the phrase, became known, the power of the Crown was so
+well established that no necessity for resorting to a policy such as
+Richelieu's for diminishing the influence of the noblesse existed.
+
+In fact, a course distinctly the reverse came to be adopted from
+the time of Elizabeth down to even a later period than the reign of
+Charles II.
+
+In the reign of Elizabeth an act was passed, which is to this hour
+probably on the statute book, restricting building in or near the
+metropolis. James I appears to have been in a chronic panic on this
+subject, and never lost an opportunity of dilating upon it. In one of
+his proclamations he refers to those swarms of gentry "who, through
+the instigation of their wives, or to new model and fashion their
+daughters who, if they were unmarried, marred their reputations,
+and if married, lost them--did neglect their country hospitality and
+cumber the city, a general nuisance to the kingdom." He desired the
+Star Chamber "to regulate the exorbitancy of the new buildings about
+the city, which were but a shelter for those who, when they had spent
+their estates in coaches, lacqueys and fine clothes like Frenchmen,
+lived miserably in their houses like Italians; but the honor of the
+English nobility and gentry is to be hospitable among their tenants.
+
+"Gentlemen resident on their estates," said he, very sensibly,
+"were like ships in port: their value and magnitude were felt
+and acknowledged; but when at a distance, as their size seemed
+insignificant, so their worth and importance were not duly estimated."
+
+Charles I., with characteristic arbitrariness, carried matters with
+a still higher hand. His Star Chamber caused buildings to be actually
+razed, and fined truants heavily. One case which is reported displays
+the grim and costly humor of the illegal tribunal which dealt with
+such cases. Poor Mr. Palmer of Sussex, a gay bachelor, being called
+upon to show cause why he had been residing in London, pleaded in
+extenuation that he had no house, his mansion having been destroyed by
+fire two years before. This, however, was held rather an aggravation
+of the offence, inasmuch as he had failed to rebuild it; and Mr.
+Palmer paid a penalty of one thousand pounds--equivalent to at least
+twenty thousand dollars now.
+
+A document which especially serves to show the manner of life of the
+ancient noblesse is the earl of Northumberland's "Household Book"
+in the early part of the sixteenth century. By this we see the great
+magnificence of the old nobility, who, seated in their castles, lived
+in a state of splendor scarcely inferior to that of the court. As
+the king had his privy council, so the earl of Northumberland had
+his council, composed of his principal officers, by whose advice and
+assistance he established his code of economic laws. As the king had
+his lords and grooms of the chamber, who waited in their respective
+turns, so the earl was attended by the constables of his several
+castles, who entered into waiting in regular succession. Among other
+instances of magnificence it may be remarked that not fewer than
+eleven priests were kept in the household, presided over by a doctor
+or bachelor of divinity as dean of the chapel.
+
+An account of how the earl of Worcester lived at Ragland Castle before
+the civil wars which began in 1641 also exhibits his manner of life
+in great detail: "At eleven o'clock the Castle Gates were shut and the
+tables laid: two in the dining-room; three in the hall; one in Mrs.
+Watson's appartment, where the chaplains eat; two in the housekeeper's
+room for my ladie's women. The Earl came into the Dining Room attended
+by his gentlemen. As soon as he was seated, Sir Ralph Blackstone,
+Steward of the House, retired. The Comptroller, Mr. Holland, attended
+with his staff; as did the Sewer, Mr. Blackburn, and the daily waiters
+with many gentlemen's sons, from two to seven hundred pounds a year,
+bred up in the Castle; my ladie's Gentleman Usher, Mr. Harcourt; my
+lord's Gentlemen of the Chamber, Mr. Morgan and Mr. Fox.
+
+"At the first table sat the noble family and such of the nobility as
+came there. At the second table in the Dining-room sat Knights and
+honorable gentlemen attended by footmen.
+
+"In the hall at the first table sat Sir R. Blackstone, Steward, the
+Comptroller, Secretary, Master of the Horse, Master of the Fishponds,
+my Lord Herbert's Preceptor, with such gentlemen as came there under
+the degree of knight, attended by footmen and plentifully served with
+wine.
+
+"At the third table in the hall sate the Clerk of the Kitchen, with
+the Yeomen, officers of the House, two Grooms of the Chamber, etc.
+
+"Other officers of the Household were the Chief Auditor, Clerk of
+Accounts, Purveyor of the Castle, Usher of the Hall, Closet Keeper,
+Gentleman of the Chapel, Keeper of the Records, Master of the
+Wardrobe, Master of the Armoury, Master Groom of the Stable for the 12
+War-horses, Master of the Hounds, Master Falconer, Porter and his men,
+two Butchers, two Keepers of the Home Park, two Keepers of the Red
+Deer Park, Footmen, Grooms and other Menial Servants to the number of
+150. Some of the footmen were Brewers and Bakers.
+
+"_Out offices_.--Steward of Ragland, Governor of Chepstow Castle,
+Housekeeper of Worcester House in London, thirteen Bailiffs, two
+Counsel for the Bailiffs--who looked after the estate--to have
+recourse to, and a Solicitor."
+
+In a delicious old volume now rarely to be met with, called _The
+Olio_, published eighty years ago, Francis Grose the antiquary thus
+describes certain characters typical of the country life of the
+earlier half of the seventeenth century: "When I was a young man there
+existed in the families of most unmarried men or widowers of the rank
+of gentlemen, resident in the country, a certain antiquated female,
+either maiden or widow, commonly an aunt or cousin. Her dress I have
+now before me: it consisted of a stiff-starched cap and hood, a little
+hoop, a rich silk damask gown with large flowers. She leant on an
+ivory-headed crutch-cane, and was followed by a fat phthisicky dog
+of the pug kind, who commonly reposed on a cushion, and enjoyed the
+privilege of snarling at the servants, and occasionally biting their
+heels, with impunity. By the side of this old lady jingled a bunch of
+keys, securing in different closets and corner-cupboards all sorts
+of cordial waters, cherry and raspberry brandy, washes for the
+complexion, Daffy's elixir, a rich seed-cake, a number of pots of
+currant jelly and raspberry jam, with a range of gallipots and phials
+and purges for the use of poorer neighbors. The daily business of this
+good lady was to scold the maids, collect eggs, feed the turkeys and
+assist at all lyings-in that happened within the parish. Alas! this
+being is no more seen, and the race is, like that of her pug dog and
+the black rat, totally extinct.
+
+"Another character, now worn out and gone, was the country squire:
+I mean the little, independent country gentleman of three hundred
+pounds a year, who commonly appeared in a plain drab or plush coat,
+large silver buttons, a jockey cap, and rarely without boots. His travels
+never exceeded the distance to the county-town, and that only at
+assize-and session-time, or to attend an election. Once a week
+he commonly dined at the next market-town with the attorneys and
+justices. This man went to church regularly, read the weekly journal,
+settled the parochial disputes between the parish officers at the vestry,
+and afterward adjourned to the neighboring ale-house, where he
+usually got drunk for the good of his country. He never played at cards
+but at Christmas, when a family pack was produced from the mantelpiece.
+He was commonly followed by a couple of greyhounds and a pointer,
+and announced his arrival at a friend's house by cracking his whip or
+giving the view-halloo. His drink was generally ale, except on Christmas,
+the Fifth of November or some other gala-day, when he would make
+a bowl of strong brandy punch, garnished with a toast and nutmeg.
+A journey to London was by one of these men reckoned as great an
+undertaking as is at present a voyage to the East Indies, and
+undertaken with scarcely less precaution and preparation. The mansion
+of one of these squires was of plaster striped with timber, not unaptly
+called calimanco-work, or of red brick; large casemented bow-windows,
+a porch with seats in it, and over it a study, the eaves of the house well
+inhabited by swallows, and the court set round with hollyhocks. The
+hall was furnished with flitches of bacon, and the mantelpiece with guns
+and fishing-rods of different dimensions, accompanied by the broadsword,
+partisan and dagger borne by his ancestors in the Civil Wars. The
+vacant spaces were occupied by stags' horns. Against the wall was
+posted King Charles's _Golden Rules_, Vincent Wing's _Almanack_
+and a portrait of the duke of Marlborough: in his window lay Baker's
+_Chronicle_, Fox's _Book of Martyrs_, Glanvil on _Apparitions_,
+Quincey's _Dispensatory_, the _Complete Justice_ and a _Book of
+Farriery_. In the corner, by the fireside, stood a large wooden
+two-armed chair with a cushion; and within the chimney-corner were
+a couple of seats. Here, at Christmas, he entertained his tenants
+assembled round a glowing fire made of the roots of trees and other
+great logs, and told and heard the traditionary tales of the village
+respecting ghosts and witches till fear made them afraid to move.
+In the mean time the jorum of ale was in continual circulation.
+The best parlor, which was never opened but on particular occasions,
+was furnished with Turk-worked chairs, and hung round with portraits
+of his ancestors--the men, some in the character of shepherds with
+their crooks, dressed in full suits and huge full-bottomed perukes,
+and others in complete armor or buff-coats; the females, likewise
+as shepherdesses with the lamb and crook, all habited in high heads
+and flowing robes. Alas! these men and these houses are no more!
+The luxury of the times has obliged them to quit the country and
+become humble dependants on great men, to solicit a place or
+commission, to live in London, to rack their tenants and draw their
+rents before due. The venerable mansion is in the mean time
+suffered to tumble down or is partly upheld as a farm-house,
+till after a few years the estate is conveyed to the steward of the
+ neighboring lord, or else to some nabob, contractor or limb of the law."
+
+It is unquestionably owing to the love of country life amongst the
+higher classes that England so early attained in many respects what
+may be termed an even civilization. In almost all other countries the
+traveler beyond the confines of a few great cities finds himself in a
+region of comparative semi-barbarism. But no one familiar with English
+country life can say that this is the case in the rural districts
+of England, whilst it is most unquestionably so in Ireland, simply
+because she has through absenteeism been deprived of those influences
+which have done so much for her wealthy sister. Go where you will
+in England to-day, and you will find within five miles of you a good
+turnpike road, leading to an inn hard by, where you may get a clean
+and comfortable though simple dinner, good bread, good butter, and
+a carriage--"fly" is the term now, as in the days of Mr. Jonathan
+Oldbuck--to convey you where you will. And this was the case long
+before railways came into vogue.
+
+The influence of the great house has very wide ramifications, and
+extends far beyond the radius of park, village and estate. It greatly
+affects the prosperity of the country and county towns. Go into Exeter
+or Shrewsbury on a market-day in the autumn months, and you will find
+the streets crowded with carriages. If a local herald be with you, he
+will tell you all about their owners by glancing at the liveries and
+panels. They belong, half of them, to the old county gentry, who have
+shopped here--always at the same shops, according as their proprietors
+are Whigs or Tories--for generations. It may well be imagined what
+a difference the custom of twenty gentlemen spending on an average
+twenty-five thousand dollars a year makes to a grocer or draper.
+Besides, this class of customer demands a first-rate article, and
+consequently it is worth while to keep it in stock. The fishmonger
+knows that twenty great houses within ten miles require their handsome
+dish of fish for dinner as regularly as their bread and butter. It
+becomes worth his while therefore to secure a steady supply. In this
+way smaller people profit, and country life becomes pleasant to them
+too, inasmuch as the demands of the rich contribute to the comfort of
+those in moderate circumstances.
+
+Let us pass to the daily routine of an affluent country home. The
+breakfast hour is from nine to eleven, except where hunting-men or
+enthusiasts in shooting are concerned. The former are often in the
+saddle before six, and young partridge-slayers may, during the first
+fortnight of September--after that their ardor abates a bit--be found
+in the stubbles at any hour after sunrise.
+
+A country-house breakfast in the house of a gentlemen with from three
+thousand a year upward, when several guests are in the house, is a
+very attractive meal. Of course its degree of excellence varies, but
+we will take an average case in the house of a squire living on his
+paternal acres with five thousand pounds a year and knowing how to
+live.
+
+It is 10 A.M. in October: family prayers, usual in nine country-houses
+out of ten, which a guest can attend or not as he pleases, are over.
+The company is gradually gathering in the breakfast-room. It is an
+ample apartment, paneled with oak and hung with family pictures. If
+you have any appreciation for fine plate--and you are to be pitied if
+you have not--you will mark the charming shape and exquisite
+chasing of the antique urn and other silver vessels, which shine as
+brilliantly as on the day they left the silversmiths to Her Majesty,
+Queen Anne. No "Brummagem" patterns will you find here.
+
+On the table at equidistant points stand two tiny tables or
+dumb-waiters, which are made to revolve. On these are placed sugar,
+cream, butter, preserves, salt, pepper, mustard, etc., so that every
+one can help himself without troubling others--a great desideratum,
+for many people are of the same mind on this point as a well-known
+English family, of whom it was once observed that they were very nice
+people, but didn't like being bored to pass the mustard.
+
+On the sideboard are three beautiful silver dishes with spirit-lamps
+beneath them. Let us look under their covers. Broiled chicken, fresh
+mushrooms on toast, and stewed kidney. On a larger dish is fish, and
+ranged behind these hot viands are cold ham, tongue, pheasant and
+game-pie. On huge platters of wood, with knives to correspond, are
+farm-house brown bread and white bread, whilst on the breakfast-table
+itself you will find hot rolls, toast--of which two or three fresh
+relays are brought in during breakfast--buttered toast, muffins and
+the freshest of eggs. The hot dishes at breakfast are varied almost
+every morning, and where there is a good cook a variety of some twenty
+dishes is made.
+
+Marmalade (Marie Malade) of oranges--said to have been originally
+prepared for Mary queen of Scots when ill, and introduced by her into
+Scotland--and "jams" of apricot and other fruit always form a part
+of an English or Scotch breakfast. The living is just as good--often
+better--among the five-thousand-pounds-a-year gentry as among the
+very wealthy: the only difference lies in the number of servants and
+guests.
+
+The luncheon-hour is from one to two. At luncheon there will be a
+roast leg of mutton or some such _piece de resistance_, and a
+made dish, such as minced veal--a dish, by the way, not the least
+understood in this country, where it is horribly mangled--two hot
+dishes of meat and several cold, and various sorts of pastry. These,
+with bread, butter, fruit, cheese, sherry, port, claret and beer,
+complete the meal.
+
+Few of the men of the party are present at this meal, and those who
+are eat but little, reserving their forces until dinner. All is placed
+on the table at once, and not, as at dinner, in courses. The servants
+leave the room when they have placed everything on the table, and
+people wait on themselves. Dumb-waiters with clean plates, glasses,
+etc. stand at each corner of the table, so that there is very little
+need to get up for what you want.
+
+The afternoon is usually passed by the ladies alone or with only
+one or two gentlemen who don't care to shoot, etc., and is spent in
+riding, driving and walking. Englishwomen are great walkers. With
+their skirts conveniently looped up, and boots well adapted to defy
+the mud, they brave all sorts of weather. "Oh it rains! what a bore!
+We can't go out," said a young lady, standing at the breakfast-room
+window at a house in Ireland; to which her host rejoined, "If you
+don't go out here when it rains, you don't go out at all;" which is
+pretty much the truth.
+
+About five o'clock, as you sit over your book in the library, you
+hear a rapid firing off of guns, which apprises you that the men have
+returned from shooting. They linger a while in the gun-room talking
+over their sport and seeing the record of the killed entered in the
+game-book. Then some, doffing the shooting-gear for a free-and-easy
+but scrupulously neat attire, repair to the ladies' sitting-room or
+the library for "kettledrum."
+
+On a low table is placed the tea equipage, and tea in beautiful little
+cups is being dispensed by fair hands. This is a very pleasant time
+in many houses, and particularly favorable to fun and flirtation. In
+houses where there are children, the cousins of the house and others
+very intimate adjourn to the school-room, where, when the party is
+further reinforced by three or four boys home for the holidays, a
+scene of fun and frolic, which it requires all the energies of the
+staid governess to prevent going too far, ensues.
+
+So time speeds on until the dressing-bell rings at seven o'clock,
+summoning all to prepare for the great event of the day--dinner. Every
+one dons evening-attire for this meal; and so strong a feeling obtains
+on this point that if, in case of his luggage going wrong or other
+accident, a man is compelled to join the party in morning-clothes, he
+feels painfully "fish-out-of-waterish." We know, indeed, of a case in
+which a guest absurdly sensitive would not come down to dinner until
+the arrival of his things, which did not make their appearance for a
+week.
+
+Ladies' dress in country-houses depends altogether upon the occasion.
+If it be a quiet party of intimate friends, their attire is of the
+simplest, but in many fashionable houses the amount of dressing is
+fully as great as in London. English ladies do not dress nearly as
+expensively or with so much taste as Americans, but, on the other
+hand, they have the subject much less in their thoughts; which is
+perhaps even more desirable.
+
+There is a degree of pomp and ceremony, which, however, is far from
+being unpleasant, at dinner in a large country-house. The party is
+frequently joined by the rector and his wife, a neighboring squire
+or two, and a stray parson, so that it frequently reaches twenty. Of
+course in this case the pleasantness of the prandial period depends
+largely upon whom you have the luck to get next to; but there's this
+advantage in the situation over a similar one in London--that you
+have, at all events, a something of local topics in common, having
+picked up a little knowledge of places and people during your stay, or
+if you are quite a new-comer, you can easily set your neighbor a-going
+by questions about surroundings. Generally there is some acquaintance
+between most of the people staying in a house, as hosts make up their
+parties with the view of accommodating persons wishing to meet others
+whom they like. Young men will thus frequently get a good-natured
+hostess to ask some young lady whose society they especially affect,
+and thus country-houses become proverbially adapted for match-making.
+
+There are few houses now-a-days in which the gentlemen linger in
+the dining-room long after the ladies have left it. Habits of hard
+drinking are now almost entirely confined to young men in the army
+and the lower classes. The evenings are spent chiefly in conversation:
+sometimes a rubber of whist is made up, or, if there are a number of
+young people, there is dancing.
+
+A rather surprising step which occasioned something of a scandalous
+sensation in the social world was resorted to some years ago at a
+country-house in Devonshire. Two or three fast young ladies, finding
+the evening somewhat heavy, and lamenting a dearth of dancing men,
+rang the bell, and in five minutes the lady of the house, who was
+in another room, was aghast at seeing them whirling round in
+their Jeames's arms. It was understood that the ringleader in this
+enterprise, the daughter of an Irish earl, was not likely to be asked
+to repeat her visit.
+
+About eleven wine and water and biscuits are brought into the
+drawing-room, and a few minutes later the ladies retire. The wine and
+water, with the addition of other stimulants, are then transferred
+to the billiard- and smoking-rooms, to which the gentlemen adjourn
+so soon as they have changed their black coats for dressing-gowns or
+lounging suits, in which great latitude is given to the caprice of
+individual fancy.
+
+The sittings in these apartments are protracted until any hour, as the
+servants usually go to bed when they have provided every one with
+his flat candle-stick--that emblem of gentility which always so
+prominently recurred to the mind of Mrs. Micawber when recalling the
+happy days when she "lived at home with papa and mamma." In some fast
+houses pretty high play takes place at such times.
+
+It not unfrequently happens that the master of the house takes but
+a very limited share in the recreations of his guests, being much
+engrossed by the various avocations which fall to the lot of a
+country proprietor. After breakfast in the morning he will make it his
+business to see that each gentleman is provided with such recreation
+as he likes for the day. This man will shoot, that one will fish;
+Brown will like to have a horse and go over to see some London friends
+who are staying ten miles off; Jones has heaps of letters which
+must be written in the morning, but will ride with the ladies in the
+afternoon; and when all these arrangements are completed the squire
+will drive off with his old confidential groom in the dog-cart, with
+that fast-trotting bay, to attend the county meeting in the nearest
+cathedral town or dispense justice from the bench at Pottleton;
+and when eight o'clock brings all together at dinner an agreeable
+diversity is given to conversation by each man's varied experiences
+during the day.
+
+Of course some houses are desperately dull, whilst others are always
+agreeable. Haddo House, during the lifetime of Lord Aberdeen, the
+prime minister, had an exceptional reputation for the former quality.
+It was said to be the most silent house in England; and silence in
+this instance was regarded as quite the reverse of golden. The family
+scarcely ever spoke, and the guest, finding that his efforts brought
+no response, became alarmed at the echoes of his own voice. Lord
+Aberdeen and his son, Lord Haddo--an amiable but weak and eccentric
+man, father of the young earl who dropped his title and was drowned
+whilst working as mate of a merchantman--did not get on well together,
+and saw very little of each other for some years. At length a
+reconciliation was effected, and the son was invited to Haddo. Anxious
+to be pleasant and conciliatory, he faltered out admiringly, "The
+place looks nice, the trees are very green." "Did you expect to see
+'em blue, then?" was the encouraging paternal rejoinder.
+
+The degree of luxury in many of these great houses is less remarkable
+than its completeness. Everything is in keeping, thus presenting a
+remarkable contrast to most of our rich men's attempts at the same.
+The dinner, cooked by a _cordon bleu_ of the cuisine [A]--whose
+resources in the way of "hot plates" and other accessories for
+furnishing a superlative dinner are unrivaled--is often served on
+glittering plate, or china almost equally valuable, by men six
+feet high, of splendid figure, and dressed with the most scrupulous
+neatness and cleanliness. Gloves are never worn by servants in
+first-rate English houses, but they carry a tiny napkin in their hands
+which they place between their fingers and the plates. Nearly all
+country gentlemen are hospitable, and it very rarely happens that
+guests are not staying in the house. A county ball or some other such
+gathering fills it from garret to cellar.
+
+[Footnote A: Frenchmen say that the best English dinners are now the
+best in the world, because they combine the finest French _entrees_
+and _entremets_ with _pieces de resistance_ of unrivaled excellence.]
+
+The best guest-rooms are always reserved for the married: bachelors
+are stowed away comparatively "anywhere." In winter fires are always
+lit in the bedrooms about five o'clock, so that they may be warm at
+dressing-time; and shortly before the dressing-bell rings the servant
+deputed to attend upon a guest who does not bring a valet with him
+goes to his room, lays out his evening-toilette, puts shirt, socks,
+etc. to air before the fire, places a capacious pitcher of boiling
+water on the washing-stand, and having lit the candles, drawn the
+easy-chair to the fire, just ready on provocation to burst into a
+blaze, lights the wax candles on the dressing-table and withdraws.
+
+In winter the guest is asked whether he likes a fire to get up by,
+and in that event a housemaid enters early with as little noise as
+possible and lights it. On rising in the morning you find all your
+clothes carefully brushed and put in order, and every appliance for
+ample ablutions at hand.
+
+A guest gives the servant who attends him a tip of from a dollar and
+a quarter to five dollars, according to the length of his stay. If he
+shoots, a couple of sovereigns for a week's sport is a usual fee to a
+keeper. Some people give absurdly large sums, but the habit of giving
+them has long been on the decline. The keeper supplies powder and
+shot, and sends in an account for them. Immense expense is involved
+in these shooting establishments. The late Sir Richard Sutton, a
+great celebrity in the sporting world, who had the finest shooting in
+England, and therefore probably in the world, used to say that every
+pheasant he killed cost him a guinea. On some estates the sale of the
+game is in some degree a set-off to the cost of maintaining it, just
+as the sale of the fruit decreases the cost of pineries, etc. Nothing
+but the fact that the possession of land becomes more and more vested
+in those who regard it as luxury could have enabled this sacrifice of
+farming to sport to continue so long. It is the source of continual
+complaint and resentment on the part of the farmers, who are only
+pacified by allowance being made to them out of their rent for damage
+done by game.
+
+The expense of keeping up large places becomes heavier every year,
+owing to the constantly-increasing rates of wages, etc., and in
+some cases imposes a grievous burden, eating heavily into income
+and leaving men with thousands of acres very poor balances at their
+bankers to meet the Christmas bills. Those who have large families
+to provide for, and get seriously behindhand, usually shut up or let
+their places--which latter is easily done if they be near London or
+in a good shooting country--and recoup on the Continent; but of
+late years prices there have risen so enormously that this plan of
+restoring the equilibrium between income and expenditure is far less
+satisfactory than it was forty years ago. The encumbrances on many
+estates are very heavy. A nobleman who twenty years ago succeeded to
+an entailed estate, with a house almost gutted, through having had
+an execution put in it, and a heavy debt--some of which, though not
+legally bound to liquidate, he thought it his duty to settle--acted
+in a very spirited manner which few of his order have the courage to
+imitate. He dropped his title, went abroad and lived for some years
+on about three thousand dollars a year. He has now paid off all
+his encumbrances, and has a clear income, steadily increasing, of
+a hundred thousand dollars a year. In another case a gentleman
+accomplished a similar feat by living in a corner of his vast mansion
+and maintaining only a couple of servants.
+
+In Ireland, owing to the lower rates of wages and far greater--in the
+remoter parts--cheapness of provisions, large places can be maintained
+at considerably less cost, but they are usually far less well kept,
+partly owing to their being on an absurdly large scale as compared
+with the means of the proprietors, and partly from the slovenly habits
+of the country. And in some cases people who could afford it will not
+spend the money. There are, however, notable exceptions. Powerscourt
+in Wicklow, the seat of Viscount Powerscourt, and Woodstock in
+Kilkenny, the beautiful demesne of Mr. Tighe, are probably in as
+perfect order as any seats in England. A countryman was sent over to
+the latter one day with a message from another county. "Well, Jerry,"
+said the master on his return, "what did you think of Woodstock?"
+"Shure, your honor," was the reply, "I niver seed such a power of
+girls a-swaping up the leaves."
+
+Country-house life in Ireland and Scotland is almost identical with
+that in England, except that, in the former especially, there is
+generally less money. Scotland has of late years become so much the
+fashion, land has risen so enormously in value, and properties are
+so very large, that some of the establishments, such as those at
+Drumlanrig, Dunrobin, Gordon Castle and Floors, the seats respectively
+of the dukes of Buccleuch, Sutherland, Richmond and Roxburghe, are on
+a princely scale. The number of wealthy squires is far fewer than
+in England. It is a curious feature in the Scottish character that
+notwithstanding the radical politics of the country--for scarcely
+a Conservative is returned by it--the people cling fondly to
+primogeniture and their great lords, who, probably to a far greater
+extent than in England, hold the soil. The duke of Sutherland
+possesses nearly the whole of the county from which he derives his
+title, whilst the duke of Buccleuch owns the greater part of four.
+
+Horses are such a very expensive item that a large stable is seldom
+found unless there is a very large income, for otherwise the rest
+of the establishment must be cut down to a low figure. Hunting
+millionaires keep from ten to twenty, or even thirty, hacks and
+hunters, besides four or five carriage-horses. Three or four
+riding-horses, three carriage-horses and a pony or two is about the
+usual number in the stable of a country gentleman with from five to
+six thousand pounds a year. The stable-staff would be coachman, groom
+and two helpers. The number of servants in country-houses varies from
+seven or eight to eighty, but probably there are not ten houses in the
+country where it reaches so high a figure as the last: from fifteen to
+twenty would be a common number.
+
+There are many popular bachelors and old maids who live about half the
+year in the country-houses of their friends. A gentleman of this sort
+will have his chambers in London and his valet, whilst the lady will
+have her lodgings and maid. In London they will live cheaply and
+comfortably, he at his club and dining out with rich friends, she in
+her snug little room and passing half her time in friends' houses.
+There is not the slightest surrender of independence about these
+people. They would not stay a day in a house which they did not like,
+but their pleasant manners and company make them acceptable, and
+friends are charmed to have them.
+
+One of the special recommendations of a great country-house is that
+you need not see too much of any one. There is no necessary meeting
+except at meals--in many houses then even only at dinner--and in the
+evening. Many sit a great deal in their own rooms if they have writing
+or work to do; some will be in the billiard-room, others in the
+library, others in the drawing-room: the host's great friend will be
+with him in his own private room, whilst the hostess's will pass most
+of the time in that lady's boudoir.[A]
+
+[Footnote A: Perhaps the most charming idea of a country-house was
+that conceived by Mr. Mathew of Thomastown--a huge mansion still
+extant, now the property of the count de Jarnac, to whom it descended.
+This gentleman, who was an ancestor of the celebrated Temperance
+leader, probably had as much claret drunk in his house as any one in
+his country; which is saying a good deal.
+
+He had an income which would be equivalent to one hundred and
+twenty-five thousand dollars a year in our money, and for several
+years traveled abroad and spent very little. On his return with an
+ample sum of ready money, he carried into execution a long-cherished
+scheme of country life.
+
+He arranged his immense mansion after the fashion of an inn. The
+guests arrived, were shown to their rooms, and treated as though they
+were in the most perfectly-appointed hotel. They ordered dinner when
+they pleased, dined together or alone as suited them, hunted, shot,
+played billiards, cards, etc. at will, and kept their own horses.
+There was a regular bar, where drinks of the finest quality were
+always served. The host never appeared in that character: he was just
+like any other gentleman in the house.
+
+The only difference from a hotel lay in the choice character of the
+company, and the fact that not a farthing might be disbursed. The
+servants were all paid extra, with the strict understanding that they
+did not accept a farthing, and that any dereliction from this rule
+would be punished by instant dismissal.
+
+Unlike most Irish establishments, especially at that date (about the
+middle of the last century), this was managed with the greatest order,
+method and economy.
+
+Among the notable guests was Dean Swift, whose astonishment at the
+magnitude of the place, with the lights in hundreds of windows at
+night, is mentioned by Dr. Sheridan.
+
+It is pleasant to add in this connection that the count and countess
+de Jarnac worthily sustain the high character earned a century
+since by their remarkable ancestor, who was one of the best and most
+benevolent men of his day.]
+
+In some respects railroads have had a very injurious effect on the
+sociability of English country life. They have rendered people in
+great houses too apt to draw their supplies of society exclusively
+from town. English trains run so fast that this can even be done in
+places quite remote from London. The journey from London to Rugby,
+for instance, eighty miles, is almost invariably accomplished in two
+hours. Leaving at five in the afternoon, a man reaches that station at
+7.10: his friend's well-appointed dog-cart is there to meet him, and
+that exquisitely neat young groom, with his immaculate buckskins and
+boots in which you may see yourself, will make the thoroughbred do the
+four miles to the hall in time to enable you to dress for dinner
+by 7.45. Returning on Tuesday morning--and all the lines are most
+accommodating about return tickets--the barrister, guardsman,
+government clerk can easily be at his post in town by eleven o'clock.
+Thus the actual "country people" get to be held rather cheap, and come
+off badly, because Londoners, being more in the way of hearing,
+seeing and observing what is going on in society, are naturally more
+congenial to fine people in country-houses who live in the metropolis
+half the year.
+
+It is evident from the following amusing squib, which appeared in one
+of the Annuals for 1832, how far more dependent the country gentleman
+was upon his country neighbors in those days, when only idle men could
+run down from town:
+
+"Mr. J., having frequently witnessed with regret country gentlemen,
+in their country-houses, reduced to the dullness of a domestic circle,
+and nearly led to commit suicide in the month of November, or, what is
+more melancholy, to invite the ancient and neighboring families of
+the Tags, the Rags and the Bobtails, has opened an office in Spring
+Gardens for the purpose of furnishing country gentlemen in their
+country-houses with company and guests on the most moderate terms. It
+will appear from the catalogue that Mr. J. has a choice and elegant
+assortment of six hundred and seventeen guests, ready to start at a
+moment's warning to any country gentleman at any house. Among them
+will be found three Scotch peers, several ditto Irish, fifteen decayed
+baronets, eight yellow admirals, forty-seven major-generals on half
+pay (who narrate the whole Peninsular War), twenty-seven dowagers,
+one hundred and eighty-seven old maids on small annuities, and several
+unbeneficed clergymen, who play a little on the fiddle. All the above
+play at cards, and usually with success if partners. No objection to
+cards on Sunday evenings or rainy mornings. The country gentleman to
+allow the guests four feeds a day, and to produce claret if a Scotch
+or Irish peer be present."
