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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.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #51786 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/51786)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Chambers's Journal of Popular Literature,
-Science, and Art, No. 729, December 15, 1877, by Various
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Chambers's Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, No. 729, December 15, 1877
-
-Author: Various
-
-Editor: William Chambers
- Robert Chambers
-
-Release Date: April 18, 2016 [EBook #51786]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHAMBERS'S JOURNAL, DEC 15, 1877 ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Susan Skinner and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: CHAMBERS'S JOURNAL
-
-OF
-
-POPULAR
-
-LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART.
-
-Fourth Series
-
-CONDUCTED BY WILLIAM AND ROBERT CHAMBERS.
-
-NO. 729. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1877. PRICE 1½_d._]
-
-
-
-
-A BUNCH OF KEYS.
-
-
-I am a professional man, and reside in the West End of London. One
-morning some few months back, my assistant on coming to attend to his
-duties produced a bunch of keys, which he informed me he had just
-picked up at the corner of a street leading from Oxford Street.
-
-'Hadn't they best be handed over to the police?' suggested my
-assistant. I wish to goodness I had at once closed with his suggestion;
-but I didn't, much to my own cost, as will be presently seen.
-
-'Well, I don't know,' was my answer. 'I rather think it will be a wiser
-plan to advertise them, if the owner is really to have a chance of
-recovering them; for to my mind, articles found in that way and handed
-over to the police are rarely heard of again.'
-
-An advertisement for the _Times_ was duly drawn up and sent off for
-insertion. It merely stated where the keys had been picked up, and
-where the owner of the bunch could have it returned to him on giving
-a proper description. The next morning the advertisement appeared;
-and though I half expected that some applications might be made later
-on in the same day, it passed over quite quietly. But the following
-morning I had a foretaste of the trouble that awaited me so soon as the
-postman had deposited my letters in the box and given his accustomed
-knock. A glance at my table shewed me that my correspondence was very
-considerably beyond its average that morning. The very first letter I
-opened was in reference to the advertisement; and before I had gone
-through the collection I found there were over twenty applications
-for the bunch of keys in my possession. Some of the writers took the
-trouble to describe the keys they had lost; but none of them were in
-the least like those that had been picked up by my assistant. Some did
-not take the trouble to give any description at all, or to state if
-they had been in the part of the town where the keys were found; and
-a few boldly claimed them on the strength of having dropped a bunch
-miles from the spot indicated in the advertisement!
-
-By the time I had got through my letters and my breakfast, my
-servant came to tell me that my waiting-room was already full of
-people--'mostly ladies,' he said--though it was nearly two hours
-before the time I was accustomed to see any one professionally. With a
-foreboding that a good deal of worry and a loss of much valuable time
-was in store for me, I entered my consulting-room, and gave orders that
-the ladies should be admitted in the order of their arrival. They were
-all applicants for the keys; and out of the sixteen persons that were
-waiting, fourteen were ladies. The two gentlemen were soon despatched.
-They _had_ lost keys, near the spot for anything they could tell; but
-on being satisfied that what had been found did in no way agree with
-the description of what they had lost, they apologised for the trouble
-and went at once.
-
-But it was no such easy matter to get rid of my fourteen
-lady-applicants. Some of them were for inflicting upon me a narration
-of family affairs that had not the most remote connection with the
-business in hand. A few kept closely enough to the subject on which
-they had come; but would not take a denial that the keys in my
-possession were not the least like those they said they had lost; and
-it was only at the sacrifice of some of my usual politeness that I was
-able to get rid of them. Not one of the morning's arrival could make
-out anything like a fair claim, and one or two owned that they had not
-even been in the quarter where the keys were found on the day specified.
-
-More letters, more applicants, came as the day wore on; and I began
-heartily to repent of my well-meant desire to benefit my fellow-mortals
-by taking the trouble to find out the rightful owner of a lost article.
-I was just on the point of giving orders to my servant to put off all
-further applicants until the following morning, when he ushered in
-a comfortable-looking lady of middle age, who proceeded straight to
-business by at once describing with the greatest accuracy the bunch of
-keys that had given me so much anxiety that day; and assuring me that
-she had passed the spot indicated in the advertisement on the morning
-they were found.
-
-'Nine keys on the bunch, all Chubb's patent; three very small ones,
-five of various sizes, and one latch-key longer than any of the others.'
-
-The description was perfect. Some of the other applicants had curiously
-enough been right as to the number, but wrong as to description.
-
-I at once told my lady visitor that I had no doubt the keys were hers;
-and that I was ready to hand them over to her. But I ventured to add
-that it would give me greater security were she to permit my assistant
-to accompany her to her residence, and there, in his presence, to
-open the different locks to which the keys belonged. To this proposal
-not the smallest objection was raised. She begged I would call my
-assistant, as she had a cab waiting at the door. The direction was
-given to some place in Bloomsbury, and they drove off. In less than an
-hour my assistant returned. He stated that the lady opened the street
-door with the latch-key, and that the other eight keys opened desks,
-writing-tables, cash-boxes, &c.--all quite correct and satisfactorily.
-The expense of the advertisement was of course paid.
-
-Congratulating myself that this troublesome business was well over, and
-mentally resolving that another time, under similar circumstances, I
-should act on my assistant's suggestion, and hand such matters over to
-the police, I gave orders that all applicants that might come were to
-be told that the rightful owner had been found and that the keys were
-disposed of.
-
-Two days passed, and I had almost dismissed the whole affair from my
-mind. On the morning of the third day my attention was attracted by
-an altercation going on between my servant and an irate lady--well
-advanced in years--to whom he refused admittance. Anxious to
-escape disturbance, I gave orders that she should be shewn into my
-consulting-room, where I presently went to see what she wanted.
-
-'I want to know why you never answered my letter about the bunch of
-keys you advertised as having found, and which I lost? I have come for
-them now.'
-
-'But, madam, none of the letters described the keys accurately, and I
-was therefore not bound to notice any of the written applications that
-reached me.'
-
-'Not describe them properly! But I _can_ describe them; they were nine
-in number on the bunch.'
-
-'So far, that is right, madam. Proceed with your description.'
-
-The description was entirely wrong; and I told her so. I told her,
-moreover, that the rightful owner had been found, who had not only
-described the keys properly, but who had taken my assistant to her
-house and had used each individual key in his presence. I added that
-if she were not satisfied, I could furnish her with the address of the
-lady to whom the keys had been given up, and that she might call and
-try to establish her claim if she fancied she had one.
-
-She was very far from being satisfied. She wanted to argue the matter
-further and, as I feared, to an unreasonable length. I told her firmly
-I could waste no further time on her; whereupon she left vowing
-vengeance.
-
-The threats of the old lady did not much disturb me; but they were not
-altogether so unmeaning as I supposed, for in two days thereafter a
-summons was handed into me, demanding my presence at the police court
-of the district, to answer for my refusal to deliver up to the rightful
-owner property belonging to her, which I owned to having found, but
-refused to account for.
-
-That I was very much annoyed may be easily supposed; but at the same
-time I could not help being somewhat amused, bearing in recollection
-how I had tried to satisfy the unreasonable dame, who had evidently
-more money than wit, seeing she was ready to waste it on so hopeless a
-case.
-
-I duly made my appearance before the worthy magistrate, whom I happened
-to know slightly, and who could not restrain an amused grin when I was
-called forward. My assistant accompanied me as a matter of course.
-
-The old lady had engaged a smart lawyer, who did his best in trying
-to make out a case; but his client rather weakened his statement by
-her inconsequential answers to both her counsel and the magistrate.
-My answer was easy. I shewed how the prosecutrix had utterly failed
-in describing the keys. I told that the rightful owner had rightly
-described them; and I put my assistant into the box to prove his having
-seen every key in the bunch fitted into its proper lock.
-
-'Were you passing along Oxford Street on the morning that this bunch of
-keys was found?' asked the magistrate of the old lady.
-
-'I was that way in an omnibus in the afternoon,' was the answer.
-
-'But the keys in question were found in the morning, and were lying on
-the pavement,' remarked His Worship.
-
-'Ah, I don't know how that might be,' said my persecutor; 'but I know I
-lost a bunch of keys.'
-
-'Well, the case is dismissed; and you must pay expenses.' And so ended
-the case.
-
-Now I have no doubt the old lady, though so wrong-headed in the claim
-she set up against me, had really lost a bunch of keys on the day my
-assistant made his--for me--unlucky find. Nor do I for a moment doubt
-the fact of some of the other applicants having also lost keys on
-the same day and perhaps near the same spot. But the applications by
-letter and personally numbered altogether not far short of fifty; and
-it may be set down as a moral certainty that they did not all lose,
-each of them, a bunch of keys on that particular day, and in Oxford
-Street--without being particular as to the spot. My theory is, that
-some of them had probably got their pockets picked of their keys while
-travelling by omnibus, and could not of course tell exactly where they
-lost them. Others may have simply mislaid their keys, and jumped to
-the conclusion that they were lost. Some others, I fear, had not lost
-keys at all, but merely came to my place out of idle curiosity. All of
-them, I know, gave me more trouble than I ever hope to have again in an
-affair of the kind.
-
-[We can hardly say that the foregoing narrative, to call it so, is
-overstrained. It points to a marvellous want of logical precision in
-reasoning which is far from uncommon. Some years ago, in these pages,
-we mentioned a droll case within our own experience. One day we chanced
-to find a brooch, and advertised the fact in the newspapers. Next day
-a lady called on us to say that she had lost a ring, and asked if we
-knew anything about it. 'Madam,' was our reply, 'you must understand
-that it was a brooch we found, and not a ring.' 'O yes, that maybe
-so; but I thought as you were in the way of finding things, you might
-perhaps have seen something of my ring.' A very pretty example this of
-want of common-sense. Our advice to all who happen to find any article
-of value on the street is, to take it at once to the police office,
-where it may be reclaimed by the owner. Those who will not take this
-trouble, should let the article alone. Finding does not constitute
-ownership. We knew a gentleman, now deceased, who in the course of his
-life punctiliously refrained from picking up any article of value on
-the street, as the article was not his, and he might have been brought
-into trouble. This was being too fastidious, for it was allowing the
-article to be appropriated by possibly some dishonest person. True
-kindness and true honesty consist in lodging the article found, at the
-police office, whence, if no owner casts up within twelve months, it
-will be sent to the finder, whose lawful property it becomes.--ED.]
-
-
-
-
-THE LAND OF THE INCAS.
-
-
-Peru recalls to every thoughtful student of history not only the
-half-barbaric splendour of the empire of the Incas, but the vanished
-prestige and glory of their Spanish conquerors. The gorgeous figure
-of Pizarro, the stately hidalgo, the successful captain, the ruthless
-soldier of fortune, meets us still at every step in the once rich
-Indian empire he won for Spain. On that low swampy mangrove-fringed
-stretch of coast, a tangled maze of vines and flowering creepers, the
-half-famished Castilian adventurer landed in 1524. And here, where the
-full tide of the Pacific rolls in upon the beach in columns of snowy
-foam, he, in 1535, founded Lima, the 'city of the kings.'
-
-To examine the cities of the Incas, their ruined palaces, and other
-objects of note in this interesting region, was a task undertaken and
-carried out by Mr Squier, whose researches have been embodied in a
-volume entitled the _Land of the Incas_, the perusal of which enables
-us to offer the following items to our readers.
-
-The coast of Peru is arid and barren, lined with guano islands, which
-although adding little to the charm of the scenery, are found as
-lucrative to-day as the mines of Potosi and Pasco were in the heyday
-of Spanish greatness. Thanks to this useful but unfragrant compost,
-Pizarro's city of the kings is still rich and flourishing, though the
-veins of silver are exhausted, and the golden sands no longer glitter
-with the precious ore, which fired the Spanish breasts of old with such
-fierce cupidity. It is very unhealthy, and although in the tropics,
-the climate for six months in the year is extremely damp and almost
-cold. Lima, which stands in an earthquake region, is built so as to
-sustain the least possible damage from the ever recurring shocks of
-those alarming phenomena. The private houses are never more than two
-stories in height. They have flat roofs and projecting balconies, and
-are constructed (one can hardly say built) of cane, plastered with mud,
-and painted in imitation of stone. Most of them have courts with open
-galleries in the Moorish style, extending along the four sides; and
-many of them have towers, from which, in addition to the surrounding
-scenery, an extended view of acres of flat roofs may be obtained--the
-said flat roofs being piled with heaps of refuse, filth, and all manner
-of abominations; very often they are used as poultry-yards, and here
-the buzzards, which act as scavengers in all the South American cities,
-roost at night.
-
-The furniture in the better class of these wicker and mud-built
-dwellings is often very fine: antique plate, velvet hangings, costly
-mirrors, and family portraits, that smile or frown upon you with
-all the charm or vigour the brush of Vandyke or Velasquez was able
-to impart. The _pasios_ or public walks are planted with trees, and
-the arcades, which are lined with fine shops, are a very favourite
-promenade. The inhabitants of Lima of all grades are remarkably fond of
-flowers, particularly of roses, which they contrive to keep in bloom
-all the year round. 'Roses,' Mr Squier says, 'bloom in every court and
-blush on every balcony, and decorate alike the heavy tresses of the
-belle and the curly shock of the zamba.'
-
-Bull-fights are a favourite amusement, and so is cock-fighting,
-although it is no longer, as formerly, practised in the public streets.
-
-The markets are well supplied, especially with fruit and vegetables.
-Fish is good and the butcher-meat of fair quality. The luckless
-traveller in Central America who could get nothing but chickens
-and turkeys to eat, and was afraid at last that his whiskers would
-transform themselves into feathers, may go to Lima with all safety, as
-a medium-sized turkey there costs twenty dollars in gold. The cookery
-is Spanish in its character, and consists much of stews savoury with
-oil and garlic and pungent with red pepper.
-
-Twenty miles from Lima is Pachacamac, a sacred city of the Incas,
-where once stood a gigantic temple, dedicated to a deity of the same
-name, the supreme creator and preserver of the universe. The ruins of
-two large wings of this temple still remain, one of which contains a
-perfect well-turned arch, which is so rare a feature in American ruins
-that Mr Squier says 'it is the only proper arch I ever found in all my
-explorations in Central and South America.' Pachacamac was the Mecca
-of South America; and its barren hills and dry nitrous sand-heaps are
-filled with the dead bodies of ancient pilgrims, who travelled from
-all parts of the country to lay their bones, not their dust, in this
-hallowed spot. 'Ashes to ashes, dust to dust,' has no meaning here; the
-dead body does not decay, but is dried and shrivelled into a mummy. Mr
-Squier had the curiosity to open the shroud of what may once have been
-perchance an Aztec belle. The body, which was that of a young girl,
-was in a sitting posture, supported on a workbox of braided reeds, in
-which were rude specimens of knitting, spindles for weaving, spools of
-thread, needles of bone and bronze, a small bronze knife, a fan, and
-a set of curious cosmetic-boxes formed of the hollow bones of a bird.
-These were filled with pigments of various colours, and were carefully
-stopped with cotton. Beside them was a small powder-puff of cotton
-for applying them to the face, and a rude mirror formed of a piece of
-iron pyrites highly polished. There was also a netting instrument and
-a little crushed ornament of gold intended to represent a butterfly.
-The long black hair, still glossy as in life, was braided and plaited
-round the forehead, which was bound with a fillet of white cloth
-adorned with silver spangles. A silver bracelet hung on the shrunken
-arm; and between the feet was the dried body of a dead parrot, a pet
-no doubt in life, and sacrificed to bear its mistress company into the
-dread unknown land of spirits.
-
-In the fertile valley of Canete, amid rich sugar-plantations, Mr Squier
-found vast pyramidal buildings, rising stage upon stage, with broad
-flights of steps winding round them to the summits. While sketching
-amid a maze of these massive shattered adobe walls, our author was
-startled by seeing three men suddenly leap over a low wall into the
-vivid sunshine before him. 'God and peace be with you!' he said as
-calmly as he could, instinctively divining that his best cue was to
-appear as cool as possible. 'God and peace be with you!' responded the
-bandits, for such they were; and after a little bullying, an amicable
-parley ensued, which had for its object the acquisition of Mr Squier's
-breech-loading rifle, a weapon which kindled in the bosom of Rossi
-Arci, the robber chief, an ardent, but with all due deference to Mr
-Longfellow, a wasted affection, for he did not obtain it. Four weeks
-afterwards, Mr Squier saw the swollen disfigured corpse of this bandit
-captain exposed to public view in one of the principal streets of Lima.
-
-At Truxillo our author came across a treasure-hunter, one Colonel La
-Rosa. This man spent his whole life in burrowing like a mole among
-the old ruins in search of buried gold, gems, silver goblets, or any
-other relic of antiquity which he could turn into money. Under his
-guidance, Mr Squier visited a great pyramid called the Temple of the
-Sun, and the extensive, interesting, and well preserved ruins of Grand
-Chimu. Here he found vast halls, the walls of which were covered with
-arabesques, and wide corridors from which spacious rooms diverged. The
-walls of these apartments were bright with vivid and delicate colours;
-and Colonel La Rosa shewed him where in the midst of them he had found
-a walled-up closet filled with vessels of gold and silver placed in
-regular layers one above the other, as if they had been hidden there in
-some dire emergency. Two vaults were also discovered filled with silver
-cups and goblets. The silver of which these vessels were composed was
-much alloyed with copper, and was so much oxidised that it had become
-exceedingly brittle. Mr Squier obtained possession of two of the cups.
-They have the appearance of being hammered out of a single piece of
-metal, are as thick as ordinary tin-plate, and are both adorned by the
-representation of a human face, with clearly cut features and a large
-aquiline nose.
-
-About a hundred yards to the westward of the excavations which have
-revealed the half-buried palace of the ancient princes of Chimu, is a
-low broad mound, which has been found to be a necropolis, filled with
-bodies richly clad and covered with gold and silver ornaments. Many of
-the heads of the dead bodies found by Colonel La Rosa were gilt and
-encircled by bands of gold; and one body, that of a woman, was covered
-with thin sheets of gold, and wrapped in a robe spangled with silver
-fishes. Warlike weapons and agricultural implements, knives, war-clubs,
-lance-heads, and spear-points, with spades and mattocks of different
-shapes, all of bronze, are found abundantly in the vicinity of these
-ruins; as are also specimens of excellent pottery, on which are
-modelled with spirit and fidelity representations of birds, animals,
-fishes, shells, fruit, vegetables, and the human face and form.
-
-Leaving Chimu reluctantly, Mr Squier travelled down to the coast, along
-which he sailed, examining the coast ruins at Calaveras and other
-places, till he reached Arica, the port of Tacna.
-
-This is peculiarly an earthquake region; and some of these subterranean
-convulsions are terrible to a degree which we dwellers in a temperate
-clime can scarcely even imagine. A notably dreadful and destructive
-earthquake was that of 1868, which shook to its base all the adjacent
-country. It was first noted in Arica about five o'clock in the morning,
-its premonitory symptoms being immense clouds of dust, which were seen
-slowly advancing across the plain in dusky columns at a distance of
-about ten miles.
-
-Nearer and nearer they came; and in the awful pause of dread expectancy
-that ensued, the distant snowy peaks of the Cordilleras were observed
-to nod and reel, as if executing some horribly suggestive cyclopean
-dance. Gradually this impulse extended itself to the mountains nearer
-to the town, till the huge _morro_ or headland, a little to the left of
-it, began to rock violently to and fro, heaving with sickening lurches,
-as if about to cast itself loose into space, and always bringing to
-again, like a hard bestead ship in a driving tempest. As it worked
-back and forward, huge fragments of stone detached themselves from its
-cave-worn surface, and fell with deafening crash into the surf below;
-while under and above all, like a subdued monotone of horror, was a
-prolonged incessant rumble, now like the roll of distant thunder, but
-ever and anon at irregular intervals swelling into a deafening crash,
-like the discharge of a whole park of artillery.
-
-As far as could be seen, the usually solid earth was agitated by a slow
-wave-like motion, which became first tremulous, and then unspeakably
-violent, throwing half of the houses into heaps of ruins, and yawning
-into wide chasm-like fissures, from which mephitic sulphurous vapours
-issued. Shrieks and groans of anguish filled the air, a mournful
-interlude shrilly resounding at intervals above the subterranean
-thunder, as the terrified crowd rushed to the mole, to seek refuge
-on board the vessels in the harbour. Scarcely had they reached this
-hoped-for haven of safety, when the sea, treacherous as the heaving
-land, glided softly back, and then rushing forward with a terrific
-roar, submerged the mole with its panting terror-stricken occupants,
-and poured on in a foaming flood over the prostrate town, where it
-completed the havoc the earthquake had begun. It then rushed back
-almost more suddenly than it had advanced, the whole fearful deluge
-occupying only about five minutes. Again and again the earth quivered
-and shook, as if about to rend asunder and drop into some unfathomable
-abyss below, and again the sea dashed forward as if in frantic fury,
-and then as suddenly recoiled, the last time shewing a perpendicular
-wall of water forty-five feet high, capped by an angry crest of foam.
-This tremendous wave swept miles inshore, where it stranded the largest
-ships then lying in the harbour, one of them a United States frigate.
-
-In Arica Mr Squier equipped himself for a journey over the Cordilleras.
-Nothing can exceed the savage wildness of these mountains, or the
-difficulties and dangers of the long narrow passes that intersect
-them. Mr Squier says: 'I have crossed the Alps by the routes of the
-Simplon, the Grand St Bernard, and St Gothard; but at no point on
-any of them have I witnessed a scene so wild and utterly desolate
-as that which spreads out around La Portada.' It is the very acmé
-of desolation--treeless, shrubless, bare of grass, with scarcely a
-lichen clinging to the rugged sides of the huge cliffs. Pile upon pile
-towering to the sullen skies, rise ridges of dark-brown hills bristling
-with snowy peaks, from several of which long trails of smoke stream
-lazily out upon the air, shewing where the pent volcano surges in
-ominous life beneath the wintry wastes of snow.