+
+A country village very often has no inhabitants except the parson
+holding the rank of gentry. The majority of ladies in moderate or
+narrow circumstances live in county-towns, such as Exeter, Salisbury,
+etc., or in watering-places, which abound and are of all degrees of
+fashion and expense. County-town and watering-place society is a thing
+_per se_, and has very little to do with "county" society, which
+means that of the landed gentry living in their country-houses.
+Thus, noblemen and gentlemen within a radius of five miles of such
+watering-places as Bath, Tonbridge Wells and Weymouth would not have a
+dozen visiting acquaintances resident in those towns.
+
+To get into "county" society is by no means easy to persons without
+advantages of position or connection, even with ample means, and to
+the wealthy manufacturer or merchant is often a business of years. The
+upper class of Englishmen, and more especially women, are accustomed
+to find throughout their acquaintance an almost identical style and
+set of manners. Anything which differs from this they are apt to
+regard as "ungentlemanlike or unladylike," and shun accordingly. The
+dislike to traders and manufacturers, which is very strong in those
+counties, such as Cheshire and Warwickshire, which environ great
+commercial centres, arises not from the folly of thinking commerce a
+low occupation, but because the county gentry have different tastes,
+habits and modes of thought from men who have worked their way up from
+the counting-room, and do not, as the phrase goes, "get on" with
+them, any more than a Wall street broker ordinarily gets on with a
+well-read, accomplished member of the Bar.
+
+A result of this is that a large number of wealthy commercial men, in
+despair of ever entering the charmed circle of county society, take up
+their abode in or near the fashionable watering-places, where,
+after the manner of those at our own Newport, they build palaces in
+paddocks, have acres of glass, rear the most marvelous of pines and
+peaches, and have model farms which cost them thousands of pounds
+a year. To this class is owing in a great degree the extraordinary
+increase of Leamington, Torquay, Tonbridge Wells, etc.--places which
+have made the fortunes of the lucky people who chanced to own them.
+
+English ladies, as a rule, take a great deal of interest in the poor
+around them, and really know a great deal of them. The village near
+the hall is almost always well attended to, but it unfortunately
+happens that outlying properties sometimes come off far less well. The
+classes which see nothing of each other in English rural life are the
+wives and daughters of the gentry and those of the wealthier farmers
+and tradesmen: between these sections a huge gulf intervenes, which
+has not as yet been in the least degree bridged over. In former days
+very great people used to have once or twice in the year what were
+called "public days," when it was open house for all who chose to
+come, with a sort of tacit understanding that none below the class
+of substantial yeomen or tradesmen would make their appearance. This
+custom has now fallen into disuse, but was maintained to the last by
+the Hon. Doctor Vernon-Harcourt, who was for more than half a century
+archbishop of York, and is yet retained by Earl Fitzwilliam at
+Wentworth House, his princely seat in Yorkshire. There, once or twice
+a year, a great gathering takes place. Dinner is provided for hundreds
+of guests, and care is taken to place a member of the family at every
+table to do his or her part toward dispensing hospitality to high and
+low.
+
+During the summer and early autumn croquet and archery offer good
+excuses for bringing young people together, and reunions of this kind
+palliate the miseries of those who cannot afford to partake of the
+expensive gayeties of the London season. The archery meetings are
+often exceedingly pretty fetes. Somtimes they are held in grounds
+specially devoted to the purpose, as is the case at St. Leonard's,
+near Hastings, where the archery-ground will well repay a visit. The
+shooting takes place in a deep and vast excavation covered with the
+smoothest turf, and from the high ground above is a glorious view of
+the old castle of Hastings and the ocean. In Devonshire these meetings
+have an exceptional interest from the fact that they are held in the
+park of Powderham Castle, the ancestral seat of the celebrated family
+of Courtenay. All the county flocks to them, some persons coming fifty
+miles for this purpose. Apropos of one of these meetings, we shall
+venture to interpolate an anecdote which deserves to be recorded for
+the sublimity of impudence which it displays. The railway from London
+to Plymouth skirts the park of Powderham, running so close beside
+it that each train sends a herd of deer scampering down the velvety
+glades. One afternoon a bouncing young lady, who belonged to a family
+which had lately emerged from the class of yeoman into that of gentry,
+and whose "manners had not the repose which stamps the caste of Vere
+de Vere," found herself in a carriage with two fashionably-attired
+persons of her own sex. As the train ran by the park, one of these
+latter exclaimed to her companion, "Oh look, there's Powderham! Don't
+you remember that archery-party we went to there two years ago?" "To
+be sure," was the rejoinder. "I'm not likely to forget it, there were
+some such queer people. Who were those vulgarians whom we thought so
+particularly objectionable? I can't remember." "Oh, H----: H----
+of P----! That was the name." Upon this the other young lady in the
+carriage bounced to her feet with the words, "Allow me to tell you,
+madam, that I am Miss H---- of P----!" Neither of those she addressed
+deigned to utter a word in reply to this announcement, nor did it
+appear in the least to disconcert them. One slowly drew out a gold
+double eye-glass, leisurely surveyed Miss H---- of P---- from head to
+foot, and then proceeded to talk to her companion in French. Perhaps
+the best part of the joke was that Miss H---- made a round of visits
+in the course of the week, and detailed the disgusting treatment to
+which she had been subjected to a numerous acquaintance, who, it
+is needless to say, appeared during the narration as indignant and
+sympathetic as she could have wished, but who are declared by some
+ill-natured persons to have been precisely those who in secret
+chuckled over the insult with the greatest glee.
+
+English gentlemen experience an almost painful sensation as they
+journey through our land and observe the utter indifference of its
+wealthier classes to the charms of such a magnificent country. "Pearls
+before swine," they say in their hearts. "God made the country and man
+made the town." "Yes, and how obviously the American prefers the work
+of man to the work of the Almighty!" These and similar reflections
+no doubt fill the minds of many a thoughtful English traveler as the
+train speeds over hill and dale, field and forest. What sites are
+here! he thinks. What a perfect park might be made out of that wild
+ground! what cover-shooting there ought to be in that woodland! what
+fishing and boating on that lake! And then he groans in spirit as the
+cars enter a forest where tree leans against tree, and neglect reigns
+on all sides, and he thinks of the glorious oaks and beeches so
+carefully cared for in his own country, where trees and flowery are
+loved and petted as much as dogs and horses. And if anything can
+increase the contempt he feels for those who "don't care a rap" for
+country and country life, it is a visit to such resorts as Newport and
+Saratoga. There he finds men whose only notion of country life is what
+he would hold to be utterly destitute of all its ingredients. They
+build palaces in paddocks, take actually no exercise, play at cards
+for three hours in the forenoon, dine, and then drive out "just like
+ladies," we heard a young Oxonian exclaim--"got up" in the style that
+an Englishman adopts only in Hyde Park or Piccadilly.
+
+When an American went to stay with Lord Palmerston at Broadlands, the
+great minister ordered horses for a ride in the delicious glades of
+the New Forest. When they came to the door his guest was obliged to
+confess himself no horseman. The premier, with ready courtesy, said,
+"Oh, then, we'll walk: it's all the same to me;" but it wasn't quite
+the same. The incident was just one of those which separate the
+Englishman of a certain rank from the American.
+
+There is of course a certain class of Americans, more especially among
+the _jeunesse doree_ of New York, who greatly affect sport: they
+"run" horses and shoot pigeons, but these are not persons who commend
+themselves to real gentlemen, English or American. They belong to
+the bad style of "fast men," and are as thoroughly distasteful to
+a Devonshire or Cheshire squire as to one who merits "the grand old
+name"--which they conspicuously defame--in their own country.
+
+The English country-loving gentleman to whom we have been referring
+is, for the most part, of a widely different mould--a man of
+first-rate education, frequently of high attainments, and often one
+whose ends and aims in life are for far higher things than pleasure,
+even of the most innocent kind, but who, when he takes it, derives it
+chiefly from the country. Many of this kind will instantly occur to
+those acquainted with English worthies: to mention two--John Evelyn
+and Sir Fowell Buxton.
+
+REGINALD WYNFORD.
+
+
+
+
+THE FOREST OF ARDEN.
+
+
+A girl of seventeen--a girl with a "missish" name, with a "missish"
+face as well, soft skin, bright eyes, dark hair, medium height and a
+certain amount of coquetry in her attire. This completes the "visible"
+of Nellie Archer. And the invisible? With an exterior such as this,
+what thoughts or ideas are possible within? Surely none worth the
+trouble of searching after. It is a case of the rind being the better
+part of the fruit, the shell excelling the kernel; and with a slight
+effort we can imagine her acquirements. Some scraps of geography,
+mixed up with the topography of an embroidery pattern; some grammar,
+of much use in parsing the imperfect phrases of celebrated authors,
+to the neglect of her own; some romanticism, finding expression in the
+arrangement of a spray of artificial flowers on a spring bonnet; some
+idea of duty, resulting in the manufacture of sweet cake or "seeing
+after" the dessert for dinner; and a conception of "woman's mission"
+gained from Tennyson--
+
+ Oh teach the orphan-boy to read,
+ Or teach the orphan-girl to sew.
+
+No! no! no! not so fast, please. In spite of Nellie's name, of her
+face, of her attire, that little head is filled quite otherwise. It is
+not her fault that this is so: is it her misfortune? But to give the
+history of this being entire, it is necessary to begin seventeen years
+back, at the very beginning of her life, for in our human nature, as
+in the inanimate world, a phenomenon is better understood when we know
+its producing causes.
+
+Nellie's father was a business-man of a type common in America--one
+whose affairs led him here, there and everywhere. Never quiet while
+awake, and scarcely at rest during slumber, he resembled Bedreddin
+Hassan in frequently going to sleep in one town, to awake in another
+far distant, but without the benighted Oriental's surprise at the
+transfer, the afrit who performed this prodigy being a steam-engine,
+and the magician it obeyed the human mind.
+
+In these rapid peregrinations it would not have been easy for Mr.
+Archer to carry an infant with him; so, when his wife died and left
+Nellie to his sole care at six months old, he speedily cast about in
+his mind to rid himself of the encumbrance.
+
+Having heard that country air is good for children, he sent the little
+one to the interior, and quite admired himself for giving her such an
+advantage: then, too, the house in the city could be sold.
+
+But to whom did he entrust his child? For a while this had been the
+great difficulty. In vain he thought over the years he had lived, to
+find a friend: he had been too busy to make friends. For an honest
+person he had traversed the world too hurriedly to perceive the
+deeper, better part of mankind; he had floated on the surface with the
+scum and froth, and could recall no one whom he could trust. At last,
+away back in the years of his childhood, he saw a face--that of a
+young but motherly Irishwoman, who had lived in his father's family as
+a faithful servant, and had been a fond partisan of his in his fickle
+troubles when a boy.
+
+He sought and found her in his need. She had married, borne children
+and grown old: her offspring, after much struggling and little help
+from the parent birds, had learned to fly alone, and had left the
+home-nest to try their own fortunes. It was not hard for Mr. Archer
+to persuade Nurse Bridget and her husband to inhabit his house in the
+country and take charge of the baby. In a short time the arrangements
+were complete, and the three were installed in comfort, for the busy
+man did not grudge money.
+
+If in the long years that followed a thought of the neglected little
+one did at times reproach him, he dismissed it with the resolution of
+doing something for her when she should be grown up; but at what date
+this event was to take place, or what it was that he intended to do,
+he did not definitely settle.
+
+The mansion in the country was an old rambling house, in which
+there were enough deserted rooms to furnish half a dozen ghosts with
+desirable lodgings, without inconvenience to the living dwellers. The
+front approach was through an avenue of hemlocks, dark and untrimmed.
+Under the closed windows lay a tangled garden, where flowers grew
+rank, shadowed by high ash and leafy oak, outposts of the forest
+behind--a forest jealous of cultivation, stealthily drawing nearer
+each year, and threatening to reconquer its own.
+
+There was an unused well in a corner that looked like the habitation
+of a fairy--of a good fairy, I am sure, because the grass grew
+greenest and best about the worn curb, and the tender mosses and
+little plants that could not support the heat in summer found a refuge
+within its cool circle and flourished there.
+
+On the other side of the house, and dividing it from level fields,
+were the kitchen-garden and orchard. In springtime you might have
+imagined the latter to be a grove of singing trees, bearing song
+for fruit: in autumn, had you seen it when the sun was low, glinting
+through leaves and gilding apples and stem, you would have been
+reminded of the garden of the Hesperides.
+
+Below the fields lay a broad river--in summer, languid and clear;
+in winter, turbid and full. The child often wondered (as soon as
+she could wonder) if, when it was lying so tranquil under the summer
+clouds, it was thinking of the frolic it would have with the great
+blocks of ice in the winter; whether it loved best the rush and
+struggle of the floods or the quiet of low water; and, above all,
+whither it was going.
+
+The homely faces and bent, ungainly forms of the old nurse and her
+husband harmonized well with the mellow gloom about them; and the
+infant Nellie completed the scene, like the spot of sunlight in the
+foreground of a picture by Rembrandt.
+
+Now, Nellie inherited her father's active disposition, and, left to
+her own amusement, her occupations were many and various. At three
+years of age she was turned loose in the orchard, with three blind
+puppies in lieu of toys. Day by day she augmented her store, until she
+had two kittens, one little white pig with a curly tail, half a dozen
+soft piepies, one kid, and many inanimate articles, such as broken
+bottles, dishes, looking-glass and gay bits of calico. When the little
+thing became sleepy she would toddle through the long grass to a
+corner, whence the river could be heard fretting against its banks,
+and lie there: she said the water sang to her. Finding that this was
+her favorite spot, the old nurse placed there a bright quilt for her
+to rest on, and in case she should awake hungry there stood a tin
+of milk hard by. This was all the attention she received, unless the
+fairy of the well took her under her protection, but for that I cannot
+vouch. Sometimes the puppies drank her milk before she awoke; then she
+went contentedly and ate green apples or ripe cherries. Thus she lived
+and grew.
+
+By the time Nellie was seven she had seen whole generations of pets
+pass away. It was wonderful what knowledge she gained in this golden
+orchard. She knew that piepies became chickens--that they were killed
+and eaten; so death came into her world. She knew that the kid grew
+into a big goat, and became very wicked, for he ran at her one day,
+throwing her to the ground and hurting her severely; so sin came into
+her world. She saw innate depravity exemplified in the conduct of her
+innocent white pig, that would take to puddles and filth in spite of
+her gentle endeavors to restrain its wayward impulses. Her puppies
+too bit each other, would quarrel over a bone, growl and get generally
+unmanageable. None of her animals fulfilled the promise of their
+youth, and her care was returned with base ingratitude. Even
+the little wrens bickered with the blue-birds, and showed their
+selfishness and jealousy in chasing them from the crumbs she
+impartially spread for all in common.
+
+So at seven she was a wise little woman, and said to her nurse one
+day, "I do not care for pets any more: they all grow up nasty."
+
+Was Solomon's "All is vanity" truer?
+
+With so much experience Nellie felt old, for life is not counted by
+years alone: it is the loss of hope, the mistrust of appearance, the
+vanishing of illusion, that brings age. A hopeful heart is young at
+seventy, and youth is past when hope is dead. But, in spite of all,
+hope was not dead in the heart of the little maid, and though deceived
+she was quite ready to be deceived a second time, as was Solomon, and
+as we are all.
+
+It was now that the girl began to be fond of flowers. She made
+herself a bed for them in a sunny corner of the kitchen-garden, and
+transplanted daisy roots and spring-beauties, with other wood- and
+field-plants as they blossomed. She watched the ferns unroll their
+worm-like fronds, made plays with the nodding violets, and ornamented
+her head with dandelion curls. This was indeed a happy summer.
+Her rambles were unlimited, and each day she was rewarded by new
+discoveries and delightful secrets--how the May-apple is good to eat,
+that sassafras root makes tea, that birch bark is very like candy,
+though not so sweet, and slippery elm a feast.
+
+Her new playmates were as lovely and perfect as she could desire.
+_They_ did not "grow up nasty," but in the autumn, alas! they died.
+
+One day at the end of the Indian summer, after having wandered for
+hours searching for her favorites, she found them all withered. The
+trees also looked forlorn, shivering in the chill air, with scarce a
+leaf to cover them: the wind moaned, and the sky was gray instead
+of the bright summer blue. The little one, tired and disappointed,
+touched by this mighty lesson of decay, threw herself on a friendly
+bank and wept.
+
+It is true the beautiful face of Nature had grown sad each winter, and
+her flowers and lovely things had yearly passed away, but Nellie had
+not then loved them.
+
+Here she was found by a boy rosy-cheeked and bright, who all his life
+had been loved and caressed to the same extent that Nellie had been
+neglected. He lived beyond the forest, and had come this afternoon
+to look for walnuts. Seeing the girl unhappy, he essayed some of the
+blandishing arts his mother had often lavished on him, speaking to her
+in a kindly tone and asking her why she cried.
+
+The child looked up at the sound of this new voice, and her
+astonishment stopped her tears. After gazing at him for some time with
+her eyes wide open, she remarked, wonderingly, "You are little, like
+me."
+
+"I am not very small," replied the boy, straightening himself.
+
+"Oh, but you _are_ young and little," she insisted.
+
+"I am young, but not little. Come stand up beside me. See! you don't
+more than reach my shoulder."
+
+"Shall you ever get bigger?"
+
+"Of course I shall."
+
+"Shall you grow up nasty?" she continued, trying to bring her stock of
+experience to bear on this new phenomenon.
+
+"No, I sha'n't!" he answered very decidedly.
+
+"Shall you die?"
+
+"No, not until I am old, old, old."
+
+"I am very glad: I will take you for a pet, All my little animals get
+nasty, and my flowers have died, but I don't care, now that you have
+come: I think I shall like you best."
+
+"But I won't be your pet," said the boy, offended.
+
+"Why not?" she asked, looking at him beseechingly. "I should be very
+good to you;" and she smoothed his sleeve with her brown hand as if it
+were the fur of one of her late darlings.
+
+"Who are you?" he demanded inquisitively.
+
+"I am myself," she innocently replied.
+
+"What is your name?"
+
+"I am Nellie. Have you a name?" she eagerly went on. "If you haven't,
+I'll give you a pretty one. Let me see: I will call you--"
+
+"You need not trouble yourself, thank you: I have a name of my own,
+Miss Nellie. I am Danby Overbeck."
+
+"Dan--by--o--ver--beck!" she repeated slowly. "Why, you have an awful
+long name, Beck, for such a little fellow."
+
+"I am not little, and I will not have you call me Beck: that is no
+name."
+
+"I forgot all but the last. Don't get nasty, please;" and she patted
+his arm soothingly. "What does your nurse call you?"
+
+"I am no baby to have a nurse," he said disdainfully.
+
+"You have no nurse? Poor thing! What do you do? who feeds you?"
+
+"I feed myself."
+
+"Where do you live," she asked, looking about curiously, as if she
+thought he had some kind of a nest near at hand.
+
+"Oh, far away--at the other side of the woods."
+
+"Won't you come and live with me? Do!"
+
+"No indeed, gypsy: I must go home. See, the sun is almost down. You
+had better go too: your mother will be anxious."
+
+"I have no mother, and my flowers are all dead. I wish you would be my
+pet--I wish you would come with me;" and her lip trembled.
+
+"My gracious, child! what would the old lady at home say? Why, there
+would be an awful row."
+
+"Never mind, come," she answered coaxingly, rubbing her head against
+his sleeve like a kitten. "Come, I will love you so much."
+
+"You go home," he said, patting her head, "and I will come again some
+day, and will bring you flowers."
+
+"The flowers are all dead," she replied, shaking her head.
+
+"I can make some grow. Go now, run away: let me see you off."
+
+She looked for a moment at this superior being, who could make flowers
+grow and could live without the care of a nurse, and then, obeying the
+stronger intelligence, she trotted off toward home.
+
+And now life contained new pleasure for Nellie, for the boy was
+large-hearted and kind, coming almost daily to take her with him on
+his excursions. Indeed, he was as lonely as the child, companions
+being difficult to find in that out-of-the-way neighborhood, and the
+odd little thing amused him. She would trudge bravely by his side
+when he went to fish, or carry his bag when he went gunning; and his
+promise of flowers was redeemed with gifts from the conservatory,
+which enhanced her opinion of this divinity, seeing that they were
+even more beautiful than those of her own fields. Often, when tired of
+sport, Danby would read to her, sitting in the shade of forest trees,
+stories of pirates and robbers or of wonderful adventures: these were
+the afternoons she enjoyed the most.
+
+One day, seeing her lips grow bright and her eyes dark from her
+intense interest in the story, he offered her the book as he was
+preparing to go, saying, "Take it home, Nellie, and read it."
+
+She took the volume in her hand eagerly, looked at the page a little
+while, a puzzled expression gradually passing over her face, until
+finally she turned to him open-eyed and disappointed, saying simply,
+"I can't."
+
+"Oh try!"
+
+"How shall I try?"
+
+"It begins _there_: now go on, it is easy. _There_" he repeated,
+pointing to the word, "go on," he added impatiently.
+
+"Where shall I go?"
+
+"Why read, Stupid! Look at it."
+
+She bent over and gazed earnestly where the end of his finger touched
+the book. "I look and look," she said, shaking her head, "but I do
+not see the pretty stories that you do. They seem quite gone away, and
+nothing is left but little crooked marks."
+
+"I do believe you can't read."
+
+"I do believe it too," said Nellie.
+
+"But you must try; such a big girl as you are getting to be!"
+
+"I try and I look, but it don't come to me."
+
+"You must learn."
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Do you intend to do it?"
+
+"Why should I? You can read to me."
+
+"You will never know anything," exclaimed the boy severely. "How do
+you spend your time in the morning, when I am not here?"
+
+"I do nothing."
+
+"Nothing?"
+
+"That is, I wait until you come," in an explanatory tone.
+
+"What do you do while you are waiting?"
+
+"I think about you, and wonder how soon you will be here; and I walk
+about, or lie on the grass and look at the clouds."
+
+"Well, did I ever hear of such an idle girl? I shall not come again
+if you don't learn to read." Nellie was not much given to laughter
+or tears. She had lived too much alone for such outward appeals for
+sympathy. Why laugh when there is no one near to smile in return? Why
+weep when there is no one to give comfort? She only regarded him with
+a world of reproach in her large eyes.
+
+"Nellie," he said, in reply to her eyes, "you ought to learn to read,
+and you _must_. Did no one ever try to teach you?"
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"Have you no books?"
+
+Again a negative shake.
+
+"Just come along with me to the house. I'll see about this thing: it
+must be stopped." And Danby rose and walked off with a determined air,
+while the girl, abashed and wondering, followed him. When they arrived
+he plunged into the subject at once: "Nurse Bridget, can you read?"
+
+"An' I raly don't know, as I niver tried."
+
+"Fiddlesticks! Of course Maurice is too blind, and very likely he
+never tried either. Are there no books in the house?"
+
+"An' there is, then--a whole room full of them, Master Danby. We are
+not people of no larnin' here, I can tell you. There is big books,
+an' little books, an' some awful purty books, an' some," she added
+doubtfully, "as is not so purty."
+
+"You know a great deal about books!" said the boy sarcastically.
+
+"An' sure I do. Haven't I dusted them once ivery year since I came to
+this blessed place? And tired enough they made me, too. I ain't likely
+to forgit them."
+
+"Well, let us see them."
+
+"Sure they're locked."
+
+"Open them," said the impatient boy.
+
+"Do open them," added Nellie timidly.
+
+But it required much coaxing to accomplish their design, and after
+nurse did consent time was lost in looking for the keys, which were at
+last found under a china bowl in the cupboard. Then the old woman led
+the way with much importance, opening door after door of the unused
+part of the house, until she came to the library. It was a large,
+sober-looking room, with worn furniture and carpet, but rich in
+literature, and even art, for several fine pictures hung on the
+walls. The ancestor from whom the house had descended must have been
+a learned man in his day, and a wise, for he had gathered about him
+treasures. Danby shouted with delight, and Nellie's eyes sparkled as
+she saw his pleasure.
+
+"Open all the windows, nurse, please, and then leave us. Why, Nellie,
+there is enough learning here to make you the most wonderful woman in
+the world! Do you think you can get all these books into your head?"
+he asked mischievously, "because that is what I expect of you. We will
+take a big one to begin with." The girl looked on while he, with mock
+ceremony, took down the largest volume within reach and laid it open
+on a reading-desk near. "Now sit;" and he drew a chair for her before
+the open book, and another for himself. "It is nice big print. Do you
+see this word?" and he pointed to one of the first at the top of the
+page.
+
+She nodded her head gravely.
+
+"It is _love_: say it."
+
+She repeated the word after him.
+
+"Now find it all over the page whereever it occurs."
+
+With some mistakes she finally succeeded in recognizing the word
+again.
+
+"Don't you forget it."
+
+"Yes."
+
+"No, you must _not_."
+
+"I mean I won't."
+
+"All right! Here is another: it is called _the_. Now find it."
+
+Many times she went through the same process. In his pride of teaching
+Danby did not let his pupil flag. When he was going she asked timidly,
+"Shall you come again?"
+
+"Of course I shall, Ignoramus, but don't you forget your lesson."
+
+"No, no," she answered brightening. "I will think of it all the time I
+am asleep."
+
+"That is a good girl," he said patronizingly, and bade her good-bye.
+
+It was thus she learned to read, not remarkably well, but well enough
+to content Danby, which was sufficient to content Nellie also; and the
+ambitious boy was not satisfied until she could write as well.
+
+An end came to this peaceful life when the youth left home for
+college. The girl's eyes seemed to grow larger from intense gazing at
+him during the last few weeks that preceded his departure, but that
+was her only expression of feeling. The morning after he left, the
+nurse, not finding her appear at her usual time, went to her chamber
+to look for her. She lay on the bed, as she had been lying all the
+night, sleepless, with pale face and red lips. Nurse asked her what
+was the matter.
+
+"Nothing," was the reply.
+
+"Come get up, Beauty," coaxed the nurse.
+
+But Nellie turned her face to the wall and did not answer. She lay
+thus for a week, scarcely eating or sleeping, sick in mind and body,
+struggling with a grief that she hardly knew was grief. At the end
+of that time she tottered from the bed, and, clothing herself with
+difficulty, crept to the library.
+
+The instinct that sends a sick animal to the plant that will cure
+it seemed to teach Nellie where to find comfort. Danby was gone, but
+memory remained, and the place where he had been was to her made
+holy and possessed healing power, as does the shrine of a saint for a
+believer. Her shrine was the reading-desk, and the chair on which he
+had sat during those happy lessons. To make all complete, she lifted
+the heavy book from the shelf and opened it at the page from which she
+had first learned. She put herself in his chair and caressed the words
+with her thin hand, her fingers trembling over the place that his had
+touched, then dropping her head on the desk where his arm had lain,
+she smiling slept.
+
+She awoke with the nurse looking down on her, saying, "Beauty, you are
+better."
+
+And so she was: she drank the broth and ate the bread and grapes that
+had been brought her, and from that day grew stronger. But the shadow
+in her eyes was deeper now, and the veins in her temples were bluer,
+as if the blood had throbbed and pained there. Every morning found
+her at her post: she had no need to roam the woods and fields now--her
+world lay within her. It was sad for one so young to live on memory.
+
+For many days her page and these few words were sufficient to content
+her, and to recall them one after another, as Danby had taught, was
+her only occupation. But by and by the words themselves began to
+interest her, then the context, and finally the sense dawned upon
+her--dawned not less surely that it came slowly, and that she was now
+and then compelled to stop and think out a word.
+
+And what did she learn? Near the top of the large page the first
+word, "love." It ended a sentence and stood conspicuous, which was the
+reason it had caught the eye of the eager boy when he began to teach.
+What did it mean? What went before? What after? It was a long time
+before she asked herself these questions, for her understanding had
+not formed the habit of being curious. Previously her eyes alone had
+sight, now her intellect commenced seeing. What was the web of which
+this word was the woof, knitting together, underlying, now appearing,
+now hidden, but always there? She turned the leaves and counted where
+it recurred again and again, like a bird repeating one sweet note, of
+which it never tires. Then the larger type in the middle of each page
+drew her attention: she read, _As You Like It_. "What do I like? This
+story is perhaps as I like it. I wonder what it is about? I don't care
+now for pirates and robbers: I liked them when _he_ read to me, but
+not now." Her thoughts then wandered off to Danby, and she read no
+more that day.
+
+However, Nellie had plenty of time before her, and when her thinking
+was ended she would return to her text. I do not know how long a time
+it required for her to connect the sentence that followed the word
+"love;" but it became clear to her finally, just as a difficult puzzle
+will sometimes resolve itself as you are idly regarding it. And this
+is what she saw: "Love! But it cannot be sounded: my affection hath an
+unknown bottom, like the bay of Portugal." The phrase struck her as
+if it was her own, and for the first time in her life she blushed.
+She did not know much about the bay of Portugal, it is true, but she
+understood the rest. From that time forth the book possessed a strange
+interest for her. Much that she did not comprehend she passed by.
+Often for several days she would not find a passage that pleased her,
+but when such a one was discovered her slow perusal of it and long
+dwelling on it gave a beauty and power to the sentiment that more
+expert students might have lost. I cannot describe the almost feverish
+effect upon her of that poetical quartette beginning with--
+
+ Good shepherd, tell this youth what 'tis to love.
+
+How she hung over it, smiled at it, brightening into delight at the
+echo of her own feelings! In the raillery of Rosalind her heart found
+words to speak; and her sense and wit were awakened by the sarcasm of
+the same character. "Pray you, no more of this: 'tis like the howling
+of Irish wolves against the moon," came like a healthy tonic after a
+week of ecstasy spent over the preceding lines.
+
+Her mind grew in such companionship. She lived no more alone: she
+had found friends who sympathized with her. Smiles and tears became
+frequent on her face, making it more beautiful. _As You Like It_ was
+just as she liked it. The forest of Arden was her forest. Rosalind's
+banished father was her father: that busy man she had never seen. With
+the book for interpreter she fell in love with her world over again.
+Sunset and dawn possessed new charms; the little flowers seemed
+dignified; moonlight and fairy-land unveiled their mysteries; nothing
+was forgotten. It appeared as if all the knowledge of the world was
+contained in those magic pages, and the master-key to this treasure,
+the dominant of this harmony, was _love_--the word that Danby
+had taught her. The word? The feeling as well, and with the
+feeling--_all_.
+
+Circling from this passion as from a pole-star, all those great
+constellations of thought revolved. With Lear's madness was Cordelia's
+affection; with the inhumanity of Shylock was Jessica's trust; with
+the Moor's jealousy was Desdemona's devotion. The sweet and bitter
+of life, religion, poetry and philosophy, ambition, revenge and
+superstition, controlled, created or destroyed by that little word.
+And _how_ they loved--Perdita, Juliet, Miranda--quickly and entirely,
+without shame, as she had loved Danby--as buds bloom and birds warble.
+Oh it was sweet, sweet, sweet! Amid friends like these she became gay,
+moved briskly, grew rosy and sang. This was her favorite song, to a
+melody she had caught from the river:
+
+ Under the greenwood tree
+ Who loves to lie with me,
+ And turn his merry note
+ Unto the sweet bird's throat,
+ Come hither, come hither, come hither:
+ Here shall he see
+ No enemy
+ But winter and rough weather.