-
-Descending from the Cordilleras, Mr Squier examined Tiaguanuco, the
-Baalbec of the New World; and from thence proceeded to Cuzco, the
-City of the Sun, the ancient capital of the Incas, which abounds with
-memorials of their vanished greatness. Here stood a magnificent temple
-of the sun, which was lined throughout with plates of gold, two of
-which, preserved as curiosities, were shewn to Mr Squier. The huge
-stones composing this and other massive buildings which yet remain are
-cut and fitted together with a precision which has been equalled, but
-never surpassed. So accurately do they fit, that it is impossible to
-pass the finest-bladed knife between their edges.
-
-In close proximity to these splendid ruins, sometimes under their
-very walls, our author found rude circles of stone, such as still
-exist at Stonehenge and in other parts of Great Britain, and in
-Brittany. Bidding adieu to Cuzco and its suggestive relics, Mr Squier
-in his journey to the coast passed over a stupendously high swinging
-bridge formed of cables of braided withes. This dreadful rope-edifice
-swung freely in space between two gigantic cliffs, which guarded
-like twin sentinels the rush of the deep and rapid Apurimac, one of
-the head-waters of the Amazon. It was something worse than the most
-breakneck defile among the Cordilleras. 'Never,' says our author,
-'will I forget this experience. I can see still the frail structure
-swaying at dizzy height over a dark abyss filled with the deep hoarse
-roar of the river. My eyes grew dim, my heart faint, my feet unsteady
-as I struggled across, not daring to cast a look on either hand.' It
-was no wonder that the nerves of one of the party, an artist, were
-so shaken that he declared that rather than set a foot upon it, he
-would swim across the Apurimac. This he did, and found the water so
-delightfully cool and pleasant, that he resolved to prolong his bath,
-and placed the bundle containing his clothes and shoes on a convenient
-cliff, whence a perverse gust of wind blew them into the water. Long
-he pursued them, with no result except the conviction that he had lost
-them irrecoverably and his way as well. In this condition, foodless,
-garmentless, he wandered about for three days in pathless thickets.
-His feet were cut and bleeding; and his body, scratched and torn, was
-scorched all day by a blistering sun, and so chilled at night by the
-cold breezes that he was glad to bury himself in the warm sand. On the
-fourth day he staggered, faint with fatigue and hunger, to the door
-of an Indian hut, and the inhabitants mistaking him in his ghastly
-squalor for the incarnate genius of fever, which they dread above all
-things, half killed with stones what little life was left in him before
-they would listen to his story.
-
-Mr Squier's researches abundantly shew that, possessing no written
-language, the Incas have impressed their history in characters which
-yet remain upon the scenes of their former glory. Their greatness
-may be traced in the splendid ruins of their temples and palaces.
-Their civilisation is abundantly proved by their bridges, roads,
-caravansaries, reservoirs, aqueducts, and perfect and extensive system
-of irrigation, by means of which vegetation was carried in terraces
-thousands of feet up the steep hill-sides, and the now desert coast
-blushed like a garden with the profuse luxuriance of the tropics. One
-may well ask, which were the barbarians, they or the Spaniards who soon
-made a Sahara of that which they found a Goshen? Their great fortresses
-bristling on every hill-side teach us alike the vastness of their
-military power and their great resources. Of their internal polity we
-catch a suggestive glimpse from their ample prisons; and we learn how
-they lived as we turn over curiously their household and agricultural
-implements, or mark with mute surprise the exquisitely fine texture of
-some mummy shroud, or the delicate carving on some long-buried goblet,
-or the graceful form and excellent workmanship of some fragile relic
-of earthenware. We can even make a guess, as we look at their burial
-towers and tombs, at the current of national thought on one important
-subject. They who laid the dead so carefully, so tenderly to rest,
-believed that in the far-off world of shadows the soul would live again.
-
-
-
-
-A CAST OF THE NET.
-
-THE STORY OF A DETECTIVE OFFICER.
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-There was nothing for me to do, that I could see, for a day or two,
-beyond improving my acquaintance with the factory hands, and keeping
-my eyes open generally; and in pursuance of this latter branch of the
-business, I got up very early on the following morning, and sat for
-an hour or two after daylight in the arbours or boxes I have so often
-mentioned. There was one great charm about the _Anchor_. It was low
-and dirty, decaying and disreputable, and the landlord was a drinking
-fellow, utterly bankrupt and hopeless, who troubled himself about
-nothing. His potman was sottish also, and too accustomed to riff-raff
-and queer doings of every kind to trouble himself about me; so I was
-thoroughly at my ease. All I saw which appeared worthy of notice was
-that the ill-tempered ferryman rowed out alone to the ship I have
-spoken of, and disappeared round its bows. I watched for some time, but
-did not see him come out into midstream; but just before I gave up my
-watch, he came into sight again. Whether he had crossed after rowing up
-a bit and had come back, or whether he had been lying all the time just
-hidden by the ship, of course I could not say.
-
-I had told the potman that I was in hope of seeing a friend of mine
-who was going to Australia and had half promised to take me with him.
-I consequently shewed a great deal of interest in the craft, and asked
-him lots of questions about them. This morning I guessed that the ship
-(the ferryman's ship), was an Australian liner; and this was just the
-joke for the potman, who laughed till his beery cheeks shook again
-at my mistaking a slow old Dutch trader for an Australian liner. He
-was quite severe in his way of poking fun at me; but he ought to have
-pitied my ignorance, not ridiculed it--and so I told him.
-
-I thought I would pass away the morning by going over to T---- and
-watching Mr Byrle's house. I had learnt that he was to be from home
-all day; Miss Doyle had told me so herself; so I knew _she_ knew it
-also; and if she had any suspicious visits to pay, or queer company to
-receive, now was the time: that was evident. Accordingly, I went to
-T---- by rail as before, starting in the rain; but luckily, just as I
-got there it cleared up and the sun came out. To give me a chance of
-learning something, I got asking my way to a lot of places I didn't
-want to go to, just by way of starting a conversation, you know; and
-the man I pitched upon was employed in the goods shed of the railway,
-but did not seem to have much to do just then; and when I asked him if
-he could spare time to run across to the public-house with me, he said
-yes, he thought he could; and he did.
-
-We could see Mr Byrle's house from this place, so it answered as well
-for me as any other; and while I was talking to the porter, I saw a
-tall young fellow, good-looking, but rather flash-looking too, go past,
-and in three or four minutes I saw him ring at the gate of Mr Byrle's
-house.
-
-'Hollo!' I says to my railway friend, 'isn't that Sims Reeves? Does he
-come down here to give lessons?'
-
-He was no more like Sims Reeves than I am, but his was the first name I
-could think of.
-
-'Sims Reeves!' says the porter; 'why that's young Mr Byrle, as gives
-his father no end of trouble. You wouldn't see him there, only the old
-gent is off somewhere for a while. He went from our station last night.'
-
-'Indeed!' I said (and then I saw the young man go into the house); 'and
-what's the quarrel about?'
-
-'Oh, his goings on,' said the railway man. 'Why, I have heard that his
-father has paid thousands on his account; and if he hadn't paid one
-time pretty heavily too, this young fellow would have been in Newgate
-for forging his governor's name. He's agoing abroad, I believe; and a
-good riddance too, I say.'
-
-'And what does he do at the house when his father is away?' I asked;
-and I really felt that our conversation was getting quite interesting.
-
-'Well, it's the old story; a lady's in the case,' said the porter.
-'There's a niece there that's over head and ears in love with Mr
-Edmund--that's his name--and he pretends to be equally sweet on her.
-But if she had seen only as much of him as we have seen at this here
-station, she would never---- There's my foreman agoing into the shed!
-Excuse me.' With that the railway-man finished his pint and was off.
-
-I considered a minute, and then decided I was as well off where I was
-as anywhere; so I borrowed yesterday's _Morning Advertiser_ of the
-barmaid, and sitting down where I could watch the house, pretended
-to read. If any one had watched me, he must have thought I was most
-remarkably interested in the Money Market, for I had that part of the
-paper folded towards me without changing for a good half-hour. At
-the end of that time the door of Mr Byrle's house was opened and the
-son came out. I was ready for a start after him, let him go in which
-direction he might; but he came towards the _Railway Tavern_, my post;
-straight on, nearer, nearer he passed my door. I peeped out after him,
-and saw him actually come into the tavern, entering by another door the
-compartment of the bar next to mine!
-
-I was in the common place; he was in one of those divisions where
-'Glasses only are served in this department;' and so on. There was some
-one there already, for I had heard the occasional clink of a spoon and
-glass, and a cough; but there wasn't more than one, for I had heard no
-voices. I now heard some one speak; I judged it to be young Mr Byrle,
-and I was right.
-
-'Hollo, skipper!' he said, 'what have you been doing to your face? Have
-you been fighting?'
-
-'Fighting!--Well, never mind my face; I don't want to talk about that;
-I shall settle that account some day,' said a voice. (_I_ knew what
-voice; _I_ knew what was the matter with the man's face.)
-
-His surly tone seemed to shut young Mr Byrle up on the subject, for he
-gave a sort of forced laugh and said no more about it. 'When do you
-sail?--for certain now. I must know to an hour to-day, for I don't like
-what I hear of things,' said Mr Byrle.
-
-'Don't speak so loud,' said the other; 'you can never tell who is
-listening;' and there he was more thoroughly right than he suspected.
-However, they dropped their voices so completely after this, that
-though I sat right up against the partition, I could hear nothing more
-than a stray word or so, out of which I could make no sense, until at
-last Mr Byrle said: 'Time's about up, skipper.'
-
-'I suppose so,' said the other. 'Well, you feel quite confident about
-her then; her courage won't fail, you think?'
-
-'_Her_ courage fail? Ha, ha! skipper,' said Mr Byrle; 'you don't
-know her, or you wouldn't say that. She'll come with the material,
-you'll see. From first to last she's never wavered; and look what a
-penetrating mind she has got!'
-
-'Yes; she's clever, I think,' says the skipper.
-
-'Clever!' Mr Byrle repeated, with a deal of contempt in his
-voice--'clever! Who but her would have found out the scheme'----
-
-'Hush!' said the skipper, stopping the young man, just as his
-conversation was getting, I may say, instructive and important. Then
-Edmund Byrle said his train was due, and posted off to the station.
-
-A minute or so after I heard the skipper put down his glass as though
-he had emptied it, and then he too left. I followed at a little
-distance, and got into the same train with him, and got out with him,
-and still following, saw him go to the ferry, pick out, as I knew he
-would, the surly waterman; and I saw him rowed to his own ship, where
-the waterman left him and then rowed over to the other side. Very good.
-Then the skipper had gone to T---- specially to meet Edmund Byrle;
-and Edmund Byrle had gone there specially because his father was away;
-and---- Then I couldn't follow it up any further.
-
-I went boldly into the _Yarmouth Smack_, and not seeing Tilley anywhere
-about, I asked for him under the agreed name, and was told he had gone
-to work on Byrle's wharf; not for the firm, but for some lighterman
-who frequented the public-house. This looked well; and if I got taken
-on, as I expected, the next Monday, I thought it would be very odd
-if between us we didn't find something out. Yet my interest in the
-business seemed dying away, or drifting into altogether a new channel,
-for I could not believe for a moment that Miss Doyle and Edmund Byrle,
-and the skipper and the sulky ferryman, were all linked in with
-stealing a few paltry brass fittings.
-
-I crossed over before the old ferryman came back, and had my dinner in
-the tap-room of the _Anchor and Five Mermaids_. It wasn't a nice place
-for a dinner, and I was always partial to having my things neat and
-tidy, which was by no means the rule at the _Anchor_, and the company
-was not to my standard. I was late to-day, so I missed the factory
-hands; and there were only two men in the room with me; one was a
-costermongerish-looking rough in a velveteen coat and fur cap, which
-was about all I could see of him, for he was asleep all of a heap in a
-corner. The other was a man who had his dinner in a newspaper, and took
-it out, whatever it was, with his fingers, till he had finished it and
-then went away.
-
-I was glad when he was gone, and I had the room as I may say to myself;
-so I sent my plate away, called for a little drop of rum-and-water (the
-only thing you could get fit to drink at the _Anchor_), and lighting
-my pipe, sat with my feet on the fender, to have a good smoke and a
-good hard think. I had sat there perhaps half-a-dozen minutes, and
-had fairly settled down to my thinking, when a low voice said: 'Mr
-Nickham!' My name! It was a very low voice which spoke, but the roar of
-an elephant couldn't have startled me more. In an instant it flashed
-upon me that my disguise was seen through and all my plans understood.
-Robinson Crusoe was not so staggered when he saw the foot-print on the
-sand as I was on hearing these two familiar words. I turned round,
-and there was that miserable-looking rough that I thought had been
-asleep, standing up and making signs to me. He was a regular rough and
-no mistake, with short hair, an ugly handkerchief twisted round his
-neck; his nose had been broken at some time or another, and he looked a
-complete jail-bird. 'Mr Nickham!'
-
-It was he that spoke; no mistake about it this time; and he put his
-hand up to the side of his mouth to keep the sound straight.
-
-'Who are you?' said I; for you know I didn't like to answer to the name
-at once, in case he wasn't certain.
-
-'My name is Wilkins--Barney Wilkins,' said the man. 'But you won't
-recollect me by that p'raps; though I've been through your hands,
-sergeant; but I giv some other name then. You got me twelve penn'orth
-for ringing in shofuls.' (He meant that he had been sent to prison for
-twelve months for passing bad money. I wasn't surprised to hear it;
-he looked fit for that or anything bad. But if he got it through me,
-why he should speak to me now was beyond my comprehension.) 'I knowed
-you directly I see you, sergeant,' he says, coming nearer, but still
-speaking in the same hoarse whisper as at first; 'and though you're a
-tight hand, you're fair and square, and acted as such by me when you
-copped me. You are down here on business--you're after some rare downy
-cards. Now ain't you, sergeant?'
-
-'If you know,' I said, 'what do you ask me for? And if you think I am
-what you say, you don't suppose I shall tell you my business, do you?'
-
-'Sergeant,' he says, coming nearer still, 'you fought a man in the
-street last night, and giv him a thorough good licking. You was the
-only man there as would take the part of a poor gal as wasn't doing no
-harm to nobody; and I respect you for it, sergeant; I do. That gal was
-my sister--my young sister, as has been like a child to me, and was so
-tidy and pretty that I was proud on her, and hoped---- Well, sergeant,
-whatever we are, we all have our feelings; and Sergeant Nickham, I'll
-do you a good turn. Look here!' With this he crept quite close and put
-his mouth almost to my ear. I watched him carefully, being much puzzled
-by his actions, yet I had seen such unexpected things occur in the
-police that I was quite ready to hear something of consequence from
-him. 'You are down here about that Bank paper, what is said to be all
-got back, but which you know it isn't. You are on the right parties,
-and it does you credit; but you'll never get them nor the paper without
-_me_.'
-
-He stopped here, to see what I would say; but though I was ten times
-more surprised than ever, I kept my countenance, and only said: 'Well?'
-In point of fact I didn't know what _to_ say.
-
-'I've been used bad, Mr Nickham,' he went on. 'I've had a lot of
-trouble and risk about that there paper. I got it from B----, and
-took the money for it to him, honest; and have been as near took
-with it in my possession as anythink. Twice the slops (he meant the
-police; 'slops' is what we call 'back-slang,' a rough sort of spelling
-the words backwards)--'twice they have come into my place when the
-stuff was there. Once I was sitting upon it done up like bundles of
-rabbit-skins. Now he gives me (the party wot I am down on)--he gives
-me five pounds, and I can't get no more out of him. And you see there
-ain't no reward out.'
-
-'No, not regularly, Barney,' I said; 'but there's no doubt at all that
-any man coming forward would be very handsomely considered by the Bank
-people.'
-
-'He might be, if he'd got anybody like you to speak for him,' says
-Barney. 'But you know, Mr Nickham, that I am wanted for a lot of things
-by the bobbies; and I have been through the mill so often, that without
-I've got a friend I don't half like touching 'em again. But you're fair
-and square, and you licked the fellow last night; and I'm told you can
-box better than even Tom Sayers could; and if that's so, I'll trust
-you. And this here man won't give me more than five pounds; and he has
-settled with a regular fence, a sort of Dutch-Yankee skipper, what
-pretends to command one of them traders out there.'
-
-'Yes, yes,' I said; 'the man I fought last night. I know him.'
-
-'_Him!_' almost screeched the man (although, mind you, he never once
-forgot his hoarse whisper); 'was it him you licked? Sergeant Nickham,
-I'd go through fire and water for you now, for I hate and despise that
-wretch; and if I had got a chance to do it safely, I'd have'---- He
-checked himself very sudden here, as if what he was going to say wasn't
-exactly the sort of thing to say to a detective. 'I see you are on the
-right lay,' he begins again; 'but I tell you he has settled with that
-skipper to have the stuff put on board, if it ain't already there; and
-then he'll go with it to whatever foreign port the craft comes from.'
-
-'And who is he,' I asked, 'who has arranged with the skipper?'
-
-'Ah, Mr Nickham,' says Wilkins, with a very cunning look, 'as if you
-didn't know! Haven't you been on the lurk round his house for two days
-past? Wasn't you there this morning?'
-
-Egad! I saw it all now! You might have knocked me down with a feather.
-I could hardly help saying something which would have shewed my
-astonishment; but I choked it down, and quite determined to keep
-the upper hand with him, I said as cool as I could: 'Now, Wilkins,
-no beating about the bush, or making me help you out. If you've got
-anything to say, any name to mention, out with it like a man, and I'm
-your friend. You understand me.'
-
-'Fair and square you are, Mr Nickham,' says Barney; 'and so you'll find
-me. That young Mr Byrle has got the paper, and he means to go out with
-the trader. There is people over in Holland awaiting anxious for it;
-and if once they gets hold of it, it's all U. P. with our bank-notes.
-Now, I don't know where the paper is; if I had known, bust me if I
-wouldn't have blowed the gaff long ago!'
-
-He meant that he would have exposed the whole transaction, and I
-noticed that this declaration did not quite agree with his anxiety
-to have a friend on his side, a point on which he had dwelt so much
-before; but that didn't signify.
-
-'Now, Mr Nickham,' he went on, 'you must board the craft when the paper
-is shipped, if it ain't there yet.'
-
-'It ain't there yet, my man,' I said, remembering what had dropped from
-Edmund Byrle, that 'she would come on board with the material.'
-
-'Then I think it will be to-night,' he continued; 'for a sail-maker as
-has been at work aboard her says she drops down the river to-morrow;
-and I think by what I can learn in other quarters, he is right.'
-
-I thought so too, and at once made up my mind that the meeting at the
-_Railway Tavern_ was to settle about shipping the paper.
-
-'I can give a pretty good guess at the man they will engage for the
-job,' says Wilkins.
-
-'I know him,' I said; 'a tall, sulky-looking, bony-headed old fellow,
-with a game eye.'
-
-'Why, Mr Nickham,' says Wilkins, 'you're a wonder, a perfect wonder!
-You're a credit to the force, and Sir Richard ought to hear of it!
-Why, that's the man, the very man; and here have you only been down
-two days, and know all about it! Keep your eye on him after dark, and
-you're all right.'
-
-We had some more talk after this; and then he pretended to go to sleep
-in his corner again, and I went out.
-
-I went straight into the City and saw some of our chief people, who
-sent over to the Bank. They would not chance my going there, for fear
-of somebody seeing me that had better know nothing about it. The gents
-from the Bank could hardly believe their ears, and the compliments they
-paid me, to be sure! It was decided that everything was to be left in
-my hands, and I was provided with letters to the right parties at the
-water-side. But I need not go into any further particulars of that kind.
-
-I was not going to trouble myself any more just now about the pilfering
-at Byrle & Co.'s factory; as far as I was interested in it, the thieves
-might take boilers, wheels, chimneys, and all. I took up my post in the
-old arbours, and there, though the rain came steadily down, I sat. I
-managed to get a pretty dry corner; and with a little of the _Anchor's_
-rum-and-water and my pipe, I made myself tolerably comfortable while I
-sat and watched the Dutch trader. I was well screened from the sight of
-any one below, or else my corner would not have suited; and although I
-could hear the steps and the voices of the people going to the ferry,
-and could have touched them by leaning over, yet they could not see me.
-
-The bony ferryman, in his tarpaulin coat and hat, was there this
-afternoon; and very sloppy and miserable all the boats looked; and as
-the tide fell lower and lower, the great broad bed of river-mud grew
-broader, and the path to the ferryboat grew longer, and still I kept my
-watch, and meant to keep it. I must own, however, that I did not expect
-to see anything worth notice, for what could there be? But sometimes,
-you know, in our business, it is as necessary to watch to make sure
-there is nothing being done, as it is to make sure that some important
-movement is going on.
-
-There was an oyster-smack not fifty yards from me as was left on the
-shingle or mud when the tide went down; and there was a man smoking
-his pipe on the deck of that oyster-smack, just as I was smoking mine
-in the arbour; and when night came, and the river got dark, and you
-couldn't make anything out of it but a great black space, with a hollow
-sound of the wind moaning over it and of the water lapping on the shore
-as the tide rose again--then there was a lantern burning on the deck
-of that smack, and there was a similar lantern burning in my arbour;
-but the light was shewn open on board of the smack, and mine was a
-dark-lantern (so was the other) with the light hid. But I was perfectly
-well aware that the man aboard that smack never took his eyes off me
-while it was light, and that after dark he watched to see if I shewed
-my lantern. I didn't shew it; but if I had, there would have been a
-Thames police galley and five armed constables alongside of that hard
-in a couple of minutes.
-
-
-
-
-AN EXTRAORDINARY PROJECT.
-
-
-In the city of San Francisco resides Mr Hubert Howe Bancroft, a
-gentleman about forty-five years of age, formerly engaged in commerce,
-but now retired from business, in order that he may devote his whole
-life, as well as the wealth which he had amassed, to the furtherance
-of a project which he formed some sixteen years ago. This was no less
-comprehensive a task than the compilation of a full history, as well
-as a scientific account, of all that vast district west of the Rocky
-Mountains, which, stretching from Panama to Alaska, embraces Central
-America, Mexico, and California. It was to be in a popular form, and
-to embrace every point of interest that could be ascertained respecting
-the Pacific States, their aboriginal inhabitants, their successive
-civilised occupiers, their geology, botany, and other natural features.
-First of all in this stupendous task comes the history of the native
-tribes--to be completed in five volumes, the first instalments of
-which are already published by Messrs Appleton and Co. in New York,
-and by Messrs Longmans in our own country. These will be followed by a
-history of the States from the Spanish Conquest down to contemporary
-times, and for this portion of the work it is thought that some twenty
-volumes will be required. A third series will treat of the geological
-structure of the territory, its minerals especially, and of mining
-operations. Physical geography forms the fourth section of the proposed
-work; whilst the fifth will deal with agriculture; and the sixth with
-bibliography. It must be apparent that a man must be of a highly
-sanguine temperament to imagine such an enterprise; it will be well if
-he live to complete only a portion of it; and should he really succeed
-in doing what he wishes, he will have earned for himself an honourable
-distinction, and conferred on the world an extraordinary boon.
-
-But how was such an undertaking to be begun? Where were the materials;
-and even granting that they were to be procured, how was such a mass
-of general reading as must be consulted, to be utilised? Mr Bancroft's
-first step was to solve this difficulty. He decided to establish at
-his own cost, in San Francisco, a library of reference, which should
-contain all the books to be had for money which could throw any light
-on the subject. With this end in view, he appointed agents in all the
-principal cities of the world, whose business was to frequent sales,
-examine book catalogues, and effect the purchase of any volumes which
-seemed likely to contain useful information. Of course by such a system
-many books were transmitted to headquarters which ultimately proved
-to be of little or no value; but this was inevitable in the course of
-purchases of such magnitude. And notwithstanding all drawbacks of the
-kind, the collection has gradually increased, until it is said now to
-consist of between eighteen and twenty thousand volumes, including
-pamphlets; whether this number also includes manuscripts, we are unable
-to say. The acquisition of these works has been occasionally furthered
-by adventitious circumstances. The Mexican war, for instance, was the
-means of throwing in Mr Bancroft's way some highly valuable documents,
-which, under favourable circumstances, would have remained the property
-of their lawful owners; these, contained in four volumes, are a set
-of parchment records of the Church in Mexico between the years 1530
-and 1583, and apart from their historical value, have an interest to
-the bibliopolist as containing autographs of many celebrated men,
-amongst others of Philip II., Torquemada, Las Casas, and Zumarraga,
-first Archbishop of Mexico. This last-named worthy is notorious for
-his act of insensate bigotry in destroying the Aztec records, and
-thereby depriving the world of the history of that race; he burned the
-hieroglyphic paintings of Anahuac in the public square of Tlatelolco,
-much as Ximenes did with eighty thousand Moorish manuscripts in
-Granada. These priceless records were stolen from the government
-archives! When the unfortunate Emperor Maximilian's library was sold,
-many valuable works were also obtained from that collection, which had
-been gathered together during a lifetime by a well-known amateur, Count
-Andrade.
-
-The weakest part of the arrangement of Mr Bancroft's undertaking is
-the manner in which the books are housed, but this is probably an
-unavoidable evil; they occupy the fifth story of the owner's house in
-Market Street, San Francisco, where they are exposed to all the risk of
-fire, to say nothing of the inconvenience of such a plan. The apartment
-in which they are kept occupies the whole length of the building, and
-the books are arranged upon shelves reaching from the floor to the
-ceiling, and running from one end of the room to the other. Let us now
-see how it is proposed to utilise this mass of literature for reference.
-
-No one but a resolute enthusiast with an abundance of means could have
-brought this extraordinary project into shape. The trouble spent in the
-undertaking has been enormous. Of course, the projector has a staff
-of assistants possessing the requisite accomplishments, headed by a
-librarian, Mr Oak, who has been indefatigable in producing a catalogue
-of the works collected, with copious subordinate references. So aided,
-Mr Bancroft, as we understand, has begun his literary operations; but
-whether he will live to complete his colossal production in proper
-artistic style must necessarily be left to conjecture. Fortunately,
-besides being still in middle life, he is said to have splendid bodily
-health and great powers of endurance, both of which must stand him
-in good stead. He always writes at a standing desk, and sometimes
-prolongs his hours of labour to as many as eleven or twelve--which seem
-to us excessive. Such application may do for work which is chiefly
-compilation; but any brain-worker knows that it is simply impossible to
-do really valuable work throughout such a time. As a matter of fact,
-very few men can read or write hard for more than six hours a day with
-profitable result. Let us hope, however, that the man who has had
-courage to undertake such a task, will have self-restraint enough not
-to endanger its success by an undue straining of the faculties, which
-must be kept in full repair to insure its accomplishment. We should be
-sorry to hear that any disaster from fire had put an abrupt termination
-to so well-meaning, though we may be allowed to call it a somewhat
-eccentric undertaking.
-
-
-
-
-GORDON.
-
-
-She came on towards me, her trailing draperies falling round her
-with the soft grace she gave to all she touched. Sunshine was on her
-beautiful hair--evening sunshine, which turned the wreath of plaits
-she wore into a crown of burnished gold. She came floating on, through
-the flower and fruit gemmed orange trees, through the crimson and pure
-white camellia bloom; violets grew beneath her feet, and she seemed to
-me part of the glory and the fragrance of the sunset and the blossoms.
-
-Below the terrace where I stood, lay the sea, where blue faded to
-green, and green to opal, melting into one deep far-stretching mystery
-of purple light and banks of golden cloud. Palaces and domes and
-tapering spires shone white against the dark background of distant
-mountains. Suddenly the music of many bells rung out on the still air,
-their chiming softened by distance into low faint sweetness. They
-were the bells of the stately marble city that shone so fair across
-her gleaming bay. The first bell-notes were taken up and echoed by
-the bells of chapels in villages along the shore; of convents hidden
-away in country dells and valleys, till the air was full of lingering
-prayerful sound. Through it, through the magical Italian twilight came
-the woman I loved. She came and stood beside me, looking across the
-water to where Genoa's palaces glimmered against the sky; but I do not
-think she saw or thought of them. There was a dreamy look in her eyes,
-a cold, set weariness about her mouth, which is only seen in those
-whose thoughts have drifted far from where they stand.
-
-'Are you tired of this place?' I at length ventured to ask her.
-
-'Not particularly,' she answered; 'you know I never care much where I
-am.' The words sound petulant; but said as she said them, they were
-only weary. I should have been glad if she had ever shewn impatience;
-anything rather than the cold quiet which ever lay upon her beauty like
-a pall. At first, in my triumphant happiness at having won her promise
-to be my wife, this coldness had not chilled me--as it sometimes did
-now--to the heart. I so longed, so hungered for a word of love, for a
-tender look. All her stately beauty would soon be mine, and it seemed
-still as far from me as ever.
-
-We leaned on the low parapet of the terrace, while the music of the
-bells died away, till only the slow beating of the waves broke the
-stillness. It was an hour of wonderful peace and beauty, yet a strange
-sense of unrest took possession of me, and jarred the music of the
-waves and the restful quiet of the twilight. Standing there close to
-her, with the certainty that soon she would be my own for ever, a vague
-thrill of fear came over me, a fear lest all this feverish joy of
-knowing she was mine, might vanish away, and leave me a lonely mortal.
-This love for her had become to me an all-absorbing passion; and yet
-she never for one moment allowed me to think that my love was returned.
-Perhaps it was the might of her beauty that filled my senses; yet I
-have seen beautiful women since, and had seen them before I first saw
-her on the walls above the old Etruscan gateway at Perugia.
-
- * * * * *
-
-One morning the week before, I had strolled out from the dull hotel;
-and leaving the street with its tall houses and quaint old fountain,
-glowing in the day's first freshness, I sauntered on to the walls, and
-there I first saw her. Below in the valley the silvery olive leaves
-trembled in the sunshine; wreaths of broad-leaved vines clung to the
-gray old trees, clothing them with a borrowed beauty of youth and
-freshness. Hundreds of flowers blushed in the light, and varied odours
-from herb and blossom filled the air with a subtle languor. Above,
-on the lichen-covered wall, with a background of purple mountain, a
-fitting frame to her stately loveliness, she sat, looking out across
-the sunlit land, with the dreary far-away look in her great deep eyes,
-and the haughty coldness upon her chiselled face. I lingered about,
-drinking draughts of beauty; fancying it was my artistic sense that
-kept me there watching her face, till she rose wearily, and slowly
-walking down the street, entered the hotel where I was staying.
-
-I found on inquiry that a Mrs Vereker and her niece, Miss Mayne, had
-arrived there the previous evening. I had sometimes met Mrs Vereker
-in London; and later on in the day, while I was carelessly examining
-the carving on the fountain in the square I saw her and my vision of
-the morning standing on the cathedral steps. Mrs Vereker came forward
-with that friendliness we feel for a slight home acquaintance whom we
-may chance to meet when abroad. So I joined them, and we strolled on
-chatting over home news. Miss Mayne seldom spoke, and yet that walk
-seemed to me a strangely happy one. Mrs Vereker told me they had only
-been a day in Perugia, and had intended going on at once to Rome;
-but the mountain air and mountain views were so delightful, they had
-changed their minds, and intended remaining for some time at Perugia.
-
-I had come to the old town to study art; to search the blazoned
-manuscripts lying hidden in sacristy and convent, and learn from them
-their secrets of colour and design; to wander through frescoed church
-and palace, where walls and ceilings are brilliant still as when the
-hands which wove their gorgeous stories first laid the pencil down and
-thanked God for the great consoler--Art. I had come to watch the mists
-rising from the valleys, and wrapping the mountains in soft mystery
-of cloud--cloud which changes and shifts, and melts at last into the
-golden and purple, the opaline green of the sunrise; so that I might
-try to wrest from Nature a faint touch of her magic of shadow and
-light, of colour and form, and lay it at the feet of the one mistress I
-had ever known--Art.
-
-What I was now studying was a woman's heart--and what I learned
-was--nothing. I do not think mine is an impressionable nature. I had
-spent thirty years in the world, and had never loved any woman until I
-saw Mary Mayne in the morning light sitting above that old gateway; yet
-in one short week I had grown to love her--well, as few women are ever
-loved.
-
-At the end of that week came a letter from Willie Vereker, saying his
-yacht needed some repairs, and he would put in at Genoa for a few days
-if his mother could meet him there. He had been to the East, and she
-had not seen him for some time; so she decided on going back to Genoa;
-hoping the _Gwendoline_ might need more repairing than Willie thought,
-and keep him there longer than he expected. The evening of the day Mrs
-Vereker received that letter, I told her of my love for her niece, and
-asked permission to accompany them to Genoa.
-
-She regarded me with an odd look of compassion. 'Have you spoken to
-Mary yet?' she asked.
-
-I told her I had not; I wished to wait until we had known each other
-longer; I feared being too precipitate.
-
-'Then,' said Mrs Vereker, 'I have no right to tell you anything of her
-story. It is a sad one, poor child! and I warn you, you have little
-chance of success. If you choose, you can come with us to Genoa; but if
-I were you, I should not do so. Save yourself while you can. You have
-known her a very short time. If you leave us now, you will soon forget
-her; later, you may find it a more difficult task.'
-
-I shook my head. The advice came too late. I went with them to Genoa.
-The stately marble city had a charm for us all. Mrs Vereker had her
-son, and the two found marvellous attractions in the quaint narrow
-streets with their palace portals, their courts and halls, where
-fountains sparkled and flung diamonds of spray round the brows of pure
-fair statues; where in the coolness and the shadow, gold-laden orange
-trees and thick masses of crimson blossom gleamed with sudden startling
-glory.
-
-I had my idol. Day after day I was by her side. It was a fool's
-Paradise perhaps; but I suppose there is such an Eden in every life;
-and looking back, when we have left its short-lived peace, we vainly
-long for a single throb of its rapture. So, during those quiet days at
-Genoa, each of us, except Mary Mayne, had our heart's desire: Willie,
-the life, the colour, the loveliness he and his _Gwendoline_ sought in
-voyages to many lands; Mrs Vereker, her son; I, my new delirious joy.
-There, on the terrace where we were standing, I first spoke to Mary,
-and heard her tell me my love was hopeless. She told me her story.
-
-Her wedding-day had been fixed. In a year she was to have been married
-to a man she loved with her whole heart; when the war with Russia broke
-out, and Gordon Frazer's regiment was ordered to the Crimea. He and
-Mary wished to be married before he left, but family reasons prevented
-it, and so they parted. He had never returned to England. A soldier
-brought Mary a little locket which she had given Gordon. The ribbon
-it hung upon was thickened here and there with deep dark stains; and
-the man said Gordon Frazer had given it to him to take to Mary, when
-the young officer lay dying after the charge at Balaklava. It was
-only the story of many an English and many a Russian girl during that
-dreadful time. When a strong, self-contained nature breaks down, it is
-almost utter collapse; so it was with Mary. For months she lay silent,
-tearless, listlessly unable to make the slightest exertion, to take the
-smallest interest in life. Her friends thought her brain had suffered
-from the shock; and when she recovered sufficiently to travel, Mrs
-Vereker had taken her abroad, where they had been moving from place to
-place ever since. Her body regained health; she was now quite strong;
-but the girl's heart and soul seemed dead; as she said, dead, and
-buried in Gordon Frazer's grave. Yet as I listened I did not despair.
-I had no living rival; he was dead, this man she loved; while my heart
-was beating, living, and strong with its worship of her. If I could
-only win her to be my wife, the dead love would pale and faint before
-my real and passionate devotion. So I hoped, as day by day I watched
-her every look, forestalled her every wish, until she grew accustomed
-to my presence, and to rely upon my care. My hopes were answered; ere
-long I won her reluctant consent to be my wife, but on the condition
-that our marriage should not take place until their return to England
-next year.
-
-The rosy clouds were fading into the deep purple of Italian night.
-Silence fell around us as a mantle; only the throb of the sea below
-the terrace broke the intense quiet. Out on the sea shone the white
-sails of a little yacht. Nearer, within the harbour, rose the masts and
-spars of many ships, mysterious, spectre-like, as ships always look at
-night. As we were seated in calm enjoyment of the scene, a small boat
-shot out from the rocks beneath our feet, where lay some hidden cave or
-landing-place. It was rowed by two men; a third sat wrapped in a large
-cloak in the stern. They rowed well, and the boat was nearly a mile
-from us, leaving a bright line of light upon the shining water, when a
-cry broke the calm of the night--a wild, weird cry, with agony in its
-tone. 'Gordon!' I have never heard its like since, and I hope I never
-shall again. In its agonised tone I could scarcely recognise the voice
-of Mary, so changed was it, so shrill with long pent-up yearning, as it
-wailed out that one word--'Gordon!' The cry seemed to be repeated again
-and again, though softened by the echoes, while the little boat sped
-on its way, and its passengers--mere dark specks they seemed--climbed
-into the yacht. The white sails gleamed against the horizon, and then,
-phantom-like, were lost in its dim purple.
-
-I turned and looked at Mary. She stood with her eyes fixed on the
-darkness which hid the yacht from sight, her hands clasped upon her
-heart, her face drawn and colourless. I feared the fate her friends
-dreaded for her had stricken her as she stood beside me there in
-the still luxurious twilight. 'Mary, my dearest, my own! what is
-it?'--taking her hand and drawing her closer.
-
-She drew her hand from mine, and shuddering away from me, leaned
-against the stone parapet, resting her head on the cold marble coping.
-
-'You are ill; let me take you home, darling,' I said.
-
-'No,' she murmured; 'not ill. But oh,' she exclaimed, 'Harry, Harry! my
-good kind friend, help me! _Gordon was near us just now._ I felt it; I
-am sure of it. You will help me to find him; will you not?'
-
-Help her to find him! help to break my own heart--to bruise this
-new-found sweetness out of my life! The very thought struck me with
-a sudden chill. What if this fancy of hers, coming so close upon my
-sure forebodings, should be a reality? What if Gordon Frazer were
-still in existence? I thrust the thought from me as I should thrust a
-temptation. 'I will help you in any way I can, my darling,' I said;
-'but come in now; the night-air is chilling; and you are giving way to
-feverish fancies.'
-
-'No,' she said; 'it is no fancy.' Drawing herself up wearily, she
-turned without looking at me; and I followed her down the terrace and
-across the marble court of the old palace which was our home in Genoa.
-I watched her glide, stately and pale and quiet, up the broad white
-staircase.
-
-It was months before she recovered from the brain-fever in which she
-awoke next morning--such awful months, during which we often feared
-the worst. Yet when they were over, and she was among us again, paler,
-more fragile, but still her own beautiful self, stately, self-possessed
-as usual, I was almost thankful for the terrible illness, which proved
-that her cry and wild words on the terrace were but warnings of coming
-illness, the mere wandering of a brain diseased.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Roman season was nearly over, yet Rome was full--full of English
-sightseers, like ourselves; full of Americans, on rapid flight across
-Europe; of eastern prelates, in flowing eastern robes, with olive-hued
-eastern faces; of eager-faced French ladies, and solemn-eyed peasants
-from lonely villages on the Campagna, and of Italians from city and
-from plain; for it was Easter-time. We were only waiting until the
-conclusion of the festivities to set out on our journey home. Home! I
-never until now felt half the meaning of that word. When we got home,
-Mary and I would be married. I should give up wandering, and settle
-down into a country gentleman. I thought with a pang of self-reproach
-of the grand old home which called me master, shut up in desolate state
-since my dear father died. How a fair young mistress would brighten and
-beautify the old rooms. I could see it all now--the oaken hall with
-its quaint old pictures; spring sunshine pouring in at the open door,
-red-coated sportsmen grouped under the beeches, horns ringing from the
-copses, children playing under the shadow of the avenue of limes--the
-loveliness of joyous life, where for so long had been the silence left
-by death. It was a sunny dream of home--home in fair England, into
-which I had fallen; standing there, upon the Pincian, under the deep
-dark blue of Roman night.
-
-Below lay the city, its narrow streets dimly mysterious, no light
-visible in their tall houses; the fountain murmured its sweet
-monotonous music in the Piazza di Spagna; the wide white marble steps
-gleamed along the hillside; tall palm-trees cast weird shadows across
-the gravelled walks; nightingales answered each other in low rich
-trills of song, echoing from tree to tree, through whispering palms and
-odorous night-flowers. Beside me, cold and silent, was the woman whose
-charmful spell woke within me this new sweet longing for home--home
-musical with the soft rustling of women's garments; with the tender
-voices of little children. I suppose such a dream and such a longing
-come to all men at some time of their lives; it came to me that night
-as I stood above the city of vanished glories, of dead and buried
-dreams.
-
-It did not last long. Suddenly, above the city roofs, a cross of
-silvery light shone out against the sky. The illumination of Saint
-Peter's had begun. Above the winding narrow streets, above palace
-roofs, above palm and cypress, above triumphal arch and mouldering
-temple, over the palace of the Cæsars, over Capitol and Forum, the
-silvery cross shone glad, triumphant; and from it, the light spread
-from window to window, from pillar to pillar, till the vast pile was
-one glory, changing rapidly from soft silvery radiance into a glow of
-golden fire.
-
-'It was worth coming to see. Was it not, Mary?'
-
-'Mary!' A stranger's voice echoed her name; and instead of answering
-my question, she sprang with a low cry from my side, and laid her head
-upon a stranger's breast. 'Did you not get my letters? I have been
-looking everywhere for you,' I heard him say.
-
-She did not answer, nor raised her head; as if at last she had found
-her rest.
-
-'You are not alone here?' he went on. 'Who are you with?'
-
-Then with a quiver as of pain, she raised herself, and looked from me
-to him with beseeching eyes and trembling clasped hands.
-
-Before she spoke--for even in all the agony of my crushed-out hopes, my
-love for her bore down all other feelings, and I tried to save her from
-the pain of telling me what I already knew--I said: 'You have found
-an older friend than I am, Mary. Shall I leave him to take you to Mrs
-Vereker?'
-
-'An older friend?' he repeated. 'By Jove! I should think so.'
-
-Then raising his hat, he shook hands with me as I turned away.
-
-I turned into the darkness, but not before I had seen that until now I
-had never known her, my love, my promised wife. I had known a beautiful
-statue, not the beautiful woman who, with eyes upraised to his, stood
-in the subdued light looking up to Gordon Frazer. All the coldness, all
-the stately calm had gone, fallen from her as a mantle falls--a mantle
-which had hidden the fullness of her loveliness, and had concealed from
-me a tender grace and beauty I had never till now beheld. I have never
-seen her since.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Some time afterwards I met a friend who had seen a good deal of the
-Frazers. He was loud in admiration of Mrs Frazer's beauty and of her
-devotion to her husband. 'He was out in the Crimea, you know, and was
-reported dead; but he was only wounded. Some Russian family, to whose
-house he had managed to be sent, had tended him with kindly care after
-even his own doctors had given up hope, and had pulled him through his
-danger. Mrs Frazer told me,' continued my friend, 'how one evening
-when standing on a terrace at Genoa, she heard his voice; and thinking
-it was a reproach from the grave (for she was going to marry another
-fellow), she got brain-fever, and was near dying. The fact was, the
-yacht in which a friend had brought him from Constantinople touched at
-Genoa, and he had actually spent the day doing the palaces! When she
-heard his voice, he was returning to the _Peri_, which lay about two
-miles from the shore. Romantic story, isn't it? But Gordon takes her
-devotion coolly enough; the love seems more on her side than on his. I
-cannot understand that.'
-
-Understand it? Yes, I could. Hers was one of those great-souled natures
-who like to give rather than to take, to pour out all the wealth and
-beauty of their being on the idol which they have clothed in all the
-glory of their own imaginings. God grant she may live on to the end,
-happy in her womanly idol-worship!
-
-As for me, the dream I dreamt upon the Pincian Hill, before the cross
-of golden light shone over the city roofs, was never realised. No
-rustle of woman's garments makes low music in the old oak-panelled
-rooms; no children's voices wake the echoes under the avenues of
-arching limes. The old Devon manor-house stands as yet without a
-mistress.
-
-
-
-
-NARCOTISM.