+
+Four years passed by--not all spent with one book, however. Nellie's
+desire for study grew with what it fed on. This book opened the way
+for many. Reading led to reflection; reflection, to observation;
+observation, to Nature; and thus in an endless round.
+
+About this time her busy father remembered he possessed a "baby," laid
+away somewhere, like an old parchment, and he concluded he would "look
+her up." His surprise was great when he saw the child a woman--still
+greater when he observed her self-possession, her intelligence, and a
+certain quaint way she had of expressing herself that was charming in
+connection with her fresh young face. She was neither diffident nor
+awkward, knowing too little of the world to fear, and having naturally
+that simplicity of manner which touches nearly upon high breeding.
+But Mr. Archer being one of those men who think that "beauty should
+go beautifully," her toilette shocked him. Under the influence of her
+presence he felt that he had neglected her. The whole house reproached
+him: the few rooms that had been furnished were dilapidated and worn.
+
+"I did not know things looked so badly down here," he said
+apologetically. "I am sure I must have had everything properly
+arranged when Nurse Bridget came. Your cradle was comfortable, was it
+not?"
+
+"I scarcely remember," answered his daughter demurely.
+
+"Oh! ah! yes! It is some time ago, I believe?"
+
+"Seventeen years."
+
+"Y-e-s: I had forgotten."
+
+He had an idea, this man of a hundred schemes, that his "baby"
+was laughing at him, and, singularly enough, it raised her in his
+estimation. He even asked her to come and live with him in the city,
+but she refused, and he did not insist.
+
+Then he set about making a change, which was soon accomplished. He
+sent for furniture and carpets, and cleared the rubbish from without
+and within. Under his decided orders a complete outfit "suitable for
+his daughter" soon arrived, and with it a maid. Nellie, whose ideas
+of maids were taken from Lucetta, was much disappointed in the actual
+being, and the modern Lucetta was also disappointed when she saw
+the "howling wilderness" to which she had been inveigled; so the two
+parted speedily. But Mr. Archer remained: he was one of those men
+who do things thoroughly which they have once undertaken. When he
+was satisfied with Nellie's appearance he took her to call on all the
+neighboring families within reach.
+
+Among others, they went to see Mrs. Overbeck, Danby's mother, whom
+Mr. Archer had known in his youth. Nellie wore her brave trappings
+bravely, and acted her part nicely until Mrs. Overbeck gave her a
+motherly kiss at parting, when she grew pale and trembled. Why should
+she? Her hostess thought it was from the heat, and insisted on her
+taking a glass of wine.
+
+In the autumn of this year Danby graduated and returned home. Nellie
+had not seen him during all this interval: he had spent his vacations
+abroad, and had become quite a traveled man. While she retained her
+affection for him unchanged, he scarcely remembered the funny little
+girl who had been so devoted to him in the years gone by. A few days
+after he arrived, his mother, in giving him the local news, mentioned
+the charming acquaintance she had made of a young lady who lived in
+the neighborhood. On hearing her name the young man exclaimed, "Why,
+that must be Nellie!"
+
+"Do you know her?" asked his mother in surprise.
+
+"Of course I do, and many a jolly time I have had with her. Odd little
+thing, ain't she?"
+
+"I should not call her odd," remarked his mother.
+
+"You do not know her as I do."
+
+"Perhaps not. I suppose you will go with me when I return her visit."
+
+"Certainly I will--just in for that sort of thing. A man feels the
+need of some relaxation after a four years' bore, and there is nothing
+like the society of the weaker sex to give the mind repose."
+
+"Shocking boy!" said the fond mother with a smile.
+
+In a short time the projected call was made.
+
+"You will frighten her with all that finery, my handsome mother,"
+remarked Danby as they walked to the carriage.
+
+"I think she will survive it, but I shall not answer for the effect of
+those brilliant kids of yours."
+
+"The feminine eye is caught by display," said her son sententiously.
+
+They chatted as they drove rapidly through the forest to the old
+house, entered the front gate and rolled up the broad avenue.
+
+"I had no idea the place looked so well," remarked Danby, _en
+connaisseur_, as they approached. "I always entered by the back way;"
+and he gave his moustache a final twirl.
+
+After a loud knock from a vigorous hand the door was opened by a small
+servant, much resembling Nellie some four years before. Danby was
+going to speak to her, but recalling the time that had elapsed, he
+knew it could not be she. All within was altered. Three rooms
+_en suite_, the last of which was the library, had been carefully
+refurnished. He looked about him. Could this be the place in which he
+had passed so many days? But he forgot all in the figure that advanced
+to receive them. With a pretty grace she gave her hand to his mother
+and welcomed "Mr. Overbeck." How she talked--talked like a babbling
+brook! It was now his turn to open big eyes and be silent. He tried
+to recall the girl he had left. Vain endeavor! This bright creature,
+grave and gay, silent but ready, respectful yet confident, how could
+he follow her? The visit came to an end, but was repeated again and
+again by Danby, and each time with new astonishment, new delight. She
+had the coquetry of a dozen women, yet her eyes looked so true. She
+was a perfect elf for pranks and jokes, yet demure as a nun. When he
+tried to awe her with his learning, she was saucy; if he was serious,
+she was gay; if he wished to teach, she rebelled. She was self-willed
+as a changeling, refractory yet gentle, seditious but just,--only
+waiting to strike her colors and proclaim him conqueror; but this he
+did not know, for she kept well hid in her heart what "woman's fear"
+she had. She was all her favorite heroines in turn, with herself added
+to the galaxy.
+
+One day he penetrated into the library, notwithstanding some very
+serious efforts on her part to prevent him: by this time he would
+occasionally assert himself. The furniture there was not much altered.
+A few worn things had been replaced, but the room looked so much the
+same that the scene of that first reading-lesson came vividly to his
+mind. He turned to the side where the desk had stood. It was still
+there, with the two chairs before it, and on it was the book. She
+would not for the world have had it moved, but it was, as it were,
+glorified. Mr. Archer had wished "these old things cleared away," but
+Nellie had besought him so earnestly that he allowed them to stay,
+stipulating, however, that they should be upholstered anew. To this
+she assented, saying, "Send me the best of everything and _I_ will
+cover them--the very best, mind;" and her father, willing to please
+her, did as she desired.
+
+So the old desk became smart in brocade and gold-lace, the book
+received a cushion all bullion and embroidery, and the chairs emulated
+the splendor. It required a poet or a girl in love to clothe a fancy
+so beautifully, and Nellie was both. It was her shrine: why should she
+not adorn it?
+
+I cannot follow the process of thought in Danby's mind as he looked
+at this and at Nellie--Nellie blushing with the sudden guiltiness that
+even the discovery of a harmless action will bring when we wish to
+conceal it. Sometimes a moment reveals much.
+
+"Nellie"--it was the first time he had called her so since his
+return--"I must give you a reading-lesson: come, sit here."
+
+Mechanically she obeyed him, all the rebel fading away: she looked
+like the Nellie of other days. She felt she had laid bare her soul,
+but in proportion as her confusion overcame her did he become decided.
+It is the slaves that make tyrants, it is said.
+
+Under the impulse of his hand the book opened at the well-worn page.
+
+"Read!"
+
+For a little while she sat with downcast eyes. Well she knew the
+passage to which he was pointing: "Love! But it cannot be sounded: my
+affection hath an unknown bottom, like the bay of Portugal."
+
+The sentence seemed to dance and grow till it covered the page--grow
+till in her sight it assumed the size of a placard, and then it took
+life and became her accuser--told in big letters the story of her
+devotion to the mocking boy beside her.
+
+"There is good advice on the preceding page," he whispered smiling.
+"Orlando says he would kiss before he spoke: may I?"
+
+She started up and looked at his triumphant face a moment, her mouth
+quivering, her eyes full of tears. "How can you--" she began.
+
+But before she could finish he was by her side: "Because I love
+you--love you, all that the book says, and a thousand times more.
+Because if you love me we will live our own romance, and I doubt if we
+cannot make our old woods as romantic as the forest of Arden. Will you
+not say," he asked tenderly, "that there will be at least one pair of
+true lovers there?"
+
+I could not hear Nellie's answer: her head was so near his--on his
+shoulder, in fact--that she whispered it in his ear. But a moment
+after, pushing him from her with the old mischief sparkling from her
+eyes, she said, "'Til frown and be perverse, and say thee nay, so thou
+wilt woo,'" and looked a saucy challenge in his face.
+
+"Naughty sprite!" he exclaimed, catching her in his arms and shutting
+her mouth with kisses.
+
+It was not long after, perhaps a year, that a happy bride and groom
+might have been seen walking up the hemlock avenue arm in arm.
+
+"Do you remember," she asked, smiling thoughtfully--"do you remember
+the time I begged you to come home with me and be my pet?"
+
+The young husband leaned down and said something the narrator did
+not catch, but from the expression of his face it must have been very
+spoony: with a bride such as that charming Nellie, how could he help
+it?
+
+Yes, she had brought him home. Mr. Archer had given the house with its
+broad acres as a dowry to his daughter, and Nellie had desired that
+the honeymoon should be spent in her "forest of Arden."
+
+ITA ANIOL PROKOP.
+
+
+
+
+JACK, THE REGULAR.
+
+
+ In the Bergen winter night, when the hickory fire is roaring,
+ Flickering streams of ruddy light on the folk before it pouring--
+ When the apples pass around, and the cider follows after,
+ And the well-worn jest is crowned by the hearers' hearty laughter--
+ When the cat is purring there, and the dog beside her dozing,
+ And within his easy-chair sits the grandsire old, reposing,--
+ Then they tell the story true to the children, hushed and eager,
+ How the two Van Valens slew, on a time, the Tory leaguer,
+ Jack, the Regular.
+
+ Near a hundred years ago, when the maddest of the Georges
+ Sent his troops to scatter woe on our hills and in our gorges,
+ Less we hated, less we feared, those he sent here to invade us
+ Than the neighbors with us reared who opposed us or betrayed us;
+ And amid those loyal knaves who rejoiced in our disasters,
+ As became the willing slaves of the worst of royal masters,
+ Stood John Berry, and he said that a regular commission
+ Set him at his comrades' head; so we called him, in derision,
+ "Jack, the Regular."
+
+ When he heard it--"Let them fling! Let the traitors make them merry
+ With the fact my gracious king deigns to make me Captain Berry.
+ I will scourge them for the sneer, for the venom that they carry;
+ I will shake their hearts with fear as the land around I harry:
+ They shall find the midnight raid waking them from fitful slumbers;
+ They shall find the ball and blade daily thinning out their numbers:
+ Barn in ashes, cattle slain, hearth on which there glows no ember,
+ Neatless plough and horseless wain; thus the rebels shall remember
+ Jack, the Regular!"
+
+ Well he kept his promise then with a fierce, relentless daring,
+ Fire to rooftrees, death to men, through the Bergen valleys bearing:
+ In the midnight deep and dark came his vengeance darker, deeper--
+ At the watch-dog's sudden bark woke in terror every sleeper;
+ Till at length the farmers brown, wasting time no more on tillage,
+ Swore those ruffians of the Crown, fiends of murder, fire and pillage,
+ Should be chased by every path to the dens where they had banded,
+ And no prayers should soften wrath when they caught the bloody-handed
+ Jack, the Regular.
+
+ One by one they slew his men: still the chief their chase evaded.
+ He had vanished from their ken, by the Fiend or Fortune aided--
+ Either fled to Powles Hoek, where the Briton yet commanded,
+ Or his stamping-ground forsook, waiting till the hunt disbanded;
+ So they checked pursuit at length, and returned to toil securely:
+ It was useless wasting strength on a purpose baffled surely.
+ But the two Van Valens swore, in a patriotic rapture,
+ _They_ would never give it o'er till they'd either kill or capture
+ Jack, the Regular.
+
+ Long they hunted through the wood, long they slept upon the hillside;
+ In the forest sought their food, drank when thirsty at the rill-side;
+ No exposure counted hard--theirs was hunting border-fashion:
+ They grew bearded like the pard, and their chase became a passion:
+ Even friends esteemed them mad, said their minds were out of balance,
+ Mourned the cruel fate and sad fallen on the poor Van Valens;
+ But they answered to it all, "Only wait our loud view-holloa
+ When the prey shall to us fall, for to death we mean to follow
+ Jack, the Regular."
+
+ Hunted they from Tenavlieon to where the Hudson presses
+ To the base of traprocks high; through Moonachie's damp recesses;
+ Down as far as Bergen Hill; by the Ramapo and Drochy,
+ Overproek and Pellum Kill--meadows flat and hilltops rocky--
+ Till at last the brothers stood where the road from New Barbadoes,
+ At the English Neighborhood, slants toward the Palisadoes;
+ Still to find the prey they sought left no sign for hunter eager:
+ Followed steady, not yet caught, was the skulking, fox-like leaguer
+ Jack, the Regular.
+
+ Who are they that yonder creep by those bleak rocks in the distance,
+ Like the figures born in sleep, called by slumber to existence?--
+ Tories doubtless from below, from the Hoek, sent out for spying.
+ "No! the foremost is our foe--he so long before us flying!
+ Now he spies us! see him start! wave his kerchief like a banner!
+ Lay his left hand on his heart in a proud, insulting manner.
+ Well he knows that distant spot's past our ball, his low scorn flinging.
+ If you cannot feel the shot, you shall hear the firelock's ringing,
+ Jack, the Regular!"
+
+ Ha! he falls! An ambuscade? 'Twas impossible to strike him!
+ Are there Tories in the glade? Such a trick is very like him.
+ See! his comrade by him kneels, turning him in terror over,
+ Then takes nimbly to his heels. Have they really slain the rover?
+ It is worth some risk to know; so, with firelocks poised and ready,
+ Up the sloping hills they go, with a quick lookout and steady.
+ Dead! The random shot had struck, to the heart had pierced the Tory--
+ Vengeance seconded by luck! Lies there, cold and stiff and gory,
+ Jack, the Regular.
+
+ "Jack, the Regular, is dead! Honor to the man who slew him!"
+ So the Bergen farmers said as they crowded round to view him;
+ For the wretch that lay there slain had with wickedness unbending
+ To their roofs brought fiery rain, to their kinsfolk woeful ending.
+ Not a mother but had prest, in a sudden pang of fearing,
+ Sobbing darlings to her breast when his name had smote her hearing;
+ Not a wife that did not feel terror when the words were uttered;
+ Not a man but chilled to steel when the hated sounds he muttered--
+ Jack, the Regular.
+
+ Bloody in his work was he, in his purpose iron-hearted--
+ Gentle pity could not be when the pitiless had parted.
+ So, the corse in wagon thrown, with no decent cover o'er it--
+ Jeers its funeral rites alone--into Hackensack they bore it,
+ 'Mid the clanging of the bells in the old Brick Church's steeple,
+ And the hooting and the yells of the gladdened, maddened people.
+ Some they rode and some they ran by the wagon where it rumbled,
+ Scoffing at the lifeless man, all elate that death had humbled
+ Jack, the Regular.
+
+ Thus within the winter night, when the hickory fire is roaring,
+ Flickering streams of ruddy light on the folk before it pouring--
+ When the apples pass around, and the cider follows after,
+ And the well-worn jest is crowned by the hearers' hearty laughter--
+ When the cat is purring there, and the dog beside her dozing,
+ And within his easy-chair sits the grandsire old, reposing,--
+ Then they tell the story true to the children, hushed and eager,
+ the two Van Valens slew, on a time, the Tory leaguer,
+ Jack, the Regular.
+
+THOMAS DUNN ENGLISH.
+
+
+
+
+OBSERVATIONS AND ADVENTURES IN SUBMARINE DIVING.
+
+
+ [Greek: --liphon
+ eponumon te reuma kai petraerephae
+ autoktit' antra.]--AESCHYLUS: _Prometheus Bound_.
+
+Did you ever pause before a calm, bright little pool in the woods, and
+look steadily at the picture it presents, without feeling as if you
+had peeped into another world? Every outline is preserved, every tint
+is freshened and purified, in the cool, glimmering reflection. There
+is a grace and a softness in the prismatic lymph that give a new form
+and color to the common and familiar objects it has printed in its
+still, pellucid depths. Every little basin of clear water by the
+roadside is a magic mirror, and transforms all that it encloses. There
+is a vastness of depth, too, in that concave hemisphere, through
+which the vision sinks like a falling star, that excites and fills the
+imagination. What it shows is only a shadow, but all things seen are
+mere shadows painted on the retina, and you have, at such times,
+a realistic sense of the beautiful and bold imagery which calls a
+favorite fountain of the East the Eye of the Desert.
+
+The alluring softness of this mimic world increases to sublimity when,
+instead of some rocky basin, dripping with mossy emeralds and coral
+berries, you look upon the deep crystalline sea. Each mates to its
+kind. This does not gather its imagery from gray, mossy rock or
+pendent leaf or flower, but draws into its enfolding arms the wide
+vault of the cerulean sky. The richness of the majestic azure is
+deepened by that magnificent marriage. The pale blue is darkened to
+violet. Far through the ever-varying surface of the curious gelatinous
+liquid breaks the phosphorescence, sprinkled into innumerable lights
+and cross-lights. As you look upon those endless pastures thought is
+quickened with the conception of their innumerable phases of vitality.
+The floating weed, whose meshes measure the spaces of continents and
+archipelagoes, is everywhere instinct with animal and vegetable life.
+The builder coral, glimmering in its softer parts with delicate hues
+and tints, throws up its stony barrier through a thousand miles of
+length and a third as much in breadth, fringing the continents with
+bays and sounds and atoll islands like fairy rings of the sea.
+Animate flowers--sea-nettles, sea anemones, plumularia, campanularia,
+hydropores, confervae, oscillatoria, bryozoa--people the great waters.
+Sea-urchins, star-fish, sea-eggs, combative gymnoti, polypes, struggle
+and thrive with ever-renewing change of color; gelatinous worms
+that shine like stars cling to every weed; glimmering animalcules,
+phosphorescent medusae, the very deep itself is vivid with sparkle
+and corruscation of electric fire. So through every scale, from the
+zoophyte to the warm-blooded whale, the sea teems with life, out of
+which fewer links have been dropped than from sub-aerial life. It is a
+matter for curious speculation that the missing species belong not to
+the lower subsidiary genera, as in terrene animals, but to the
+highest types of marine life. In the quarries of Lyme Regis, among the
+accumulations of a sea of the Liassic period, lay the huge skeleton of
+the Ichthyosaurus, a warm-blooded marine existence, with huge saucer
+eyes of singular telescopic power, that gleamed radiant "with the
+eyelids of the morning," "by whose neesings alight doth shine"--the
+true leviathan of Job. In the same extinct sea is found the skeleton
+of the Plesiosaurus, a marine lizard of equal size, and warm-blooded,
+whose swan-like neck and body graced the serene seas of the
+pre-adamite world. Another was that of the Pterodactyl, the antique
+aragon, a winged fish. The task of sustaining these existences was too
+great for old Ocean, and the monsters dropped from the upper end of
+the chain into the encrusting mud, the petrified symbols of failure.
+So one day man may drop into the limbo of vanities, among the
+abandoned tools in the Creator's workshop.
+
+But, however high or low the degree in the scale, one distinguishing
+feature marks the vital creation in vegetable or animal--an
+intelligence capable of adjusting itself to the elements about it, and
+electing its food. The sunflower, even, does not follow the sun by a
+mechanical law, but, growing by a fair, bright sheet of water, looks
+as constantly at that shining surface for the beloved light as
+ever did the fabled Greek boy at his own image in the fountain.
+The tendrils of the vine seek and choose their own support, and the
+thirsty spongioles of the root find the nourishing veins of water.
+Growth, says a naturalist, is the conscious motion of vegetable life.
+But this theory of kinship, imperfect in the plant, becomes plain
+and distinct in the animate creation. However far removed, the wild
+dolphin at play and the painted bird in the air are cousins of man,
+with a responsive chord of sympathy connecting them.
+
+It is this feeling that sends an exhilarating thrill through the
+submarine explorer when a school of porpoises frisk by with undulating
+grace, the marine type of a group of frolicking children. It is the
+instinctive perception that it is a pure enjoyment to the fish, the
+healthy glow and laugh of submarine existence. But for that sense of
+sympathetic nature the flying-fish, reeling porpoise and dolphin would
+be no more to him than the skipping shuttle in a weaver's loom, the
+dull impetus of senseless machinery. Self-generated motion is the
+outward and visible sign of vitality--its wanton exercise the symbol
+and expression of enjoyment. The poor philosopher who distinguished
+humanity as singular in the exhibition of humor had surely never heard
+a mocking-bird sing, watched a roguish crow or admired a school of
+fish.
+
+This keen appreciation of a kindred life in the sea has thrown its
+charm over the poetry and religion of all races. Ocean us leaves the
+o'erarching floods and rocky grottoes at the call of bound Prometheus;
+Cyrene, with her nymphs, sits in the cool Peneus, where comes
+Aristaeus mourning for his stolen bees; the Druid washed his
+hedge-hyssop in the sacred water, and priestesses lived on coral reefs
+visited by remote lovers in their sundown seas; Schiller's diver
+goes into the purpling deep and sees the Sea-Horror reaching out its
+hundred arms; the beautiful Undine is the vivid poetry of the sea.
+Every fountain has its guardian saint or nymph, and to this day not
+only the German peasant and benighted English boor thrill at the sight
+of some nymph-guarded well, but the New Mexican Indian offers his rude
+pottery in propitiation of the animate existence, the deity of the
+purling spring.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Der Taucher," for all the rhythm and music that clothes his luckless
+plunge, was but a caitiff knight to some of our submarine adventurers.
+A diver during the bay-fight in Mobile harbor had reason to apprehend
+a more desperate encounter. A huge cuttle-fish, the marine monster of
+Pliny and Victor Hugo, had been seen in the water. His tough,
+sinuous, spidery arms, five fathoms long, wavered visibly in the blue
+transparent gulf,
+
+ Und schaudernd dacht ich's--da kroch's heran,
+ Regte hundert Gelenke zugleich,
+ Will schnappen nach mir.
+
+A harpoon was driven into the leathery, pulpy body of the monster, but
+with no other effect than the sudden snapping of the inch line like
+thread. It was subsequent to this that, as the diver stayed his steps
+in the unsteady current, his staff was seized below. The water was
+murky with the river-silt above the salt brine, and he could see
+nothing, but after an effort the staff was rescued or released.
+Curious to know what it was, he probed again, and the stick was
+wrenched from his hand. With a thrill he recognized in such power the
+monster of the sea, the devil-fish. He returned anxious, doubtful, but
+resolute. Few like to be driven from a duty by brute force. He armed
+himself, and descended to renew the hazardous encounter in the gloomy
+solitude of the sea-bottom. I would I had the wit to describe that
+tournament beneath the sea; the stab, thrust, curvet, plunge--the
+conquest and capture of the unknown combatant. A special chance
+preserves the mediaeval character of the contest, saving it from the
+sulphurous associations of modern warfare that might be suggested by
+the name of devil-fish. No: the antagonist wore a coat-of-mail and
+arms of proof, as became a good knight of the sea, and was besides
+succulent, digestible--a veritable prize for the conqueror. It was a
+monstrous crab.
+
+The constant encounter of strange and unforeseen perils enables the
+professional diver to meet them with the same coolness with which
+ordinary and familiar dangers are confronted on land. On one occasion
+a party of such men were driven out into the Gulf by a fierce
+"norther," were tossed about like chips for three days in the vexed
+element, scant of food, their compass out of order, and the horizon
+darkened with prevailing storm. At another time a party wandered out
+in the shallows of one of the keys that fringe the Gulf coast. They
+amused themselves with wading into the water, broken into dazzling
+brilliance. A few sharks were seen occasionally, which gradually and
+unobserved increased to, a squadron. The waders meanwhile continued
+their sport until the evening waned away. Far over the dusk violet
+Night spread her vaporous shadows:
+
+ The blinding mist came up and hid the land,
+ And round and round the land,
+ And o'er and o'er the land,
+ As far as eye could see.
+
+At last they turned their steps homeward, crossing the little sandy
+key, between which and the beach lay a channel shoulder-deep, its
+translucent waves now glimmering with phosphorescence. But here
+they were met by an unexpected obstacle. The fleet of sharks, with
+a strategical cunning worthy of admiration, had flanked the little
+island, and now in the deeper water formed in ranks and squadrons,
+and, with their great goggle eyes like port-fires burning, lay ready
+to dispute the passage. Armed with such weapons as they could clutch,
+the men dashed into the water with paeans and shouts and the broken
+pitchers of fallen Jericho. The violet phosphorescence lighted them on
+their way, and tracked with luminous curve and star every move of the
+enemy. The gashed water at every stroke of club or swish of tail or
+fin bled in blue and red fire, as if the very sea was wounded. The
+enemy's line of battle was broken and scattered, but not until more
+than one of the assailants had looked point-blank into the angry eyes
+of a shark and beaten it off with actual blows. It was the Thermopylae
+of sharkdom, with numbers reversed--a Red Sea passage resonant with
+psalms of victory.
+
+There are novel difficulties as well as dangers to be encountered. The
+native courage of the man must be tempered, ground and polished. On
+land it is the massing of numbers that accomplishes the result--the
+accumulation of vital forces and intelligence upon the objective
+point. The innumerable threads of individual enterprise, like the
+twist of a Manton barrel, give the toughest tensile power. Under the
+sea, however, it is often the strength of the single thread, the
+wit of the individual pitted against the solid impregnability of the
+elements, the _vis inertiae_ of the sea. It looks as if uneducated
+Nature built her rude fastnesses and rocky battlements with a special
+view to resistance, making the fickle and unstable her strongest
+barricade. An example of the skill and address necessary to conquer
+obstacles of the latter kind was illustrated in Mobile Bay. There lay
+about a sunken vessel an impenetrable mail of quicksand. It became
+necessary to sink piles into this material. The obstacle does not
+lie in its fickle, unstable character, but its elastic tension. It
+swallows a nail or a beam by slow, serpent-like deglutition. It is
+hungry, insatiable, impenetrable. Try to force it, to drive down
+a pile by direct force: it resists. The mallet is struck back by
+reverberating elasticity with an equal force, and the huge pointed
+stake rebounds. Brute force beats and beats in vain. The fickle sand
+will not be driven--no, not an inch.
+
+Wit comes in where weight breaks down. A force-pump, a common
+old-style fire-engine, was rigged up, the nozzle and hose bound to a
+huge pile,
+
+ to equal which the tallest pine
+ Hewn on Norwegian hills, to be the mast
+ Of some great ammiral, were but a wand.
+
+The pump was set to work. The water tore through the nostril-pipe,
+boring a hole with such rapidity that the tall beam dropped into the
+socket with startling suddenness. Still breathing torrents, the pipe
+was withdrawn: the clutching sand seized, grappled the stake. It is
+cemented in.
+
+ You may break, you may shatter the _stake_, if you will,
+
+but--you can never pull it out.
+
+Perhaps the most singular and venturesome exploit ever performed in
+submarine diving was that of searching the sunken monitor Milwaukee
+during the bay-fight in Mobile harbor. This sea-going fortress was a
+huge double-turreted monitor, with a ponderous, crushing projectile
+force in her. Her battery of four fifteen-inch guns, and the tough,
+insensible solidity of her huge wrought-iron turrets and heavy plated
+hulk, burdened the sleepy waters of the bay. Upon a time she braced
+her iron jacket about her, girded her huge sides with fifteen-inch
+pistolry, and went rolling her clumsy volume down the bay to mash Fort
+Taylor to rubbish and debacle. The sea staggered under her ponderous
+gliding and groaned about her massive bulk as she wended her awkward
+course toward the bay-shore over against the fort. She sighted her
+blunderbusses, and, rolling, grunting, wheezing in her revolving
+towers like a Falstaff ill at ease, spat her gobbets of flame and
+death. The poor little water-spaniel fort ran down to the shore and
+barked at her of course. _Cui bono_ or _malo?_ Why, like Job's mates,
+fill its poor belly with the east wind, or try to draw out leviathan
+with a hook, or his tongue with a cord thou lettest down? Yet who
+treads of the fight between invulnerable Achilles and heroic Hector,
+and admires Achilles? The admiral of the American fleet, sick of the
+premature pother, signaled the lazy solidity to return. The loathly
+monster, slowly, like a bull-dog wrenched from his victim, rolled
+snarling, lazily, leisurely down the bay, not obeying and yet not
+disobeying the signal.
+
+All along the sunny coast, like flowers springing up in a
+battle-field, were rows of little white cottages, tenanted by women
+and children--love, life and peace in the midst of ruin and sudden
+death. At the offending spectacle of homely peace among its enemies
+the unglutted monster eased its huge wrath. Tumbling and bursting
+among the poor little pasteboard shells of cottages, where children
+played and women gossiped of the war, and prayed for its end, no
+matter how, fell the huge globes and cones of murder. Shrieks and
+cries, slain babes and wounded women on shore; surly, half-mutinous
+officers and crew on that iron hulk, shocked at the fell work they
+were set to do; and the glimmer and wash of the bay-water below--that
+sweet, tranquil, half-transparent liquid, with idle weeds and chips
+upon it, empty crates and boxes of dead merchandise, sacked of their
+life and substance by the war, as one might swallow an oyster; the
+soft veils of shadowy ships and the distant city spires; umbrageous
+fires and slips of shining sand all mirrored in the soft and quiet
+sea, while this devilish pother went on. There is a buoy adrift! No,
+it is a sodden cask, perhaps of spoiling meat, while the people in the
+town yonder are starving; and still the huge iron, gluttonous monster
+bursts its foam of blood and death, while the surly crew curse and
+think of mothers and babes at home. Better to look at the bay, the
+idle, pleasing summer water, with chips and corks and weeds upon it;
+better to look at the bubbling cask yonder--much better, captain,
+if you only knew it! But the reluctant, heavy iron turret groans and
+wheezes on its pivotal round, and it will be a minute or half a minute
+before the throated hell speaks again. But it _will_ speak: machinery
+is fatally accurate to time and place. Can nothing stay it, or
+stop the trembling of those bursting iron spheres among yon pretty
+print-like homes? No: look at the buoy, wish-wash, rolling lazily,
+bobbing in the water, a lazy, idle cask, with nothing in the world
+to do on this day of busy mischief. What hands coopered it in the new
+West? what farmer filled it? There is the grunting of swine, lowing of
+cattle, in the look of the staves. But the turret groans and wheezes
+and goes around, whether you look at it or not. What cottage this
+time? The soft lap-lap of the water goes on, and the tedious cask gets
+nearer: it will slide by the counter. You have a curious interest in
+that. No: it grates under the bow; it--Thunder and wreck and ruin!
+Has the bay burst open and swallowed us? The huge, invulnerable iron
+monster--not invulnerable after all--has met its master in the idle
+cask. It is blind, imprisoned Samson pulling down the pillars of the
+temple. The tough iron plates at the bow are rent and torn and twisted
+like wet paper. A terrible hole is gashed in the hull. The monster
+wobbles, rolls, gasps, and drinks huge gulps of water like a wounded
+man--desperately wounded, and dying in his thirsty veins and arteries.
+The swallowed torrent rushes aft, hissing and quenching the fires;
+beats against the stern, and comes forward with the rush of that
+repulse to meet the incoming wave. Into the boats, the water--anywhere
+but here. She reels again and groans; and then, as a desperate hero
+dies, she slopes her huge warlike beak at the hostile water and rushes
+to her own ruin with a surge and convulsion. The victorious sea sweeps
+over it and hides it, laughing at her work. She will keep it safely.