-
-
-In these days of medical knowledge, when so many merciful means for the
-alleviation of pain are known, it follows as a matter of course that
-great abuse of sleep-producing agents exists. We would therefore say a
-few words of caution as to the pernicious practice of people making use
-of chloral, chlorodyne, chloroform, and other kindred agents _without
-medical advice_. It is, we think, little known to how great an extent
-this evil exists. To come across a lady who is constantly more or less
-under the influence of chlorodyne, is by no means uncommon; every
-trifling ailment or passing _malaise_ being an excuse for a few drops
-of that narcotic. Chloral is also extensively and improperly used; the
-more so because, unfortunately at the time of its first introduction as
-a sleep-producing agent, it was most erroneously stated to be perfectly
-harmless, and many are still under this impression.
-
-The real truth is, that _no_ narcotic of any kind whatever is harmless,
-but on the contrary, invariably pernicious when taken otherwise
-than by the advice and under the treatment of a medical man. True,
-sleeplessness is one of the most trying things a person can suffer
-from; but then there are other means of combating the enemy than by
-dosing one's self with chloral or any such agent; and thus making an
-infirmity chronic, which would in all probability have been only a
-temporary evil. Rely upon opiates for sleep, and sleep will not come
-without them. Thus a bad habit is formed; the bodily strength is
-undermined, the digestive powers enfeebled, the mind and intellect
-weakened and enervated, and the unfortunate sufferer becomes a slave,
-bound hand and foot to a habit that it is almost impossible to shake
-off. Sleeplessness often comes from want of sufficient fresh air and
-exercise, from over-mental work, mental distress, from too great a
-quantity of stimulants taken during the day, and from various other
-causes, which a little care as to diet and regimen would quickly
-overcome. Taking short naps during the day; too much tea and coffee
-drinking, especially shortly before bedtime--all these are apt to cause
-sleeplessness. In many cases a light and simple supper taken shortly
-before retiring to rest, and attention to the feet being thoroughly
-warm, will insure a good night's sleep when more energetic means have
-failed.
-
-In those terrible abodes of suffering, our cancer hospitals, the
-method of all others most resorted to, and most efficacious for the
-alleviation of pain, is the sub-cutaneous (under-the-skin) injection of
-morphia. In sciatica, neuralgia, and other painful nervous affections,
-this remedy is often exceedingly beneficial, when used under competent
-medical advice and supervision; but like every other good thing it
-is open to great abuse, and often made use of merely as a soothing
-narcotic by the irritable, excitable, and discontented. A long train
-of evils follows; but with these we are not called upon to deal here.
-What we want now to lay before the reader is a plain statement as to
-the prompt treatment called for in a case of over-narcotism from
-too strong a dose of injected morphia. Coldness of the extremities,
-lividity of the countenance, profuse cold sweat, and loss of power
-over the limbs, insensibility, very deep breathing, and contraction of
-the pupils of the eyes to such an extent that they resemble a black
-pin-head, result.
-
-What then is to be done? Time is precious, and perhaps half an hour
-or more may elapse before medical aid can be obtained. Taking it for
-granted that the patient is in a recumbent position, the first thing to
-be done is to raise the head, to sponge the face and chest copiously
-with fresh cold water, to rub the limbs steadily and strongly, to put
-hot-water applications to the feet and to the sides of the body, if
-it feel cold to the touch. Place strong smelling-salts to the nose;
-lay the head on one side with the mouth open, so that the tongue may
-not fall back and prevent respiration; give brandy-and-water, if the
-patient can possibly swallow it; but if the narcotism be severe, this
-will be impossible, and it is wisest to abstain from attempts which
-may result in fluid going the wrong way. In fact do everything to keep
-the body warm and the breathing unimpeded, and strive to rouse the
-unconscious faculties into action.
-
-Supposing, however, that the narcotism be very excessive, and the
-breathing be slow, irregular, and low, then if medical aid be not
-forthcoming, it would be well to resort to artificial respiration;
-by no means a difficult matter to manage, if only any one present
-has a slight amount of knowledge on the subject. The following is Dr
-Sylvester's method, and is advantageous from its simplicity: 'Place the
-patient on the back, inclined a little upwards from the feet by raising
-and supporting the head on a cushion, placing support also under the
-shoulder-blades. Draw out the tongue and keep it forward, so as to
-leave the air-passages free. Remove all clothing from the neck, chest,
-and abdomen. Stand by the patient's head, take firm hold of the arms
-just above the elbows, and draw them gently and steadily upwards above
-the head, keeping them stretched upwards for two or three seconds. Then
-turn down the arms, and press them firmly and steadily against the
-sides of the chest for two or three seconds. Repeat these movements
-alternately, deliberately, and _perseveringly_, until a spontaneous
-effort at respiration is perceived; immediately upon which, proceed to
-try by every possible means to induce circulation and warmth.' However,
-should the case of narcotism be _not_ a severe one, such extreme
-measures as artificial respiration will not be called for, and in all
-probability, after the use of those simpler remedies at first named,
-sickness will occur, and this may be taken as a sign that the worst of
-the evil is over.
-
-And here let us once more emphatically state that in this and all
-other cases we assume that a medical man is sent for, and that our
-suggestions only refer to what is to be done _until_ he appears
-upon the scene. Nothing is so annoying and so productive of harm as
-for a non-professional person to be constantly making this and that
-suggestion as to the treatment of a sufferer, when a medical man is
-giving his best thought and skill to the case; but on the other hand
-it is well for people--more especially women--to know what to do when
-thrown upon their own resources.
-
-Cases of poisoning from over-doses of opiates are of course only one
-class of such-like accidents; and the accidental swallowing of irritant
-poisons, embrocations, &c. often occur, and call for the utmost
-promptitude of action and presence of mind on the part of those present.
-
-In the less densely populated parts of the country, it is a positive
-necessity that people should be able to rely upon themselves in cases
-of emergency, for if a doctor is many miles distant, and it takes
-several hours to fetch him, one might almost as well be without him,
-where sharp practice is called for. To produce vomiting, one of the
-best emetics we happen to know of is an American one. It consists of
-a table-spoonful of common treacle (molasses it is called across the
-water) and as much powdered alum stirred into it as the sticky compound
-can be made to contain. Now alum is such a valuable drug in many ways
-that it ought to be kept in every household medicine-chest; and treacle
-is not usually hard to get. We have never seen this remedy tried in a
-case of poisoning, but we _have_ seen its effect in croup; and anything
-more decided and imperious in its action it would be difficult to
-imagine. Such a dose might freely be given in _any_ case of poisoning;
-and after the emetic has acted freely, we would give some soothing
-mixture, such as thickened milk. There are various things which have
-the power to a certain extent of protecting the coats of the stomach
-from the action of irritant poisons; if the poison be an acid, the
-scrapings off a white-washed wall or chalk and milk are good. Milk
-almost stiffened with common brown sugar is one of them; sweet oil
-taken to nauseation is another.
-
-In all cases of poisoning, _loss of time_ is the one great thing to be
-avoided; and the nearest remedy at hand is the best one to make use of.
-Mustard and water, strong and plenty of it, is a capital emetic. Of
-croup, that enemy of juvenile humanity, we must now speak a few words;
-and we know of no better remedy than the American one above described,
-combined with a hot bath and a hot blanket to roll the child well up in
-afterwards.
-
-The ignorance of the poor as to the treatment and still more the
-prevention of the diseases of children is something appalling, and
-there can be no doubt that thousands of little lives are annually
-sacrificed to this Moloch.
-
-'I can't tell what ails my child, ma'am,' said a labourer's wife to
-the writer of this, one bitter day last winter, 'he's carrying on so
-strange: crowing like a cock, and turning his-self almost black in the
-face every nows and again.'
-
-The infant in question was comfortably seated on a nice cold door-step,
-and breathing as if he had swallowed a baby's rattle by mistake.
-'Your child has the croup,' I said, picking up the unfortunate little
-creature and carrying it to the fireside; 'and if you don't do
-something for him at once, he'll very likely die.'
-
-However something _was_ done for him, and he didn't die; but he had a
-kick for his life all the same, and very little more door-step would
-have finished him. Yet this poor woman was not an unloving mother; she
-was only ignorant, and in her ignorance, assisting her child into the
-grave she would have shed such bitter tears over.
-
-From croup to diphtheria is a natural progression, and we would wish
-to say a few, a very few words on this terrible disease; not as to its
-treatment by the amateur nurse, for it is of the greatest importance
-that such cases should have close medical care. It is then on the
-subject of the operation called _tracheotomy_--that is, the making
-an outward incision in the windpipe below the seat of the disease,
-and inserting a tube for the purpose of respiration, that we would
-speak--not to discuss it in its medical aspect, but simply to say a
-word or two to nervous mothers who would shrink from the idea of the
-surgeon's knife touching a sick child under any circumstances whatever.
-Surely there can be no more pitiful sight to look upon than a child
-dying of diphtheria--the eyes wild with fear, looking appealingly for
-help from one troubled face to another; the little hand thrust into the
-mouth in helpless, useless effort to dislodge the terrible leather-like
-substance that is clogging up the throat, and making each breath a
-sound so painful that for days and weeks to come it will not cease to
-sound in our ears. What more agonising sight can the sick-room give us
-to gaze upon? And yet doctors have told us of cases in which a mother
-has had such an overpowering dread of the surgeon's knife, that even
-when things come to such a state as this, she has positively refused to
-allow of any attempt at alleviation of her child's agony by a simple
-operation!
-
-Now it is on this head we wish to say a few words of encouragement and
-counsel. Tracheotomy is in the first place a _chance_--a very slight
-chance in most cases--but still a chance for life; but if it does not
-save life, it spares the child a death of awful suffering. The pain of
-the operation itself is so momentary as not to be worth considering,
-and relief is _instantaneous_. We are not speaking of recovery, but
-simply of the difference between such a death as that described above
-and the quiet 'falling asleep' of the child upon whom tracheotomy
-has been performed; and this is what the writer saw--the frightened
-appealing eyes; the pitiful effort at self-help; and then the instant
-relief given by firm and skilful hands; and four-and-twenty hours
-later, the quiet painless death; the boy smiling up into our faces as
-the pure spirit fled to that place of rest and peace where 'there shall
-be no more pain.' It was not a thing to be seen and forgotten.
-
-
-
-
-LIFE IN A MILITARY PRISON.
-
-BY A PRISON CHAPLAIN.
-
-
-In an address lately delivered at Birmingham, Professor Tyndall says:
-'I met some few years since in a railway carriage the governor of one
-of our largest prisons. He was evidently an observant and reflective
-man. He told me that the prisoners in his charge might be divided into
-three classes. The first class consisted of persons who ought never to
-have been in prison. External accident, and not internal taint, had
-brought them within the grasp of the law, and what had happened to them
-might happen to most of us. They were essentially men of sound moral
-stamina, though wearing the prison garb. Then came the largest class,
-formed of individuals possessing no strong bias moral or immoral,
-plastic to the touch of circumstances, which would mould them into
-either good or evil members of society. Thirdly came a class--happily
-not a large one--whom no kindness could conciliate and no discipline
-tame. They were sent into this world labelled "Incorrigible,"
-wickedness being stamped as it were upon their organisations.'
-
-As a matter of fact, there is a distinction made, and rightly made,
-between the inmates of military prisons. They are divided into first,
-second, and third classes; which you may call bad, worse, and worst, if
-you are of the despairing type of philanthropist; or good, better, and
-best, if you are a great believer in human nature, even in imprisoned
-human nature. The first class wear a red stripe on the arm, and being
-the best conducted, are given less work to do and more food. Class
-number two are marked with a yellow stripe; while the third or lowest
-class are distinguished by a white badge. A stranger might perhaps
-shrink from all who wear white stripes as from 'incorrigibles;' but
-some in the third class may be really very little more 'incorrigible'
-than himself, for every prisoner, no matter what his character may
-be, except in very special cases, is placed in the third class on his
-reception. He then, by good conduct, becomes eligible for promotion
-into the second class, and subsequently into the first. Rule one
-hundred and sixty-six of the Regulations for Military Prisons, lays
-down that 'the first class will be composed of those prisoners who,
-from their quiet orderly habits and general good conduct under
-punishment, may appear deserving of being promoted from the second
-class after some experience has been gained of their characters.
-Prisoners in either the first or the second class will also be liable
-to be removed to a lower class for misconduct.' Though the first class
-of prisoners are employed during the same hours as those prescribed
-for the second class, the labour is of a less severe description:
-picking oakum or drill being substituted for the deservedly hated crank
-and shot exercise. Another privilege enjoyed by the first class is,
-that they are never deprived of their bed, whereas, 'all prisoners
-on reception are to sleep for the first week in the same manner as
-a soldier on guard--that is, on a board without undressing--and
-subsequently, the third-class prisoners are to sleep as on guard every
-other night; and the second-class prisoners in the same manner every
-third night: the prisoners of the first class being alone exempted
-from this rule.' First and second class prisoners are employed in this
-prison--which is no Castle of Indolence--at drill, shot exercise, the
-crank, cleaning the passages and other parts of the premises from six
-o'clock A.M. to six o'clock P.M.; and those of the third class from six
-o'clock A.M. to eight o'clock P.M.; with the exception of regular times
-for parades, chapel, and meals.
-
-'If any man will not work neither let him eat,' is a motto strictly
-adhered to by the authorities; for no prisoner is allowed meat-dinner
-who is not employed at hard labour. Those not so engaged are only
-given porridge and bread-and-milk. When labouring at hard work,
-prisoners have a meat-dinner every Tuesday and Thursday. Eight ounces
-of beef without bone and one pint of soup is the allowance. The first
-class have an additional meat-dinner on Sundays. There is, we see,
-considerable advantage to be gained by the prisoner, to reward his
-ambition, should it prompt him to move upward into a higher class.
-Now this is no trifling matter, for the very essence of good prison
-discipline is the subordination of mere punishment to reformation;
-and this system of classification tends not only to preserve a man's
-self-respect, but to fan the spark of hope that otherwise might be
-extinguished in his breast.
-
-The justly celebrated novel _Never too late to Mend_ has made the
-public in some degree familiar with the 'silent system' of prison
-discipline. This system has been found not to work when sentences are
-for a long period. Speech is discovered to be more than a luxury, being
-essential to the mental health of prisoners. None now are condemned
-to the silent system except those who are imprisoned for only a short
-time. And how great is the punishment of not being allowed to speak,
-is proved to the chaplain by this one fact. Nowhere are prayers so
-diligently responded to and hymns sung with such _will_, if without
-musical taste, as in the chapel of a military prison, for prisoners
-recognise the service as an opportunity of convincing themselves that
-they have not become dumb. Until this explanation was given by the
-governor, I was full of admiration for religion, afterwards discovered
-to be more loud-sounding than genuine.
-
-Prisoners condemned to solitary confinement are forced to turn to
-the wall on the approach of visitors or the superior officers of
-the prison. 'Has my face assumed any terrific aspect? Am I so much
-worse-looking than usual?' This is the thought that naturally comes
-into one's mind on walking through a military prison for the first
-time. Each man takes a quick glance at your Gorgon head, and then, fast
-as lightning, turns his back to you and his face to the wall, until
-your apparently baneful or bewitching influence has passed.
-
-Another humiliation to which prisoners have to submit is that of having
-their hair frequently cut short. A man must sink very low indeed
-before he lose altogether personal vanity. It would seem as if there
-were a peacock as well as an angel and a beast in each of us. For this
-reason the regulation that requires the hair of all prisoners of the
-third class to be cropped every fortnight is no slight punishment. It
-is especially felt by those who leave the prison without having been
-promoted to the second and first classes, in which a prisoner's hair is
-permitted to grow during the last fortnight of imprisonment. How can a
-man shew himself in respectable society, or take off his hat to a lady,
-when that common act of courtesy would reveal the fact that his hair
-was cut by--government?
-
-Some may desire to know whether flogging has or has not been entirely
-abolished. To the question, we answer: 'Yes; except for aggravated
-breaches of prison discipline.' Nor is it easy to see in what other way
-such cases can be dealt with. A man, let us suppose in a fit of sulky
-stubbornness, does not attempt to pick his oakum. He is brought before
-the governor, and sentenced to lose his supper and bed; that is, to be
-obliged to sleep on the floor. On going back to his cell he says to
-himself: 'What can I do now to avenge myself on the authorities?' and
-he acts on the impulse that seizes him, which is to break the window
-and destroy everything in his cell. Probably this sort of stubborn
-ill-conditioned character is a coward; and if this be the case, nothing
-is found to bring him to his senses so well as twenty-five lashes
-administered in the presence of the governor and medical officer.
-
-The punishments which we should like to see abolished, if others
-without equal or greater disadvantages could be discovered, are the
-crank and shot-drill. 'What is the crank?' may be asked by happy
-people who have never had to do with prisons in any way. It is, we
-answer, a Sisyphus' wheel that the prisoner is forced to turn twelve
-or fourteen thousand times each day, for no other reason than because
-the useless monotonous exercise is sufficiently hateful to him to be a
-real punishment. 'To what purpose is this waste?' we may ask. Why is
-this wheel not made to pump water or grind corn or do some other useful
-work? Why should a man be degraded into a machine, and made to turn a
-wheel merely for the sake of turning it? Will he not in this way lose
-all self-respect? Yes; these are the unanswerable arguments against
-the crank. But then its very uselessness is urged as an argument for
-its retention. Suppose, for instance, that prisoners are employed in
-gardens where vegetables are cultivated for barrack-use, what will
-be the consequence? That soldiers will desire to abandon their own
-profession for Adam's calling, and for this purpose will designedly get
-into prison. If, again, the crank-wheel be utilised in any way, men
-will feel that they are useful members of society, and will probably
-prefer their new work to the dull routine and irksome duties of
-barrack-life. Almost the same remarks are applicable to shot-drill, or
-the very humiliating process of lifting six times each minute for three
-hours per diem a thirty-six pound cannon-ball, for no other reason than
-to put it down again three paces from where it originally lay. Nothing
-can be more fatiguing and worrying than this process of putting the
-shot there and back, there and back, there and back! But then we must
-again remark, that to make prisons very comfortable is absolutely to
-make them useless.
-
-Almost all the inmates of military prisons are sentenced for such
-crimes as these: Desertion--the commonest crime of all--making
-away with kit, breaking out of barracks, insubordination. How is
-desertion to be stopped? This is now a very difficult problem with the
-authorities, and almost all officers give it as their opinion that the
-plague of desertion can only be stayed by again having recourse to the
-system lately abolished of branding the letter D on the deserter's
-side. In the absence of this _Nota bene_, there is nothing to prevent a
-soldier from enlisting over and over again in different corps, in order
-to get a bounty and new kit on each occasion.
-
-As regards insubordination, when you speak to a prisoner on the folly
-of having resisted or disobeyed a non-commissioned officer, he will
-generally give an answer somewhat as follows: 'Well, sir, when I came
-back from foreign service I had a little money, and with this I drank
-with some comrades more than was good for me. There is a corporal [or
-sergeant] in the barrack-room who is always down on me; and upon that
-day, having had a little too much, I could not stand his going on at
-me; and so I--though indeed I tried to help myself doing so--just
-struck him between his eyes.' There is no doubt that nine out of every
-ten soldiers in military prisons have got into trouble through drink. A
-soldier was once overheard describing the advantages of the Cape as a
-station in these words: 'Drink is cheap, and you are always dry.' Men
-of this stamp fill our military prisons.
-
-In some cases the crime of insubordination is provoked by the petty
-bullying and offensive manner of non-commissioned officers, though
-their superiors do their best to check them. Officers are now easily
-accessible, and are ready to give the youngest private an impartial
-hearing. In all respects the position of a British soldier is now
-greatly improved. Indeed it is not too much to say that life in a
-military prison now is quite as endurable as was existence out of it to
-the well-conducted soldier of forty years ago.
-
-
-
-
-DESOLATE.
-
-
- Like a funereal pall,
- Darkness lies over all;
- Weirdly the owl doth call
- From her lone steep.
- Sadly the night-wind blows
- Over December snows;
- Vain 'tis my eyes to close--
- I cannot sleep.
-
- Thy voice is in my ear;
- Once more thy words I hear,
- Bringing now hope now fear,
- But always love;
- And thy sweet face doth rise
- Radiant with starry eyes,
- Cloudless as summer skies
- In heaven above.
-
- Once more at night's soft noon,
- Under the pensive moon
- Of a long vanished June,
- With thee I stray:
- As when in days of old
- All my heart's love I told,
- And to my pleading bold
- Thou saidst not nay.
-
- When thou wast by my side,
- Calmly the days did glide;
- Like an unruffled tide
- My life did flow.
- Then was each hour too brief;
- Now I but seek relief
- From my consuming grief,
- Rest from my woe.
-
- Now falls the scalding tear,
- Shed for the present drear;
- Shed for the past so dear,
- So quickly flown.
- Over thy lonely grave,
- Hard by the sounding wave,
- Madly the wind-gusts rave;
- I am alone.
-
- Yes; but my whole life through
- Leal have I been and true;
- True shall I be to you,
- As true as then;
- Till when that life is o'er,
- Skyward my soul shall soar,
- And on the heavenly shore
- We meet again.