+That is the unsung epic of the Milwaukee, without which I should have
+little to say of the submarine diving during the bay-fight.
+
+The harbor of Mobile is shaped like a rude Innuit boot. At the top,
+Tensaw and Mobile Rivers, in their deltas, make, respectively, two
+and three looplike bands, like the straps. The toe is Bonsecour
+Bay, pointing east. The heel rests on Dauphin Island, while the main
+channel flows into the hollow of the foot between Fort Morgan and
+Dauphin Island. In the north-west angle, obscured by the foliage,
+lay the devoted city, suffering no less from artificial famine, made
+unnecessarily, than the ligatures that stopped the vital current of
+trade. Tons of meat were found putrefying while the citizens, and
+even the garrison, had been starving on scanty rations. Food could
+be purchased, but at exorbitant rates, and the medium of exchange,
+Confederate notes, all gone to water and waste paper. The true story
+of the Lost Cause has yet to be written. North of Mobile, in the
+Trans-Mississippi department, thousands whose every throb was devoted
+to the enterprise, welcomed the Northern invaders, not as destroyers
+of a hope already dead by the act of a few entrusted with its defence,
+but as something better than the anarchy that was not Southern
+independence or anything else human.
+
+Such were the condition, period and place--the people crushed
+between the upper and nether millstones of two hostile and contending
+civilizations--when native thrift evoked a new element, that set
+in sharp contrast the heroism of life and the heroism of death, the
+courage that incurs danger to save against the courage that
+accepts danger to destroy. The work was the saving of the valuable
+arms--costing the government thirty thousand dollars per gun--and the
+machinery of the sunken Milwaukee.[A] By a curious circumstance this
+party of divers was composed partly, if not principally or entirely,
+of mechanics and engineers who were exempt from military service
+under the economic laws of the Confederacy, yet who in heart and soul
+sympathized with the rebellion. They had worked to save for the South:
+now they were to work and save for the North. It was a service of
+superadded danger. All the peril incurred from missile weapons
+was increased by the hidden danger of the secret under-sea and the
+presence of the terrible torpedoes. These floated everywhere, in all
+innocent, unsuspicious shapes. One monster, made of boiler iron, a
+huge cross, is popularly believed to be still hidden in the bay. The
+person possessing the chart wherein the masked battery's place was set
+down is said to have destroyed it and fled. Let us hope, however, that
+this is an error.
+
+[Footnote A: The Milwaukee was sunk nearly due east of the city: the
+Osage, Tecumseh, several despatch-boats and steamers, besides the
+three monitors, were sunk by torpedoes in the bay.]
+
+Keep in mind, in reading this account, the contrasted picture of peace
+in Nature and war in man--the calm blue sky; the soft hazy outlines
+of woods and bay-shore dropping their soft veils in the water; the
+cottages, suggesting industry and love; the distant city; the delicate
+and graceful spars of the Hartford; the busy despatch-steamers plying
+to and fro; the bursting forts and huge ugly monitors; the starry
+arches of flying shells by night and flying cloud by day; the soft lap
+of the water; the sensuous, sweet beauty of that latitude of eternal
+spring; and the soft dark violet of the outer sea, glassing itself in
+calm or broken into millioned frets of blue, red and starry fire; the
+danger above and the danger below; the dark mysterious caverns of the
+sea, rich with coral grots and grove and abounding marine life; the
+impenetrable gloom of the ship's hold, whose unimaginable darkness and
+labyrinthine intricacy of machinery set obstacles at every turn and
+move and step; the darkness; the fury; the hues and shape, all that
+art can make or Nature fashion, gild or color wrought into one grand
+tablature of splendor and magnificence. War and peaceful industry met
+there in novel rivalry, and each claimed its privileges. The captain
+of the Search said to the officers, while crowding his men behind the
+turret, with sly, dry humor, "Come, you are all _paid_ to be shot at:
+my men are not."
+
+More than once the accuracy of the enemy's fire drove the little party
+to shelter. Though the diver was shielded by the impenetrable fickle
+element that gave Achilles invulnerability, the air-pump above was
+exposed, and thus the diver might be slain by indirection. There
+lay Achilles' heel, the exposed vulnerable part that Mother Thetis's
+baptism neglected.
+
+The work below was arduous: the hulk crowded with the entangling
+machinery of sixteen engines, cuddies, ports, spars, levers, hatches,
+stancheons, floating trunks, bibulous boxes heavy with drink, and the
+awful, mysterious gloom of the water, which is not night or darkness,
+but the absence of any ray to touch the sensitive optic nerve. The
+sense of touch the only reliance, and the life-line his guide.
+
+But the peril incurred can be better understood through an
+illustrative example of a perilous adventure and a poor return.
+Officers and men of the unfortunate monitor asked for the rescue of
+their property, allowing a stipulated sum in lieu of salvage. Among
+these was a petty officer, anxious for the recovery of his chest.
+It involved peculiar hazards, since it carried the diver below
+the familiar turret-chamber, through the _inextricabilis error_ of
+entangling machinery in the engine-room, groping among floating and
+sunken objects, into a remote state-room, the Acheron of the cavernous
+hold. He was to find by touch a seaman's chest; handle it in that
+thickening gloom; carry it, push it, move it through that labyrinthine
+obscurity to a point from which it could be raised. To add
+immeasurably to the intricacy of this undertaking, there was the need
+of carrying his life-line and air-hose through all that entanglement
+and obscurity. Three times in that horror of thick darkness like wool
+the line tangled in the web of machinery, and three times he had, by
+tedious endeavor, to follow it up, find the knot and release it. Then
+the door of the little state-room, the throat of exit, was shut to,
+and around and around the dense chamber he groped as if in a dream,
+and could find no vent. All was alike--a smooth, slimy wall, glutinous
+with that gelatinous liquid, the sea-water. The tangled line became a
+blind guide and fruitful source of error; the hours were ebbing away,
+drowning life and vital air in that horrible watery pit;
+
+ Aut hoc inclusi ligno occultantur Achivi,
+
+or, a worse enemy than the subtle Greek's, death from the suspended
+air-current. Speed, nimbleness, strength and activity were worthless:
+with tedious fingers he must follow the life-line, find its
+entanglements and slowly loosen them, carefully taking up the slack,
+and so follow the straightened cord to the door. Then the chest: he
+must not forget that. Slowly he heaves and pushes, now at this, now
+at the life-line hitching on knob, handle, lever or projecting peg--on
+anything or nothing in that maze of machinery; by involution and
+evolution, like the unknown quantity in a cubic equation, through all
+the twists, turns, assumptions and substitutions, and always with that
+unmanageable, indivisible coefficient the box, until he reaches the
+upper air.
+
+In Aesop's fable, when the crane claimed the reward of the wolf for
+using his long neck and bill as a forceps in extracting a bone from
+the latter's oesophagus, Lupus suggests that for the crane to have had
+his head down in the lupine throat and _not_ get it snapped off
+was reward enough for any reasonable fowl. The petty officer was
+sufficiently learned in the Lyceum to administer a like return. The
+stipulated salvage was never paid or offered.[A]
+
+[Footnote A: It was a warrant-officer of the Milwaukee: I do not wish
+to be more definite; but the money (fifty dollars) may be sent to the
+editor of this Magazine, who will forward it to the diver.]
+
+The monitors had small square hatches or man-ports let into the deck,
+admitting one person conveniently.
+
+ Hinc via, Tartanii quae fert Acherontis ad undas.
+
+A swinging ladder, whose foot was clear of the floor, led down
+into the recesses. A diver, having completed his task, ascended the
+treacherous staircase to escape, and found the hatch blocked up.
+A floating chest or box had drifted into the opening, and, fitting
+closely, had firmly corked the man up in that dungeon, tight as a fly
+in a bottle. From his doubtful perch on the ladder he endeavored to
+push the obstacle from its insertion. Two or more equal difficulties
+made this impossible. The box had no handle, and it was slippery with
+the ooze and mucus of the sea. The leverage of pushing only wedged
+it faster in the orifice. The inconstant ladder swayed from it as
+a fulcrum. Again and again by art and endeavor and angle of push he
+essayed, and the ladder made sport of it. It was deadly sport, that
+swing and seesaw on the slippery rungs in the immeasurable loneliness
+of the silent, shrouded cabin. It was no rush of air, sending life
+tingling in the blood made brilliant with carmine of oxidation, but
+the dense, mephitic sough of the thick wool of water. He descended
+and sat upon the floor to think. Feasible methods had failed, and the
+sands of his life were running out like the old physician's. Now to
+try the impracticable. There are heaps of wisdom in the wrong way
+sometimes, which, I suppose, is the reason some of us like it. The
+box was out of his reach, choked in the gullet of that life-hole. No
+spring or leap from floor or ladder could reach its slippery side
+or bear it from its fixture. The sea had caught him prowling in its
+mysteries, and blocked him up, as cruel lords of ancient days walled
+up the intruder on their domestic privacy. Wit after brute force:
+man and Nature were pitted against each other in the uncongenial
+gloom--life the stake.
+
+He groped about his prison, glutinous with infusoriae and the oily
+consistence of the sea. Here a nail, there a block or lever, shaped
+out mentally by the touch, theorized, studied upon and thrown down.
+Now a hatchet, monkey-wrench, monkey's-tail, or gliding fish or
+wriggling eel, companions of his imprisonment. At last the cold
+touch of iron: the hand encloses and lifts it; its weight betrays its
+length; he feels it to the end--blunt, square, useless. He tries the
+other end--an edge or spike. That will do. Standing under the hatch,
+guided by the ladder to the position, and with a strong swinging,
+upward blow, the new tool is driven into the soft, fibrous and
+adhesive pine bottom of the box. On the principle on which your
+butler's practiced elbow draws the twisted screw sunk into the
+cobwebbed seal of your '48 port, he uncorks himself. The box pulled
+out of the hatch, the sea-gods threw up the sponge, that zoophyte
+being handy.
+
+These few incidents, strung together at random, and embracing only
+limited experiences out of many in one enterprise, are illustrative,
+in their variety and character, of this hardy pursuit, and the
+fascination of danger which is the school of native hardihood.
+But they give the reader a very imperfect idea of the nature and
+appearance of the new element into which man has pushed his industry.
+The havoc and spoil, the continued danger and contention, darken the
+gloom of the submarine world as a flash of lightning leaves blacker
+the shadow of the night and storm.
+
+The first invention to promote subaqueous search was the diving-bell,
+a clumsy vessel which isolates the diver. It is embarrassing, if not
+dangerous, where there is a strong current or if it rests upon a slant
+deck. It limits the vision, and in one instance it is supposed the
+wretched diver was taken from the bell by a shark. It permits an
+assistant, however, and a bold diver will plunge from the deck above
+and ascend in the vessel, to the invariable surprise of his companion.
+An example of one of its perils, settling in the mud, occurred, I
+think, in the port of New York. A party of amateurs, supported by
+champagne flasks and a reporter, went down. The bell settled and stuck
+like a boy's sucker. One of the party proposed shaking or rocking the
+bell, and doing so, the water was forced under and the bell lifted
+from the ooze.
+
+But a descent in submarine armor is the true way to visit the world
+under water. The first sensation in descending is the sudden bursting
+roar of furious, Niagarac cascades in the ears. It thunders and booms
+upon the startled nerve with the rush and storm of an avalanche. The
+sense quivers with it. But it is not air shaken by reflected blows: it
+is the cascades driven into the enclosing helmet by the force-pump.
+As the flexile hose has to be stiffly distended to bear an aqueous
+gravity of twenty-five to fifty pounds to the square inch, the force
+of the current can be estimated. The tympanum of the ear yields to
+the fierce external pressure. The brain feels and multiplies the
+intolerable tension as if the interior was clamped in a vice, and
+that tumultuous, thunderous torrent pours on. Involuntarily the mouth
+opens: the air rushes in the Eustachian tube, and with sudden velocity
+strikes the intruded tension of the drum, which snaps back to its
+normal state with a sharp, pistol-like crack. The strain is momently
+relieved to be renewed again, and again relieved by the same attending
+salutes.
+
+In your curious dress you must appear monstrous, even to that marine
+world, familiar with abnormal creations. The whale looks from eyes on
+the top of his head; the flat-fish, sole, halibut have both eyes on
+the same side; and certain Crustacea place the organ on a foot-stalk,
+as if one were to hold up his eye in his hand to include a wider
+horizon. But the monster which the fish now sees differs from all
+these. It has four great goggle eyes arranged symmetrically around
+its head. Peering through these plate-glass optics, the diver sees
+the curious, strange beauty of the world around him, not as the bather
+sees it, blurred and indistinct, but in the calm splendor of its own
+thallassphere. The first thought is one of unspeakable admiration of
+the miraculous beauty of everything around him--a glory and a splendor
+of refraction, interference and reflection that puts to shame the
+Arabian story of the kingdom of the Blue Fish. Above him is that pure
+golden canopy with its rare glimmering lustrousness--something like
+the soft, dewy effulgence that comes with sun-breaks through showery
+afternoons. The soft delicacy of that pure straw-yellow that prevails
+everywhere is crossed and lighted by tints and glimmering hues of
+accidental and complementary color indescribably elegant. The floor of
+the sea rises like a golden carpet in gentle incline to the surface;
+but this incline, experience soon teaches, is an ocular deception,
+the effect of refraction, such as a tumbler of water and a spoon can
+exhibit in petty. It is perhaps the first observable warning that you
+are in a new medium, and that your familiar friend, the light, comes
+to you altered in its nature; and it is as well to remember this and
+"make a note on it."
+
+Raising your eyes to the horizontal and looking straight forward,
+a new and beautiful wealth of color is developed. It is at first a
+delicate blue, as if an accidental color of the prevailing yellow.
+But soon it deepens into a rich violet. You feel as if you had never
+before appreciated the loveliness of that rich tint. As your eye
+dwells upon it the rich lustrous violet darkens to indigo, and sinking
+into deeper hues becomes a majestic threat of color. It is ominous,
+vivid blue-black--solid, adamantine, a crystal wall of amethyst. It is
+all around you. You are cased, dungeoned in the solid masonry of the
+waters. It is beauty indeed, but the sombre and awful beauty of the
+night and storm. The eye turns for relief and reassurance to the
+paly-golden lustrous roof, and watches that tender penciling which
+brightens every object it touches. The hull of the sunken ship,
+lying slant and open to the sun, has been long enough submerged to
+be crusted with barnacles, hydropores, crustacea and the labored
+constructions of the microscopic existences and vegetation that fill
+the sea. The song of Ariel becomes vivid and realistic in its rich
+word-power:
+
+ Full fathom five thy father lies;
+ Of his bones are coral made;
+ Those are pearls that were his eyes:
+ Nothing of him that doth fade
+ But doth suffer a sea-change
+ Into something rich and strange.
+
+The transfiguration of familiar objects is indeed curious and
+wonderful. The hulk, once gaudy with paint and gilding, has come under
+the skill of the lapidary and sea-artist. It is crusted with emerald
+and flossy mosses, and glimmers with diamond, jacinth, ruby, topaz,
+sapphire and gold. Every jewel-shape in leaf, spore, coral or plume,
+lying on a greenish crystalline ground, is fringed with a soft
+radiance of silver fire, and every point is tipped in minute ciliate
+flames of faint steely purple. It is spotted with soft velvety black
+wherever a shadow falls, that mingles and varies the wonderful display
+of color. It is brilliant, vivid, changeable with the interferences
+of light from the fluctuating surface above, which transmogrifies
+everything--touches the coarsest objects with its pencil, and they
+become radiant and spiritual. A pile of brick, dumped carelessly
+on the deck, has become a huge hill of crystal jewelry, lively with
+brilliant prismatic radiance. Where the light falls on the steps of
+the staircase it shows a ladder of silver crusted with emeralds. The
+round-house, spars, masts, every spot where a peak or angle catches
+the light, have flushed into liquid, jeweled beauty; and each point, a
+prism and mirror, catches, multiplies and reflects the other splendor.
+A rainbow, a fleecy mist over the lake, made prismal by the sunlight,
+a bunch of sub-aqueous moss, a soap-bubble, are all examples in our
+daily experience of that transforming power of water in the display of
+color. The prevailing tone is that soft, golden effulgence which,
+like the grace of a cheerful and loving heart, blends all into one
+harmonious whole.
+
+But observation warns the spectator of the delusive character of all
+that splendor of color. He lifts a box from the ooze: he appears
+to have uncorked the world. The hold is a bottomless chasm. Every
+indentation, every acclivity that casts a shadow, gives the impression
+of that soundless depth. The bottom of the sea seems loopholed with
+cavities that pierce the solid globe and the dark abysses of space
+beyond. The diver is surrounded by pitfalls, real and imaginary. There
+is no graduation. The shallow concave of a hand-basin is as the shadow
+of the bottomless well.
+
+If the exploration takes place in the delta of a great river, the
+light is affected by the various densities of the double refracting
+media. At the proper depth one can see clearly the line where these
+two meet, clean cut and as sharply defined as the bottom of a green
+glass tumbler through the pure water it contains. The salt brine or
+gelatinous sea-water sinks weighted to the bottom, and over it flows
+the fresh river-water. If the latter is darkened with sediment, it
+obscures the silent depths with a heavy, gloomy cloud. In seasons of
+freshet this becomes a total darkness.
+
+But even on a bright, sunshiny day, under clear water, the shadow of
+any object in the sea is unlike any shade in the upper atmosphere. It
+draws a black curtain over everything under it, completely obscuring
+it. Nor is this peculiarity lost when the explorer enters the shadow;
+but, as one looking into a tunnel from without can see nothing
+therein, though the open country beyond is plainly visible, so,
+standing in that submarine shadow, all around is dark, though beyond
+the sable curtain of the shadow the view is clear. Apply this optical
+fact to the ghastly story of a diver's alleged experience in the
+cabin of a sunken ship. It is narrated that there was revealed to
+his appalled sight the spectacle of the drowned passengers in various
+attitudes of alarm or devotion when the dreadful suffocation came.
+The story is told with great effect and power, but unless a voltaic
+lantern is included in the stage furniture, the ghastly tableaux must
+sink into the limbo of incredibilities.
+
+The cabin of a sunken vessel is dark beyond any supernal conception of
+darkness. Even a cabin window does not alter this law, though it
+may be itself visible, with objects on its surface, as in a child's
+magic-lantern. As the rays of light pass through an object flatwise,
+like the blade of a knife through the leaves of a book, and may be
+admitted through another of like character in the plane of the first,
+so a ray of light can penetrate with deflection through air and water.
+But becoming polarized, the interposition of a third medium ordinarily
+transparent will stop it altogether. Hence the plate-glass window
+under water admits no light into the interior of a cabin. The distrust
+of sight grows with the diver's experience. The eye brings its habit
+of estimating proportion and distance from an attenuated atmosphere
+into another and denser medium, and the seer is continually deceived
+by the change. He hesitates, halts, and is observant of the pitfalls
+about him. A gang-plank slightly above the surface of the deck is
+bordered, where its shadow falls, by dismal trenches. There is a range
+of hills crossing the deck before him. As he approaches he estimates
+the difficulty of the ascent. At its apparent foot he reaches to
+clamber the steep sides, and the sierra is still a step beyond his
+reach. Drawing still nearer, he prepares to crawl up; his hand touches
+the top; it is less than shoulder-high.
+
+But perhaps the strongest illustration of the differing densities
+of these two media is furnished by an attempt to drive a nail
+under water. By an absolute law such an effort, if guided by sight
+independent of calculation, must fail. Habit and experience, tested
+in atmospheric light, will control the muscles, and direct the blow
+at the very point where the nail-head is not. For this reason the
+ingenious expedient of a voltaic lantern under water has proved to
+be impracticable. It is not the light alone which is wanted, but that
+sweet familiar atmosphere through which we are habituated to look. The
+submarine diver learns to rely wholly on the truer sense of touch, and
+guided by that he engages in tasks requiring labor and skill with the
+easy assurance of a blind man in the crowded street.
+
+The conveyance of sound through the inelastic medium of water is so
+difficult that it has been called the world of silence. This is only
+comparatively true. The fish has an auditory cavity, which, though
+simple in itself, certifies the ordinary conviction of sound, but it
+is dull and imperfect; and perhaps all marine creatures have other
+means of communication. There is an instance, however, of musical
+sounds produced by marine animals, which seems to show an appreciation
+of harmony. In one of the lakes of Ceylon, Sir Emerson Tennent heard
+soft musical sounds, like the first faint notes of the aeolian harp
+or the faint vibrations of a wineglass when its rim is rubbed by a wet
+finger. This curious harmony is supposed to be produced by a species
+of testaceous mollusk. A similar intonation is heard at times along
+the Florida coast.
+
+Interesting as this may be, as indicating an appreciation of that
+systematic order in arrangement which in music is harmony, it does not
+alter the fact that to the ears of the diver, save the cascade of the
+air through the life-hose, it is a sea of silence. No shout or spoken
+word reaches him. Even a cannon-shot comes to him dull and muffled,
+or if distant it is unheard. But a sharp, quick sound, that appears to
+break the air, like ice, into sharp radii, can be heard, especially if
+struck against anything on the water. The sound of driving a nail on
+the ship above, for example, or a sharp tap on the diving-bell below,
+is distinctly and reciprocally audible. Conversation below the surface
+by ordinary methods is out of the question, but it can be sustained
+by placing the metal helmets of the interlocutors together, thus
+providing a medium of conveyance.
+
+The effort to clothe with intelligence subaqueous life must have been
+greatly strengthened among primitive nations by the musical sounds
+to which I have referred. Those mysterious breathings were associated
+with a human will, and gave forebodings from their very sweetness.
+Everywhere they are associated with a passionate or pathetic mystery,
+and the widely-spread area over which their island home is portrayed
+as existing strengthens the conclusion that the strange music of the
+sea belongs not to Ceylon or Florida or the Mediterranean alone. It
+affords us another instance, by that common enjoyment of sweet sounds,
+of the chain of sympathy between all intelligent creatures, and better
+prepares us for familiar acquaintance with the beings which people the
+sea. We have prejudices and preconceived ideas to get rid of, whose
+strength has crystallized into aphorisms. "Cold as a fish" and
+"fish-eyed" are ordinary expressions. Then the touch of a fish, cold,
+slippery, serpent-like, causes an involuntary shrinking.
+
+But the submarine diver has a new revelation of piscine character and
+beauty, and perhaps can better understand the enticings of a siren or
+fantastic Lurlei than the classical scholar. In the flush of aureal
+light tinging their pearly glimmering armor are the radiant, graceful,
+frolicsome inhabitants of the sea. The glutinous or oily exudation
+that covers them is a brilliant varnish. Their lustrous colors,
+variety of crystalline tints and beautiful markings and spots, attract
+the eye of the artist even in the fish-market; but when glowing with
+full life, lively, nimble, playful, surely the most graceful living
+creatures of earth, air or sea, the soul must be blind indeed that can
+look upon them unmoved.
+
+The dull optic seen glazing in the death-throes upon the market-stall,
+with coarse vulgar surroundings, becomes, in its native element,
+full of intelligence and light. In even the smaller fry the round orb
+glitters like a diamond star. One cannot see the fish without seeing
+its eye. It is positive, persistent, prevalent, the whole animate
+existence expressed in it. As far as the fish can be seen its eye is
+visible. The glimmer of scales, the grace of perfect motion, the rare
+golden pavilion with its jeweled floor and heavy violet curtains,
+complete a scene whose harmony of color, radiance and animal life is
+perfect. The minnow and sun-perch are the pages of the tourney on the
+cloth of gold. There is a fearless familiarity in these playful
+little things, a social, frank intimacy with their novel visitor, that
+astonishes while it pleases. They crowd about him, curiously touch
+him, and regard all his movements with a frank, lively interest.
+Nor are the larger fish shy. The sheeps-head, red and black groper,
+sea-trout and other, familiar fish of the sportsman, receive him with
+frank bonhommie or fearless curiosity. In their large round beautiful
+eyes the diver reads evidence of intelligence and curious wonder that
+sometimes startles him with its entirely human expression. There is
+a look of interest mixed with curiosity, leading to the irresistible
+conclusion of a kindred nature. No faithful hound or pet doe could
+express a franker interest in its eyes. Curiosity, which I take to
+be expressly destructive of the now-exploded theory of instinct, is
+expressed not only by the eye, but by the movements. As in man there
+is an eager passion to handle that which is novel, so these curious
+denizens of the sea are persistent in their efforts to touch the
+diver. An instance of this occurred, attended with disagreeable
+results to one of the parties, and that not the fish. The Eve of this
+investigation was a large catfish. These fish are the true rovers of
+the water. They have a large round black eye, full of intelligence
+and fire: their warlike spines and gaff-topsails give them the true
+buccaneer build. One of these, while the diver was engaged, incited by
+its fearless curiosity, slipped up and touched him with its cold nose.
+The man involuntarily threw back his hand, and the soft palm striking
+the sharp gaff, it was driven into the flesh. There was an instant's
+struggle before the fish wrenched itself loose from the bleeding
+member, and then it only swung off a little, staring with its bold
+black eyes at the intruder, as if it wished to stay for further
+question. It is hard to translate the expression of that look of
+curious wonder and surprise without appearing to exaggerate, but the
+impression produced was that if the fish did not speak to him, it was
+from no lack of intelligent emotions to be expressed in language.
+
+A prolonged stay in one place gave a diver an opportunity to test this
+intelligence further, and to observe the trustful familiarity of this
+variety of marine life. He was continually surrounded at his work by
+a school of gropers, averaging a foot in length. An accident having
+identified one of them, he observed it was a daily visitor. After the
+first curiosity the gropers apparently settled into the belief that
+the novel monster was harmless and clumsy, but useful in assisting
+them to their food. The species feed on Crustacea and marine
+worms, which shelter under rocks, mosses and sunken objects at the
+sea-bottom. In raising anything out of the ooze a dozen of these fish
+would thrust their heads into the hollow for their food before the
+diver's hand was removed. They would follow him about, eyeing his
+motions, dashing in advance or around in sport, and evidently with
+a liking for their new-found friend. Pleased with such an unexpected
+familiarity, the man would bring them food and feed them from his
+hand, as one feeds a flock of chickens. The resemblance, in their
+familiarity and some of their ways, to poultry was, in fact, very
+striking. As a little chick will sometimes seize a large crumb and
+scurry off, followed by the flock, so a fish would sometimes snatch a
+morsel and fly, followed by the school. If he dropped it or stopped to
+enjoy his _bonne bouche_, his mates would be upon him. Sometimes two
+would get the same morsel, and there would be a trial of strength,
+accompanied with much flash and glitter of shining scales. But no
+matter how called off, their interest and curiosity remained with the
+diver. They would return, pushing their noses about him, caressingly
+in appearance if not intent, and bob into the treasures of worm and
+shellfish his labor exposed. He became convinced that they were
+sportive, indulging in dash and play for the fun of it, rather than
+for any grosser object to be attained.
+
+This curious intimacy was continued for weeks: the fish, unless driven
+away by some rover of prey of their kind, were in regular attendance
+during his hours of work. Perhaps the solitude and silence of that
+curious submarine world strengthened the impression of recognition
+and intimacy, but by every criterion we usually accept in terrestrial
+creation these little creatures had an interest and a friendly feeling
+for one who furnished them food, and who was always careful to avoid
+injuring them or giving them any unnecessary alarm. He could not,
+of course, take up a fish in his hand, any more than a chicken will
+submit to handling; but as to the comparative tameness of the two,
+the fish is more approachable than the chicken. That they knew and
+expected the diver at the usual hour was a conclusion impossible
+to deny, as also that they grew into familiarity with him, and were
+actuated by an intelligent recognition of his service to them. It
+would be hard to convince this gentleman that a school of fish cannot
+be as readily and completely tamed as a flock of chickens.
+
+Why not? The fear of man is no instinctive feeling in the invertebrate
+creation. The pioneer who penetrates into the uninhabited wilds of
+our Western frontier finds bird and beast fearless and familiar. Man's
+cruelty is a lesson of experience. The timid and fearful of the lower
+creation belong to creatures of prey. The shark, for example, is as
+cowardly as the wolf.
+
+I thought to speak of other marine creations with which the diver
+grows acquainted, finding in them only a repetition of the same degree
+of life he has seen in the upper world. But let it be enough to state
+the conclusion--as yet only an impression, and perhaps never to be
+more--that in marine existence there is to be found the counterpart
+always of some animate existence on earth, invertebrate or radiate,
+in corresponding animals or insects, between whose habits and modes
+of existence strong analogies are found. The shrimps that hang in
+clusters on your hand under the water are but winged insects of the
+air in another frame that have annoyed you on the land.
+
+Let me dismiss the subject with the brief account of a diver caught in
+a trap.
+
+In the passion of blind destruction that followed and attended the
+breaking out of hostilities between the North and the South, as a
+child breaks his rival's playthings, the barbarism of war destroyed
+the useful improvements of civilization. Among the things destroyed by
+this iconoclastic fury was the valuable dry-dock in Pensacola Bay. It
+was burned to the water's edge, and sunk. A company was subsequently
+organized to rescue the wreck, and in the course of the submarine
+labor occurred the incident to which I refer.
+
+The dry-dock was built in compartments, to ensure it against sinking,
+but the ingenuity which was to keep it above water now served
+effectually to keep it down. Each one of these small water-tight
+compartments held the vessel fast to the bottom, as Gulliver was bound
+by innumerable threads to the ground of Lilliput. It was necessary
+to break severally into the lower side of each of these chambers, and
+allow the water to flow evenly in all. The interior of the hull was
+checkered by these boxes. Huge beams and cross-ties intersected
+each other at right angles, forming the frame for this honeycombed
+interior, pigeon-holed like a merchant's desk. It was necessary to
+tear off the skin and penetrate from one to the other in order to
+effect this.
+
+It was a difficult and tedious job under water. The net of
+intersecting beams lay so close together that the passage between was
+exceedingly narrow and compressed, barely admitting the diver's
+body. The pens, so framed by intersecting beams, were narrowed and
+straitened, embarrassing attempts at labor in them, which the cold,
+slippery, serpent-like touch of the sea-water was not likely to make
+pleasanter. It folded the shuddering body in its coils, and a most
+ancient and fish-like smell did not improve the situation. The toil
+was multiplied by the innumerable pigeon-holes, as if they fitted
+into one another like a Chinese puzzle, with the unlucky diver in the
+middle box. It was a nightmare of the sea, the furniture of a dream
+solidified in woody fibre.
+
+Into one of these crowding holes the diver crawled. There was the
+tedious work of tearing off the casing to occupy an hour or more, and
+when it was accomplished he endeavored to back out of his situation.
+He was stopped fast and tight in his regression. The arrangement of
+the armor about the head and shoulders, making a cone whose apex was
+the helmet, prevented his exit. It was like the barb of a harpoon,
+and caught him fast in the wood. Such a danger is not sudden in its
+revelation. There is at first only a feeling of impatience at the
+embarrassment, a disposition to "tear things." In vain attempts at
+doubling and other gymnastic feats the diver wasted several hours,
+until his companions above became alarmed at the delay. They renewed
+and increased their labors at the force-pump, and the impetuous
+torrent came surging about the diver's ears. It served to complete
+his danger. It sprung the trap in which he lay enclosed. The inflated
+armor swelled and filled up the crowded spaces. It stiffened out the
+casing of the helmet to equal the burden of fifty pounds to the square
+inch, and made it as hard as iron. He was caught like the gluttonous
+fox. The bulky volume of included air made exit impossible. It was no
+longer a labyrinth as before, where freedom of motion incited courage:
+he was in the fetters of wind and water, bound fast to the floor of
+his dungeon den. He signaled for the pump to stop. It was the only
+alternative. He might die without that life-giving air, but he would
+certainly die if its volume was not reduced. The cock at the back
+of the helmet for discharging the vessel was out of his reach. The
+invention never contemplated a case in which the diver would perish
+from the presence of air.
+
+As the armor worn was made tight at the sleeves with elastic
+wristbands, his remedy was to insert his fingers under it, and slowly
+and tediously allow the bubbling air to escape. In this he persevered
+steadily, encouraged by the prospect of escape. The way was long and
+difficult, but release certain with the reduction of that huge bulk.
+
+But a new and subtler danger attacked him--the very wit of Nature
+brought to bear upon his force and ingenuity. It was as if the
+mysterious sirens of the sea saw in that intellectual force the real
+strength of their prisoner, and sought to steal it from him while they
+lulled him to indifference. Inhaling and reinhaling the reduced volume
+of air, it became carbonized and foul, not with the warning of sudden
+oppression, but
+
+ Sly as April melts to May,
+ And May slips into June.
+
+The senses, intoxicated by the new companion sent them by the lungs,
+began to sport with it, as ignorant children with a loaded shell,
+forgetful of duty and the critical condition of the man. They began to
+wander in vagaries and delusions. A soft chime of distant bells rang
+in his ears with the sweet sleepy service of a Sabbath afternoon; the
+sound of hymns and the organ mingled with the melody and the chant of
+the sirens of the sea.
+
+ There is sweet music here that softer falls
+ Than petals from blown roses on the grass,
+ Or night-dew on still waters, between walls
+ Of shadowy granite in a gleaming pass--
+ Music that gentler on the spirit lies
+ Than tired eyelids upon tired eyes.
+ Here are cool mosses deep,
+ And through the moss the ivies creep,
+ And in the stream the long-leaved flowers weep,
+ And from the craggy ledge the poppy hangs in sleep.
+
+The sensuous beauty, the infinite luxury of repose sung by the poet,
+filled and steeped his senses. The desire to sleep was intoxicating,
+delicious, irresistible; and with it ran delicious, restful thrills
+through all his limbs, the narcotism of the blood. It was partly,
+no doubt, the effect of inhaling that pernicious air; partly
+that hibernation of the bear which in the freezing man precedes
+dissolution; and possibly more than that, something more than any mere
+physical cause--life perhaps preparing to lay this tired body down,
+its future usefulness destroyed.
+
+This delicious enervation had to be constantly resisted and dominated
+by a superior will. One more strenuous effort to relieve that
+straitened garrison, to release that imprisoned and fettered body,
+and then, if that failed, an unconditional surrender to the armies of
+eternal steep. But it did not fail. That constant, persevering tugging
+of the fingers at the wristbands, pursued mechanically in that strange
+condition of pleasing stupor, had reduced the exaggerated distensions
+of the bulbous head-gear. A stout, energetic push set the diver free,
+and he was drawn to the surface dazed, drowsy, and only half conscious
+of the peril undergone. But with the rush of fresh, untainted air to
+the lungs came an emotion of gratitude to the Giver of life and the
+full consciousness of escape.
+
+And this sums up my sketch illustrative of the peculiar character of
+marine life, and the hazards of submarine adventure, hitherto known to
+few, for--well, for _divers_ reasons.
+
+WILL WALLACE HARNEY.
+
+
+
+
+CONFIDENTIAL.
+
+
+My ear has ever been considered public property for private usage. I
+cannot call to mind the time when I was not somebody's confidante,
+the business beginning as far back as the winter I ran down to Aunt
+Rally's to receive my birthday-party of sweet or bitter sixteen, as
+will appear.
+
+Ralph Romer was the first to spread the news of my arrival in the
+village among the girls of my own age. Ralph Romer it was who had
+braved the dangers of "brier and brake" to find the bright holly
+berries with which Aunt Hally had decorated the cheery little parlor
+for the occasion; and it was with Ralph Romer I danced the oftenest on
+that famous night.
+
+"Wouldn't I just step out on the porch a short little minute," he
+whispered as he came around in the rear of Aunt Hally to bid me
+good-night, ending the whisper, according to the style of all
+boy-lovers, "I've got something to tell you."
+
+The door stood open and conveniently near, and I suppose I wanted to
+see how high the snow had drifted since dark; and, a better reason
+still, I couldn't afford to let Ralph take my hand off with him; and
+so I had to go out on the porch just long enough to get it back,
+while he said: "Ettie Moore says she loves me, and we are going to
+correspond when I go back to college; and as you know all lovers
+and their sweethearts must have a confidante to smuggle letters and
+valentines across the lines, we have both chosen you for ours. Oh, I
+was so afraid you wouldn't come!"
+
+I found the snow had drifted--well, I don't believe I knew how many
+inches.
+
+I have not promised a recital of all my auricular experiences. Enough
+to say, that in time I settled down into the conviction that it was
+my special mission to be the receptacle of other people's secrets; and
+they seemed determined to convince me that they thought so too.
+
+So, when Mr. Tennent Tremont happened along and became a candidate for
+auricular favors, like a tradesman who has gained the self-sustaining
+ground which has made him indifferent as to custom-seeking, I could
+afford to be entirely independent about giving a previous promise to
+keep his secrets for him; and so, dear reader, they are as much yours
+as mine.
+
+When my brother introduced him into our family circle we took him
+to be a Northern college-chum, met with during his
+just-returned-from-trip to Washington; for it was in those days when
+Southern hospitality was as much appreciated as it was liberally
+bestowed. It was a good time for a modest stranger to come among new
+faces. We were in the flutter and bustle which a wedding in the family
+makes, and it gave him an opportunity to get used to us, and left us
+none to observe him unpleasantly much.
+
+But when the wedding was over, and I had made up my week of lost
+sleep, and he and my brother had kept themselves out of the way on a
+camp-hunt, for my mother to do up her week of house-cleaning,--it is
+here that our story proper begins.
+
+As we were leaving the breakfast-table one morning my brother caught
+my dress-sleeve, and, dropping in the rear of Mr. Tennent Tremont,
+allowed him to find the verandah: "Really, sis, I don't think you are
+doing the clever thing, quite."
+
+"How?"
+
+"Why, in not helping me to entertain my friend."
+
+"Getting tired of him?"
+
+"No, he isn't one of that kind; but, to tell the truth, I am too busy
+just now to give him the whole of my time."
+
+"Too busy turning your own cakes. Yes, I see."
+
+"Which is no more than my sister is doing; which reminds me to say
+that J.B. will call this morning, he desired me to inform you. But,
+dear sis, we must not be so absorbed in our own love-matters as to
+give my friend only a moiety of our attention, for, poor fellow! he
+has one of his own."
+
+"So I am to bore him for the sake of relieving you? Is that my role?"
+
+"Now stop! He simply wants a lady confidante."
+
+I broke away from my brother's hold, and ran up to my room to see if
+all was right for my expected caller, giving my right ear a pull, by
+way of saying to that victimized organ, "You are needed."
+
+And what think you I did next? Got out my embroidery-material bag, and
+put it in order for action at a moment's warning. I was prepared for a
+reasonable amount of martyrdom pertaining to my profession, but I was
+always an economist of time, and not another unemployed hour would I
+yield to the selfish demands of my forthcoming job.
+
+The next day was one of November drizzle, the house confinement of
+which, my adroit brother declared, could only be mitigated by my
+presence in the sitting-room until the improved state of the weather
+allowed their escape from it.
+
+I was in the habit of appropriating such weather to my piano, and I
+had not touched it for a month. Whether Mr. Tennent Tremont's nerves
+were in a sound state or not, I was determined to practice until
+twelve. But when he came in from the library and assisted me in
+opening the instrument, I was obliged to ask him what he would have.
+They were my first direct words to him, our three weeks' guest.
+
+"Oh, 'Summer Night' is a favorite," he said.
+
+I gave him the song, and then executed the long variations; then,
+dropping my tired hands in my lap, inquired whether he liked vocal or
+instrumental best.
+
+"Not any more of either, just now, thanking you kindly for what you
+have given me," he said. "Have you ever been a confidante, Miss ----?"
+
+"That is my vocation, Mr. Tremont," I replied, grasping my bag.
+
+"Which? your embroidery or--"
+
+"Both combined," I tried to say pleasantly, "as on this occasion. I am
+at Mr. Tremont's service;" and I threaded my tapestry-needle.
+
+Without a prefatory word he began: "Years before your young heart was
+awakened to 'the sweetest joy, the wildest woe,' I loved."
+
+"And single yet!" I exclaimed as I let my hands drop and glanced up
+at his brown hair, to see if all those years had left their silver
+footprints there.
+
+"And single yet," he repeated slowly, "and still worshiping at the
+same shrine; and to no other will I ever bow until this head is
+silvered o'er, and this strong arm palsied with the infirmities of
+age--if a long life is indeed to be mine."
+
+His ardor startled me, but I managed to stitch away composedly, and he
+went on:
+
+"I know it is in the highest degree selfish to inflict on you a
+recital of what may not interest you; but I have tried to keep my
+secret buried from human eyes, from all but _hers_, and you are now
+the only being on earth to whom I have ever _said_, 'I love.' As
+intimate as I have been with your brother, if he knows it, it is by
+his penetration, for no word of acknowledgment has ever passed my lips
+before. May I go on?" he asked.
+
+"Oh yes," I answered, taken by surprise. "I suppose so. It is a relief
+to talk, and to listen, I have told you, is my vocation."
+
+"How long can you listen?" he questioned in delighted eagerness.
+
+I fancied he would have to be allowanced, and I held up my paper
+pattern before me: "This bouquet of flowers is to be transferred.
+I will give you all the time it will take to do it. Remember, the
+catastrophe must be reached by that time. Some one else will probably
+want my ear."
+
+"But," said he, "listening is not the only duty of a confidante: you
+must aid me by your counsel. Only a woman may say how a woman may be
+won."
+
+"You have my sympathies, Mr. Tremont, on the score of your being a
+very dear brother's friend. I know nothing of her--next to nothing of
+you. I can neither counsel nor aid you."
+
+"That brother is familiar with every page of my outward life-history.
+It was in our family he spent his vacation, while you and your father
+were traveling in Europe."
+
+"Well, then, that will do about yourself. Now about her?"
+
+The door-bell was rung: the waiter announced--well, my obliging
+brother has already given enough of his name--"Mr. J.B." My confessor
+withdrew.
+
+The next morning, as I was bringing the freshened flower-vases into
+the sitting-room, he brought me my bag, saying, "Now about her."
+
+I opened the piano, repeated his favorite, kept my seat and cultivated
+my roses vigorously.
+
+"Miss ----," he began, "I would not knowingly give pain to a human
+creature. Yesterday, when your visitor found me by your side, I
+observed a frown on his face. I detest obtrusiveness, but if there is
+anything in the relation in which you stand to each other which will
+make my attentions objectionable to either of you, they shall cease
+this moment. You are at perfect liberty to repeat to him every word I
+have said to you."
+
+"I thank you sincerely for your considerateness," I said. "I am under
+no obligations of the kind to him or any other gentleman."
+
+He introduced his topic by saying: "I am glad that I shall have to
+say little more of myself. Oh, what a strange joy it is to be able to
+speak unreservedly of her, and of the long pent-up hopes and fears
+of the past years! And now, if you will assist me in interpreting
+her conduct toward me--if you will inspire me with even faint hope
+of success--if you will advise me as you would a brother how to
+proceed,--gratitude will be too weak a word for my feeling toward you
+for the remainder of my life."
+
+"I have not yet sufficient light on her part of the affair to aid you
+by advice," I answered. "In these slowly-developing love-affairs
+there is usually but one great hindering cause. Do you know," I said,
+laughing as much as I dared, looking into his woebegone face, "that
+you have not told me what has passed between you?"
+
+His moment or two of death silence made me almost regret my last
+words.
+
+"In the first of our acquaintance I was ever tortured by her
+indifference. My first attentions were quietly received, never
+encouraged. Then came the still more torturing fear--agony let me call
+it--lest she was pre-engaged. Thank God! that burden was lifted from
+my poor heart, but only, it seemed, to make room for the very one of
+all in the catalogue of causes by which a lover's hope dies beyond the
+possibility of a resurrection. It is the rock--no, I fear the
+placid waters of friendship into which my freighted bark is now
+drifting--which may lie between it and the bright isle of love, the
+safe harbor" (he shuddered), "not the blissful possession."
+
+Reader, the roses were not growing under my needle: my sympathies were
+at last fully enlisted.
+
+"You have well said," I answered. "Friendship is the 'nine notch'
+in which a lover makes 'no count' in the game of hearts. But steer
+bravely past these dark gulfs of despair. Have you ever had recourse
+to jealousy in your desperation?" I queried.
+
+"I scorn such a base ally. Your brother can tell you I am here partly
+because I would avoid increasing an affection in another which I
+cannot return."
+
+"Does she know of that?" I asked, not at all prepared in my own mind
+to yield the potency of the ally in my sincere desire to aid him by
+this test of a woman's affection.
+
+"Yes: I have no reason, however, for thinking that the fact has raised
+her estimate of the article," he said, making a poor attempt to smile.
+
+I felt ashamed of my suggestion, and said quickly, "You correspond,
+of course: how are her letters?" Now I was sure of my safest clue in
+finding her out.
+
+"It was through the medium of her letters that I first obtained my
+knowledge of her mind, her temperament, her disposition, her admirable
+domestic virtues; for they were written without reserve. They excited
+my highest admiration; they stimulated my desire to know more of her;
+but they contain no word of love for me."
+
+His want of boldness almost excited my contempt. My skill was baffled
+on every side, and, not caring much to conceal my impatience, I said,
+"You have asked me to advise you as I would my brother. She is cold
+and selfish: give her up."
+
+"Give her up!" he said with measured and emphatic slowness--"give
+her up, when I have sought her beneath every clime on which the sun
+shines--not for months, but for years? Give her up, when her presence
+gives me all I have ever known of happiness? Give her up!" and he
+leaned his head on the back of his chair and closed his eyes.
+
+I had imagined him gifted with wonderful self-control, but when I
+looked up from my work all color had faded from his cheeks, the lips
+seemed ready to yield the little blood left there by the clinch of the
+white-teeth upon them, while every muscle of the face quivered with
+spasmodic effort to control emotion. When the eyes were opened and
+fixed on the ceiling, I saw no trace in them of anger, revenge, or
+even of wounded pride. They were full of tears, ready to gush in one
+last flood-tide of feeling over a subdued, chastened, but breaking
+heart.
+
+It was very evident that my treatment was not adding much comfort to
+my patient, however salutary it might prove in the end. I knew of his
+intention to leave the next day: there was little time left me to aid
+him, and I had come to regard the unknown woman's mysterious nature or
+strategic warfare as pitted against my superior penetration. That
+he might be victorious she must be vanquished. _She_ was, then, my
+antagonist.
+
+The deepening twilight was producing chilliness. I flooded the room
+with brilliant light, stirred the grate into glowing warmth, and
+invited him to a seat near the fire.
+
+"You will not leave me, will you? This may be--_it will be_--my last
+demand on you as a confidante. How is the bouquet progressing?" he
+asked.
+
+"See," I said, holding my embroidery up before me: "we must hurry. I
+have but one more tendril to add."
+
+"Tendrils are clinging things, like hope, are they not?" he said
+pensively.
+
+But sentimentalizing was not the business of the hour, and I intimated
+as much to him. "Yes," I replied, "but hope must now give place to
+effort. I see you are not going to take my 'give-her-up' advice."
+
+"No--only from her who has the right to give it."
+
+I now considered my patient out of danger.
+
+"Then why do you torture yourself longer with doubts? Perhaps your
+irresolution has caused a want of confidence in the strength of
+your affection. At least give her an opportunity to define her true
+position toward you. Beard the lions of indifference and friendship in
+their dens, and do not yield to unmanly cowardice. Strange that I have
+given you the counsel last which should have been given first! But do
+not, I beseech you, lose any time in seeking her. Assure her of your
+long and unwavering devotion. Constancy is the most valued word in a
+true woman's vocabulary. You have staked too much happiness to lose:
+you _must_ win."
+
+"And if I lose," he said--holding up something before him which I
+took to be a picture, though it was in the shape of a heart--"and if
+I lose, then perish all of earth to me. But leave me only this, and
+should I hold you thus, and gaze on what I have first and last and
+only loved until this perishable material on which I have placed you
+turn to dust, still will you be graven on a heart whose deathless love
+can know no death; for a thing so holy as the love I bear you was not
+made to die."
+
+My work--now my completed work--dropped beneath my fingers, for the
+last stitch was taken.
+
+If I could not prevent his self-torture, he should not, at least,
+torture me longer; and snatching the thing from his grasp, I exclaimed
+as I closed my hands over it, "Now, before I return it, you must, you
+_shall_, promise me that you will take the last advice I gave you; or
+will you allow me to look at it, and then unseal the silent lips
+and give you the prophetic little 'yes' or 'no' which a professed
+physiognomist like your confidante can always read in the eye?"
+
+"I would rather you did the last," he said; and I rose, leaned my
+elbow on the corner of the mantel nearest the gaslight, rested my head
+on my empty hand, so as to shade my eyes from the intensity of the
+brilliant burner near me, and with the awe creeping over me with
+which the old astrologers read the horoscope of the midnight stars,
+I looked, and saw--only a wonderfully faithful copy of the portrait
+hanging just over me, of which Mr. Tennent Tremont's confidante was
+the original. I threw it from me, and burst into tears. He stood quite
+near me. I thought I hated him, but my obtuse, blundering, idiotic
+self more than him. I waved my hand in token either of his silence or
+withdrawal, for in all my life long I, with a whole dictionary in
+my mind of abusive epithets, was never more at a loss for a word. My
+token was unheeded.
+
+He only murmured softly,
+
+ I had never seen thee weeping:
+ I cannot leave thee now.
+
+When you snatched my picture from me a moment ago I saw a glistening
+tear of sympathy in your eye; but what are these?"
+
+"So cruel! so ungenerous! so unfair!" I said, still pressing my hands
+tightly over my eyes. "How can I ever forgive you?"
+
+With softer murmur than the last he repeated the words,
+
+ "'Tis sweet to let the pardoned in."
+
+"Astounding presumption that!" I said, now giving him the benefit of
+my full gaze--"to speak of pardon before making a confession of
+your guilt! But before I give you time even for that, the remaining
+mysteries which still hang around your tale of woe shall be cleared
+up. Please to inform the court how the original of your purloined
+sketch could have been the object of years of devotion, when it has
+been only four weeks to-day since you laid your mortal eyes on her?"
+
+"Ah! you may well say mortal; but you know the soul too has its visual
+organs. I saw and loved and worshiped my ideal in those years, and
+sought her too--how unceasingly!--and I said,
+
+ Only for the real will I with the ideal part:
+ Another shall not even tempt my heart.
+
+When I saw her just four weeks since, I knew her,
+
+ And my heart responded as, with unseen wings,
+ An angel touched its unswept strings,
+ And whispers in its song,
+ Where hast thou strayed so long?"
+
+But the avenging demon of curiosity was not to be exorcised by
+sentimental evasion: "Those letters, sir, of which you spoke, _they_
+must have been of a real, tangible form--not a part of the mythical
+phantasmagoria of your idealistic vision."
+
+He laughed as a light-hearted child would, but knitted his brow with
+a perplexed air as he said, "Why don't the British government send
+a woman to find the source of the Nile? I must thank your
+unsophisticated brother's pride in his sister's epistolary
+accomplishments for my privilege of perusal. What next?"
+
+I thought a moment. Before, I had fifty other queries to propound, but
+now as I looked into the glowing anthracite before me which gave us
+those pleasant Reveries, they very naturally all resolved themselves
+into explained mysteries without his aid.
+
+He insists that the "prophetic little yes or no" never came.
+
+Upon my honor, dear reader, as a confidante, I still think it the
+most unfair procedure which ever "disgraced the annals of civilized
+warfare;" but I shall have abundant opportunity for revenge, for we
+are to make the journey of life together.
+
+
+
+
+GLIMPSES OF JOHN CHINAMAN.
+
+
+When John Marshall picked up the first golden nugget in California,
+a call was sounded for the gathering of an immense gold-seeking
+army made up of many nationalities; and among the rest China sent a
+battalion some fifty thousand strong.
+
+John Chinaman has remained with us ever since, despised and abused,
+being neither a co-worshiper nor a co-sympathizer in aught save
+the getting of gold. In dress, custom and language his is still a
+nationality as distinct from ours as are the waters of the Gulf Stream
+from those of the ocean.
+
+It is possible that this may be but the second migration of Tartars to
+the American shore. It is possible that the North American Indian and
+the Chinaman may be identical in origin and race. Close observers find
+among the aboriginal tribes resident far up on the north-west American
+coast peculiar habits and customs, having closely-allied types among
+the Chinese. The features of the Aleuts, the natives of the Aleutian
+Islands, are said to approximate closely to those of the Mongolians.
+The unvarying long black hair, variously-shaded brown skin, beardless
+face and shaven head are points, natural and artificial, common to
+the Indian and Mongolian. There is a hint of common custom between the
+Indian scalplock and Chinese cue.
+
+"John" has been a thorough gleaner of the mines. The "superior race"
+allowed him to make no valuable discoveries. He could buy their
+half-worked-out placers. The "river-bed" they sold him when its
+chances of yielding were deemed desperate. When the golden fruitage
+of the banks was reduced to a dollar per day, they became "China
+diggings." But wherever "John" settled he worked steadily, patiently
+and systematically, no matter whether his ten or twelve hours' labor
+brought fifty cents or fifty dollars; for his industry is of an
+untiring mechanical character. In the earlier and flusher days of
+California's gold-harvest the white man worked spasmodically. He
+was ever leaving the five-dollar diggings in hand for the fifty- or
+hundred-dollar-per-day claims afar off in some imaginary bush. These
+golden rumors were always on the wing. The country was but half
+explored, and many localities were rich in mystery. The white vanguard
+pushed north, south and east, frequently enduring privation and
+suffering. "John," in comparative comfort, trotted patiently after,
+carrying his snugly made-up bundle of provisions and blankets at one
+end of a bamboo pole, his pick, shovel, pan and rocker at the other,
+to work over the leavings. The leavings sometimes turned out more gold
+than "new ground," much to the chagrin of the impatient Caucasian. But
+John, according to his own testimony, never owned a rich claim. Ask
+him how much it yielded per day, and he would tell you, "sometimes
+four, sometimes six bittee" (four or six shillings). He had many
+inducements for prevarication. Nearly every white man's hand was
+against him. If he found a bit of rich ground, "jumpers" were ready to
+drive him from it: Mexicans waylaid him and robbed him of his dust. In
+remote localities he enclosed his camp by strong stockades: even these
+were sometimes forced and carried at night by bands of desperadoes.
+Lastly came the foreign miner's tax-collector, with his demand of four
+dollars monthly per man for the privilege of digging gold. There
+were hundreds and thousands of other foreign laborers in the
+mines--English, German, French, Italian and Portuguese--but they paid
+little or none of this tax, for they might soon be entitled to a vote,
+and the tax-collector was appointed by the sheriff of the county, and
+the sheriff, like other officials, craved a re-election. But John was
+never to be a voter, and so he shouldered the whole of this load, and
+when he could not pay, the official beat him and took away his tools.
+John often fought this persecutor by strategy. In localities where no
+white men would betray him he signalized his coming from afar. From
+the crags of Red Mountain on the Tuolumne River I have often seen the
+white flag waved as the dreaded collector came down the steep trail
+to collect his monthly dues. That signal or a puff of smoke told the
+Chinese for miles along the river-valley to conceal themselves from
+the "license-man." Rockers, picks and shovels were hastily thrust into
+clumps of chapparal, and their owners clambered up the hillsides
+into artificial caves or leafy coverts. Out of companies of fifty
+the collector finds but twenty men at work. These pay their tax, the
+official rides on down the river, the hidden thirty Mongolians emerge
+from cover; and more than once has a keen collector "doubled on them"
+by coming back unexpectedly and detecting the entire gang on their
+claim.
+
+John has been invaluable to the California demagogue, furnishing
+for him a sop of hatred and prejudice to throw before "enlightened
+constituencies." It needs but to mention the "filthy Chinaman" to
+provoke an angry roar from the mass-meeting. Yet the Chinaman is
+not entirely filthy. He washes his entire person every day when
+practicable; he loves clean clothes; his kitchen-utensils will bear
+inspection. When the smallpox raged so severely in San Francisco a few
+years since, there were very few deaths among his race. But John
+_is_ not nice about his house. He seems to have none of our ideas
+concerning home comfort. Smoke has no terror for him; soap he keeps
+entirely for his clothes and person; floor-and wall-washing are things
+never hinted at; and the refuse of his table is scarcely thrown out
+of doors. Privacy is not one of his luxuries--he wants a house full:
+where there is room for a bunk, there is room for a man. An anthill,
+a beehive, a rabbit-warren are his models of domestic comfort: what is
+stinted room for two Americans is spaciousness for a dozen Chinese.
+Go into one of their cabins at night, and you are in an oven full of
+opium- and lamp-smoke. Recumbent forms are dimly seen lying on bunks
+above and below. The chattering is incessant. Stay there ten minutes,
+and as your eye becomes accustomed to the smoke you will dimly see
+blue bundles lying on shelves aloft. Anon the bundles stir, talk and
+puff smoke. Above is a loft six feet square: a ladder brings it in
+communication with the ground floor. Mongolians are ever coming down,
+but the gabble of tongues above shows that a host is still left. Like
+an omnibus, a Chinese house is never full. Nor is it ever quiet. At
+all hours of the night may be heard their talk and the clatter of
+their wooden shoes. A Chinaman does not retire like an American,
+intending to make a serious business of his night's sleeping. He
+merely "lops down" half dressed, and is ready to arise at the least
+call of business or pleasure.
+
+While at work in his claim his fire is always kindled near by, and
+over it a tea-pot. This is his beverage every half hour. His tea must
+be hot, strong and without milk or sugar. He also consumes a terrible
+mixture sold him by white traders, called indiscriminately brandy, gin
+or whisky, yet an intoxicated Chinaman is the rarest of rare sights.
+Rice he can cook elegantly, every grain being steamed to its utmost
+degree of distension. Soup he makes of no other meat than pork. The
+poorest among his hordes must have a chicken or duck for his holiday.
+He eats it merely parboiled. He will eat dog also, providing it is not
+long past maturity.
+
+The Chinese grocery-stores are museums to the American. There are
+strange dried roots, strange dried fish, strange dried land and marine
+plants, ducks and chickens, split, pressed thin and smoked; dried
+shellfish; cakes newly made, yellow, glutinous and fatty, stamped with
+tea-box characters; and great earthen jars filled with rottenness. I
+speak correctly if perhaps too forcibly, for when those imposing jars
+are opened to serve a customer with some manner of vegetable cut in
+long strips, the native-born American finds it expedient to hold
+his nose. American storekeepers in the mines deal largely in Chinese
+goods. They know the Mongolian names of the articles inquired for,
+but of their character, their composition, how they are cooked or
+how eaten, they can give no information. It is heathenish "truck," by
+whose sale they make a profit. Only that and nothing more.
+
+A Chinese miner's house is generally a conglomeration of old boards,
+mats, brush, canvas and stones. Rusty sheets of tin sometimes help to
+form the edifice. Anything lying about loose in the neighborhood is
+certain in time to form a part of the Mongolian mansion.
+
+When the white man abandons mining-ground he often leaves behind very
+serviceable frame houses. John comes along to glean the gold left by
+the Caucasian. He builds a cluster of shapeless huts. The deserted
+white man's house gradually disappears. A clapboard is gone, and then
+another, and finally all. The skeleton of the frame remains: months
+pass away; piece by piece the joists disappear; some morning they are
+found tumbled in a heap, and at last nothing is left save the cellar
+and chimneys. Meantime, John's clusters of huts swell their rude
+proportions, but you must examine them narrowly to detect any traces
+of your vanished house, for he revels in smoke, and everything about
+him is soon colored to a hue much resembling his own brownish-yellow
+countenance. Thus he picks the domiciliary skeleton bare, and then
+carries off the bones. He is a quiet but skillful plunderer. John No.
+1 on his way home from his mining-claim rips off a board; John No.
+2 next day drags it a few yards from the house. John No. 3 a week
+afterward drags it home. In this manner the dissolution of your
+house is protracted for months. In this manner he distributes the
+responsibility of the theft over his entire community. I have seen a
+large boarding-house disappear in this way, and when the owner, after
+a year's absence, revisited the spot to look after his property, he
+found his real estate reduced to a cellar.
+
+John himself is a sort of museum in his character and habits. We must
+be pardoned for giving details of these, mingled promiscuously,
+rather after the museum style. His New Year comes in February. For
+the Chinaman of limited means it lasts a week, for the wealthy it may
+endure three. His consumption of fire-crackers during that period is
+immense. He burns strings a yard in length suspended from poles over
+his balconies. The uproar and sputtering consequent on this festivity
+in the Chinese quarter at San Francisco is tremendous. The city
+authorities limit this Celestial Pandemonium to a week.
+
+He does not forsake the amusement of kite-flying even when arrived at
+maturity. His artistic imitations of birds and dragons float over
+our housetops. To these are often affixed contrivances for producing
+hollow, mournful, buzzing sounds, mystifying whole neighborhoods.
+His game of shuttlecock is to keep a cork, one end being stuck with
+feathers, flying in the air as long as possible, the impelling member
+being the foot, the players standing in a circle and numbering from
+four to twenty. Some show great dexterity in kicking with the heel.
+His vocal music to our ears seems a monotonous caterwaul. His violin
+has but one string: his execution is merely a modified species of
+saw-filing.
+
+He loves to gamble, especially in lotteries. He is a diligent student
+of his own comfort. Traveling on foot during a hot day, he protects
+himself with an umbrella and refreshes himself with a fan. In place of
+prosaic signs on his store-fronts, he often inscribes quotations from
+his favorite authors.
+
+He is a lover of flowers. His balconies and window-sills are often
+thickly packed with shrubs and creepers in pots. He is not a speedy
+and taciturn eater. His tea-table talks are full of noisy jollity, and
+are often prolonged far into the night.
+
+He is a lover of the drama. A single play sometimes requires months
+for representation, being, like a serial story, "continued" night
+after night. He never dances. There is no melody in the Mongolian
+foot. Dancing he regards as a species of Caucasian insanity.
+
+To make an oath binding he must swear by the head of a cock cut off
+before him in open court. Chinese testimony is not admissible in
+American courts. It is a legal California axiom that a Chinaman
+cannot speak the truth. But cases have occurred wherein, he being an
+eye-witness, the desire to hear what he _might_ tell as to what he had
+seen has proved stronger than the prejudice against him; and the more
+effectually to clinch the chances of his telling the truth, the above,
+his national form of oath, has been resorted to. He has among us some
+secret government of his own. Before his secret tribunals more than
+one Mongolian has been hurried in Star-Chamber fashion, and never
+seen afterward. The nature of the offences thus visited by secret and
+bloody punishment is scarcely known to Americans. He has two chief
+deities--a god and a devil. Most of his prayers are offered to his
+devil. His god, he says, being good and well-disposed, it is not
+necessary to propitiate him. But his devil is ugly, and must be won
+over by offering and petition. Once a year, wherever collected in any
+number, he builds a flimsy sort of temple, decorates it with ornaments
+of tinsel, lays piles of fruit, meats and sugared delicacies on an
+altar, keeps up night and day a steady crash of gongs, and installs
+therein some great, uncouth wooden idols. When this period of worship
+is over the "josh-house" disappears, and the idols are unceremoniously
+stowed away among other useless lumber.