-
- H. D.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Printed and Published by W. & R. CHAMBERS, 47 Paternoster Row, LONDON,
-and 339 High Street, EDINBURGH.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_All Rights Reserved._
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Chambers's Journal of Popular
-Literature, Science, and Art, No. 729, December 15, 1877, by Various
-
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Chambers's Journal of Popular Literature,
-Science, and Art, No. 729, December 15, 1877, by Various
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Chambers's Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, No. 729, December 15, 1877
-
-Author: Various
-
-Editor: William Chambers
- Robert Chambers
-
-Release Date: April 18, 2016 [EBook #51786]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHAMBERS'S JOURNAL, DEC 15, 1877 ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Susan Skinner and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
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-</pre>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_785" id="Page_785">{785}</a></span></p>
-
-<h1>CHAMBERS'S JOURNAL<br />
-OF<br />
-POPULAR<br />
-LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART.</h1>
-
-<div>
-<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
-
-<p class='center'>
-
-<!-- Autogenerated TOC. Modify or delete as required. -->
-
-<a href="#A_BUNCH_OF_KEYS">A BUNCH OF KEYS.</a><br />
-<a href="#THE_LAND_OF_THE_INCAS">THE LAND OF THE INCAS.</a><br />
-<a href="#A_CAST_OF_THE_NET">A CAST OF THE NET.</a><br />
-<a href="#AN_EXTRAORDINARY_PROJECT">AN EXTRAORDINARY PROJECT.</a><br />
-<a href="#GORDON">GORDON.</a><br />
-<a href="#NARCOTISM">NARCOTISM.</a><br />
-<a href="#LIFE_IN_A_MILITARY_PRISON">LIFE IN A MILITARY PRISON.</a><br />
-<a href="#DESOLATE">DESOLATE.</a><br />
-
-<!-- End Autogenerated TOC. -->
-
-</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/header.png" width="600" height="294" alt="Chambers's Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art. Fourth Series. Conducted by William and Robert Chambers." />
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="full" />
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="" width="85%">
-<tr><td align="left"><b><span class="smcap">No.</span> 729.</b></td><td align="center"><b>SATURDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1877.</b></td><td align="right"><b><span class="smcap">Price</span> 1½<i>d.</i></b></td></tr>
-</table></div></div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<div>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="A_BUNCH_OF_KEYS" id="A_BUNCH_OF_KEYS">A BUNCH OF KEYS.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">I am</span> a professional man, and reside in the West
-End of London. One morning some few months
-back, my assistant on coming to attend to his
-duties produced a bunch of keys, which he informed
-me he had just picked up at the corner of
-a street leading from Oxford Street.</p>
-
-<p>'Hadn't they best be handed over to the
-police?' suggested my assistant. I wish to goodness
-I had at once closed with his suggestion; but
-I didn't, much to my own cost, as will be presently
-seen.</p>
-
-<p>'Well, I don't know,' was my answer. 'I rather
-think it will be a wiser plan to advertise them, if
-the owner is really to have a chance of recovering
-them; for to my mind, articles found in that way
-and handed over to the police are rarely heard of
-again.'</p>
-
-<p>An advertisement for the <i>Times</i> was duly drawn
-up and sent off for insertion. It merely stated
-where the keys had been picked up, and where
-the owner of the bunch could have it returned to
-him on giving a proper description. The next
-morning the advertisement appeared; and though
-I half expected that some applications might be
-made later on in the same day, it passed over
-quite quietly. But the following morning I had a
-foretaste of the trouble that awaited me so soon as
-the postman had deposited my letters in the box
-and given his accustomed knock. A glance at my
-table shewed me that my correspondence was very
-considerably beyond its average that morning. The
-very first letter I opened was in reference to the
-advertisement; and before I had gone through the
-collection I found there were over twenty applications
-for the bunch of keys in my possession.
-Some of the writers took the trouble to describe
-the keys they had lost; but none of them were in
-the least like those that had been picked up by
-my assistant. Some did not take the trouble to
-give any description at all, or to state if they had
-been in the part of the town where the keys were
-found; and a few boldly claimed them on the
-strength of having dropped a bunch miles from
-the spot indicated in the advertisement!</p>
-
-<p>By the time I had got through my letters and
-my breakfast, my servant came to tell me that
-my waiting-room was already full of people&mdash;'mostly
-ladies,' he said&mdash;though it was nearly two
-hours before the time I was accustomed to see any
-one professionally. With a foreboding that a good
-deal of worry and a loss of much valuable time
-was in store for me, I entered my consulting-room,
-and gave orders that the ladies should be admitted
-in the order of their arrival. They were all applicants
-for the keys; and out of the sixteen
-persons that were waiting, fourteen were ladies.
-The two gentlemen were soon despatched. They
-<i>had</i> lost keys, near the spot for anything they
-could tell; but on being satisfied that what had
-been found did in no way agree with the description
-of what they had lost, they apologised for the
-trouble and went at once.</p>
-
-<p>But it was no such easy matter to get rid of my
-fourteen lady-applicants. Some of them were for
-inflicting upon me a narration of family affairs that
-had not the most remote connection with the business
-in hand. A few kept closely enough to the
-subject on which they had come; but would not
-take a denial that the keys in my possession were
-not the least like those they said they had lost;
-and it was only at the sacrifice of some of my
-usual politeness that I was able to get rid of them.
-Not one of the morning's arrival could make out
-anything like a fair claim, and one or two owned
-that they had not even been in the quarter where
-the keys were found on the day specified.</p>
-
-<p>More letters, more applicants, came as the day
-wore on; and I began heartily to repent of my
-well-meant desire to benefit my fellow-mortals by
-taking the trouble to find out the rightful owner of
-a lost article. I was just on the point of giving
-orders to my servant to put off all further applicants
-until the following morning, when he ushered
-in a comfortable-looking lady of middle age, who
-proceeded straight to business by at once describing
-with the greatest accuracy the bunch of keys
-that had given me so much anxiety that day; and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_786" id="Page_786">{786}</a></span>
-assuring me that she had passed the spot indicated
-in the advertisement on the morning they were
-found.</p>
-
-<p>'Nine keys on the bunch, all Chubb's patent;
-three very small ones, five of various sizes, and one
-latch-key longer than any of the others.'</p>
-
-<p>The description was perfect. Some of the other
-applicants had curiously enough been right as to
-the number, but wrong as to description.</p>
-
-<p>I at once told my lady visitor that I had no
-doubt the keys were hers; and that I was ready to
-hand them over to her. But I ventured to add
-that it would give me greater security were she to
-permit my assistant to accompany her to her residence,
-and there, in his presence, to open the
-different locks to which the keys belonged. To
-this proposal not the smallest objection was raised.
-She begged I would call my assistant, as she had a
-cab waiting at the door. The direction was given
-to some place in Bloomsbury, and they drove off.
-In less than an hour my assistant returned. He
-stated that the lady opened the street door with the
-latch-key, and that the other eight keys opened
-desks, writing-tables, cash-boxes, &amp;c.&mdash;all quite
-correct and satisfactorily. The expense of the
-advertisement was of course paid.</p>
-
-<p>Congratulating myself that this troublesome
-business was well over, and mentally resolving
-that another time, under similar circumstances, I
-should act on my assistant's suggestion, and hand
-such matters over to the police, I gave orders that
-all applicants that might come were to be told
-that the rightful owner had been found and that
-the keys were disposed of.</p>
-
-<p>Two days passed, and I had almost dismissed
-the whole affair from my mind. On the morning
-of the third day my attention was attracted by an
-altercation going on between my servant and an
-irate lady&mdash;well advanced in years&mdash;to whom he
-refused admittance. Anxious to escape disturbance,
-I gave orders that she should be shewn into my
-consulting-room, where I presently went to see
-what she wanted.</p>
-
-<p>'I want to know why you never answered my
-letter about the bunch of keys you advertised as
-having found, and which I lost? I have come for
-them now.'</p>
-
-<p>'But, madam, none of the letters described the
-keys accurately, and I was therefore not bound
-to notice any of the written applications that
-reached me.'</p>
-
-<p>'Not describe them properly! But I <i>can</i> describe
-them; they were nine in number on the bunch.'</p>
-
-<p>'So far, that is right, madam. Proceed with
-your description.'</p>
-
-<p>The description was entirely wrong; and I told
-her so. I told her, moreover, that the rightful
-owner had been found, who had not only described
-the keys properly, but who had taken my assistant
-to her house and had used each individual key
-in his presence. I added that if she were not
-satisfied, I could furnish her with the address of
-the lady to whom the keys had been given up,
-and that she might call and try to establish her
-claim if she fancied she had one.</p>
-
-<p>She was very far from being satisfied. She
-wanted to argue the matter further and, as I feared,
-to an unreasonable length. I told her firmly I
-could waste no further time on her; whereupon
-she left vowing vengeance.</p>
-
-<p>The threats of the old lady did not much disturb
-me; but they were not altogether so unmeaning as
-I supposed, for in two days thereafter a summons
-was handed into me, demanding my presence at
-the police court of the district, to answer for my
-refusal to deliver up to the rightful owner property
-belonging to her, which I owned to having
-found, but refused to account for.</p>
-
-<p>That I was very much annoyed may be easily
-supposed; but at the same time I could not help
-being somewhat amused, bearing in recollection
-how I had tried to satisfy the unreasonable
-dame, who had evidently more money than wit,
-seeing she was ready to waste it on so hopeless
-a case.</p>
-
-<p>I duly made my appearance before the worthy
-magistrate, whom I happened to know slightly,
-and who could not restrain an amused grin when
-I was called forward. My assistant accompanied
-me as a matter of course.</p>
-
-<p>The old lady had engaged a smart lawyer, who
-did his best in trying to make out a case; but his
-client rather weakened his statement by her inconsequential
-answers to both her counsel and the
-magistrate. My answer was easy. I shewed how
-the prosecutrix had utterly failed in describing
-the keys. I told that the rightful owner had
-rightly described them; and I put my assistant
-into the box to prove his having seen every key
-in the bunch fitted into its proper lock.</p>
-
-<p>'Were you passing along Oxford Street on the
-morning that this bunch of keys was found?'
-asked the magistrate of the old lady.</p>
-
-<p>'I was that way in an omnibus in the afternoon,'
-was the answer.</p>
-
-<p>'But the keys in question were found in the
-morning, and were lying on the pavement,' remarked
-His Worship.</p>
-
-<p>'Ah, I don't know how that might be,' said my
-persecutor; 'but I know I lost a bunch of keys.'</p>
-
-<p>'Well, the case is dismissed; and you must
-pay expenses.' And so ended the case.</p>
-
-<p>Now I have no doubt the old lady, though so
-wrong-headed in the claim she set up against me,
-had really lost a bunch of keys on the day my
-assistant made his&mdash;for me&mdash;unlucky find. Nor
-do I for a moment doubt the fact of some of the
-other applicants having also lost keys on the same
-day and perhaps near the same spot. But the
-applications by letter and personally numbered
-altogether not far short of fifty; and it may be set
-down as a moral certainty that they did not all
-lose, each of them, a bunch of keys on that particular
-day, and in Oxford Street&mdash;without being
-particular as to the spot. My theory is, that some
-of them had probably got their pockets picked of
-their keys while travelling by omnibus, and could
-not of course tell exactly where they lost them.
-Others may have simply mislaid their keys, and
-jumped to the conclusion that they were lost.
-Some others, I fear, had not lost keys at all, but
-merely came to my place out of idle curiosity.
-All of them, I know, gave me more trouble
-than I ever hope to have again in an affair of
-the kind.</p>
-
-<p>[We can hardly say that the foregoing narrative,
-to call it so, is overstrained. It points to a marvellous
-want of logical precision in reasoning
-which is far from uncommon. Some years ago,
-in these pages, we mentioned a droll case within
-our own experience. One day we chanced to find a
-brooch, and advertised the fact in the newspapers.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_787" id="Page_787">{787}</a></span>
-Next day a lady called on us to say that she had
-lost a ring, and asked if we knew anything about
-it. 'Madam,' was our reply, 'you must understand
-that it was a brooch we found, and not a
-ring.' 'O yes, that maybe so; but I thought as
-you were in the way of finding things, you might
-perhaps have seen something of my ring.' A
-very pretty example this of want of common-sense.
-Our advice to all who happen to find any
-article of value on the street is, to take it at once
-to the police office, where it may be reclaimed by
-the owner. Those who will not take this trouble,
-should let the article alone. Finding does not
-constitute ownership. We knew a gentleman, now
-deceased, who in the course of his life punctiliously
-refrained from picking up any article of value on
-the street, as the article was not his, and he might
-have been brought into trouble. This was being
-too fastidious, for it was allowing the article to be
-appropriated by possibly some dishonest person.
-True kindness and true honesty consist in lodging
-the article found, at the police office, whence, if no
-owner casts up within twelve months, it will be
-sent to the finder, whose lawful property it
-becomes.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Ed.</span>]</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div>
-<h2><a name="THE_LAND_OF_THE_INCAS" id="THE_LAND_OF_THE_INCAS">THE LAND OF THE INCAS.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Peru</span> recalls to every thoughtful student of history
-not only the half-barbaric splendour of the empire
-of the Incas, but the vanished prestige and glory of
-their Spanish conquerors. The gorgeous figure of
-Pizarro, the stately hidalgo, the successful captain,
-the ruthless soldier of fortune, meets us still at
-every step in the once rich Indian empire he won
-for Spain. On that low swampy mangrove-fringed
-stretch of coast, a tangled maze of vines and flowering
-creepers, the half-famished Castilian adventurer
-landed in 1524. And here, where the full tide of
-the Pacific rolls in upon the beach in columns of
-snowy foam, he, in 1535, founded Lima, the 'city
-of the kings.'</p>
-
-<p>To examine the cities of the Incas, their
-ruined palaces, and other objects of note in this
-interesting region, was a task undertaken and
-carried out by Mr Squier, whose researches have
-been embodied in a volume entitled the <i>Land of
-the Incas</i>, the perusal of which enables us to offer
-the following items to our readers.</p>
-
-<p>The coast of Peru is arid and barren, lined with
-guano islands, which although adding little to the
-charm of the scenery, are found as lucrative to-day
-as the mines of Potosi and Pasco were in the heyday
-of Spanish greatness. Thanks to this useful but
-unfragrant compost, Pizarro's city of the kings
-is still rich and flourishing, though the veins of
-silver are exhausted, and the golden sands no
-longer glitter with the precious ore, which fired the
-Spanish breasts of old with such fierce cupidity. It
-is very unhealthy, and although in the tropics, the
-climate for six months in the year is extremely
-damp and almost cold. Lima, which stands in
-an earthquake region, is built so as to sustain the
-least possible damage from the ever recurring
-shocks of those alarming phenomena. The private
-houses are never more than two stories in height.
-They have flat roofs and projecting balconies, and
-are constructed (one can hardly say built) of cane,
-plastered with mud, and painted in imitation of
-stone. Most of them have courts with open galleries
-in the Moorish style, extending along the
-four sides; and many of them have towers, from
-which, in addition to the surrounding scenery, an
-extended view of acres of flat roofs may be obtained&mdash;the
-said flat roofs being piled with heaps of
-refuse, filth, and all manner of abominations; very
-often they are used as poultry-yards, and here
-the buzzards, which act as scavengers in all the
-South American cities, roost at night.</p>
-
-<p>The furniture in the better class of these wicker
-and mud-built dwellings is often very fine: antique
-plate, velvet hangings, costly mirrors, and family
-portraits, that smile or frown upon you with all
-the charm or vigour the brush of Vandyke or
-Velasquez was able to impart. The <i>pasios</i> or
-public walks are planted with trees, and the
-arcades, which are lined with fine shops, are a very
-favourite promenade. The inhabitants of Lima
-of all grades are remarkably fond of flowers, particularly
-of roses, which they contrive to keep in
-bloom all the year round. 'Roses,' Mr Squier
-says, 'bloom in every court and blush on every
-balcony, and decorate alike the heavy tresses of the
-belle and the curly shock of the zamba.'</p>
-
-<p>Bull-fights are a favourite amusement, and so is
-cock-fighting, although it is no longer, as formerly,
-practised in the public streets.</p>
-
-<p>The markets are well supplied, especially with
-fruit and vegetables. Fish is good and the butcher-meat
-of fair quality. The luckless traveller in
-Central America who could get nothing but
-chickens and turkeys to eat, and was afraid at last
-that his whiskers would transform themselves into
-feathers, may go to Lima with all safety, as a
-medium-sized turkey there costs twenty dollars
-in gold. The cookery is Spanish in its character,
-and consists much of stews savoury with oil and
-garlic and pungent with red pepper.</p>
-
-<p>Twenty miles from Lima is Pachacamac, a sacred
-city of the Incas, where once stood a gigantic
-temple, dedicated to a deity of the same name, the
-supreme creator and preserver of the universe.
-The ruins of two large wings of this temple still
-remain, one of which contains a perfect well-turned
-arch, which is so rare a feature in American
-ruins that Mr Squier says 'it is the only proper
-arch I ever found in all my explorations in Central
-and South America.' Pachacamac was the Mecca
-of South America; and its barren hills and dry
-nitrous sand-heaps are filled with the dead bodies
-of ancient pilgrims, who travelled from all parts of
-the country to lay their bones, not their dust, in
-this hallowed spot. 'Ashes to ashes, dust to dust,'
-has no meaning here; the dead body does not decay,
-but is dried and shrivelled into a mummy. Mr
-Squier had the curiosity to open the shroud of
-what may once have been perchance an Aztec belle.
-The body, which was that of a young girl, was in a
-sitting posture, supported on a workbox of braided
-reeds, in which were rude specimens of knitting,
-spindles for weaving, spools of thread, needles of
-bone and bronze, a small bronze knife, a fan, and
-a set of curious cosmetic-boxes formed of the
-hollow bones of a bird. These were filled with
-pigments of various colours, and were carefully
-stopped with cotton. Beside them was a small
-powder-puff of cotton for applying them to the
-face, and a rude mirror formed of a piece of iron
-pyrites highly polished. There was also a netting
-instrument and a little crushed ornament of gold
-intended to represent a butterfly. The long black
-hair, still glossy as in life, was braided and plaited<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_788" id="Page_788">{788}</a></span>
-round the forehead, which was bound with a fillet
-of white cloth adorned with silver spangles. A
-silver bracelet hung on the shrunken arm; and
-between the feet was the dried body of a dead
-parrot, a pet no doubt in life, and sacrificed to bear
-its mistress company into the dread unknown land
-of spirits.</p>
-
-<p>In the fertile valley of Canete, amid rich sugar-plantations,
-Mr Squier found vast pyramidal
-buildings, rising stage upon stage, with broad
-flights of steps winding round them to the summits.
-While sketching amid a maze of these
-massive shattered adobe walls, our author was
-startled by seeing three men suddenly leap over
-a low wall into the vivid sunshine before him.
-'God and peace be with you!' he said as calmly as
-he could, instinctively divining that his best cue
-was to appear as cool as possible. 'God and
-peace be with you!' responded the bandits, for such
-they were; and after a little bullying, an amicable
-parley ensued, which had for its object the acquisition
-of Mr Squier's breech-loading rifle, a weapon
-which kindled in the bosom of Rossi Arci, the
-robber chief, an ardent, but with all due deference
-to Mr Longfellow, a wasted affection, for he did
-not obtain it. Four weeks afterwards, Mr Squier
-saw the swollen disfigured corpse of this bandit
-captain exposed to public view in one of the
-principal streets of Lima.</p>
-
-<p>At Truxillo our author came across a treasure-hunter,
-one Colonel La Rosa. This man spent
-his whole life in burrowing like a mole among
-the old ruins in search of buried gold, gems, silver
-goblets, or any other relic of antiquity which
-he could turn into money. Under his guidance,
-Mr Squier visited a great pyramid called the
-Temple of the Sun, and the extensive, interesting,
-and well preserved ruins of Grand Chimu. Here
-he found vast halls, the walls of which were
-covered with arabesques, and wide corridors from
-which spacious rooms diverged. The walls of these
-apartments were bright with vivid and delicate
-colours; and Colonel La Rosa shewed him where
-in the midst of them he had found a walled-up
-closet filled with vessels of gold and silver placed
-in regular layers one above the other, as if they
-had been hidden there in some dire emergency.
-Two vaults were also discovered filled with silver
-cups and goblets. The silver of which these
-vessels were composed was much alloyed with
-copper, and was so much oxidised that it had
-become exceedingly brittle. Mr Squier obtained
-possession of two of the cups. They have the
-appearance of being hammered out of a single
-piece of metal, are as thick as ordinary tin-plate,
-and are both adorned by the representation of a
-human face, with clearly cut features and a large
-aquiline nose.</p>
-
-<p>About a hundred yards to the westward of the
-excavations which have revealed the half-buried
-palace of the ancient princes of Chimu, is a low
-broad mound, which has been found to be a
-necropolis, filled with bodies richly clad and
-covered with gold and silver ornaments. Many of
-the heads of the dead bodies found by Colonel La
-Rosa were gilt and encircled by bands of gold; and
-one body, that of a woman, was covered with thin
-sheets of gold, and wrapped in a robe spangled
-with silver fishes. Warlike weapons and agricultural
-implements, knives, war-clubs, lance-heads,
-and spear-points, with spades and mattocks
-of different shapes, all of bronze, are found abundantly
-in the vicinity of these ruins; as are also
-specimens of excellent pottery, on which are
-modelled with spirit and fidelity representations
-of birds, animals, fishes, shells, fruit, vegetables,
-and the human face and form.</p>
-
-<p>Leaving Chimu reluctantly, Mr Squier travelled
-down to the coast, along which he sailed, examining
-the coast ruins at Calaveras and other places,
-till he reached Arica, the port of Tacna.</p>
-
-<p>This is peculiarly an earthquake region; and
-some of these subterranean convulsions are terrible
-to a degree which we dwellers in a temperate
-clime can scarcely even imagine. A notably dreadful
-and destructive earthquake was that of 1868,
-which shook to its base all the adjacent country.
-It was first noted in Arica about five o'clock in
-the morning, its premonitory symptoms being
-immense clouds of dust, which were seen slowly
-advancing across the plain in dusky columns at a
-distance of about ten miles.</p>
-
-<p>Nearer and nearer they came; and in the awful
-pause of dread expectancy that ensued, the distant
-snowy peaks of the Cordilleras were observed to
-nod and reel, as if executing some horribly suggestive
-cyclopean dance. Gradually this impulse
-extended itself to the mountains nearer to the
-town, till the huge <i>morro</i> or headland, a little to
-the left of it, began to rock violently to and fro,
-heaving with sickening lurches, as if about to cast
-itself loose into space, and always bringing to again,
-like a hard bestead ship in a driving tempest.
-As it worked back and forward, huge fragments
-of stone detached themselves from its cave-worn
-surface, and fell with deafening crash into the surf
-below; while under and above all, like a subdued
-monotone of horror, was a prolonged incessant
-rumble, now like the roll of distant thunder, but
-ever and anon at irregular intervals swelling into
-a deafening crash, like the discharge of a whole
-park of artillery.</p>
-
-<p>As far as could be seen, the usually solid
-earth was agitated by a slow wave-like motion,
-which became first tremulous, and then unspeakably
-violent, throwing half of the houses into
-heaps of ruins, and yawning into wide chasm-like
-fissures, from which mephitic sulphurous
-vapours issued. Shrieks and groans of anguish
-filled the air, a mournful interlude shrilly resounding
-at intervals above the subterranean thunder, as
-the terrified crowd rushed to the mole, to seek
-refuge on board the vessels in the harbour. Scarcely
-had they reached this hoped-for haven of safety,
-when the sea, treacherous as the heaving land,
-glided softly back, and then rushing forward with
-a terrific roar, submerged the mole with its panting
-terror-stricken occupants, and poured on in a foaming
-flood over the prostrate town, where it completed
-the havoc the earthquake had begun. It then
-rushed back almost more suddenly than it had
-advanced, the whole fearful deluge occupying only
-about five minutes. Again and again the earth
-quivered and shook, as if about to rend asunder
-and drop into some unfathomable abyss below, and
-again the sea dashed forward as if in frantic fury,
-and then as suddenly recoiled, the last time shewing
-a perpendicular wall of water forty-five feet
-high, capped by an angry crest of foam. This
-tremendous wave swept miles inshore, where it
-stranded the largest ships then lying in the harbour,
-one of them a United States frigate.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_789" id="Page_789">{789}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In Arica Mr Squier equipped himself for a
-journey over the Cordilleras. Nothing can exceed
-the savage wildness of these mountains, or the
-difficulties and dangers of the long narrow passes
-that intersect them. Mr Squier says: 'I have
-crossed the Alps by the routes of the Simplon,
-the Grand St Bernard, and St Gothard; but at
-no point on any of them have I witnessed a
-scene so wild and utterly desolate as that which
-spreads out around La Portada.' It is the very acmé
-of desolation&mdash;treeless, shrubless, bare of grass,
-with scarcely a lichen clinging to the rugged
-sides of the huge cliffs. Pile upon pile towering
-to the sullen skies, rise ridges of dark-brown
-hills bristling with snowy peaks, from several
-of which long trails of smoke stream lazily out
-upon the air, shewing where the pent volcano
-surges in ominous life beneath the wintry wastes
-of snow.</p>
-
-<p>Descending from the Cordilleras, Mr Squier
-examined Tiaguanuco, the Baalbec of the New
-World; and from thence proceeded to Cuzco, the
-City of the Sun, the ancient capital of the Incas,
-which abounds with memorials of their vanished
-greatness. Here stood a magnificent temple of the
-sun, which was lined throughout with plates of
-gold, two of which, preserved as curiosities, were
-shewn to Mr Squier. The huge stones composing
-this and other massive buildings which yet remain
-are cut and fitted together with a precision which
-has been equalled, but never surpassed. So accurately
-do they fit, that it is impossible to pass the
-finest-bladed knife between their edges.</p>
-
-<p>In close proximity to these splendid ruins,
-sometimes under their very walls, our author
-found rude circles of stone, such as still exist
-at Stonehenge and in other parts of Great Britain,
-and in Brittany. Bidding adieu to Cuzco and its
-suggestive relics, Mr Squier in his journey to the
-coast passed over a stupendously high swinging
-bridge formed of cables of braided withes. This
-dreadful rope-edifice swung freely in space between
-two gigantic cliffs, which guarded like twin sentinels
-the rush of the deep and rapid Apurimac, one
-of the head-waters of the Amazon. It was something
-worse than the most breakneck defile among
-the Cordilleras. 'Never,' says our author, 'will I
-forget this experience. I can see still the frail
-structure swaying at dizzy height over a dark
-abyss filled with the deep hoarse roar of the river.
-My eyes grew dim, my heart faint, my feet unsteady
-as I struggled across, not daring to cast a
-look on either hand.' It was no wonder that the
-nerves of one of the party, an artist, were so
-shaken that he declared that rather than set a
-foot upon it, he would swim across the Apurimac.
-This he did, and found the water so delightfully
-cool and pleasant, that he resolved to prolong his
-bath, and placed the bundle containing his clothes
-and shoes on a convenient cliff, whence a perverse
-gust of wind blew them into the water. Long he
-pursued them, with no result except the conviction
-that he had lost them irrecoverably and his way
-as well. In this condition, foodless, garmentless,
-he wandered about for three days in pathless
-thickets. His feet were cut and bleeding; and his
-body, scratched and torn, was scorched all day by
-a blistering sun, and so chilled at night by the
-cold breezes that he was glad to bury himself in
-the warm sand. On the fourth day he staggered,
-faint with fatigue and hunger, to the door of an
-Indian hut, and the inhabitants mistaking him in
-his ghastly squalor for the incarnate genius of
-fever, which they dread above all things, half
-killed with stones what little life was left in him
-before they would listen to his story.</p>
-
-<p>Mr Squier's researches abundantly shew that,
-possessing no written language, the Incas have
-impressed their history in characters which yet
-remain upon the scenes of their former glory.
-Their greatness may be traced in the splendid
-ruins of their temples and palaces. Their civilisation
-is abundantly proved by their bridges, roads,
-caravansaries, reservoirs, aqueducts, and perfect
-and extensive system of irrigation, by means of
-which vegetation was carried in terraces thousands
-of feet up the steep hill-sides, and the now desert
-coast blushed like a garden with the profuse luxuriance
-of the tropics. One may well ask, which
-were the barbarians, they or the Spaniards who
-soon made a Sahara of that which they found a
-Goshen? Their great fortresses bristling on every
-hill-side teach us alike the vastness of their military
-power and their great resources. Of their
-internal polity we catch a suggestive glimpse from
-their ample prisons; and we learn how they lived
-as we turn over curiously their household and
-agricultural implements, or mark with mute surprise
-the exquisitely fine texture of some mummy
-shroud, or the delicate carving on some long-buried
-goblet, or the graceful form and excellent workmanship
-of some fragile relic of earthenware. We
-can even make a guess, as we look at their burial
-towers and tombs, at the current of national
-thought on one important subject. They who
-laid the dead so carefully, so tenderly to rest,
-believed that in the far-off world of shadows the
-soul would live again.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div>
-<h2><a name="A_CAST_OF_THE_NET" id="A_CAST_OF_THE_NET">A CAST OF THE NET.</a></h2>
-
-<p class='ph3'>THE STORY OF A DETECTIVE OFFICER.</p>
-
-
-<h3>CHAPTER III.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">There</span> was nothing for me to do, that I could see,
-for a day or two, beyond improving my acquaintance
-with the factory hands, and keeping my eyes
-open generally; and in pursuance of this latter
-branch of the business, I got up very early on the
-following morning, and sat for an hour or two after
-daylight in the arbours or boxes I have so often
-mentioned. There was one great charm about the
-<i>Anchor</i>. It was low and dirty, decaying and disreputable,
-and the landlord was a drinking fellow,
-utterly bankrupt and hopeless, who troubled himself
-about nothing. His potman was sottish also,
-and too accustomed to riff-raff and queer doings of
-every kind to trouble himself about me; so I was
-thoroughly at my ease. All I saw which appeared
-worthy of notice was that the ill-tempered ferryman
-rowed out alone to the ship I have spoken
-of, and disappeared round its bows. I watched for
-some time, but did not see him come out into midstream;
-but just before I gave up my watch, he
-came into sight again. Whether he had crossed
-after rowing up a bit and had come back, or
-whether he had been lying all the time just hidden
-by the ship, of course I could not say.</p>
-
-<p>I had told the potman that I was in hope of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_790" id="Page_790">{790}</a></span>
-seeing a friend of mine who was going to Australia
-and had half promised to take me with him.
-I consequently shewed a great deal of interest in
-the craft, and asked him lots of questions about
-them. This morning I guessed that the ship (the
-ferryman's ship), was an Australian liner; and this
-was just the joke for the potman, who laughed till
-his beery cheeks shook again at my mistaking a
-slow old Dutch trader for an Australian liner.
-He was quite severe in his way of poking fun at
-me; but he ought to have pitied my ignorance, not
-ridiculed it&mdash;and so I told him.</p>
-
-<p>I thought I would pass away the morning by
-going over to T&mdash;&mdash; and watching Mr Byrle's
-house. I had learnt that he was to be from home
-all day; Miss Doyle had told me so herself; so I
-knew <i>she</i> knew it also; and if she had any suspicious
-visits to pay, or queer company to receive,
-now was the time: that was evident. Accordingly,
-I went to T&mdash;&mdash; by rail as before, starting
-in the rain; but luckily, just as I got there it
-cleared up and the sun came out. To give me a
-chance of learning something, I got asking my way
-to a lot of places I didn't want to go to, just by
-way of starting a conversation, you know; and the
-man I pitched upon was employed in the goods
-shed of the railway, but did not seem to have
-much to do just then; and when I asked him if he
-could spare time to run across to the public-house
-with me, he said yes, he thought he could; and
-he did.</p>
-
-<p>We could see Mr Byrle's house from this place,
-so it answered as well for me as any other; and
-while I was talking to the porter, I saw a tall
-young fellow, good-looking, but rather flash-looking
-too, go past, and in three or four minutes I saw
-him ring at the gate of Mr Byrle's house.</p>
-
-<p>'Hollo!' I says to my railway friend, 'isn't that
-Sims Reeves? Does he come down here to give
-lessons?'</p>
-
-<p>He was no more like Sims Reeves than I am,
-but his was the first name I could think of.</p>
-
-<p>'Sims Reeves!' says the porter; 'why that's
-young Mr Byrle, as gives his father no end of
-trouble. You wouldn't see him there, only the
-old gent is off somewhere for a while. He went
-from our station last night.'</p>
-
-<p>'Indeed!' I said (and then I saw the young man
-go into the house); 'and what's the quarrel about?'</p>
-
-<p>'Oh, his goings on,' said the railway man. 'Why,
-I have heard that his father has paid thousands on
-his account; and if he hadn't paid one time pretty
-heavily too, this young fellow would have been in
-Newgate for forging his governor's name. He's
-agoing abroad, I believe; and a good riddance too,
-I say.'</p>
-
-<p>'And what does he do at the house when his
-father is away?' I asked; and I really felt that our
-conversation was getting quite interesting.</p>
-
-<p>'Well, it's the old story; a lady's in the case,'
-said the porter. 'There's a niece there that's over
-head and ears in love with Mr Edmund&mdash;that's his
-name&mdash;and he pretends to be equally sweet on
-her. But if she had seen only as much of him
-as we have seen at this here station, she would
-never&mdash;&mdash; There's my foreman agoing into the
-shed! Excuse me.' With that the railway-man
-finished his pint and was off.</p>
-
-<p>I considered a minute, and then decided I
-was as well off where I was as anywhere; so I
-borrowed yesterday's <i>Morning Advertiser</i> of the
-barmaid, and sitting down where I could watch
-the house, pretended to read. If any one had
-watched me, he must have thought I was most
-remarkably interested in the Money Market, for I
-had that part of the paper folded towards me
-without changing for a good half-hour. At the
-end of that time the door of Mr Byrle's house was
-opened and the son came out. I was ready for a
-start after him, let him go in which direction he
-might; but he came towards the <i>Railway Tavern</i>,
-my post; straight on, nearer, nearer he passed my
-door. I peeped out after him, and saw him
-actually come into the tavern, entering by another
-door the compartment of the bar next to mine!</p>
-
-<p>I was in the common place; he was in one of
-those divisions where 'Glasses only are served in
-this department;' and so on. There was some one
-there already, for I had heard the occasional clink
-of a spoon and glass, and a cough; but there wasn't
-more than one, for I had heard no voices. I
-now heard some one speak; I judged it to be
-young Mr Byrle, and I was right.</p>
-
-<p>'Hollo, skipper!' he said, 'what have you been
-doing to your face? Have you been fighting?'</p>
-
-<p>'Fighting!&mdash;Well, never mind my face; I don't
-want to talk about that; I shall settle that
-account some day,' said a voice. (<i>I</i> knew what
-voice; <i>I</i> knew what was the matter with the man's
-face.)</p>
-
-<p>His surly tone seemed to shut young Mr Byrle
-up on the subject, for he gave a sort of forced
-laugh and said no more about it. 'When do you
-sail?&mdash;for certain now. I must know to an hour
-to-day, for I don't like what I hear of things,' said
-Mr Byrle.</p>
-
-<p>'Don't speak so loud,' said the other; 'you can
-never tell who is listening;' and there he was
-more thoroughly right than he suspected. However,
-they dropped their voices so completely after
-this, that though I sat right up against the
-partition, I could hear nothing more than a stray
-word or so, out of which I could make no sense,
-until at last Mr Byrle said: 'Time's about up,
-skipper.'</p>
-
-<p>'I suppose so,' said the other. 'Well, you feel
-quite confident about her then; her courage won't
-fail, you think?'</p>
-
-<p>'<i>Her</i> courage fail? Ha, ha! skipper,' said Mr
-Byrle; 'you don't know her, or you wouldn't say
-that. She'll come with the material, you'll see.
-From first to last she's never wavered; and look
-what a penetrating mind she has got!'</p>
-
-<p>'Yes; she's clever, I think,' says the skipper.</p>
-
-<p>'Clever!' Mr Byrle repeated, with a deal of
-contempt in his voice&mdash;'clever! Who but her
-would have found out the scheme'&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>'Hush!' said the skipper, stopping the young
-man, just as his conversation was getting, I may
-say, instructive and important. Then Edmund
-Byrle said his train was due, and posted off to the
-station.</p>
-
-<p>A minute or so after I heard the skipper put
-down his glass as though he had emptied it, and
-then he too left. I followed at a little distance,
-and got into the same train with him, and got out
-with him, and still following, saw him go to the
-ferry, pick out, as I knew he would, the surly
-waterman; and I saw him rowed to his own ship,
-where the waterman left him and then rowed over
-to the other side. Very good. Then the skipper had
-gone to T&mdash;&mdash; specially to meet Edmund Byrle;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_791" id="Page_791">{791}</a></span>
-and Edmund Byrle had gone there specially because
-his father was away; and&mdash;&mdash; Then I
-couldn't follow it up any further.</p>
-
-<p>I went boldly into the <i>Yarmouth Smack</i>, and
-not seeing Tilley anywhere about, I asked for him
-under the agreed name, and was told he had gone
-to work on Byrle's wharf; not for the firm, but
-for some lighterman who frequented the public-house.
-This looked well; and if I got taken on, as
-I expected, the next Monday, I thought it would
-be very odd if between us we didn't find something
-out. Yet my interest in the business seemed
-dying away, or drifting into altogether a new
-channel, for I could not believe for a moment
-that Miss Doyle and Edmund Byrle, and the
-skipper and the sulky ferryman, were all linked
-in with stealing a few paltry brass fittings.</p>
-
-<p>I crossed over before the old ferryman came
-back, and had my dinner in the tap-room of the
-<i>Anchor and Five Mermaids</i>. It wasn't a nice place
-for a dinner, and I was always partial to having
-my things neat and tidy, which was by no means
-the rule at the <i>Anchor</i>, and the company was not
-to my standard. I was late to-day, so I missed the
-factory hands; and there were only two men in
-the room with me; one was a costermongerish-looking
-rough in a velveteen coat and fur cap,
-which was about all I could see of him, for he was
-asleep all of a heap in a corner. The other was a
-man who had his dinner in a newspaper, and took
-it out, whatever it was, with his fingers, till he had
-finished it and then went away.</p>
-
-<p>I was glad when he was gone, and I had the
-room as I may say to myself; so I sent my plate
-away, called for a little drop of rum-and-water
-(the only thing you could get fit to drink at the
-<i>Anchor</i>), and lighting my pipe, sat with my feet
-on the fender, to have a good smoke and a good
-hard think. I had sat there perhaps half-a-dozen
-minutes, and had fairly settled down to my thinking,
-when a low voice said: 'Mr Nickham!'
-My name! It was a very low voice which spoke,
-but the roar of an elephant couldn't have startled
-me more. In an instant it flashed upon me that
-my disguise was seen through and all my plans
-understood. Robinson Crusoe was not so staggered
-when he saw the foot-print on the sand as I was
-on hearing these two familiar words. I turned
-round, and there was that miserable-looking
-rough that I thought had been asleep, standing
-up and making signs to me. He was a regular
-rough and no mistake, with short hair, an ugly
-handkerchief twisted round his neck; his nose had
-been broken at some time or another, and he
-looked a complete jail-bird. 'Mr Nickham!'</p>
-
-<p>It was he that spoke; no mistake about it this
-time; and he put his hand up to the side of his
-mouth to keep the sound straight.</p>
-
-<p>'Who are you?' said I; for you know I didn't
-like to answer to the name at once, in case he
-wasn't certain.</p>
-
-<p>'My name is Wilkins&mdash;Barney Wilkins,' said
-the man. 'But you won't recollect me by that
-p'raps; though I've been through your hands,
-sergeant; but I giv some other name then. You
-got me twelve penn'orth for ringing in shofuls.'
-(He meant that he had been sent to prison for
-twelve months for passing bad money. I wasn't
-surprised to hear it; he looked fit for that or anything
-bad. But if he got it through me, why he
-should speak to me now was beyond my comprehension.)
-'I knowed you directly I see you,
-sergeant,' he says, coming nearer, but still speaking
-in the same hoarse whisper as at first; 'and though
-you're a tight hand, you're fair and square, and
-acted as such by me when you copped me. You
-are down here on business&mdash;you're after some rare
-downy cards. Now ain't you, sergeant?'</p>
-
-<p>'If you know,' I said, 'what do you ask me for?
-And if you think I am what you say, you don't
-suppose I shall tell you my business, do you?'</p>
-
-<p>'Sergeant,' he says, coming nearer still, 'you
-fought a man in the street last night, and giv him
-a thorough good licking. You was the only man
-there as would take the part of a poor gal as wasn't
-doing no harm to nobody; and I respect you for
-it, sergeant; I do. That gal was my sister&mdash;my
-young sister, as has been like a child to me, and
-was so tidy and pretty that I was proud on her,
-and hoped&mdash;&mdash; Well, sergeant, whatever we are, we
-all have our feelings; and Sergeant Nickham, I'll
-do you a good turn. Look here!' With this he
-crept quite close and put his mouth almost to my
-ear. I watched him carefully, being much puzzled
-by his actions, yet I had seen such unexpected
-things occur in the police that I was quite ready to
-hear something of consequence from him. 'You
-are down here about that Bank paper, what is said
-to be all got back, but which you know it isn't.
-You are on the right parties, and it does you
-credit; but you'll never get them nor the paper
-without <i>me</i>.'</p>
-
-<p>He stopped here, to see what I would say; but
-though I was ten times more surprised than ever,
-I kept my countenance, and only said: 'Well?'
-In point of fact I didn't know what <i>to</i> say.</p>
-
-<p>'I've been used bad, Mr Nickham,' he went on.
-'I've had a lot of trouble and risk about that there
-paper. I got it from B&mdash;&mdash;, and took the money
-for it to him, honest; and have been as near took
-with it in my possession as anythink. Twice the
-slops (he meant the police; 'slops' is what we call
-'back-slang,' a rough sort of spelling the words
-backwards)&mdash;'twice they have come into my place
-when the stuff was there. Once I was sitting
-upon it done up like bundles of rabbit-skins.
-Now he gives me (the party wot I am down on)&mdash;he
-gives me five pounds, and I can't get no more
-out of him. And you see there ain't no reward
-out.'</p>
-
-<p>'No, not regularly, Barney,' I said; 'but there's
-no doubt at all that any man coming forward
-would be very handsomely considered by the Bank
-people.'</p>
-
-<p>'He might be, if he'd got anybody like you to
-speak for him,' says Barney. 'But you know, Mr
-Nickham, that I am wanted for a lot of things by
-the bobbies; and I have been through the mill so
-often, that without I've got a friend I don't half
-like touching 'em again. But you're fair and
-square, and you licked the fellow last night; and
-I'm told you can box better than even Tom Sayers
-could; and if that's so, I'll trust you. And this
-here man won't give me more than five pounds;
-and he has settled with a regular fence, a sort of
-Dutch-Yankee skipper, what pretends to command
-one of them traders out there.'</p>
-
-<p>'Yes, yes,' I said; 'the man I fought last night.
-I know him.'</p>
-
-<p>'<i>Him!</i>' almost screeched the man (although,
-mind you, he never once forgot his hoarse whisper);
-'was it him you licked? Sergeant Nickham, I'd go<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_792" id="Page_792">{792}</a></span>
-through fire and water for you now, for I hate and
-despise that wretch; and if I had got a chance to
-do it safely, I'd have'&mdash;&mdash; He checked himself
-very sudden here, as if what he was going to say
-wasn't exactly the sort of thing to say to a detective.
-'I see you are on the right lay,' he begins again;
-'but I tell you he has settled with that skipper
-to have the stuff put on board, if it ain't already
-there; and then he'll go with it to whatever foreign
-port the craft comes from.'</p>
-
-<p>'And who is he,' I asked, 'who has arranged
-with the skipper?'</p>
-
-<p>'Ah, Mr Nickham,' says Wilkins, with a very
-cunning look, 'as if you didn't know! Haven't
-you been on the lurk round his house for two days
-past? Wasn't you there this morning?'</p>
-
-<p>Egad! I saw it all now! You might have
-knocked me down with a feather. I could hardly
-help saying something which would have shewed
-my astonishment; but I choked it down, and
-quite determined to keep the upper hand with
-him, I said as cool as I could: 'Now, Wilkins, no
-beating about the bush, or making me help you
-out. If you've got anything to say, any name to
-mention, out with it like a man, and I'm your
-friend. You understand me.'</p>
-
-<p>'Fair and square you are, Mr Nickham,' says
-Barney; 'and so you'll find me. That young Mr
-Byrle has got the paper, and he means to go out
-with the trader. There is people over in Holland
-awaiting anxious for it; and if once they gets hold
-of it, it's all U. P. with our bank-notes. Now, I
-don't know where the paper is; if I had known,
-bust me if I wouldn't have blowed the gaff long
-ago!'</p>
-
-<p>He meant that he would have exposed the
-whole transaction, and I noticed that this declaration
-did not quite agree with his anxiety to have
-a friend on his side, a point on which he had
-dwelt so much before; but that didn't signify.</p>
-
-<p>'Now, Mr Nickham,' he went on, 'you must
-board the craft when the paper is shipped, if it
-ain't there yet.'</p>
-
-<p>'It ain't there yet, my man,' I said, remembering
-what had dropped from Edmund Byrle, that
-'she would come on board with the material.'</p>
-
-<p>'Then I think it will be to-night,' he continued;
-'for a sail-maker as has been at work aboard her
-says she drops down the river to-morrow; and
-I think by what I can learn in other quarters, he
-is right.'</p>
-
-<p>I thought so too, and at once made up my mind
-that the meeting at the <i>Railway Tavern</i> was to
-settle about shipping the paper.</p>
-
-<p>'I can give a pretty good guess at the man they
-will engage for the job,' says Wilkins.</p>
-
-<p>'I know him,' I said; 'a tall, sulky-looking,
-bony-headed old fellow, with a game eye.'</p>
-
-<p>'Why, Mr Nickham,' says Wilkins, 'you're a
-wonder, a perfect wonder! You're a credit to the
-force, and Sir Richard ought to hear of it! Why,
-that's the man, the very man; and here have you
-only been down two days, and know all about it!