+
+He shaves with an instrument resembling a butcher's cleaver in
+miniature. Nature generally denies him beard, so he shaves what a
+sailor would term the fore and after part of his head. He reaps his
+hirsute crop dry, using no lather. His cue is pieced out by silken
+braid, so interwoven as gradually to taper into a slim tassel,
+something like a Missouri mule-driver's "black snake" whip-lash. To
+lose this cue is to lose caste and standing among his fellows. No
+misfortune for him can be greater.
+
+Coarse cowhide boots are the only articles of American wear that he
+favors. He inclines to buy the largest sizes, thinking he thereby gets
+the most for his money, and when his No. 7 feet wobble and chafe in
+No. 12 boots he complains that they "fit too much."
+
+He cultivates the vegetables of his native land in California. They
+are curiosities like himself. One resembles our string-bean, but is
+circular in shape and from two to three feet in length. It is not
+in the least stringy, breaks off short and crisp, boils tender very
+quickly and affords excellent eating. He is a very careful cultivator,
+and will spend hours picking off dead leaves and insects from the
+young plants. When he finds a dead cat, rat, dog or chicken, he throws
+it into a small vat of water, allows it to decompose, and sprinkles
+the liquid fertilizer thus obtained over his plantation. Watermelon
+and pumpkin seeds are for him dessert delicacies. He consumes his
+garden products about half cooked in an American culinary point of
+view, merely wilting them by an immersion in boiling water.
+
+There are about fifteen English words to be learned by a Chinaman on
+arriving in California, and no more. With these he expresses all his
+wants, and with this limited stock you must learn to convey all that
+is needful to him. The practice thus forced upon one in employing
+a Chinese servant is useful in preventing a circumlocutory habit of
+speech. Many of our letters the Mongolian mouth has no capacity for
+sounding. _R_ he invariably sounds like _l_, so that the word "rice"
+he pronounces "lice"--a bit of information which may prevent an
+unpleasant apprehension when you come to employ a Chinese cook. He
+rejects the English personal pronoun I, and uses the possessive "my"
+in its place; thus, "My go home," in place of "I go home."
+
+When he buries a countryman he throws from the hearse into the
+air handfuls of brown tissue-paper slips, punctured with Chinese
+characters. Sometimes, at his burial-processions, he gives a small
+piece of money to every person met on the road. Over the grave he
+beats gongs and sets off packs of fire-crackers. On it he leaves
+cooked meats, drink, delicacies and lighted wax tapers. Eventually the
+bones are disinterred and shipped to his native land. In the remotest
+mining-districts of California are found Chinese graves thus opened
+and emptied of their inmates. I have in one instance seen him, so
+far as he was permitted, render some of these funeral honors to an
+American. The deceased had gained this honor by treating the Chinese
+as though they were partners in our common humanity. "Missa Tom," as
+he was termed by them, they knew they could trust. He acquired among
+them a reputation as the one righteous American in their California
+Gomorrah. Chinamen would come to him from distant localities, that
+he might overlook their bills of sale and other documents used in
+business intercourse with the white man. Their need of such, an honest
+adviser was great. The descendants of the Pilgrim Fathers often took
+advantage of their ignorance of the English language, written or
+spoken. "Missa Tom" suddenly died. I had occasion to visit his farm a
+few days after his death, and on the first night of my stay there saw
+the array of meats, fruit, wine and burning tapers on a table in front
+of the house, which his Chinese friends told me was intended as an
+offering to "Missa Tom's" spirit.
+
+We will dive for a moment into a Chinese wash-cellar. "John" does
+three-fourths of the washing of California. His lavatories are on
+every street. "Hip Tee, Washing and Ironing," says the sign, evidently
+the first production of an amateur in lettering. Two doors above is
+the establishment of Tong Wash--two below, that of Hi Sing. Hip Tee
+and five assistants are busy ironing. The odor is a trinity of steam,
+damp clothes and opium. More Mongolian tongues are heard from smoky
+recesses in the rear. As we enter, Hip Tee is blowing a shower of
+moisture from his mouth, "very like a whale." This is his method
+of dampening the linen preparatory to ironing. It is a skilled
+performance. The fluid leaves his lips as fine as mist. If we are on
+business we leave our bundles, and in return receive a ticket covered
+with hieroglyphics. These indicate the kind and number of the garments
+left to be cleansed, and some distinguishing mark (supposing this
+to be our first patronage of Hip Tee) by which we may be again
+identified. It may be by a pug nose, a hare lip, red hair, no hair or
+squint eyes. They never ask one's name, for they can neither pronounce
+nor write it when it is given. The ticket is an unintelligible tracery
+of lines, curves, dots and dashes, made by a brush dipped in India
+ink on a shred of flimsy Chinese paper. It may teem with abuse and
+ridicule, but you must pocket all that, and produce it on calling
+again, or your shirts and collars go into the Chinese Circumlocution
+Wash-house Office. It is very difficult getting one's clothes back if
+the ticket be lost--very. Hip Tee now dabs a duplicate of your ticket
+in a long book, and all is over. You will call on Saturday night for
+your linen. You do so. There is apparently the same cellar, the same
+smell of steam, damp clothes and opium, the same sputter of sprinkling
+water, and apparently the same Hip Tee and assistants with brown
+shaven foreheads and long cues hanging straight down behind or coiled
+in snake-like fashion about their craniums. You present your ticket.
+Hip Tee examines it and shakes his head. "No good--oder man," he says,
+and points up the street. You are now perplexed and somewhat alarmed.
+You say: "John, I want my clothes. I left them here last Monday. You
+gave me that ticket." "No," replies Hip Tee very decidedly, "oder
+man;" and again he waves his arm upward. Then you are wroth. You
+abuse, expostulate, entreat, and talk a great deal of English, and
+some of it very strong English, which Hip Tee does not understand;
+and Hip Tee talks a great deal of Chinese, and perhaps strong Chinese,
+which you do not understand. You commence sentences in broken Chinese
+and terminate them in unbroken English. Hip Tee commences sentences
+in broken English and terminates them in pure Chinese, from a like
+inability to express his indignation in a foreign tongue. "What for
+you no go oder man? No my ticket--tung sung lung, ya hip kee--_ping!"_
+he cries; and all this time the assistants are industriously ironing
+and spouting mist, and leisurely making remarks in their sing-song
+unintelligibility which you feel have uncomplimentary reference to
+yourself. Suddenly a light breaks upon you. This is not Hip Tee's
+cellar, this is not Hip Tee. It is the establishment of Hi Sing. This
+is Hi Sing himself who for the last half hour has been endeavoring
+with his stock of fifteen English words to make you understand that
+you are in the wrong house. But these Chinese, as to faces and their
+wash-houses, and all the paraphernalia of their wash-houses, are so
+much alike that this is an easy mistake to make. You find the lavatory
+of Hip Tee, who pronounces the hieroglyphics all correct, and delivers
+you your lost and found shirts clean, with half the buttons broken,
+and the bosoms pounded, scrubbed and frayed into an irregular sort of
+embroidery.
+
+"He can only dig, cook and wash," said the American miner
+contemptuously years ago: "he can't work rock." To work rock in mining
+parlance is to be skillful in boring Earth's stony husk after mineral.
+It is to be proficient in sledging, drilling and blasting. The
+Chinaman seemed to have no aptitude for this labor. He was content to
+use his pick and shovel in the gravel-banks: metallic veins of gold,
+silver or copper he left entirely to the white man.
+
+Yet it was a great mistake to suppose he could not "work rock," or
+do anything else required of him. John is a most apt and intelligent
+labor-machine. Show him once your tactics in any operation, and ever
+after he imitates them as accurately as does the parrot its memorized
+sentences. So when the Pacific Railroad was being bored through the
+hard granite of the Sierras it was John who handled the drill and
+sledge as well as the white laborer. He was hurled by thousands on
+that immense work, and it was the tawny hand of China that hewed out
+hundreds of miles for the transcontinental pathway. Nor is this
+all. He is crowding into one avenue of employment after another in
+California. He fills our woolen- and silk-mills; he makes slippers and
+binds shoes; he is skilled in the use of the sewing-machine; cellar
+after cellar in San Francisco is filled with these Celestial brownies
+rolling cigars; his fishing-nets are in every bay and inlet; he is
+employed in scores of the lesser establishments for preserving fruit,
+grinding salt, making matches, etc. He would quickly jump into the
+places of the carpenter, mason and blacksmith were he allowed, for
+there are numbers of them whose knowledge of these and other trades is
+sufficient at least to render them useful as assistants. He is handy
+on shipboard: the Panama steamers carry Chinese foremast hands. He is
+preferred as a house-servant: the Chinese boy of fourteen or sixteen
+learns quickly to cook and wash in American fashion. He is neat
+in person, can be easily ruled, does not set up an independent
+sovereignty in the kitchen, has no followers, will not outshine
+his mistress in attire; and, although not perfect, yet affords a
+refreshing change from our Milesian tyrants of the roast and wash-tub.
+But when you catch this Celestial domestic treasure, be sure that the
+first culinary operations performed for his instruction are correctly
+manipulated, for his imitativeness is of a cast-iron rigidity. Once
+in the mould, it can only with great difficulty be altered. Burn your
+toast or your pudding, and he is apt to regard the accident as the
+rule.
+
+The young Chinese, especially in San Francisco, are anxious to acquire
+an English education. They may not attend the public schools. A few
+years since certain Chinese mission-schools were established by the
+joint efforts of several religious denominations. Young ladies and
+gentlemen volunteered their services on Sunday to teach these Chinese
+children to read. They make eager, apt and docile pupils. Great is
+their pride on mastering a few lines of English text. They become much
+attached to their teachers, and it is possible, if the vote of the
+latter were taken, it would evidence more liking for their yellow,
+long-cued pupils than for any class of white children. But while so
+assiduous to learn, it is rather doubtful whether much real religious
+impression is made upon them. It is possible that their home-training
+negatives that.
+
+We have spoken entirely of the Chinaman. What of the Chinawoman in
+America? In California the word "Chinawoman" is synonymous with what
+is most vile and disgusting. Few, very few, of a respectable class
+are in the State. The slums of London and New York are as respectable
+thoroughfares compared with the rows of "China alleys" in the heart of
+San Francisco. These can hardly be termed "abandoned women." They
+have had no sense of virtue, propriety or decency to abandon. They are
+ignorant of the disgrace of their calling: if the term may be allowed,
+they pursue it innocently. Many are scarcely more than children. They
+are mere commodities, being by their own countrymen bought in China,
+shipped and consigned to factors in California, and there sold for a
+term of years.
+
+The Chinaman has bitter enemies in San Francisco: they thirst to
+annihilate him. He is accustomed to blows and brickbats; he is
+legitimate game for rowdies, both grown and juvenile; and children
+supposed to be better trained can scarce resist the temptation of
+snatching at his pig-tail as he passes through their groups in front
+of the public schools. Even on Sundays nice little boys coming from
+Sabbath-school, with their catechisms tucked under their jackets,
+and texts enjoining mercy and gentleness fresh upon their lips, will
+sometimes salute the benighted heathen as he passes by with a volley
+of stones. If he turns on his small assailants, he is apt to meet
+larger ones. Men are not wanting, ready and panting, to take up the
+quarrel thus wantonly commenced by the offspring of the "superior
+race." There are hundreds of families, who came over the sea to seek
+in America the comfort and prosperity denied them in the land of their
+birth, whose children from earliest infancy are inculcated with the
+sentiment that the Chinaman is a dog, a pest and a curse. On the
+occasion of William H. Seward's visit to a San Francisco theatre, two
+Chinese merchants were hissed and hooted by the gallery mob from a
+box which they had ventured to occupy. This assumption of style and
+exclusiveness proved very offensive to the shirt-sleeved, upper-tier
+representatives of the "superior race," who had assembled in large
+numbers to catch a glimpse of one of the black man's great champions.
+Ethiopia could have sat in that box in perfect safety, but China in
+such a place was the red rag rousing the ire of the Democratic bull.
+John has a story of his own to carry back home from a Christian land.
+
+For this prejudice and hostility there are provocative causes,
+although they may not be urged in extenuation. The Chinaman is a
+dangerous competitor for the white laborer; and when the latter, with
+other and smaller mouths to feed, once gets the idea implanted in
+his mind that the bread is being taken from them by what he deems a
+semi-human heathen, whose beliefs, habits, appearance and customs are
+distasteful to him, there are all the conditions ready for a state
+of mind toward the almond-eyed Oriental which leans far away from
+brotherly love.
+
+Brotherly love sometimes depends on circumstances. "Am I not a man and
+brother?" cries John from his native shore. "Certainly," we respond.
+Pass round the hat--let us take up a contribution for the conversion
+of the poor heathen. The coins clink thickly in the bottom of the
+charitable chapeau. We return home, feeling ourselves raised an inch
+higher heavenward.
+
+"Am I not a man and brother?" cries John in our midst, digging our
+gold, setting up opposition laundries and wheeling sand at half a
+dollar per day less wages. "No. Get out, ye long-tailed baste! An' wad
+ye put me on a livil with that--that baboon?" Pass round the hat.
+The coins mass themselves more thickly than ever. For what? To buy
+muskets, powder and ball. Wherefore? Wait! More than once has the
+demagogue cried, "Drive them into the sea!"
+
+PRENTICE MULFORD.
+
+
+
+
+A WINTER REVERIE.
+
+
+ We stood amid the rustling gloom alone
+ That night, while from the blue plains overhead,
+ With golden kisses thickly overblown,
+ A shooting star into the darkness sped.
+ "'Twas like Persephone, who ran," we said,
+ "Away from Love." The grass sprang round our feet,
+ The purple lilacs in the dusk smelled sweet,
+ And the black demon of the train sped by,
+ Rousing the still air with his long, loud cry.
+
+ The slender rim of a young rising moon
+ Hung in the west as you leaned on the bar
+ And spun a thread of some sweet April tune,
+ And wished a wish and named the falling star.
+ We heard a brook trill in the fields afar;
+ The air wrapped round us that entrancing fold
+ Of vanishing sweet stuff that mortal hold
+ Can never grasp--the mist of dreams--as down
+ The street we went in that fair foreign town.
+
+ I might have whispered of my love that night,
+ But something wrapped you as a shield around,
+ And held me back: your quiver of affright,
+ Your startled movement at some sudden sound--
+ A night-bird rustling on the leafy ground--
+ Your hushed and tremulous whisper of alarm,
+ Your beating heart pressed close against my arm,--
+ All, all were sweet; and yet _my_ heart beat true,
+ Nor shrined one wish I might not breathe to you.
+
+ So when we parted little had been said:
+ I left you standing just within the door,
+ With the dim moonlight streaming on your head
+ And rippling softly on the checkered floor.
+ I can remember even the dress you wore--
+ Some dainty white Swiss stuff that floated round
+ Your supple form and trailed upon the ground,
+ While bands of coral bound each slender wrist,
+ Studded with one great purple amethyst.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ My story is not much--is it?--to tell:
+ It seems a wandering line of music, faint,
+ Whose sweet pathetic measures rise and swell,
+ Then, strangled, fall with curious restraint.
+ 'Tis like the pictures that the artists paint,
+ With shadows forward thrown into the light
+ From the real figures hidden out of sight.
+ And is not life crossed in this strange, sad way
+ With dreams whose shadows lengthen day by day?
+
+ But you, dear heart--sweet heart loved all these years--
+ Will recognize the passion of the strain:
+ Who eats the lotos-flower of Love with tears,
+ Will know the rapture of that numb, vague pain
+ Which thrills the heart and stirs the languid brain.
+ All day amid the toiling throng we strive,
+ While in our heart these sacred, sweet loves thrive,
+ And in choice hours we show them, white and cool
+ Like lilies floating on a troubled pool.
+
+MILLIE W. CARPENTER.
+
+
+
+
+"PASSPORTS, GENTLEMEN!"
+
+
+The close of July, 1870, found our party tarrying for a few days at
+Geneva. We had left home with the intention of "doing" Europe in less
+than four months. June and July were already gone, but in that time,
+traveling as only Americans can, Great Britain, Belgium, the Rhine
+country and portions of Switzerland had been visited and admired. We
+were now pausing for a few days to take breath and prepare for yet
+wider flights. Our proposed route from Geneva would lead us through
+Northern Germany, returning by way of Paris to London and Liverpool.
+
+We had intentionally left Paris for the last, hoping that the
+Communist disturbances would be completely quieted before September.
+At this time their forces had been recently routed, and the Versailles
+troops were occupying the capital. The leaders of the Commune were
+scattered in every direction, and, if newspaper accounts were to be
+believed, were being captured in every city of France. Especially was
+this true of the custom-house upon the Swiss frontier, where report
+said that more than one leading Communist had been stopped by the
+lynx-eyed officials, who would accept no substitute for the signed and
+countersigned passport, and hold no parley until such a passport had
+been presented.
+
+In view of these facts, the American minister in Paris had issued a
+circular letter to citizens of the United States traveling abroad,
+requesting them to see that their passports had the official vise
+before attempting to enter France, thus saving themselves and friends
+a large amount of unnecessary trouble and delay. Nothing was said
+of those who might think proper to attempt an entrance _without_ a
+passport, such temerity being in official eyes beyond all advice or
+protection. Influenced by this letter and several facts which had come
+under our notice proving the uncertainty of all things, and especially
+of travel in France, we saw that our passports were made officially
+correct.
+
+While at Geneva our party separated for a few days. My friends
+proposed making an expedition up the lake, while I arranged to spend
+a day and night at Aix-les-Bains, a small town in the south of France.
+My object in visiting it was not to enjoy the sulphur-baths for which
+it is famous, but to see some friends who were spending the summer
+there. I had written, telling them to expect me by the five o'clock
+train on Wednesday afternoon. As my stay was to be so brief, I left
+my valise at the hotel in Geneva, and found myself now, for the first
+time, separated from that trusty sable friend which had until this
+hour been my constant companion by day and night.
+
+The train was just leaving the station when a lady sitting opposite to
+me, with her back to the locomotive, asked, in French, if I would be
+willing to change seats. Catching her meaning rather by her gestures
+than words, I inquired in English if she would like my seat, and found
+by her reply that I was traveling with an English lady.
+
+I should here explain that although I had studied the French language
+as part of my education, I found it impossible to speak French with
+any fluency or understand it when spoken. My newly-made friend,
+however (for friend she proved herself), spoke French and English with
+equal fluency.
+
+In the process of comparing notes (so familiar to all travelers)
+mention was made of the recent war and the unwonted strictness and
+severity of the custom-house officials. In an instant my hand was upon
+my pocket-book, only to find that I had neglected to take my passport
+from my valise.
+
+The embarrassment of the situation flashed upon me, and my troubled
+countenance revealed to my companion that something unusual had
+occurred. I answered her inquiring look by saying that I had left my
+passport in Geneva. Her immediate sympathy was only equaled by her
+evident alarm. She said there was but one thing to be done--return
+instantly for it. I fully agreed with her, but found, to my dismay,
+upon consulting a guide-book, that our train was an express, which did
+not stop before reaching Belgarde, the frontier-town.
+
+I would willingly have pulled the bell-rope had there been any, and
+stopped the train at any cost, but it was impossible, and nothing
+remained but to sit quietly while I was relentlessly hurried into the
+very jaws of the French officials. The misery of the situation was
+aggravated by the fact that I could not command enough French to
+explain how I came to be traveling without a passport. As a last
+resort, I applied to my friend, begging her to explain to the officer
+at the custom-house that I was a citizen of the United States, and had
+left my passport in Geneva. This she readily promised to do, although
+I could see that she had but little faith in the result. After a ride
+of an hour, during which my reflections were none of the pleasantest,
+we arrived at Belgarde. Here the doors of the railway carriages were
+thrown open, and we were politely requested to alight. We stepped
+out upon a platform swarming with fierce gendarmes, whom I regarded
+attentively, wondering which of them was destined to become my
+protector. From the platform we were ushered into a large room
+communicating by a narrow passage with a second room, into which our
+baggage was being carried. One by one my fellow-passengers approached
+the narrow and (to me) gloomy passage and presented their passports.
+These were closely scanned by the officer in charge, handed to an
+assistant to be countersigned, and the holder, all being right, was
+passed into the second room. Our turn soon came, and, accompanied by
+the English lady, I approached my fate.
+
+Her passport was declared to be official, and handing it back
+the officer looked inquiringly at me. My friend then began her
+explanation. As I stood attentively regarding the officer's face, I
+could see his puzzled look change into one of comprehension, and
+then of amusement. To her inquiry he replied that there would be
+no objection under the circumstances to my returning to Geneva and
+procuring my passport. Encouraged by the favorable turn my fortunes
+had taken, I asked, through my friend, if it would be possible for me
+to go on without a passport. An instantaneous change passed over his
+countenance, and, shrugging his shoulders, he replied that it was
+impossible: there was a second custom-house at Culoz, where I should
+certainly be stopped, forced to explain how I had passed Belgarde, and
+severely punished for attempting to enter without a passport. I did
+not, however, wait for him to finish his angry harangue, but passed on
+to the second room, where I was soon joined by my interpreting friend,
+who explained to me in full what I had already learned from the
+officer's countenance and gesture. She thought that I was fortunate in
+escaping so easily, and advised an immediate return to Geneva. I again
+consulted my guide-book, and found that there was no return train for
+several hours, and consequently that I should arrive in Geneva too
+late to start for Aix-les-Bains that night. This would necessitate
+waiting until Thursday, and perhaps force me to give up the trip, for
+our seats were engaged in the Chamouni coach for Friday morning. I
+imagined my friends in vain awaiting my arrival at Aix, and the smiles
+of our party when they found me in Geneva upon their return from the
+lake. But, more than all, the possibility of not reaching Aix at all
+troubled me, for I was very anxious to see my friends there, and had
+written home that I intended to see them.
+
+I found by my guide-book that our train reached Culoz before the
+Geneva return train; so on the instant I formed the desperate resolve
+of running the blockade at Belgarde, and if I found it impossible to
+pass the custom-house at Culoz, _there_ to take the return train for
+Geneva. I walked to the platform as if merely accompanying my friend,
+stood for a moment at the door of the carriage conversing with her,
+and then, as the train started for Culoz, quickly stepped in and shut
+the door. Her dismay was really pitiable: had I not been somewhat
+troubled in mind myself, I should have laughed outright. She saw
+nothing before me but certain destruction, and I am free to confess
+that the prospect of a telegram flashing over the wires at that moment
+from Belgarde to Culoz was not reassuring. The die, however, had
+been cast, and now nothing remained but to endure in silence the
+interminable hour which must elapse ere we should reach Culoz. There
+we were to change cars, the Geneva train going on to Paris, while
+we took the train on the opposite platform for Aix-les-Bains. This
+necessitated passing through the depot, and passing through the depot
+was passing through the custom-house. As our train stopped in front of
+the fatal door, and one by one the passengers filed into it and were
+lost to sight, I seemed to see written above the door, "All hope
+abandon, ye who enter here!" It was simply rushing into the jaws of
+fate: there was not the slightest possibility of my being able to pass
+through that depot unchallenged. I should be carried on to Paris if
+I remained in the train; I should be arrested if I remained on the
+platform; I was discovered if I entered the custom-house. Eagerly I
+glanced around for some means of escape. Every instant the number of
+passengers on the platform was decreasing, the danger of discovery
+rapidly increasing.
+
+I had feared lest some benevolent French officer, anxious for my
+safety, would be found waiting to assist me in alighting: I was
+thankful to find that I should be allowed to assist myself, and
+that no one paid any particular attention to me. As I stood there
+hesitating what course to pursue, and feeling how much easier my mind
+at this moment would be were I waiting on the Belgarde platform, I
+noticed a door standing open a few steps to the left. Without any
+further hesitation I walked directly in, to find myself in a railroad
+restaurant. It proved to be a tower of refuge.
+
+No one had noticed me. There were other passengers in the room,
+waiting for the Paris train; so, joining myself to them, I remained
+there until the custom-house doors were closed and the guards had left
+the platform. The question now arose, How should I reach the opposite
+platform? The train might start at any moment: the only legitimate
+passage was closed. I knew that the attempt would be fraught with
+danger, yet I felt that it was now too late to draw back. If I
+remained any length of time in the restaurant, I should be suspected
+and discovered; and as I thought of that moment a terrific scene arose
+before my mind in which an excited French official thundered at me
+in his choicest French, while I stood silent, unable to explain who
+I was, how I came there, whither I was going; I imagined myself being
+searched for treasonable documents and none being found; I seemed to
+see my captors consulting how they could best compel me to tell what
+I knew. These scenes and others of like nature entertained me while
+I waited for the coast--or rather platform--to be cleared. When at
+length all the immediate guards were gone, I started out to find
+my way, if possible, to the train for Aix. I have read of travelers
+cutting their way through trackless forests, of ice-bound mariners
+anxiously seeking the North-west passage, and, worse than all, of
+luckless countrymen wandering bewildered through the streets of
+Boston; but I am confident that no traveler, mariner or countryman
+ever sought his way with more circumspection and diligence than I in
+my search for a passage between those two platforms.
+
+As I glanced cautiously up and down I saw a door standing open at
+some little distance. Around that door all my hopes were immediately
+centred. It might lead directly to the custom-house; it might be the
+entrance to the barracks of the guards; it might be--I knew not what;
+but it might afford a passage to the other platform.
+
+I walked quickly to the door, glanced in, saw no one and entered. The
+room was a baggage-room, and at that moment unoccupied. It instantly
+occurred to me that a baggage-room _ought_ to open on both platforms.
+I felt as though I could have shouted "Eureka!" and I am confident
+that the joy of Archimedes as he rushed through the streets of
+Syracuse was no greater than mine as I felt that I had so unexpectedly
+discovered the passage I was seeking. Passing through this room, I
+found myself in a second, like the former unoccupied. It had occurred
+to me that all the doors might be closed, and the thought had
+considerably abated my rejoicing; but no! I saw a door which stood
+invitingly open.
+
+No guards were stationed on the platform; so I stepped out, and before
+me stood the train for Aix, into which my fellow-passengers were
+entering, some of them still holding their passports in their hands.
+Taking my seat in one of the carriages, in a few moments the train
+started and I was on my way to Aix. The relief was unspeakably great.
+An instant before it seemed as if nothing short of a miracle
+could save me from a French guard-house, and now, by the simplest
+combination of circumstances, in which a restaurant and baggage-room
+bore an important part, I had passed unchallenged. I remember that I
+enjoyed the scenery and views along the route from Culoz to Aix more
+than while passing from Belgarde to Culoz.
+
+My friends were found expecting me upon my arrival, and joined in
+congratulating me upon my happy escape. A night and day were passed
+very pleasantly, and then arose the question of return.
+
+I suggested telegraphing to Geneva for my passport, but that
+was vetoed, and it was decided that I should return as I had
+come--passportless. I confess that the attempt seemed somewhat
+hazardous. If it was dangerous to attempt an entrance into France,
+how much more so to attempt an exit, especially when the custom-house
+force had been doubled with the sole object that all possibility of
+escape might be precluded, and that any one passing Culoz might be
+stopped at Belgarde! It was urged, however, that our seats had been
+engaged in the diligence for Friday morning, and to send for the
+passport would consume considerable time--would certainly delay the
+party until Saturday, and perhaps until Monday, which delay would
+seriously affect all their plans, time being so limited and so many
+places remaining to be visited. I had passed once, why not again?
+Influenced by these facts, and thinking what a triumph it would be
+once more to baffle French vigilance, I determined to attempt the
+return. There was a train leaving Aix about eight P.M., reaching
+Geneva at eleven: it was decided that I should take this train. I had
+arranged a vague plan of action, although I expected to depend rather
+upon the suggestion of the moment.
+
+It was quite dark when we reached Culoz. As the train arrived at the
+platform, and we were obliged again to change cars, I thought of the
+friendly restaurant; but no! the restaurant was closed, and moreover
+a company of gendarmes was present to see that every one entered the
+door leading to the custom-house. There was no room for hesitation or
+delay. I entered under protest, but still I entered.
+
+In a moment I perceived the desperate situation. The room had two
+doors--one opening upon the platform from which we had just come, and
+now guarded by an officer; the other leading to the opposite platform,
+and there stood the custom-house officer receiving and inspecting the
+passports. It was indeed Scylla and Charybdis. If I attempted to pass
+the officer without a passport, I was undone; if I remained until all
+the other passengers had passed out, I was undone. For an instant I
+felt as if I had better give up the unequal contest. The forces of the
+enemy were too many for me. I saw that I had been captured: why fight
+against Fate? A moment's reflection, however, restored my courage. It
+was evident that one thing alone remained to be done: that was to find
+my way out of the door by which I had just entered, as speedily as
+possible. But there stood the guard.
+
+The train by which we had come was still before the platform: an idea
+suggested itself. Acting as if I had left some article in the train, I
+stepped hurriedly up to the guard, who, catching my meaning, made way
+for me without a word. Once upon the platform, I resolved never again
+to enter that door except as a prisoner. The guard followed me with
+his eyes for a moment, and then, seeing me open one of the carriage
+doors, turned back to his post. As soon as I perceived that I was
+no longer watched I glided off in the opposite direction under the
+shadows of the platform. I was looking for a certain door which I
+remembered well as a friend in need. I knew not in which direction it
+lay, nor could I have recognized it if shut; but hardly had I gone ten
+steps when the same door stood open before me. It was the act of an
+instant to spring through it, out of sight of the guard. Why this door
+and baggage-room should have been left thus open and unguarded when
+such evident and scrutinizing care was taken in every other quarter, I
+have to this day been unable to understand. But for that fact I should
+have found it utterly impossible to pass that custom-house going or
+coming.
+
+Once in the baggage-room, the way was familiar, and, passing into the
+second room, I found the door open as on the day previous, and in
+a moment stood undiscovered upon the platform. Entering the waiting
+train, I was soon on the way to Belgarde.
+
+My only thought during the ride was, What shall I do when we arrive at
+Belgarde? I expected to see the doors thrown open as before, and hear
+again the polite invitation to enter the custom-house. Was it not
+certain detection to refuse? was it not equally dangerous to obey? The
+officer at Belgarde had seen me the day before, and warned me not to
+go to Culoz. What reception would he give me when he saw me attempting
+to return? Or it might be he would not remember me, and then in
+the darkness and confusion I should surely be taken for an escaping
+Communist. That I had passed Culoz was no comfort when I remembered
+that this would only aggravate my guilt in their eyes.
+
+The case did indeed seem desperate. Willingly would I have jumped out
+and walked the entire distance to Geneva, if I might only thus
+escape that terrible custom-house, which every moment loomed up more
+terrifically. At length this troubled hour was passed: we had arrived
+at Belgarde, and the moment for action had come. I had determined to
+avoid the custom-house at all hazards. When the doors were thrown
+open I expected to alight, but not to enter. My plan was to find some
+sheltering door, or even corner, where I could remain until the others
+had presented their passports and were beginning to return, then join
+them and take my seat as before. The depot at Belgarde was brilliantly
+lighted, and the gendarmes pacing to and fro in the gaslight seemed
+not only to have increased in numbers, but to have acquired an
+additional ferocity since the day previous.
+
+As I looked but my spirit sank within me. I could only brace myself
+for the coming crisis. For several moments nothing was said or done.