-Keep your eye on him after dark, and you're all
-right.'</p>
-
-<p>We had some more talk after this; and then he
-pretended to go to sleep in his corner again, and
-I went out.</p>
-
-<p>I went straight into the City and saw some of
-our chief people, who sent over to the Bank.
-They would not chance my going there, for fear
-of somebody seeing me that had better know
-nothing about it. The gents from the Bank could
-hardly believe their ears, and the compliments
-they paid me, to be sure! It was decided that
-everything was to be left in my hands, and I was
-provided with letters to the right parties at the
-water-side. But I need not go into any further
-particulars of that kind.</p>
-
-<p>I was not going to trouble myself any more just
-now about the pilfering at Byrle &amp; Co.'s factory;
-as far as I was interested in it, the thieves might
-take boilers, wheels, chimneys, and all. I took up
-my post in the old arbours, and there, though the
-rain came steadily down, I sat. I managed to
-get a pretty dry corner; and with a little of the
-<i>Anchor's</i> rum-and-water and my pipe, I made
-myself tolerably comfortable while I sat and
-watched the Dutch trader. I was well screened
-from the sight of any one below, or else my corner
-would not have suited; and although I could hear
-the steps and the voices of the people going to the
-ferry, and could have touched them by leaning
-over, yet they could not see me.</p>
-
-<p>The bony ferryman, in his tarpaulin coat and
-hat, was there this afternoon; and very sloppy and
-miserable all the boats looked; and as the tide
-fell lower and lower, the great broad bed of river-mud
-grew broader, and the path to the ferryboat
-grew longer, and still I kept my watch, and
-meant to keep it. I must own, however, that I did
-not expect to see anything worth notice, for what
-could there be? But sometimes, you know, in
-our business, it is as necessary to watch to make
-sure there is nothing being done, as it is to make
-sure that some important movement is going on.</p>
-
-<p>There was an oyster-smack not fifty yards from
-me as was left on the shingle or mud when the
-tide went down; and there was a man smoking
-his pipe on the deck of that oyster-smack, just
-as I was smoking mine in the arbour; and when
-night came, and the river got dark, and you
-couldn't make anything out of it but a great black
-space, with a hollow sound of the wind moaning
-over it and of the water lapping on the shore as
-the tide rose again&mdash;then there was a lantern
-burning on the deck of that smack, and there was
-a similar lantern burning in my arbour; but the
-light was shewn open on board of the smack, and
-mine was a dark-lantern (so was the other) with
-the light hid. But I was perfectly well aware
-that the man aboard that smack never took his
-eyes off me while it was light, and that after dark
-he watched to see if I shewed my lantern. I didn't
-shew it; but if I had, there would have been a
-Thames police galley and five armed constables
-alongside of that hard in a couple of minutes.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div>
-<h2><a name="AN_EXTRAORDINARY_PROJECT" id="AN_EXTRAORDINARY_PROJECT">AN EXTRAORDINARY PROJECT.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">In</span> the city of San Francisco resides Mr Hubert
-Howe Bancroft, a gentleman about forty-five years
-of age, formerly engaged in commerce, but now
-retired from business, in order that he may devote
-his whole life, as well as the wealth which he had
-amassed, to the furtherance of a project which he
-formed some sixteen years ago. This was no less
-comprehensive a task than the compilation of a
-full history, as well as a scientific account, of all
-that vast district west of the Rocky Mountains,
-which, stretching from Panama to Alaska, embraces
-Central America, Mexico, and California.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_793" id="Page_793">{793}</a></span>
-It was to be in a popular form, and to embrace
-every point of interest that could be ascertained
-respecting the Pacific States, their aboriginal
-inhabitants, their successive civilised occupiers,
-their geology, botany, and other natural features.
-First of all in this stupendous task comes the
-history of the native tribes&mdash;to be completed in
-five volumes, the first instalments of which are
-already published by Messrs Appleton and Co. in
-New York, and by Messrs Longmans in our own
-country. These will be followed by a history of
-the States from the Spanish Conquest down to
-contemporary times, and for this portion of the
-work it is thought that some twenty volumes will
-be required. A third series will treat of the
-geological structure of the territory, its minerals
-especially, and of mining operations. Physical
-geography forms the fourth section of the proposed
-work; whilst the fifth will deal with agriculture;
-and the sixth with bibliography. It must be
-apparent that a man must be of a highly sanguine
-temperament to imagine such an enterprise; it
-will be well if he live to complete only a portion
-of it; and should he really succeed in doing what
-he wishes, he will have earned for himself an
-honourable distinction, and conferred on the world
-an extraordinary boon.</p>
-
-<p>But how was such an undertaking to be begun?
-Where were the materials; and even granting that
-they were to be procured, how was such a mass of
-general reading as must be consulted, to be utilised?
-Mr Bancroft's first step was to solve this
-difficulty. He decided to establish at his own
-cost, in San Francisco, a library of reference, which
-should contain all the books to be had for money
-which could throw any light on the subject. With
-this end in view, he appointed agents in all the
-principal cities of the world, whose business was to
-frequent sales, examine book catalogues, and effect
-the purchase of any volumes which seemed likely
-to contain useful information. Of course by such
-a system many books were transmitted to headquarters
-which ultimately proved to be of little
-or no value; but this was inevitable in the course
-of purchases of such magnitude. And notwithstanding
-all drawbacks of the kind, the collection
-has gradually increased, until it is said now
-to consist of between eighteen and twenty thousand
-volumes, including pamphlets; whether this
-number also includes manuscripts, we are unable
-to say. The acquisition of these works has been
-occasionally furthered by adventitious circumstances.
-The Mexican war, for instance, was the
-means of throwing in Mr Bancroft's way some
-highly valuable documents, which, under favourable
-circumstances, would have remained the property
-of their lawful owners; these, contained in
-four volumes, are a set of parchment records of
-the Church in Mexico between the years 1530 and
-1583, and apart from their historical value, have
-an interest to the bibliopolist as containing autographs
-of many celebrated men, amongst others
-of Philip II., Torquemada, Las Casas, and Zumarraga,
-first Archbishop of Mexico. This last-named
-worthy is notorious for his act of insensate bigotry
-in destroying the Aztec records, and thereby
-depriving the world of the history of that race;
-he burned the hieroglyphic paintings of Anahuac
-in the public square of Tlatelolco, much as
-Ximenes did with eighty thousand Moorish manuscripts
-in Granada. These priceless records were
-stolen from the government archives! When the
-unfortunate Emperor Maximilian's library was
-sold, many valuable works were also obtained from
-that collection, which had been gathered together
-during a lifetime by a well-known amateur, Count
-Andrade.</p>
-
-<p>The weakest part of the arrangement of Mr
-Bancroft's undertaking is the manner in which the
-books are housed, but this is probably an unavoidable
-evil; they occupy the fifth story of the
-owner's house in Market Street, San Francisco,
-where they are exposed to all the risk of fire, to
-say nothing of the inconvenience of such a plan.
-The apartment in which they are kept occupies the
-whole length of the building, and the books are
-arranged upon shelves reaching from the floor to
-the ceiling, and running from one end of the room
-to the other. Let us now see how it is proposed
-to utilise this mass of literature for reference.</p>
-
-<p>No one but a resolute enthusiast with an abundance
-of means could have brought this extraordinary
-project into shape. The trouble spent in
-the undertaking has been enormous. Of course,
-the projector has a staff of assistants possessing the
-requisite accomplishments, headed by a librarian,
-Mr Oak, who has been indefatigable in producing
-a catalogue of the works collected, with copious
-subordinate references. So aided, Mr Bancroft,
-as we understand, has begun his literary operations;
-but whether he will live to complete
-his colossal production in proper artistic style
-must necessarily be left to conjecture. Fortunately,
-besides being still in middle life, he is said to
-have splendid bodily health and great powers of
-endurance, both of which must stand him in good
-stead. He always writes at a standing desk, and
-sometimes prolongs his hours of labour to as many
-as eleven or twelve&mdash;which seem to us excessive.
-Such application may do for work which is chiefly
-compilation; but any brain-worker knows that it
-is simply impossible to do really valuable work
-throughout such a time. As a matter of fact, very
-few men can read or write hard for more than six
-hours a day with profitable result. Let us hope,
-however, that the man who has had courage to
-undertake such a task, will have self-restraint
-enough not to endanger its success by an undue
-straining of the faculties, which must be kept in
-full repair to insure its accomplishment. We
-should be sorry to hear that any disaster from
-fire had put an abrupt termination to so well-meaning,
-though we may be allowed to call it
-a somewhat eccentric undertaking.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div>
-<h2><a name="GORDON" id="GORDON">GORDON.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">She</span> came on towards me, her trailing draperies
-falling round her with the soft grace she gave to
-all she touched. Sunshine was on her beautiful
-hair&mdash;evening sunshine, which turned the wreath
-of plaits she wore into a crown of burnished gold.
-She came floating on, through the flower and fruit
-gemmed orange trees, through the crimson and
-pure white camellia bloom; violets grew beneath
-her feet, and she seemed to me part of the glory
-and the fragrance of the sunset and the blossoms.</p>
-
-<p>Below the terrace where I stood, lay the sea,
-where blue faded to green, and green to opal, melting
-into one deep far-stretching mystery of purple<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_794" id="Page_794">{794}</a></span>
-light and banks of golden cloud. Palaces and domes
-and tapering spires shone white against the dark
-background of distant mountains. Suddenly the
-music of many bells rung out on the still air, their
-chiming softened by distance into low faint sweetness.
-They were the bells of the stately marble
-city that shone so fair across her gleaming bay.
-The first bell-notes were taken up and echoed by
-the bells of chapels in villages along the shore; of
-convents hidden away in country dells and valleys,
-till the air was full of lingering prayerful sound.
-Through it, through the magical Italian twilight
-came the woman I loved. She came and stood
-beside me, looking across the water to where
-Genoa's palaces glimmered against the sky; but I
-do not think she saw or thought of them. There
-was a dreamy look in her eyes, a cold, set weariness
-about her mouth, which is only seen in those
-whose thoughts have drifted far from where they
-stand.</p>
-
-<p>'Are you tired of this place?' I at length ventured
-to ask her.</p>
-
-<p>'Not particularly,' she answered; 'you know I
-never care much where I am.' The words sound
-petulant; but said as she said them, they were only
-weary. I should have been glad if she had ever
-shewn impatience; anything rather than the cold
-quiet which ever lay upon her beauty like a pall.
-At first, in my triumphant happiness at having
-won her promise to be my wife, this coldness had
-not chilled me&mdash;as it sometimes did now&mdash;to the
-heart. I so longed, so hungered for a word of
-love, for a tender look. All her stately beauty
-would soon be mine, and it seemed still as far
-from me as ever.</p>
-
-<p>We leaned on the low parapet of the terrace,
-while the music of the bells died away, till only
-the slow beating of the waves broke the stillness.
-It was an hour of wonderful peace and beauty, yet
-a strange sense of unrest took possession of me,
-and jarred the music of the waves and the restful
-quiet of the twilight. Standing there close to her,
-with the certainty that soon she would be my own
-for ever, a vague thrill of fear came over me, a
-fear lest all this feverish joy of knowing she was
-mine, might vanish away, and leave me a lonely
-mortal. This love for her had become to me an
-all-absorbing passion; and yet she never for one
-moment allowed me to think that my love was
-returned. Perhaps it was the might of her beauty
-that filled my senses; yet I have seen beautiful
-women since, and had seen them before I first
-saw her on the walls above the old Etruscan
-gateway at Perugia.</p>
-
-<p class='p2'>One morning the week before, I had strolled out
-from the dull hotel; and leaving the street with
-its tall houses and quaint old fountain, glowing
-in the day's first freshness, I sauntered on to the
-walls, and there I first saw her. Below in the
-valley the silvery olive leaves trembled in the
-sunshine; wreaths of broad-leaved vines clung to
-the gray old trees, clothing them with a borrowed
-beauty of youth and freshness. Hundreds of
-flowers blushed in the light, and varied odours
-from herb and blossom filled the air with a
-subtle languor. Above, on the lichen-covered
-wall, with a background of purple mountain, a
-fitting frame to her stately loveliness, she sat,
-looking out across the sunlit land, with the dreary
-far-away look in her great deep eyes, and the
-haughty coldness upon her chiselled face. I
-lingered about, drinking draughts of beauty;
-fancying it was my artistic sense that kept me
-there watching her face, till she rose wearily, and
-slowly walking down the street, entered the hotel
-where I was staying.</p>
-
-<p>I found on inquiry that a Mrs Vereker and her
-niece, Miss Mayne, had arrived there the previous
-evening. I had sometimes met Mrs Vereker in
-London; and later on in the day, while I was
-carelessly examining the carving on the fountain
-in the square I saw her and my vision of the
-morning standing on the cathedral steps. Mrs
-Vereker came forward with that friendliness we
-feel for a slight home acquaintance whom we
-may chance to meet when abroad. So I joined
-them, and we strolled on chatting over home news.
-Miss Mayne seldom spoke, and yet that walk
-seemed to me a strangely happy one. Mrs Vereker
-told me they had only been a day in Perugia,
-and had intended going on at once to Rome;
-but the mountain air and mountain views were
-so delightful, they had changed their minds, and
-intended remaining for some time at Perugia.</p>
-
-<p>I had come to the old town to study art; to
-search the blazoned manuscripts lying hidden in
-sacristy and convent, and learn from them their
-secrets of colour and design; to wander through
-frescoed church and palace, where walls and
-ceilings are brilliant still as when the hands which
-wove their gorgeous stories first laid the pencil
-down and thanked God for the great consoler&mdash;Art.
-I had come to watch the mists rising from
-the valleys, and wrapping the mountains in soft
-mystery of cloud&mdash;cloud which changes and shifts,
-and melts at last into the golden and purple,
-the opaline green of the sunrise; so that I might
-try to wrest from Nature a faint touch of her magic
-of shadow and light, of colour and form, and lay
-it at the feet of the one mistress I had ever known&mdash;Art.</p>
-
-<p>What I was now studying was a woman's
-heart&mdash;and what I learned was&mdash;nothing. I
-do not think mine is an impressionable nature.
-I had spent thirty years in the world, and had
-never loved any woman until I saw Mary Mayne
-in the morning light sitting above that old gateway;
-yet in one short week I had grown to love
-her&mdash;well, as few women are ever loved.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of that week came a letter from
-Willie Vereker, saying his yacht needed some
-repairs, and he would put in at Genoa for a few
-days if his mother could meet him there. He had
-been to the East, and she had not seen him for some
-time; so she decided on going back to Genoa;
-hoping the <i>Gwendoline</i> might need more repairing
-than Willie thought, and keep him there longer
-than he expected. The evening of the day Mrs
-Vereker received that letter, I told her of my love
-for her niece, and asked permission to accompany
-them to Genoa.</p>
-
-<p>She regarded me with an odd look of compassion.
-'Have you spoken to Mary yet?' she
-asked.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_795" id="Page_795">{795}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I told her I had not; I wished to wait until we
-had known each other longer; I feared being too
-precipitate.</p>
-
-<p>'Then,' said Mrs Vereker, 'I have no right to
-tell you anything of her story. It is a sad one,
-poor child! and I warn you, you have little chance
-of success. If you choose, you can come with us
-to Genoa; but if I were you, I should not do so.
-Save yourself while you can. You have known
-her a very short time. If you leave us now, you
-will soon forget her; later, you may find it a more
-difficult task.'</p>
-
-<p>I shook my head. The advice came too late.
-I went with them to Genoa. The stately marble
-city had a charm for us all. Mrs Vereker had
-her son, and the two found marvellous attractions
-in the quaint narrow streets with their palace
-portals, their courts and halls, where fountains
-sparkled and flung diamonds of spray round the
-brows of pure fair statues; where in the coolness
-and the shadow, gold-laden orange trees and thick
-masses of crimson blossom gleamed with sudden
-startling glory.</p>
-
-<p>I had my idol. Day after day I was by her side.
-It was a fool's Paradise perhaps; but I suppose
-there is such an Eden in every life; and looking
-back, when we have left its short-lived peace, we
-vainly long for a single throb of its rapture. So,
-during those quiet days at Genoa, each of us,
-except Mary Mayne, had our heart's desire: Willie,
-the life, the colour, the loveliness he and his
-<i>Gwendoline</i> sought in voyages to many lands; Mrs
-Vereker, her son; I, my new delirious joy. There,
-on the terrace where we were standing, I first
-spoke to Mary, and heard her tell me my love was
-hopeless. She told me her story.</p>
-
-<p>Her wedding-day had been fixed. In a year she
-was to have been married to a man she loved with
-her whole heart; when the war with Russia broke
-out, and Gordon Frazer's regiment was ordered to
-the Crimea. He and Mary wished to be married
-before he left, but family reasons prevented it, and
-so they parted. He had never returned to England.
-A soldier brought Mary a little locket which she
-had given Gordon. The ribbon it hung upon
-was thickened here and there with deep dark
-stains; and the man said Gordon Frazer had
-given it to him to take to Mary, when the young
-officer lay dying after the charge at Balaklava.
-It was only the story of many an English and
-many a Russian girl during that dreadful time.
-When a strong, self-contained nature breaks
-down, it is almost utter collapse; so it was with
-Mary. For months she lay silent, tearless, listlessly
-unable to make the slightest exertion, to
-take the smallest interest in life. Her friends
-thought her brain had suffered from the shock;
-and when she recovered sufficiently to travel, Mrs
-Vereker had taken her abroad, where they had
-been moving from place to place ever since.
-Her body regained health; she was now quite
-strong; but the girl's heart and soul seemed dead;
-as she said, dead, and buried in Gordon Frazer's
-grave. Yet as I listened I did not despair. I
-had no living rival; he was dead, this man she
-loved; while my heart was beating, living, and
-strong with its worship of her. If I could only
-win her to be my wife, the dead love would pale
-and faint before my real and passionate devotion.
-So I hoped, as day by day I watched her every
-look, forestalled her every wish, until she grew
-accustomed to my presence, and to rely upon my
-care. My hopes were answered; ere long I won
-her reluctant consent to be my wife, but on the
-condition that our marriage should not take place
-until their return to England next year.</p>
-
-<p>The rosy clouds were fading into the deep
-purple of Italian night. Silence fell around us
-as a mantle; only the throb of the sea below the
-terrace broke the intense quiet. Out on the sea
-shone the white sails of a little yacht. Nearer,
-within the harbour, rose the masts and spars of
-many ships, mysterious, spectre-like, as ships
-always look at night. As we were seated in calm
-enjoyment of the scene, a small boat shot out from
-the rocks beneath our feet, where lay some hidden
-cave or landing-place. It was rowed by two men;
-a third sat wrapped in a large cloak in the stern.
-They rowed well, and the boat was nearly a mile
-from us, leaving a bright line of light upon the
-shining water, when a cry broke the calm of the
-night&mdash;a wild, weird cry, with agony in its tone.
-'Gordon!' I have never heard its like since, and
-I hope I never shall again. In its agonised tone
-I could scarcely recognise the voice of Mary, so
-changed was it, so shrill with long pent-up
-yearning, as it wailed out that one word&mdash;'Gordon!'
-The cry seemed to be repeated again
-and again, though softened by the echoes, while
-the little boat sped on its way, and its passengers&mdash;mere
-dark specks they seemed&mdash;climbed into
-the yacht. The white sails gleamed against the
-horizon, and then, phantom-like, were lost in its
-dim purple.</p>
-
-<p>I turned and looked at Mary. She stood with
-her eyes fixed on the darkness which hid the
-yacht from sight, her hands clasped upon her
-heart, her face drawn and colourless. I feared the
-fate her friends dreaded for her had stricken her
-as she stood beside me there in the still luxurious
-twilight. 'Mary, my dearest, my own!
-what is it?'&mdash;taking her hand and drawing her
-closer.</p>
-
-<p>She drew her hand from mine, and shuddering
-away from me, leaned against the stone parapet,
-resting her head on the cold marble coping.</p>
-
-<p>'You are ill; let me take you home, darling,' I
-said.</p>
-
-<p>'No,' she murmured; 'not ill. But oh,' she
-exclaimed, 'Harry, Harry! my good kind friend,
-help me! <i>Gordon was near us just now.</i> I felt
-it; I am sure of it. You will help me to find him;
-will you not?'</p>
-
-<p>Help her to find him! help to break my own
-heart&mdash;to bruise this new-found sweetness out of
-my life! The very thought struck me with a
-sudden chill. What if this fancy of hers, coming
-so close upon my sure forebodings, should be a
-reality? What if Gordon Frazer were still in
-existence? I thrust the thought from me as I
-should thrust a temptation. 'I will help you in
-any way I can, my darling,' I said; 'but come in
-now; the night-air is chilling; and you are giving
-way to feverish fancies.'</p>
-
-<p>'No,' she said; 'it is no fancy.' Drawing
-herself up wearily, she turned without looking at
-me; and I followed her down the terrace and
-across the marble court of the old palace which
-was our home in Genoa. I watched her glide,
-stately and pale and quiet, up the broad white
-staircase.</p>
-
-<p>It was months before she recovered from the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_796" id="Page_796">{796}</a></span>
-brain-fever in which she awoke next morning&mdash;such
-awful months, during which we often feared
-the worst. Yet when they were over, and she was
-among us again, paler, more fragile, but still her
-own beautiful self, stately, self-possessed as usual, I
-was almost thankful for the terrible illness, which
-proved that her cry and wild words on the terrace
-were but warnings of coming illness, the mere
-wandering of a brain diseased.</p>
-
-<p class='p2'>The Roman season was nearly over, yet Rome
-was full&mdash;full of English sightseers, like ourselves;
-full of Americans, on rapid flight across
-Europe; of eastern prelates, in flowing eastern
-robes, with olive-hued eastern faces; of eager-faced
-French ladies, and solemn-eyed peasants from lonely
-villages on the Campagna, and of Italians from city
-and from plain; for it was Easter-time. We were
-only waiting until the conclusion of the festivities
-to set out on our journey home. Home! I never
-until now felt half the meaning of that word.