+The doors remained shut, and no one seemed at all concerned about
+our presence. Each minute appeared an hour as I sat there awaiting
+my fate. The suspense was becoming too great: I felt that my stock of
+self-possession was entirely deserting me. At length I began to hope
+that they were satisfied with the examination at Culoz, and would
+allow us to pass unchallenged. Just at that moment, as hope was
+dawning into certainty, the door opened and the custom-house officer
+entered with a polite bow, while a body of gendarmes drew up behind
+him upon the platform. He uttered two French words, and I needed no
+interpreter to tell me that they were "Passports, gentlemen!"
+
+I shuddered as I saw him standing so near, within reach of my arm.
+There were six persons besides myself in the carriage, and I was
+occupying a seat beside the door farthest from the platform. Any one
+who has seen a European railway-carriage will understand me when I say
+that I sat next to the right-hand door, while he had entered by the
+left. One by one the passports were handed up to him until he held six
+in his hand.
+
+With the rest of the passengers I had taken out my pocket-book and
+searched as if for my passport, but had handed none to him, and now I
+sat awaiting developments. I saw that he would read the six passports,
+and then turn to me for the seventh.
+
+The desperate thought flashed upon me of opening the door and escaping
+into the darkness. The carriage itself was so dimly lighted that I
+could barely see the face of my opposite neighbor, and I therefore
+hoped to be able to slip out without any one perceiving it. The
+attempt was desperate, but so was the situation. The officer was
+buried in the passports, holding them near his face to catch the dim
+light. The door was fastened upon the outside, and so, watching him,
+I leaned far out of the window until I was able to reach the catch
+and unfasten the door. A slight push, and it swung noiselessly open. I
+glanced at the officer: he was intently reading the _last_ passport. I
+had placed one foot upon the outside step, and was about to glide out
+into the darkness, when he laid the paper down and looked directly at
+me.
+
+It would have been madness to attempt an escape with his eyes upon me;
+so, assuming as nonchalant a look as my present feelings would allow,
+I answered his inquiring glance with one of confident assurance.
+
+He saw my nonchalant expression. He saw the open pocket-book in my
+hand. He had _not_ counted the number of passports. All the passengers
+were settling themselves to sleep. It must be all right; so, with
+a polite "Bon soir, messieurs!" he bowed and left the carriage. My
+sensation of relief may be better imagined than described. Hardly had
+he left our carriage when we heard the sound of voices and hurrying
+feet upon the platform, and looking out saw some unfortunate
+individual carried off under guard. I trembled as I thought how
+narrowly I had escaped his fate. In a few moments, however, we were
+safely on our way to Geneva, and as we sped on into the darkness,
+while congratulating myself upon my fortunate escape, I firmly
+resolved to be better prepared for the emergency the next time I
+should hear those memorable words, "Passports, gentlemen!"
+
+A.H.
+
+
+
+
+OUR MONTHLY GOSSIP.
+
+THE CORNWALLIS FAMILY.
+
+
+The death was lately announced of two of the last survivors--only
+one of the name is now left--of a family whose chief played a very
+conspicuous, and for himself unfortunate, part in this country a
+century ago--the marquis Cornwallis. His only son, who married a
+daughter of the celebrated match-making duchess of Gordon, left no
+male issue, but five daughters. Two of them, the countess of St.
+Germans--wife of the earl who accompanied the prince of Wales on his
+visit here--and Lady Braybrook, died some years ago; and recently
+Lady Mary Ross, whose husband edited the correspondence of the first
+marquis, and Lady Louisa, who never married, have also gone to their
+graves.
+
+The family of Cornwallis is very ancient, and can point to many
+distinguished members. Its ancestral seat is at Brome, in Suffolk.
+This is a fine old mansion, and the hall, which is very lofty and open
+to the roof, is an excellent specimen of the work of other days. The
+chapel contains capital oak carving. In the village church there are
+monuments worth notice of the family.
+
+Following the fate of so many other places, Brome passed after the
+death of the second marquis to a _novus homo_, one Matthias Kerrison,
+who, having begun life as a carpenter, contrived in various ways to
+acquire a colossal fortune. His son rose to distinction in the army,
+obtained a seat in Parliament, which he held for thirty years, and was
+created a baronet.
+
+He left at his death a son and three daughters. The former, long
+married, is childless. The sisters are respectively the wives of Earl
+Stanhope, the well-known historian; Lord Henniker, a wealthy Suffolk
+proprietor; and Lord Bateman. It is understood that under the late
+baronet's will the son of the last will, in the event of the present
+baronet dying childless, succeed to the property. It will thus be
+observed that Brome, after having been for four centuries in one
+family, is destined to change hands repeatedly in a few years.
+
+When the second Marquis Cornwallis died sonless, the marquisate became
+extinct, but the earldom passed to his first cousin. This nobleman,
+by no means an able or admirable person, married twice. By his first
+marriage he had a daughter, who married Charles Wykeham-Martin, Esq.,
+M.P., whose father, by a concatenation of chances, became the owner
+of Leeds Castle, near Maidstone, in Kent--a splendid moated baronial
+pile, dating from the thirteenth century, but added to and improved
+in admirable taste. Leeds was formerly the property of the Fairfax
+family, whose chief, the present lord, resides near Washington. It
+came to them from the once famous family of Colepepper.
+
+Earl Cornwallis married a second time late in life, and had an only
+daughter, Lady Julia. From that time his one idea seemed to be to
+accumulate for this child, and accordingly at his death she was
+the greatest heiress in England, her long minority serving to add
+immensely to her father's hoards. Of course, when the time approached
+for her entering society under the chaperonage of her cousins, the
+marquis's daughters, speculation was very rife in the London world as
+to whom she would marry, and many a mamma of high degree cast sheep's
+eyes at the heiress, and thought how charmingly her accumulations
+would serve to clear the encumbrances on certain acres. But they were
+not kept long in suspense. One night during the London season, when
+the ladies Cornwallis gave a grand ball, a damper was cast over the
+proceedings, so far at least as aspirants to the heiress's money-bags
+were concerned, by the announcement of her engagement. Said a lady to
+a gentleman in the course of that evening, "Most extraordinary! There
+seem to be no men in the room to-night." "Why, of course not," was the
+rejoinder, "after this fatal news." Lady Julia's choice fell upon a
+young officer in the Guards, Viscount Holmesdale, eldest son of Earl
+Amherst. Lord Holmesdale was unexceptionable in point of position,
+but his pecuniary position was such as to make one hundred and fifty
+thousand dollars a year a very agreeable addition to his income. It
+may, however, be a satisfaction to those less richly endowed with this
+world's goods than Lady Holmesdale to reflect that being an heiress
+generally proves rather the reverse of a passport to matrimonial
+bliss; and by all accounts she is no exception to the usual fate in
+this respect. We can't have everything in this world.
+
+Lady Holmesdale's property was tied up by her old father (whose whole
+thoughts were given to this end, and who was in the habit of carrying
+his will on his person) to such a degree that in the event of her
+death her husband can only derive a very slight benefit from his
+wife's property beyond the insurances which may have been effected
+on her life. She is childless, and has very precarious health. Her
+principal seat is Linton Park, near Maidstone, Kent, in which county
+she is the largest landowner. In the event of her dying without issue,
+her estates pass to the son of Major Fiennes Cornwallis, who was
+second son of the late Mr. Wykeham-Martin by Lady Holmesdale's elder
+half-sister.
+
+A cousin of Lady Holmesdale, Miss Cornwallis, the last representative
+of a third branch, died some years ago. This lady, who possessed rare
+literary and social acquirements, bequeathed her property to Major
+Wykeham-Martin, who thereupon changed his name to Cornwallis. The
+major, a gallant officer, one of those of whom Tennyson says,
+
+ Into the jaws of death
+ Rode the six hundred,
+
+only survived the Balaklava charge to die a few years later through
+an accident in the hunting-field. "A fine, modest young officer," was
+Thackeray's verdict about him, when, after dinner at "Tom Phinn's," a
+noted bachelor barrister of eminence whose little dinners were not
+the least agreeable in London, the story of that famous ride had been
+coaxed out of the young _militaire_, who, if left to himself, would
+never have let you have a notion that he had seen such splendid
+service. The only Cornwallis now left is Lady Elizabeth, granddaughter
+of the first marquis.
+
+
+
+
+NOVELTIES IN ETHNOLOGY.
+
+
+Two savants of high reputation have lately undertaken to seek out the
+origin of that German race which has just put itself at the head of
+military Europe. One is Wilhelm Obermueller, a German ethnologist,
+member of the Vienna Geographical Society, whose startling theory
+nevertheless is that the Germans are the direct descendants of Cain!
+The other scholar, M. Quatrefages, a man of still greater reputation,
+devotes himself to a proposition almost as extraordinary--namely, that
+the Prussian pedigree is Finn and Slav, with only a small pinch of
+Teuton, and hence, in an ethnographical view, is anti-German!
+
+That M. Quatrefages should maintain such a postulate, his patriotism
+if not his scientific reputation might lead us to expect; but that
+Obermueller should be so eager to trace German origin back to the first
+murderer is rather more suprising. Obermueller's work embraces in
+its general scope the origin of all European nations, but the most
+striking part is that relating to Germany. He holds that, from
+the remotest era, the Celto-Aryan race, starting from the plain
+of Tartary, the probable cradle of mankind, split into two great
+branches--one the Oriental Aryans, and the other the Western Aryans,
+or Celts. The former--who, as he proceeds to show, were no other than
+the descendants of Cain--betook themselves to China, which land they
+found inhabited by the Mongolians, another great primordial race; and
+we are told that the Mongolians are indicated when mention is made in
+Scripture of Cain's marriage in the land of Nod. The intermixture of
+Cainists and Mongolians produced the Turks, while the pure Cainist
+tribes formed the German people, under the name of Swabians (Chinese,
+_Siampi_), Goths (_Yeuten_ in Chinese) and Ases (_Sachsons_). Such, in
+brief, is the curious theory of Obermueller.
+
+The question next arises, How is it that we find the Germans
+transplanted from the Hoang-Ho to the Rhine? We are told that, being
+driven out of China by the Turks, they poured into the European
+countries which the Celts or Western Aryans had already occupied.
+These latter had in the mean time gone out from the Asiatic cradle
+of the race, and following the course of the Indus to Hindostan and
+Persia, had, under the name of Chaldeans, overrun Armenia, Syria,
+Arabia, Egypt and North Africa, which latter they found inhabited by
+certain negro races, whereas in Egypt they discovered red-skins or
+Atlantides; which latter, by the way, form also our own aborigines.
+The intermixture of the Celts with these primitive races just named
+produced the Jews and Semitic people. At the time of the Celtic
+invasion Western Europe and Northern Africa were occupied by the race
+of the Atlantides, while the Mongolians, including also the Lapps,
+Finns and Huns, peopled the north of Europe and of Asia. The Celts
+pushed in between these two races, and only very much later the German
+people, driven out of China by the Turks, as we have said, arrived in
+Europe.
+
+When, therefore, did these Cainist invasions of Germany take place?
+Obermueller says that the date must have been toward the epoch of
+the Roman conquests. Gallia was then inhabited in the south by the
+primitive Atlantid race of Ligurians and by the Greek colony of
+Massilia; in the centre by the Gaelags (Celts) or Gauls, who, pouring
+northward from Spain, had conquered it fifteen hundred years before
+the Christian era; and in the north by the Belgic Cimbrians, who had
+come from Germany, and who were designated under the name of Germans
+(_Ghermann_) or border-men, and who, though called _Germani_ by Caesar
+and Tacitus, were yet not of the Cainist stock, but Celts. However,
+these Germans, whom the Romans encountered to their cost on the Rhine
+and Danube, were of the genuine Oriental Cainist stock, and these,
+after centuries of fierce struggle, they failed to conquer, though the
+Celts of Britain, Gaul and Spain, as well as all the old empires of
+the East, had fallen an easy prey to their victorious eagles.
+
+It only remains to add that this invasion of Germany by Cain's progeny
+was accomplished in three streams. The Ases (Sachsons) directed
+themselves to the Elbe and Danube, and thence to the north; the Suevi,
+or Swabians, chose the centre and south of Germany; while the Goths
+did not rest till they had overrun Italy, Southern France and Spain.
+But each of these three main streams was composed of many tribes,
+whom the old writers catalogue without system, mixing both Celtic and
+Teutonic tribes under the general name of Germans; and it is only in
+modern days that the careless enumeration of the classic writers has
+been rejected, and a more scientific method substituted. It will
+be seen, in fine, that in the main Obermueller does not differ from
+accepted theories in German ethnology, which have long carefully
+dissevered the Celts from the Teutons, and assigned to each tribe with
+approximate accuracy its earliest fixed abode in Europe. It is the
+tracing back of the German race proper to the first-born of Adam,
+according to scriptural genealogy, which makes this theory curious and
+amusing.
+
+To the work of M. Quatrefages we have only space to devote a
+paragraph. Originally contributed to the _Revue des Deux Mondes_,
+it bears the marks in its inferences, if not in its facts, of being
+composed for an audience of sympathizing countrymen, rather than for
+the world of science at large. M. Quatrefages says that the first
+dwellers in Prussia were Finns, who founded the stock, and were in
+turn overpowered by the Slavs, who imposed their language and customs
+on the whole of the Baltic region. The consequent mixture of Finns and
+Slavs created a population wholly un-German; and what dash of genuine
+Germanism Prussia now has was subsequently acquired in the persons of
+sundry traders from Bremen, followed by a class of roving nobility,
+who entered the half-civilized country with their retainers in quest
+of spoils. Besides these elements, Prussia, like England and America,
+received in modern times an influx of French Huguenots; which M.
+Quatrefages naturally considers a piece of great good fortune for
+Prussia. Briefly, then, the French savant regards Prussia as German
+only in her nobility and upper-middle classes, while the substratum
+of population is a composition of Slav and Finn, and hence thoroughly
+anti-German. As, according to the old saying, if you scratch a Russian
+you will find a Tartar beneath, so, according to M. Ouatrefages,
+we may suppose that scraping a Prussian would disclose a Finn. The
+political inferences which he draws are very fanciful. He traces
+shadowy analogies between the tactics of Von Moltke's veterans and
+the warlike customs of the ancient Slavs, and suggests that the basic
+origin of the Prussian population may lead it to cultivate a Russian
+alliance rather than an Austrian, forgetting, apparently, that by
+his own admission the ruling-classes of Prussia are German in origin,
+ideas and sympathies.
+
+L.S.
+
+
+
+
+THE STEAM-WHISTLE.
+
+
+While Mr. Ruskin was lately bewailing the bell-ringing propensity of
+mankind, the English Parliament and several American legislatures,
+city or State, were assaulting the greater nuisance of the
+steam-whistle, and trying to substitute bell-ringing for it. Mr.
+Ruskin's particular grievance was, that his own nerves were _crispe_
+by the incessant ding-dong of the church-bells of Florence summoning
+the devout to prayer, but he generalized his wrath. Possibly, he
+would have been less sensitive and fastidious regarding the musical
+carillons of the Italian city were he wont to dwell within ear-shot of
+an American factory or railroad-station. Not that Mr. Ruskin fails to
+appreciate--or, rather, to depreciate--railways in their connection
+with Italian landscapes; for, besides his series of complaints
+regarding the Florence bells, he denounces the railway from Rome to
+Naples, and the railway-tunnels under Monts Cenis and St. Gothard, and
+the railway-bridge leading into Venice, as enemies of the beautiful
+and picturesque in Nature. But it is the locomotive, independent of
+the shriek, that is his abomination; whereas a man less sensitive to
+sights, and (if possible) more sensitive to sounds, might pardon the
+cutting up of the landscape were his ear-drum spared from splitting.
+
+Emerson asks, "What is so odious as noise?" But a _Saturday Reviewer_
+once devoted an elaborate essay to the eulogy of unmitigated noise, or
+rather to the keen enjoyment of it by children. People with enviable
+nerves and unenviable tastes often enjoy sounds in the ratio of their
+lack of melody--say, such everyday thoroughfare music as the slap and
+bang of coach-wheels on the cobble-stones; the creaking of street-cars
+round a sharp curve, like Milton's infernal doors "grating harsh
+thunder;" the squeaking falsettos of the cries by old-clothes' men,
+itinerant glaziers, fishmongers, fruiterers, tinkers and what not; the
+yells of rival coachmen at the railway-stations, giving one an idea
+of Bedlam; the street-fiddlers and violinists with horribly untuned
+instruments; the Italian open-air singers hoarsely shouting,
+"Shoo Fly" or "Viva Garibaldi! viva l'Italia!" the gongs beaten on
+steamboats and by hotel-runners at stations on the arrival of trains;
+the unearthly squeals and shrieks of new "musical instruments" sold
+cheap by street-peddlers; the horrible noise-producers which boys
+invent for the torture of nervous people--such, for example, as this
+present season's, which is happily styled "the devil's fiddle," or
+"the chicken-box," whose simplest form is an emptied tomato-can, with
+a string passed through the end and pulled with the rosined fingers.
+Now, that a man may be pleased with a rattle, even if it be only a
+car-rattle, is conceivable, but it is hard to understand how he can
+retain a relish for the squeal of a locomotive-whistle. The practice
+of summoning workmen to factories by this shrill monitor, of using
+it to announce the dinner-hour, the hour of resuming work after the
+nooning, and the hour of quitting work for the night, ought to be
+abolished everywhere. There is not the faintest excuse for it, because
+clocks and bells will do the same work exactly as well. On the other
+hand, the whistle causes perpetual irritation to the nervous, feeble
+and sick, and frequent cases of horses running away with fright at the
+sudden shriek, smashing property or destroying life.
+
+Let us give moral aid and comfort to the campaign, Cisatlantic and
+Transatlantic, against the steam-whistle. In the local councils of
+Philadelphia, Camden and other cities it has been well opened in our
+country; in the House of Commons has been introduced a bill providing
+that "no person shall use or employ in any manufactory or any other
+place any steam-whistle or steam-trumpet for the purpose of summoning
+or dismissing workmen or persons employed, without the sanction of the
+sanitary authorities." They call this whistle, by the way, it
+would seem, the "American devil," for the Manchester _Examiner_
+congratulates its readers that the "American devil" has been taken by
+the throat, and ere long his yells will be heard no more.
+
+John Leech, it is said, was actually driven from house to house in
+a vain effort to escape the nuisance of organ-grinders, whom he has
+immortalized in Punch by many exquisite sketches, showing that they
+know "the vally of peace and quietness." Some of his friends declare
+that this nuisance so worked on his nerves that he may be said to
+have died of organ-grinders. Holmes has immortalized the same guild of
+wandering minstrels as a sort of "crusaders sent from infernal clime
+to dock the ears of melody and break the legs of time." And yet the
+hand-organ, so often the subject of municipal legislation, is dulcet
+music compared with the steam-whistle, even when the latter instrument
+takes its most ambitiously artistic form of the "Calliope."
+
+
+
+
+SIAMESE NEWS.
+
+
+Letters recently received from Bangkok, Siam, bearing date July 25,
+1872, give the following interesting items.
+
+His Majesty has just appointed an English tutor to his royal brothers,
+associating with them some of the sons of the higher nobles to the
+number of twenty. This certainly indicates progress in liberal and
+enlarged views in a land where hitherto no noble, however exalted his
+rank or worthy his character, was considered a fit associate for the
+princes of the royal family, who have always been trained to hold
+themselves entirely aloof from those about them. The young king now on
+the throne has changed all this, and says he wishes not only that his
+brothers shall have the advantage of studying with others of their own
+age, but that they should thus learn to know their people better, and
+by mingling with them freely in their studies and sports acquire more
+liberal views of men and things than their ancestors had. He insists
+that his young brothers and their classmates shall stand on precisely
+the same footing, and each be treated by the teacher according to his
+merits. The king intends to appoint yet other teachers in his family
+for both boys and girls; and though perhaps the time may not yet have
+come, it is certainly not far distant, when Siam will sustain high
+schools and colleges, both literary and scientific.
+
+The religious aspect of the nation is somewhat less promising. Though
+the royal edict gives protection to all religions, and permits every
+man to choose for himself in matters of conscience, it can scarcely be
+said that the two kings take any real interest in Christianity. They
+think less of Booddhism, its mystic creed and imposing ceremonies, and
+have made very many changes in the form of worship; but, apparently,
+they are no more Christians than were their respective fathers, the
+late first and second kings. They treat Christianity with outward
+respect, because they esteem it decorous to do so; and the same is
+true of the regent and prime minister; but none of them even profess
+any real regard for the worship of the true God. The concessions made
+thus far indicate progress in civilization, not in piety; and while
+the kings and their subjects are assuredly loosing their grasp on
+Booddhism, they are not reaching out to lay hold on Christianity. It
+seems rather as if the whole nation were swaying off into the frigid
+regions of skepticism, and, influenced by the example of many unworthy
+representatives of Christian countries, they live only for the
+luxuries and laxities of the present life. Priestly robes are much
+less frequently seen on the river and in the streets than formerly;
+and many of the clergy no longer reside at the temples, but with their
+families in their own houses; thus relinquishing even the pretence of
+celibacy, which has hitherto been one of the very strongest points
+of Booddhism, giving it an appearance of sanctity and a hold on
+the affections of the people that nothing else can do. With this
+rapidly-increasing renunciation of priestly celibacy and the
+daily-diminishing ranks of the clergy, Booddhism, the mammoth religion
+of the world, seems tottering to ruin, and even the present generation
+may see its utter demolition, at least so far as Siam is concerned.
+Services at the temples are now held in imitation of English morning
+and evening prayers; a moral essay is read, at which the body-guards
+of the kings and the government officers are generally required to
+be present, and the remainder of the day they are excused from duty,
+instead of being kept, as formerly, Sundays and week-days, in almost
+perpetual attendance on His Majesty.
+
+The supreme king is now in his twentieth year, and will take the
+reins of government this year. He is tall and slight in person,
+gentlemanlike in manners, perfectly well bred, and always courteous to
+strangers, though even more modest and unassuming than was his father,
+the priest-king, whose praises are still fresh in every heart. His
+Majesty speaks English quite creditably, wears the English dress most
+of the time, and keeps himself well informed as to matters and things
+generally. His reign, thus far, promises well for himself and his
+kingdom.
+
+The second king, still called King _George Washington_, is now about
+thirty, and a most noble specimen of the courtly Oriental gentleman.
+His tall, compact figure is admirably developed both for strength and
+beauty, his face is full and pleasing, and his head finely formed.
+He is affable in manner, converses readily in English, and is fond
+of Europeans and their customs. He keeps his father's palace and
+steamboats in excellent condition, and his body-guard under thorough
+drill. On a recent visit of the American steamer Moreton he came out
+on the battlements of his palace, and after watching her progress for
+some time, he signaled her to lay to, which she did just opposite his
+palace. He immediately went aboard, and remained for an hour or so,
+chatting merrily with both ladies and gentlemen, while the steamer
+puffed up the river a few miles, and then returned for His Majesty to
+disembark at his own palace. King George occasionally wears the _full_
+English dress, either civil or military, but generally only the
+hat, coat, linen and shoes, with the Siamese _pah-nung_ in lieu of
+pantaloons. The regent, the minister of foreign affairs and many of
+the princes and nobles have adopted this mongrel costume, and, to a
+greater or less extent, our language, manner of living and forms
+of etiquette. Visitors to the kings now sit on chairs, instead of
+crouching on cushions before the throne, as formerly; while native
+princes and ministers of state no longer prostrate themselves with
+their faces in the dust in the royal presence, but stand at the foot
+of the throne while holding an audience with their Majesties, each
+being allowed full opportunity to state his case or present any
+petition he may desire. The sovereigns are no longer unknown,
+mysterious personages, whose features their people have never been
+permitted to look upon; but they may be seen any fine day taking their
+drives in their own coaches or phaetons, and lifting their hats to
+passing friends. Nor do they on ordinary occasions deem it necessary
+to be surrounded by armed soldiers for protection, but go where they
+list, with only their liveried coachmen and footmen, and perhaps a
+single companion or secretary inside.
+
+The city itself has correspondingly improved. Within the walls have
+just been completed two new streets, meeting at right angles near
+the mayor's office, where is a public park of circular form very
+handsomely laid out. The streets radiating from this centre are broad,
+and lined with new brick houses of two stories and tiled roofs. These
+are mostly private dwellings, uniformly built; and with their broad
+sidewalks and shade trees of luxuriant tropical growth present a
+very picturesque appearance. One wide street, commencing at the royal
+palace, extends six or seven miles through the city, reaching
+the river near a little village called Pak-lat-bon. This is the
+fashionable _drive_, where may be seen not only their Majesties, the
+regent, the prime minister and other high dignitaries lounging in
+stately equipages drawn by two or four prancing steeds, but many
+private citizens of different nations in their light pony-carriages,
+palanquins, etc., instead of the invariable barges and _sampans_ of a
+few years ago, when the river was the "Broadway" of the city and the
+canals its cross-streets. Steamers of various dimensions now
+busily ply the river: the kings own several, which they use for
+pleasure-boats; eight or ten are fitted up as war-steamers, and others
+are packets to Singapore, China and elsewhere, carrying passengers and
+merchandise.
+
+The regent, _Pra-Nai-Wai,_ is a sedate, dignified, courteous gentleman
+of sixty-five, who walks erect with firm step and manly form, and with
+mental and physical powers still unimpaired. His half-brother, who
+filled the post of minister of foreign affairs at the commencement
+of the present reign, died blind some little time back, after twice
+paying ten thousand dollars to a Dutch oculist from Batavia to operate
+on his eyes for cataract. His successor, the present minister, is one
+of the finest specimens of a Siamese gentleman in the country. He
+was first a provincial governor; then went on a special embassy to
+England; last year attended the supreme king on his visit to Singapore
+and Batavia; and recently accompanied him again to India, whence the
+royal party have but just returned. The regal convoy consisted of five
+or six war-steamers, and His Majesty, besides his own officers, was
+escorted also by the English consul at Bangkok, the harbor-master and
+several European officers in the Siamese service. The royal tourist
+visited Rangoon, Calcutta, Madras, Bombay, Allahabad and Ceylon;
+and entered with great gusto into the spirit of his travels, seeing
+everything, asking questions and taking notes as he passed from point
+to point. The regent, in conjunction with the second king, held the
+reins of government during the absence of the first king; and in truth
+the regent has for the most part governed the country since the death
+of the late king, in 1868, the young heir being then but fifteen years
+of age. The regent is decidedly a favorite with both kings and people,
+and his rule has been popular and prosperous.
+
+
+
+
+MADISON AS A TEMPERANCE MAN.
+
+
+Many years ago, when the temperance movement began in Virginia,
+ex-President Madison lent the weight of his influence to the
+cause. Case-bottles and decanters disappeared from the sideboard at
+Montpelier--wine was no longer dispensed to the many visitors at that
+hospitable mansion. Nor was this all. Harvest began, but the customary
+barrel of whisky was not purchased, and the song of the scythemen in
+the wheatfield languished. In lieu of whisky, there was a beverage
+most innocuous, unstimulating and unpalatable to the army of dusky
+laborers.
+
+The following morning, Mr. Madison called in his head-man to make the
+usual inquiry, "Nelson, how comes on the crop?"
+
+"Po'ly, Mars' Jeems--monsus po'ly."
+
+"Why, what's the matter?"
+
+"Things is seyus."
+
+"What do you mean by serious?"
+
+"We gwine los' dat crap."
+
+"Lose the crop! Why should we lose it?"
+
+"'Cause dat ar crap ar heap too big a crap to be gethered 'thout
+whisky. 'Lasses-and-water nuver gethered no crap sence de woil' war'
+made, ner 'taint gwine to."
+
+Mr. Madison succumbed: the whisky was procured, the "crap" was
+"gethered," case-bottles and decanters reappeared, and the ancient
+order was restored at Montpelier, never again to be disturbed.
+
+
+
+
+NOTES.
+
+
+Amidst the recent hurly-burly of politics in France, involving the
+fate of the Thiers government, if not of the republic itself, a minor
+grievance of the artists has probably been little noticed by the
+general public. Yet a grievance it was, and one which caused men of
+taste and sentiment to cry out loudly. The threatened act of vandalism
+against which they protested was a proposal to fell part of the Forest
+of Fontainebleau. The castle and forest have long belonged to the
+state, but why the woods should now be cut down by the government is
+not clear. The motive is probably to turn the fine timber into
+cash, though a Paris wit, in pretended despair of other explanation,
+jokingly alleged, at the time of Prince Napoleon's late expulsion from
+France, that the government was afraid the prince, taking refuge in
+its dense recesses, might there conceal himself (_a la_ Charles II.,
+we presume) in one of its venerable oaks. At any rate, it was arranged
+to level a part of the timber, and on hearing of this threatened
+mutilation of a favorite resort the French artists rallied to beg M.
+Thiers, like the character in General Morris's ballad, to "spare those
+trees." And well may they petition, for the forest contains nearly
+thirty-five thousand acres, abounding in beautiful and picturesque
+scenery. It can boast finer trees than any other French forest, while
+its meadows, lawns and cliffs furnish specimens of almost every plant
+and flower to be found in France. Now, when we add that its views are
+exceedingly varied, its rocks, ravines, plateaus and thickets
+each offering some entirely different and admirable study to the
+landscape-painters who frequent it in great numbers during the spring
+and autumn months (for it is only fourteen or fifteen leagues out of
+Paris, on the high road to Lyons), we have shown reason enough for the
+consentaneous action on the part of the men and women of the brush and
+pencil.
+
+The traveled reader will hardly need to be told that good judges
+consider the forest and castle to compose the finest domain in France.
+But there are also numberless historic reminiscences intertwined with
+Fontainebleau. And, by the way, it was originally known as the
+Foret de Bierre, until some thirsty huntsmen, who found its spring
+deliciously refreshing, rebaptized it as Fontaine Belle Eau. Such, at
+least, is the old story. The first founding of a royal residence there
+dates at least as far back as the twelfth century, and possibly much
+farther, while the present chateau was begun by Francis I. in the
+sixteenth. So many famous historic events, indeed, have taken place
+within the precincts of the forest that the committee of "Protection
+Artistique" is pardonable in claiming that "Fontainebleau Forest ought
+to be ranked with those national historic monuments which must at all
+hazards be preserved for the admiration of artists and tourists," as
+well as of patriotic Frenchmen. What illustrations shall we select
+from among the events connected with it, about which a thousand
+volumes of history, poetry, art, science and romance have been
+composed? At Fontainebleau, Charles V. was royally feasted by Francis;
+there the Edict of Nantes was revoked; there Conde died; there the
+decree of divorce between Napoleon and Josephine was pronounced; and
+there the emperor afterward signed his own abdication. It is true
+that nobody proposes to demolish the castle, and that is the historic
+centre; but the petitioners claim that it is difficult and dangerous
+to attempt to divide the domain into historic and non-historic,
+artistic and non-artistic parts, with a view to its mutilation. There
+is ground for hoping that a favorable response will be given to the
+eloquent appeal of the artists and amateurs.
+
+The vanity of Victor Hugo, though always "Olympian," perhaps never
+mounted to a sublimer height than in the reply he sent to M. Catulle
+Mendes on receiving from him the news of Gautier's death. It contained
+but half a dozen lines, yet found space to declare, "Of the men of
+1830, _I alone am left_. It is now my turn." The profound egotism of
+"_il ne reste plus que moi_" could not escape being vigorously lashed
+by V. Hugo's old comrades of the quill, dating back with him to 1830,
+and now so loftily ignored. "See, even in his epistles of condolence,"
+they cry, "the omnipresent _moi_ of Hugo must appear, to overshadow
+everything else!" One indignant writer declares the poet to be a mere
+walking personal pronoun. Another humorously pities those still extant
+contemporaries of 1830 who, after having for forty years dedicated
+their songs and romances and dramas to Hugo, now learn from the
+selfsame maw which has greedily gulped their praises that they
+themselves do not exist, never did exist. One man of genius
+slyly writes: "Some of us veterans will find ourselves
+embarrassed--Michelet, G. Sand, Janin, Sandeau _et un pen moi_. Is it
+possible that we died a long time ago, one after the other, without
+knowing it? Was it a delusion on our part to fancy ourselves existing,
+or was our existence only a bad dream?" But to Victor Hugo even these
+complaints will perhaps seem to smoke like fresh incense on the altar
+of self-adulation which this great genius keeps ever lighted.
+
+The reader may remember the story of that non-committal editor who
+during the late canvass, desiring to propitiate all his subscribers of
+both parties, hoisted the ticket of "Gr---- and ----n" at the top
+of his column, thus giving those who took the paper their choice of
+interpretations between "Grant and Wilson" and "Greeley and Brown."
+A story turning on the same style of point (and probably quite as
+apocryphal, though the author labels it "_historique_") is told of an
+army officers' mess in France. A brother-soldier from a neighboring
+detachment having come in, and a _champenoise_ having been uncorked in
+his honor, "Gentlemen," said the guest, raising his glass, "I am about
+to propose a toast at once patriotic and political." A chorus of hasty
+ejaculations and of murmurs at once greeted him. "Yes, gentlemen,"
+coolly proceeded the orator, "I drink to a thing which--an object
+that--Bah! I will out with it at once. It begins with an _R_ and ends
+with an _e_."
+
+"Capital!" whispers a young lieutenant of Bordeaux promotion. "He
+proposes the _Republique_, without offending the old fogies by saying
+the word."
+
+"Nonsense! He means the _Radicale_," replies the other, an old captain
+from Cassel.
+
+"Upon my word," says a third as he lifts his glass, "our friend must
+mean _la Royaute_."
+
+"I see!" cries a one-legged veteran of Froschweiler: "we drink to _la
+Revanche_."
+
+In fact, the whole party drank the toast heartily, each interpreting
+it to his liking.
+
+In the hands of a Swift even so trivial an incident might be made
+to point a moral on the facility with which alike in theology
+and politics--from Athanasian Creed to Cincinnati or Philadelphia
+Platform--men comfortably interpret to their own diverse likings some
+doctrine that "begins with an _R_ and ends with an _e_," and swallow
+it with great unanimity and enthusiasm.
+
+Possibly the death of Mr. Greeley, after a prolonged delirium induced
+in part by political excitement, may add for Americans some fresh
+interest to the theory of a paper which just previous to that pathetic
+event M. Lunier had read before the Paris Academy of Medicine. The
+author confessed his statistics to be incomplete, but regarded them
+as ample for the decisive formulation of the proposition that great
+political crises tend to increase the number of cases of mental
+alienation. The leading point of his elaborate argument appears to
+be the classification of fresh cases of insanity developed since the
+beginning of the late French war. The strongest comparison is one
+indicating an excess of seven per cent, in the number of such cases,
+proportioned to the population in the departments conquered and
+occupied by the Germans, over those which they did not invade.
+Finally, M. Lunier reckons the cases of mental alienation induced
+by the late political and military events in France at from
+twelve hundred to fifteen hundred. Politics without war may, it is
+considered, produce the same results--results not at all surprising,
+of course, except as to their extent. As to this last, if M. Lunier's
+figures and deductions be correct, the mental strain of exciting
+politics is even more destructive than has been generally supposed.
+
+
+
+
+LITERATURE OF THE DAY.
+
+
+Gareth and Lynette. By Alfred Tennyson, D.C.L., Poet-Laureate. Boston:
+J.R. Osgood & Co.
+
+"With this poem the author concludes the Idyls of the King." The
+occasion is a tempting one to review the long series of Arthurian lays
+written by Tennyson, from the _Mort d' Arthur_, and the pretty song
+about Lancelot and Guinevere, and the first casting of "Elaine's"
+legend in the form of _The Lady of Shallot_, down to the present tale,
+flung like a capricious field flower into a wreath complete enough
+without it. The poet's first adventure into the subject--the
+mysterious, shadowy and elevated performance called the _Mort d'
+Arthur_--will probably be always thought the best. Tennyson, when
+he wrote it, was just trying the peculiarities of his style: he was
+testing the quality of his cadences, the ring of his long sententious
+lines repeated continually as refrains, and the trustworthiness of his
+artful, much-sacrificing simplicity. He put as it were a spot or two
+of pigment on the end of his painting-knife, and held it up into the
+air of the vaporous traditions of the Round Table. It stood the test,
+it had the color; but the artist, uncertain of his style, his public
+and his own liking, made a number of other tentatives before he
+could decide to go on in the manner he commenced with. He tried the
+_Guinevere_, laughing and galloping in its ballad-movement; he tried
+the _Shallot_, with a triple rhyme and a short positive refrain, like
+a bell rung in an incantation, and brought up every minute by a finger
+pressed upon the edge. Either of these three--although the metre of
+the first was the only one endurable by the ear in the case of a long
+series of poems--either of these had, it may be positively said, a
+general tone more suitable to the ancient feeling, and more consistent
+with the duty of a modern poet arranging for new ears the legends
+collected by Sir Thomas Malory, than the general tone of the present
+Idyls. Those first experiments, charged like a full sponge with the
+essence and volume of primitive legend, went to their purpose without
+retrospection or vacillation: each short tale, whether it laughed or
+moaned, promulgated itself like an oracle. The teller seemed to have
+been listening to the voice of Fate, and whether, Guinevere swayed the
+bridle-rein, or Elaine's web flew out and floated wide, or Lancelot
+sang tirra-lirra by the river, it was asserted with the positiveness
+of a Hebrew chronicle, which we do not question because it is history.
+But we hardly have such an illusion in reading the late Idyls. We
+seem to be in the presence of a constructor who arranges things, of a
+moralist turning ancient stories with a latent purpose of decorum, of
+an official Englishman looking about for old confirmations of modern
+sociology, of a salaried laureate inventing a prototype of Prince
+Albert. The singleness of a story-teller who has convinced himself
+that he tells a true story is gone. That this diversion into the
+region of didactics is accompanied, on our poet's part, with every
+ingenuity of ornament, and every grace of a style which people have
+learned to like and which he has made his own, need not be said.
+The Tennysonian beauties are all there. The work takes its place
+in literature, obscuring the Arthurian work of Dryden, as Milton's
+achievement of _Paradise Lost_ obscured the Italian work on the same
+subject which preceded it. The story is told, and the things of the
+Round Table can hardly be related again in English, any more than the
+tale of Troy could be sung again in Greek after the poem of Homer.
+But beauties do not necessarily compose into perfect Beauty, and
+the achievement of a task neatly done does not prevent the eye from
+wandering over the work to see if the material has been used to the
+best advantage. So, the reader who has allowed himself to rest long
+in the simple magic evoked by Malory or in the Celtic air of
+Villemarque's legends, will be fain to ask whether a man of Tennyson's
+force could not have given to his century a recasting which would have
+satisfied primitive credulity as well as modern subtility. There is
+an antique bronze at Naples that has been cleaned and set up in a
+splendid museum, and perhaps looks more graceful than ever; but the
+pipe that used to lead to the lips, and the passage that used to
+communicate with the priest-chamber, are gone, and nothing can
+compensate for them: it used to be a form and a voice, and now it is
+nothing but a form.
+
+We have just observed that in our opinion the first essays made by the
+Laureate with his Arthurian material had the best ring, or at least
+had some excellences lost to the later work. _Gareth and Lynette_,
+however, by its fluency and simplicity, and by not being overcharged
+with meaning, seems to part company with some of this overweighted
+later performance, and to attempt a recovery of the directness and
+spring of the start. It is, however, far behind all of them in a
+momentous particular; for in narrating _them_, the poet, while able to
+keep up his immediate connection with the source of tradition, and to
+narrate with the directness of belief, had still some undercurrent of
+thought which he meant to convey, and which he succeeded in keeping
+track of: Arthur and Guinevere, in the little song, ride along like
+primeval beings of the world--the situation seems the type of all
+seduction; the Lady of Shallot is not alone the recluse who sees life
+in a mirror, she is the cloistered Middle Age itself, and when her
+mirror breaks we feel that a thousand glasses are bursting, a thousand
+webs are parting, and that the times are coming eye to eye with the
+actual. In those younger days, Tennyson, possessed with a subject, and
+as it were floating in it, could pour out a legend with the credulity
+of a child and the clear convincing insight of a teacher: when he came
+in mature life to apply himself to the rounded work, he had more of a
+disposition to teach, and less of that imaginative reach which is
+like belief; and _now_ he is telling a story again for the sake of
+the story, but without the deeper meaning. Lynette is a supercilious
+damsel who asks redress of the knights of the Round Table: Gareth,
+a male Cinderella, starts from the kitchen to defend her, and after
+conquering her prejudices by his bravery, assumes his place as a
+disguised prince. It is a plain little comedy, not much in Tennyson's
+line: there are places where he tries to imitate the artless
+disconnected speech of youth; and here, as with the little nun's
+babble in _Guinevere_, and with some other passages of factitious
+simplicity, the poet makes rather queer work:
+
+ Gold? said I gold?--ay then, why he, or she,
+ Or whosoe'er it was, or half the world,
+ Had ventured--_had_ the thing I spake of been
+ Mere gold--but this was all of that true steel
+ Whereof they forged the brand Excalibur,
+ And lightnings played about it in the storm, etc.
+
+It may be questioned whether hap-hazard talk ever, in any age of human
+speech, took a form like that, though it is just like Tennyson in many
+a weary part of his poetry. The blank verse, for its part, is broken
+with all the old skill, and there are lines of beautiful license, like
+this:
+
+ Camelot, a city of shadowy palaces,
+
+or strengthened with the extra quantity, like this:
+
+ Stay, felon knight, I avenge me for my friend!
+
+or imitating the motion described, as these:
+
+ The hoof of his horse slept in the stream, the stream
+ Descended, and the Sun was washed away;
+
+but occasionally the effort to give variety leads into mere puzzles
+and disagreeable fractures of metre, such as the following quatrain:
+
+ Courteous or bestial from the moment,
+ Such as have nor law nor king; and three of these
+ Proud in their fantasy, call themselves the Day,
+ Morning-Star, and Noon-Sun, and Evening-Star.
+
+The first line in this quotation, if it be not a misprint of the
+American edition, can only be brought to any kind of rule by accenting
+each polysyllable on the last, and is not, when even that is done, a
+pleasant piece of caprice. There are plenty of phrases that shock
+the attention sufficiently to keep it from stagnating on the smooth
+surface of the verse; such are--"ever-highering eagle-circles," "there
+were none but few goodlier than he," "tipt with trenchant steel," and
+the expression, already famous, of "tip-tilted" for Lynette's nose; to
+which may be added the object of Gareth's attention, mentioned in the
+third line of the poem, when he "stared at the _spate_." But in the
+matter of descriptive power we do not know that the Laureate
+has succeeded better for a long time past in his touches of
+landscape-painting: the pictures of halls, castles, rivers and
+woods are all felicitous. For example, this in five lines, where the
+travelers saw
+
+ Bowl-shaped, through tops of many thousand pines,
+ A gloomy-gladed hollow slowly sink
+ To westward; in the deeps whereof a mere,
+ Round as the red eye of an eagle-owl,
+ Under the half-dead sunset glared; and cries
+ Ascended.
+
+Or this simple and beautiful sketch of crescent moonlight:
+
+ Silent the silent field
+ They traversed. Arthur's harp tho' summer-wan,
+ In counter motion to the clouds, allured
+ The glance of Gareth dreaming on his liege.
+ A star shot.
+
+It is still, perfect, and utterly simple sketches like these, thrown
+off in the repose of power, that form the best setting for a heroic
+or poetical action: what better device was ever invented, even by
+Tennyson himself, for striking just the right note in the reader's
+mind while thinking of a noble primitive knight, than that in another
+Idyl, where Lancelot went along, looking at a star, "_and wondered
+what it was"?_ Of a more imaginative kind of beauty are the
+descriptions of the walls of rock near Castle Dangerous, decked by the
+hermit with tinted bas-reliefs, and the fine one of Camelot, looking
+as if "built by fairy kings," with its city gate surmounted by the
+figures of the three mystic queens, "the friends of Arthur," and
+decked upon the keystone with the image of the Lady, whose form is
+set in ripples of stone and crossed by mystic fish, while her drapery
+weeps from her sides as water flowing away. The most charming part of
+the character-painting is where the shrewish Lynette, as her estimate
+of the scullion-knight gradually rises in view of his mighty deeds,
+evinces her kindlier mood, not directly in speech, but by catches of
+love-songs breaking out of the midst of her scornful gibes: this is
+a very subtle and suitable and poetical way of eliciting the
+under-workings of the damsel's mind, and it is continued through five
+or six pages in an interrupted carol, until at last the maiden, wholly
+won, bids him ride by her side, and finishes her lay:
+
+ O trefoil, sparkling on the rainy plain,
+ O rainbow, with three colors after rain,
+ Shine sweetly: thrice my love hath smiled on me.
+
+The allegory by which Gareth's four opponents are made to form a sort
+of stumbling succession representing Morn, Noon, Evening, and Night or
+Death, is hardly worth the introduction, but it is not insisted
+upon: the last of these knights, besieging Castle Perilous in a skull
+helmet, and clamoring for marriage with Lynette's sister Lyonors,
+turns out to be a large-sized, fresh-faced and foolish boy, who issues
+from the skull "as a flower new blown," and fatuously explains that
+his brothers have dressed him out in burlesque and deposited him as a
+bugbear at the gate. This is not very salutary allegorizing, but it
+is soon over, and the poem closed, leaving a pleasant perfume in the
+reader's mind of chivalry, errantry and the delicious days before the
+invention of civilization.
+
+
+
+Handbook of the History of Philosophy. By Dr. Albert Schwegler.
+Translated arid annotated by James Hutchison Stirling, LL.D. New York:
+Putnam.
+
+Spinoza teaches that "substance is God;" but, says Mr. Matthew Arnold,
+"propositions about substance pass by mankind at large like the idle
+wind, which mankind at large regards not: it will not even listen to
+a word about these propositions, unless it first learns what their
+author was driving at with them, and finds that this object of his
+is one with which it sympathizes." There is no way of getting the
+multitude to listen to Spinoza's _Ethics_ or Plato's _Dialectics_ but
+something is gained when a man of science like Dr. Schwegler happens
+to possess the gift of fluent and easy statement, and can pour into a
+work like the present, which is the expansion of a hasty encyclopaedia
+article, the vivacity of current speech, and the impulse which gives
+unity to a long history while it excludes crabbed digressions. It
+happens that the American world received the first translation of
+Schwegler's _History_ _of Philosophy_; and it may be asked, What need
+have Americans of a subsequent version by a Scotch doctor of laws? The
+answer is, that Mr. Seelye's earlier rendering was taken from a first
+edition, and that the present one includes the variations made in five
+editions which have now been issued. Even on British ground the work
+thus translated has reached three editions, and the multitude of
+"mankind at large," hearing of these repeated editions in Edinburgh
+and of twenty thousand copies sold in Germany, may begin to prick
+up its ears, and to think that this is one of the easily-read
+philosophies of modern times, of which Taine and Michelet have the
+secret. It is not so: abstractions stated with scientific precision in
+their elliptic slang or technicality are not and cannot be made easy
+reading: the strong hands of condensation which Schwegler pressed down
+upon the material he controlled so perfectly have not left it lighter
+or more digestible. The reader of this manual, for instance, will be
+invited to consider the Eleatic argumentation that nothing exists but
+Identity, "which is the beent, and that Difference, the non-beent,
+does not exist; and therefore that he must not only not go on talking
+about difference, but that he must not allude to difference as being
+anything but the non-beent; for if he casts about for a synonym, and
+arrives at the notion that he may say non-existent for non-beent, he
+is abjectly wrong, for beent does not mean existent, and non-beent
+non-existent, but it must be considered that the beent is strictly the
+non-existent, and the existent the non-beent." Such are the amenities
+of expression into which an eloquent metaphysician, trying his best
+to speak popularly, is led. Yet the book is readable to that orderly
+application of the mind which such studies exact, and is the firmest
+and strictest guide now speaking our English tongue. Its steady
+attention to the business in hand, from the pre-Socratic philosphies
+down through the great age of the Greek revival, to Germany and Hegel
+at last, is most sustained and admirable. Indeed, few thinkers of
+Anglo-Saxon birth are able even to praise such a book as it deserves.
+The only real impediment to its acceptance by scholars of our race is
+that its attention to modern philosophy is rather partial, the French
+and the Germans getting most of the story, and English philosophers
+like Locke and Hume receiving scant attention, while Paley is not
+recognized. This class of omissions is attended to by the Scotch
+translator in a mass of annotations which lead him into a broad and
+interesting view of British philosophy, in the course of which he has
+some severe reflections on the ignorance of Mr. Lewes and Mr. Mill. On
+account of these valuable notes, and also for the alterations made
+by Schwegler himself, we feel that we must invite American scholars
+possessing the Seelye translation to replace it or accompany it by
+this present version, which is a cheap and compassable volume.
+
+
+
+Joseph Noirel's Revenge. By Victor Cherbuliez. Translated from the
+French by Wm. F. West, A.M. New York: Holt & Williams.
+
+M. Victor Cherbuliez belongs to a Genevese family long and honorably
+connected with literature in the capacity of publishers both at Paris
+and Geneva. It is in the latter town and the adjacent region that the
+scene of the present story--the first, we believe, of the author's
+works which has found its way into English--is laid; and much of
+its charm is derived from the local coloring with which many of the
+characters and incidents are invested. Even the quiet home-life of
+so beautiful and renowned a place cannot but be tinted by reflections
+from the incomparable beauties of its surroundings, and from the
+grand and vivid passages of its singularly picturesque history. The
+subordinate figures on the canvas have accordingly an interest greater
+than what arises from their commonplace individualities and their
+meagre part in the action--like barndoor fowls pecking and clucking
+beside larger bipeds in a walled yard steeped in sunlight. But the
+sunlight which gives a delicious warmth and brightness to the earlier
+chapters of the novel is soon succeeded by gloom and tempest. The
+interest is more and more concentrated on the few principal persons;
+and the action, which at the outset promised to be light and amusing,
+with merely so much of tenderness and pathos as may belong to the
+higher comedy, becomes by degrees deeply tragical, and ends in a
+catastrophe which is saved from being horrible and revolting only by
+the shadows that forecast and the softening strains that attend it. In
+point of construction and skillful handling the story is as effective
+as French art alone could have made it, while it has an under-meaning
+rendered all the more suggestive by being left to find its way into
+the reader's reflections without any obvious prompting. The heroine,
+sole child of a prosperous bourgeois couple, stands between two
+lovers--one the last relic of a noble Burgundian family; the other a
+workman with socialist tendencies. Marguerite Mirion is invested with
+all the fascination which beauty of face, simplicity of mind, purity
+of soul, sweetness of disposition and joyousness of spirit can impart.
+Yet she is, and feels herself to be, entirely _bourgeoise,_ longing
+for no ideal heights, worldly or spiritual, ready for all ordinary
+duties, content with simple and innocent pleasures, rinding in the
+life, the thoughts, the occupations and enjoyments of her class all
+that is needed to make the current of her life run smoothly and to
+satisfy the cravings of her bright but gentle nature. It is in simple
+obedience to the will of her parents that she marries Count Roger
+d'Ornis, and is carried from her happy home at Mon-Plaisir to a
+dilapidated castle in the Jura, where there are no smiling faces or
+loving hearts to make her welcome--where, on the contrary, she meets
+only with haughty, spiteful or morose looks and a chilling and gloomy
+atmosphere. It is from sheer necessity that she accepts the aid
+of Joseph Noirel, her father's head-workman, whose ardent spirit,
+quickened by the consciousness of talent, but rendered morbid by the
+slights which his birth and position have entailed, has been plunged
+into blackest night by the loss of the single star that had illumined
+its firmament. Count Roger is not wholly devoid of honor and
+generosity; but he has no true appreciation of his wife, and will
+sacrifice her without remorse to save his own reputation. Joseph, on
+the other hand, is ready to dare all things to protect her from
+harm; but he cannot forego the reward which entails upon her a deeper
+misery. It is Marguerite alone who, in the terrible struggle of fate
+and of clashing interests and desires, rises to the height of absolute
+self-abnegation; and this not through any sudden development of
+qualities or intuitions foreign to her previous modes of thought,
+but by the simple application of these to the hard and complicated
+problems which have suddenly confronted her. Herein lies the novelty
+of the conception and the lesson which the author has apparently
+intended to convey. See, he seems to say, how the bourgeois nature,
+equally scorned by the classes above and below it as the embodiment of
+vulgar ease and selfishness, contains precisely the elements of true
+heroism which are wanting alike in those who set conventional rules
+above moral laws and in those who revolt against all restrictions. The
+book is thus an apology for a class which is no favorite with poets
+or romancers; but, as we have said, the design is only to be inferred
+from the story, and may easily pass unnoticed, at least with American
+readers. The character of Noirel is powerfully drawn, but it is less
+original than that of the heroine, belonging, for example, to the
+same type as the hero of _Le Rouge et le Noir_--"ce Robespierre de
+village," as Sainte-Beuve, we believe, calls him.
+
+
+
+Homes and Hospitals; or, Two Phases of Woman's Work, as exhibited in
+the Labors of Amy Button and Agnes E. Jones. Boston: American Tract
+Society; New York: Hurd & Houghton.
+
+Doubtless we should not, though most of us do, feel a tenderness for
+the Dorcas who proves to be a lady of culture and distinction, rather
+different from the careless respect we accord to the Dorcas who has
+large feet and hands, and mismanages her _h_'s. In this elegant little
+book "Amy" is the descendant of influential patrons and patronesses,
+and "Agnes" is the lovely saint whom Miss Nightingale calls "Una,"
+though her high-bred purity and lowly self-dedication rather recall
+the character of Elizabeth of Hungary. Agnes, in Crook lane and
+Abbot's street, encounters old paupers who have already enjoyed the
+bounty of her ancestress's (Dame Dutton) legacy. When she becomes
+interested in the old Indian campaigner, Miles, she is able to procure
+his admission to Chelsea through the influence of "my brother, Colonel
+Dutton." She lightens her watches by reading Manzoni's novel,
+_I Promessi Sposi,_ she quotes Lord Bacon, and compares the
+hospital-nurses to the witches in _Macbeth_. These mental and
+social graces do not, perhaps, assist the practical part of her
+ministrations, but they undoubtedly chasten the influence of
+her ministrations on her own character. It is as a purist and an
+aristocrat of the best kind that Miss Dutton forms within her own mind
+this resolution: "If the details of evil are unavoidably brought under
+your eye, let not your thoughts rest upon them a moment longer than is
+absolutely needful. Dismiss them with a vigorous effort as soon as you
+have done your best to apply a remedy: commit the matter into higher
+Hands, then turn to your book, your music, your wood-carving, your pet
+recreation, whatever it is. This is one way, at least, of keeping the
+mind elastic and pure." And with the discretion of rare breeding she
+carries into the haunts of vice and miserable intrigue the Italian
+byword: _Orecchie spalancate, e bocca stretta_. A similar elevation,
+but also a sense that responsibility to her caste requires the most
+tender humility, may be found in "Una." When about to associate with
+coarse hired London nurses at St. Thomas's Hospital, she asks herself,
+"Are you more above those with whom you will have to mix than our
+Saviour was in every thought and sensitive refinement?" It was by
+such self-teaching that these high-spirited girls made their life-toil
+redound to their own purification, as it did to the cause of humanity.
+The purpose served by binding in one volume the district experiences
+of Miss Dutton and the hospital record of Miss Jones is that of
+indicating to the average young lady of our period a diversity of ways
+in which she may serve our Master and His poor. With "Amy" she may
+retain her connection with society, and adorn her home and her circle,
+all the while that she reads the Litany with the decayed governess or
+_Golden Deeds_ to the dying burglar. With "Agnes" she may plunge into
+more heroic self-abnegation. Leaving the fair attractions of the world
+as utterly as the diver leaves the foam and surface of the sea, she
+may grope for moral pearls in the workhouse of Liverpool or train
+for her sombre avocation in the asylum at Kaiserwerth. Such absolute
+dedication will probably have some effect on her "tone" as a lady. She
+can no longer keep up with the current interests of society. Instead
+of Shakespeare and Italian literature, which we have seen coloring
+the career of the district visitor, her life will take on a sort of
+submarine pallor. The sordid surroundings will press too close for any
+gleam from the outer world to penetrate. The things of interest will
+be the wretched things of pauperdom and hospital service--the slight
+improvement of Gaffer, the spiritual needs of Gammer, the harsh
+tyranny of upper nurses. "To-day when out walking," says the brave
+young lady, as superintendent of a boys' hospital, "I could only keep
+from crying by running races with my boys." The effect of a training
+so rigid--training which sometimes includes stove-blacking and
+floor-washing--is to try the pure metal, to eject the merely
+ornamental young lady whose nature is dross, and to consolidate
+the valuable nature that is sterling. Miss Agnes, plunged in hard
+practical work, and unconsciously acquiring a little workmen's slang,
+gives the final judgment on the utility of such discipline: "Without
+a regular hard London training I should have been nowhere." Both the
+saints of the century are now dead, and these memoirs conserve the
+perfume of their lives.
+
+
+
+Songs from the Old Dramatists. Collected and Edited by Abby Sage
+Richardson, New York: Hurd & Houghton.
+
+Any anthology of old English lyrics is a treasure if one can depend
+upon the correctness of printing and punctuating. Mrs. Richardson has
+found a quantity of rather recondite ones, and most of the favorites
+are given too. Only to read her long index of first lines is to catch
+a succession of dainty fancies and of exquisite rhythms, arranged when
+the language was crystallizing into beauty under the fanning wings of
+song. That some of our pet jewels are omitted was to be expected.
+The compiler does not find space for Rochester's most sincere-seeming
+stanzas, beginning, "I cannot change as others do"--among the sweetest
+and most lyrical utterances which could set the stay-imprisoned hearts
+of Charles II.'s beauties to bounding with a touch of emotion. Perhaps
+Rochester was not exactly a dramatist, though that point is wisely
+strained in other cases. We do not get the "Nay, dearest, think me
+not unkind," nor do we get the "To all you ladies now on land," though
+sailors' lyrics, among the finest legacies of the time when gallant
+England ruled the waves, are not wanting. We have Sir Charles Sedley's
+
+ "Love still hath something of the sea
+ From which his mother rose,"
+
+and the siren's song, fit for the loveliest of Parthenopes, from
+Browne's _Masque of the Inner Temple_, beginning,
+
+ "Steer, hither steer your winged pines,
+ All beaten mariners!"--
+
+songs which severally repeat the fatigue of the sea or that daring
+energy of its Elizabethan followers which by a false etymology we term
+chivalrous. We do not find the superb lunacy of "Mad Tom of Bedlam" in
+the catch beginning, "I know more than Apollo," but we have something
+almost as spirited, where John Ford sings, in _The Sun's Darling_,
+
+ "The dogs have the stag in chase!
+ 'Tis a sport to content a king.
+ So-ho! ho! through the skies
+ How the proud bird flies,
+ And swooping, kills with a grace!
+ Now the deer falls! hark! how they ring."
+
+For what is pensive and retrospective in tone we are given a song
+of "The Aged Courtier," which once in a pageant touched the finer
+consciousness of Queen Elizabeth. The unemployed warrior, whose
+"helmet now shall make a hive for bees," treats the virgin sovereign
+as his saint and divinity, promising,
+
+ "And when he saddest sits in holy cell,
+ He'll teach his swains this carol for a song:
+ Blest be the hearts that wish my sovereign well!
+ Cursed be the souls that think her any wrong!
+ Goddess! allow this aged man his right
+ To be your beadsman now, that was your knight."
+
+The feudal feeling can hardly be more beautifully expressed.
+
+From the devotion that was low and lifelong we may turn to the
+devotion that was loud and fleeting. The love-songs are many and well
+picked: one is the madrigal from Thomas Lodge's _Eitphues' Golden
+Legacy,_ which "he wrote," he says, "on the ocean, when every line
+was wet with a surge, and every humorous passion counterchecked with
+a storm;" and which (the madrigal) had the good fortune to suggest and
+name Shakespeare's archest character, Rosalind. We cannot dwell
+upon this perfumed chaplet of love-ditties. Mrs. Richardson is here
+doubtless in her element, but she does not always lighten counsel
+with the wisdom of her words; for instance, when, in Beaumont and
+Fletcher's "Beauty clear and fair," she makes an attempted emendation
+in the lines--
+
+ "Where to live near,
+ And planted there,
+ Is still to live and still live new;
+ Where to gain a favor is
+ More than light perpetual bliss;
+ Oh make me live by serving you."
+
+On this the editress says: "I have always been inclined to believe
+that this line should read: 'More than _life_, perpetual bliss.'" The
+image here, where the whole figure is taken from flowers, is of being
+planted and growing in the glow of the mistress's beauty, whose favor
+is more fructifying than the sun, and to which he immediately begs
+to be recalled, "back again, to this _light_." To say that living
+anywhere is "more than life" is a forced bombastic notion not in
+the way of Beaumont and Fletcher, but coming later, and rather
+characteristic of Poe, with his rant about
+
+ "that infinity with which my wife
+ Was dearer to my soul than its soul-life."
+
+Mrs. Richardson's notes, in fact, contradict the impression of
+thoroughness which her selecting, we are glad to say, leaves on the
+mind. She is aware that the "Ode to Melancholy" in _The Nice Valour_
+begins in the same way as Milton's "Pensieroso," but she does not seem
+to know that the latter is also closely imitated from Burton's poem in
+his _Anatomy of Melancholy_. And she quotes John Still's "Jolly Good
+Ale and Old" as a "panegyric on old sack," sack being sweet wine.
+
+The publishers have done their part, and made of these drops of oozed
+gold what is called "an elegant trifle" for the holidays. Mr. John La
+Farge, a very "advanced" sort of artist and illustrator, has furnished
+some embellishments which will be better liked by people of broad
+culture, and especially by enthusiasts for Japanese art, than they
+will be by ordinary Christmas-shoppers, though the frontispiece to
+"Songs of Fairies," representing Psyche floating among water-lilies,
+is beautiful enough and obvious enough for anybody.
+
+
+
+
+
+_Books Received._
+
+
+A Concordance to the Constitution of the United States of America. By
+Charles W. Stearns, M.D. New York: Mason, Baker & Pratt.
+
+The Standard: A Collection of Sacred and Secular Music. By L.O.
+Emerson and H. R. Palmer. Boston: Oliver Ditson & Co.
+
+Gems of Strauss: A Collection of Dance Music for the Piano. By Johann
+Strauss. Boston: Oliver Ditson & Co.
+
+The Greeks of To-Day. By Charles K. Tuckerman. New York: G.P. Putnam &
+Sons.
+
+The Eustace Diamonds. By Anthony Trollope. New York: Harper &
+Brothers.
+
+How to Paint. By F.B. Gardner. New York: Samuel R. Wells.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Lippincott's Magazine Of Popular
+Literature And Science, No. 23, February, 1873, Vol. XI., by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LIPPINCOTT'S MAGAZINE ***
+
+***** This file should be named 13636.txt or 13636.zip *****
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