-When we got home, Mary and I would be married.
-I should give up wandering, and settle down into
-a country gentleman. I thought with a pang of
-self-reproach of the grand old home which called
-me master, shut up in desolate state since my
-dear father died. How a fair young mistress
-would brighten and beautify the old rooms. I
-could see it all now&mdash;the oaken hall with its
-quaint old pictures; spring sunshine pouring in
-at the open door, red-coated sportsmen grouped
-under the beeches, horns ringing from the copses,
-children playing under the shadow of the avenue
-of limes&mdash;the loveliness of joyous life, where for
-so long had been the silence left by death. It
-was a sunny dream of home&mdash;home in fair England,
-into which I had fallen; standing there,
-upon the Pincian, under the deep dark blue of
-Roman night.</p>
-
-<p>Below lay the city, its narrow streets dimly
-mysterious, no light visible in their tall houses;
-the fountain murmured its sweet monotonous
-music in the Piazza di Spagna; the wide white
-marble steps gleamed along the hillside; tall palm-trees
-cast weird shadows across the gravelled walks;
-nightingales answered each other in low rich trills
-of song, echoing from tree to tree, through whispering
-palms and odorous night-flowers. Beside me,
-cold and silent, was the woman whose charmful
-spell woke within me this new sweet longing
-for home&mdash;home musical with the soft rustling
-of women's garments; with the tender voices of
-little children. I suppose such a dream and such
-a longing come to all men at some time of their
-lives; it came to me that night as I stood above
-the city of vanished glories, of dead and buried
-dreams.</p>
-
-<p>It did not last long. Suddenly, above the city
-roofs, a cross of silvery light shone out against the
-sky. The illumination of Saint Peter's had begun.
-Above the winding narrow streets, above palace
-roofs, above palm and cypress, above triumphal
-arch and mouldering temple, over the palace of
-the Cæsars, over Capitol and Forum, the silvery
-cross shone glad, triumphant; and from it, the
-light spread from window to window, from pillar
-to pillar, till the vast pile was one glory, changing
-rapidly from soft silvery radiance into a glow of
-golden fire.</p>
-
-<p>'It was worth coming to see. Was it not,
-Mary?'</p>
-
-<p>'Mary!' A stranger's voice echoed her name;
-and instead of answering my question, she sprang
-with a low cry from my side, and laid her head
-upon a stranger's breast. 'Did you not get my
-letters? I have been looking everywhere for you,'
-I heard him say.</p>
-
-<p>She did not answer, nor raised her head; as if
-at last she had found her rest.</p>
-
-<p>'You are not alone here?' he went on. 'Who
-are you with?'</p>
-
-<p>Then with a quiver as of pain, she raised herself,
-and looked from me to him with beseeching
-eyes and trembling clasped hands.</p>
-
-<p>Before she spoke&mdash;for even in all the agony
-of my crushed-out hopes, my love for her bore
-down all other feelings, and I tried to save her
-from the pain of telling me what I already knew&mdash;I
-said: 'You have found an older friend than I
-am, Mary. Shall I leave him to take you to Mrs
-Vereker?'</p>
-
-<p>'An older friend?' he repeated. 'By Jove! I
-should think so.'</p>
-
-<p>Then raising his hat, he shook hands with me
-as I turned away.</p>
-
-<p>I turned into the darkness, but not before I had
-seen that until now I had never known her, my
-love, my promised wife. I had known a beautiful
-statue, not the beautiful woman who, with eyes
-upraised to his, stood in the subdued light looking
-up to Gordon Frazer. All the coldness, all the
-stately calm had gone, fallen from her as a mantle
-falls&mdash;a mantle which had hidden the fullness of
-her loveliness, and had concealed from me a
-tender grace and beauty I had never till now
-beheld. I have never seen her since.</p>
-
-<p class='p2'>Some time afterwards I met a friend who had
-seen a good deal of the Frazers. He was loud in
-admiration of Mrs Frazer's beauty and of her
-devotion to her husband. 'He was out in the
-Crimea, you know, and was reported dead; but
-he was only wounded. Some Russian family, to
-whose house he had managed to be sent, had
-tended him with kindly care after even his own
-doctors had given up hope, and had pulled him
-through his danger. Mrs Frazer told me,' continued
-my friend, 'how one evening when standing
-on a terrace at Genoa, she heard his voice;
-and thinking it was a reproach from the grave (for
-she was going to marry another fellow), she got
-brain-fever, and was near dying. The fact was,
-the yacht in which a friend had brought him
-from Constantinople touched at Genoa, and he had
-actually spent the day doing the palaces! When
-she heard his voice, he was returning to the
-<i>Peri</i>, which lay about two miles from the shore.
-Romantic story, isn't it? But Gordon takes her
-devotion coolly enough; the love seems more
-on her side than on his. I cannot understand
-that.'</p>
-
-<p>Understand it? Yes, I could. Hers was one
-of those great-souled natures who like to give
-rather than to take, to pour out all the wealth and
-beauty of their being on the idol which they
-have clothed in all the glory of their own imaginings.
-God grant she may live on to the end,
-happy in her womanly idol-worship!</p>
-
-<p>As for me, the dream I dreamt upon the Pincian
-Hill, before the cross of golden light shone over
-the city roofs, was never realised. No rustle of
-woman's garments makes low music in the old<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_797" id="Page_797">{797}</a></span>
-oak-panelled rooms; no children's voices wake
-the echoes under the avenues of arching limes.
-The old Devon manor-house stands as yet without
-a mistress.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div>
-<h2><a name="NARCOTISM" id="NARCOTISM">NARCOTISM.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">In</span> these days of medical knowledge, when so
-many merciful means for the alleviation of pain
-are known, it follows as a matter of course that
-great abuse of sleep-producing agents exists. We
-would therefore say a few words of caution as to
-the pernicious practice of people making use of
-chloral, chlorodyne, chloroform, and other kindred
-agents <i>without medical advice</i>. It is, we think,
-little known to how great an extent this evil
-exists. To come across a lady who is constantly
-more or less under the influence of chlorodyne,
-is by no means uncommon; every trifling ailment
-or passing <i>malaise</i> being an excuse for a few drops
-of that narcotic. Chloral is also extensively and
-improperly used; the more so because, unfortunately
-at the time of its first introduction as a
-sleep-producing agent, it was most erroneously
-stated to be perfectly harmless, and many are still
-under this impression.</p>
-
-<p>The real truth is, that <i>no</i> narcotic of any kind
-whatever is harmless, but on the contrary, invariably
-pernicious when taken otherwise than by the
-advice and under the treatment of a medical man.
-True, sleeplessness is one of the most trying things
-a person can suffer from; but then there are other
-means of combating the enemy than by dosing
-one's self with chloral or any such agent; and thus
-making an infirmity chronic, which would in all
-probability have been only a temporary evil. Rely
-upon opiates for sleep, and sleep will not come
-without them. Thus a bad habit is formed; the
-bodily strength is undermined, the digestive powers
-enfeebled, the mind and intellect weakened and
-enervated, and the unfortunate sufferer becomes a
-slave, bound hand and foot to a habit that it is
-almost impossible to shake off. Sleeplessness often
-comes from want of sufficient fresh air and exercise,
-from over-mental work, mental distress, from
-too great a quantity of stimulants taken during the
-day, and from various other causes, which a little
-care as to diet and regimen would quickly overcome.
-Taking short naps during the day; too
-much tea and coffee drinking, especially shortly
-before bedtime&mdash;all these are apt to cause sleeplessness.
-In many cases a light and simple supper
-taken shortly before retiring to rest, and attention
-to the feet being thoroughly warm, will insure a
-good night's sleep when more energetic means
-have failed.</p>
-
-<p>In those terrible abodes of suffering, our cancer
-hospitals, the method of all others most resorted to,
-and most efficacious for the alleviation of pain, is
-the sub-cutaneous (under-the-skin) injection of
-morphia. In sciatica, neuralgia, and other painful
-nervous affections, this remedy is often exceedingly
-beneficial, when used under competent medical
-advice and supervision; but like every other good
-thing it is open to great abuse, and often made
-use of merely as a soothing narcotic by the irritable,
-excitable, and discontented. A long train of
-evils follows; but with these we are not called
-upon to deal here. What we want now to lay
-before the reader is a plain statement as to the
-prompt treatment called for in a case of over-narcotism
-from too strong a dose of injected
-morphia. Coldness of the extremities, lividity
-of the countenance, profuse cold sweat, and loss of
-power over the limbs, insensibility, very deep
-breathing, and contraction of the pupils of the
-eyes to such an extent that they resemble a black
-pin-head, result.</p>
-
-<p>What then is to be done? Time is precious,
-and perhaps half an hour or more may elapse
-before medical aid can be obtained. Taking it for
-granted that the patient is in a recumbent position,
-the first thing to be done is to raise the head, to
-sponge the face and chest copiously with fresh
-cold water, to rub the limbs steadily and strongly,
-to put hot-water applications to the feet and to
-the sides of the body, if it feel cold to the touch.
-Place strong smelling-salts to the nose; lay the
-head on one side with the mouth open, so that
-the tongue may not fall back and prevent respiration;
-give brandy-and-water, if the patient can
-possibly swallow it; but if the narcotism be
-severe, this will be impossible, and it is wisest
-to abstain from attempts which may result in fluid
-going the wrong way. In fact do everything to
-keep the body warm and the breathing unimpeded,
-and strive to rouse the unconscious faculties into
-action.</p>
-
-<p>Supposing, however, that the narcotism be very
-excessive, and the breathing be slow, irregular, and
-low, then if medical aid be not forthcoming, it
-would be well to resort to artificial respiration; by
-no means a difficult matter to manage, if only any
-one present has a slight amount of knowledge on
-the subject. The following is Dr Sylvester's
-method, and is advantageous from its simplicity:
-'Place the patient on the back, inclined a little
-upwards from the feet by raising and supporting
-the head on a cushion, placing support
-also under the shoulder-blades. Draw out the
-tongue and keep it forward, so as to leave the
-air-passages free. Remove all clothing from the
-neck, chest, and abdomen. Stand by the patient's
-head, take firm hold of the arms just above
-the elbows, and draw them gently and steadily
-upwards above the head, keeping them stretched
-upwards for two or three seconds. Then turn
-down the arms, and press them firmly and steadily
-against the sides of the chest for two or three
-seconds. Repeat these movements alternately,
-deliberately, and <i>perseveringly</i>, until a spontaneous
-effort at respiration is perceived; immediately
-upon which, proceed to try by every possible
-means to induce circulation and warmth.' However,
-should the case of narcotism be <i>not</i> a severe
-one, such extreme measures as artificial respiration
-will not be called for, and in all probability, after
-the use of those simpler remedies at first named,
-sickness will occur, and this may be taken as a
-sign that the worst of the evil is over.</p>
-
-<p>And here let us once more emphatically state
-that in this and all other cases we assume that a
-medical man is sent for, and that our suggestions
-only refer to what is to be done <i>until</i> he appears
-upon the scene. Nothing is so annoying and so
-productive of harm as for a non-professional person
-to be constantly making this and that suggestion
-as to the treatment of a sufferer, when a medical
-man is giving his best thought and skill to the
-case; but on the other hand it is well for people&mdash;more
-especially women&mdash;to know what to do when
-thrown upon their own resources.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_798" id="Page_798">{798}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Cases of poisoning from over-doses of opiates
-are of course only one class of such-like accidents;
-and the accidental swallowing of irritant poisons,
-embrocations, &amp;c. often occur, and call for the
-utmost promptitude of action and presence of mind
-on the part of those present.</p>
-
-<p>In the less densely populated parts of the country,
-it is a positive necessity that people should
-be able to rely upon themselves in cases of emergency,
-for if a doctor is many miles distant, and it
-takes several hours to fetch him, one might almost
-as well be without him, where sharp practice is
-called for. To produce vomiting, one of the best
-emetics we happen to know of is an American one.
-It consists of a table-spoonful of common treacle
-(molasses it is called across the water) and as
-much powdered alum stirred into it as the sticky
-compound can be made to contain. Now alum is
-such a valuable drug in many ways that it ought
-to be kept in every household medicine-chest;
-and treacle is not usually hard to get. We have
-never seen this remedy tried in a case of poisoning,
-but we <i>have</i> seen its effect in croup; and anything
-more decided and imperious in its action it
-would be difficult to imagine. Such a dose might
-freely be given in <i>any</i> case of poisoning; and after
-the emetic has acted freely, we would give some
-soothing mixture, such as thickened milk. There
-are various things which have the power to a
-certain extent of protecting the coats of the
-stomach from the action of irritant poisons; if the
-poison be an acid, the scrapings off a white-washed
-wall or chalk and milk are good. Milk almost
-stiffened with common brown sugar is one of them;
-sweet oil taken to nauseation is another.</p>
-
-<p>In all cases of poisoning, <i>loss of time</i> is the one
-great thing to be avoided; and the nearest remedy
-at hand is the best one to make use of. Mustard
-and water, strong and plenty of it, is a capital
-emetic. Of croup, that enemy of juvenile humanity,
-we must now speak a few words; and we
-know of no better remedy than the American one
-above described, combined with a hot bath and a
-hot blanket to roll the child well up in afterwards.</p>
-
-<p>The ignorance of the poor as to the treatment
-and still more the prevention of the diseases of
-children is something appalling, and there can be
-no doubt that thousands of little lives are annually
-sacrificed to this Moloch.</p>
-
-<p>'I can't tell what ails my child, ma'am,' said a
-labourer's wife to the writer of this, one bitter day
-last winter, 'he's carrying on so strange: crowing
-like a cock, and turning his-self almost black in the
-face every nows and again.'</p>
-
-<p>The infant in question was comfortably seated
-on a nice cold door-step, and breathing as if he had
-swallowed a baby's rattle by mistake. 'Your child
-has the croup,' I said, picking up the unfortunate
-little creature and carrying it to the fireside; 'and
-if you don't do something for him at once, he'll
-very likely die.'</p>
-
-<p>However something <i>was</i> done for him, and
-he didn't die; but he had a kick for his life all
-the same, and very little more door-step would
-have finished him. Yet this poor woman was not
-an unloving mother; she was only ignorant, and
-in her ignorance, assisting her child into the grave
-she would have shed such bitter tears over.</p>
-
-<p>From croup to diphtheria is a natural progression,
-and we would wish to say a few, a very few
-words on this terrible disease; not as to its treatment
-by the amateur nurse, for it is of the greatest
-importance that such cases should have close
-medical care. It is then on the subject of the
-operation called <i>tracheotomy</i>&mdash;that is, the making an
-outward incision in the windpipe below the seat of
-the disease, and inserting a tube for the purpose of
-respiration, that we would speak&mdash;not to discuss it
-in its medical aspect, but simply to say a word or
-two to nervous mothers who would shrink from
-the idea of the surgeon's knife touching a sick
-child under any circumstances whatever. Surely
-there can be no more pitiful sight to look upon
-than a child dying of diphtheria&mdash;the eyes wild
-with fear, looking appealingly for help from one
-troubled face to another; the little hand thrust
-into the mouth in helpless, useless effort to dislodge
-the terrible leather-like substance that is
-clogging up the throat, and making each breath a
-sound so painful that for days and weeks to come
-it will not cease to sound in our ears. What more
-agonising sight can the sick-room give us to gaze
-upon? And yet doctors have told us of cases in
-which a mother has had such an overpowering dread
-of the surgeon's knife, that even when things come
-to such a state as this, she has positively refused to
-allow of any attempt at alleviation of her child's
-agony by a simple operation!</p>
-
-<p>Now it is on this head we wish to say a few words
-of encouragement and counsel. Tracheotomy is
-in the first place a <i>chance</i>&mdash;a very slight chance in
-most cases&mdash;but still a chance for life; but if it
-does not save life, it spares the child a death of
-awful suffering. The pain of the operation itself
-is so momentary as not to be worth considering,
-and relief is <i>instantaneous</i>. We are not speaking
-of recovery, but simply of the difference between
-such a death as that described above and
-the quiet 'falling asleep' of the child upon whom
-tracheotomy has been performed; and this is what
-the writer saw&mdash;the frightened appealing eyes; the
-pitiful effort at self-help; and then the instant
-relief given by firm and skilful hands; and four-and-twenty
-hours later, the quiet painless death;
-the boy smiling up into our faces as the pure spirit
-fled to that place of rest and peace where 'there
-shall be no more pain.' It was not a thing to be
-seen and forgotten.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div>
-<h2><a name="LIFE_IN_A_MILITARY_PRISON" id="LIFE_IN_A_MILITARY_PRISON">LIFE IN A MILITARY PRISON.</a></h2>
-
-<p class='ph3'>BY A PRISON CHAPLAIN.</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">In</span> an address lately delivered at Birmingham,
-Professor Tyndall says: 'I met some few years
-since in a railway carriage the governor of one of our
-largest prisons. He was evidently an observant
-and reflective man. He told me that the prisoners
-in his charge might be divided into three classes.
-The first class consisted of persons who ought
-never to have been in prison. External accident,
-and not internal taint, had brought them within
-the grasp of the law, and what had happened to
-them might happen to most of us. They were
-essentially men of sound moral stamina, though
-wearing the prison garb. Then came the largest
-class, formed of individuals possessing no strong
-bias moral or immoral, plastic to the touch of circumstances,
-which would mould them into either
-good or evil members of society. Thirdly came a
-class&mdash;happily not a large one&mdash;whom no kindness
-could conciliate and no discipline tame. They<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_799" id="Page_799">{799}</a></span>
-were sent into this world labelled "Incorrigible,"
-wickedness being stamped as it were upon their
-organisations.'</p>
-
-<p>As a matter of fact, there is a distinction made,
-and rightly made, between the inmates of military
-prisons. They are divided into first, second, and
-third classes; which you may call bad, worse,
-and worst, if you are of the despairing type of
-philanthropist; or good, better, and best, if you
-are a great believer in human nature, even in
-imprisoned human nature. The first class wear
-a red stripe on the arm, and being the best
-conducted, are given less work to do and more
-food. Class number two are marked with a yellow
-stripe; while the third or lowest class are distinguished
-by a white badge. A stranger might perhaps
-shrink from all who wear white stripes as
-from 'incorrigibles;' but some in the third class
-may be really very little more 'incorrigible' than
-himself, for every prisoner, no matter what his
-character may be, except in very special cases, is
-placed in the third class on his reception. He
-then, by good conduct, becomes eligible for promotion
-into the second class, and subsequently into the
-first. Rule one hundred and sixty-six of the Regulations
-for Military Prisons, lays down that 'the
-first class will be composed of those prisoners who,
-from their quiet orderly habits and general good
-conduct under punishment, may appear deserving
-of being promoted from the second class after
-some experience has been gained of their characters.
-Prisoners in either the first or the second
-class will also be liable to be removed to a lower
-class for misconduct.' Though the first class of
-prisoners are employed during the same hours as
-those prescribed for the second class, the labour is
-of a less severe description: picking oakum or
-drill being substituted for the deservedly hated
-crank and shot exercise. Another privilege enjoyed
-by the first class is, that they are never
-deprived of their bed, whereas, 'all prisoners on
-reception are to sleep for the first week in the
-same manner as a soldier on guard&mdash;that is, on a
-board without undressing&mdash;and subsequently, the
-third-class prisoners are to sleep as on guard
-every other night; and the second-class prisoners
-in the same manner every third night: the prisoners
-of the first class being alone exempted from
-this rule.' First and second class prisoners are
-employed in this prison&mdash;which is no Castle of
-Indolence&mdash;at drill, shot exercise, the crank,
-cleaning the passages and other parts of the premises
-from six o'clock <span class="smcap lowercase">A.M.</span> to six o'clock <span class="smcap lowercase">P.M.</span>; and
-those of the third class from six o'clock <span class="smcap lowercase">A.M.</span> to
-eight o'clock <span class="smcap lowercase">P.M.</span>; with the exception of regular
-times for parades, chapel, and meals.</p>
-
-<p>'If any man will not work neither let him eat,'
-is a motto strictly adhered to by the authorities;
-for no prisoner is allowed meat-dinner who is not
-employed at hard labour. Those not so engaged
-are only given porridge and bread-and-milk.
-When labouring at hard work, prisoners have a
-meat-dinner every Tuesday and Thursday. Eight
-ounces of beef without bone and one pint of soup
-is the allowance. The first class have an additional
-meat-dinner on Sundays. There is, we see, considerable
-advantage to be gained by the prisoner,
-to reward his ambition, should it prompt him to
-move upward into a higher class. Now this is
-no trifling matter, for the very essence of good
-prison discipline is the subordination of mere
-punishment to reformation; and this system
-of classification tends not only to preserve a
-man's self-respect, but to fan the spark of hope
-that otherwise might be extinguished in his
-breast.</p>
-
-<p>The justly celebrated novel <i>Never too late to
-Mend</i> has made the public in some degree familiar
-with the 'silent system' of prison discipline. This
-system has been found not to work when sentences
-are for a long period. Speech is discovered to be
-more than a luxury, being essential to the mental
-health of prisoners. None now are condemned
-to the silent system except those who are imprisoned
-for only a short time. And how great is
-the punishment of not being allowed to speak, is
-proved to the chaplain by this one fact. Nowhere
-are prayers so diligently responded to and
-hymns sung with such <i>will</i>, if without musical
-taste, as in the chapel of a military prison, for
-prisoners recognise the service as an opportunity
-of convincing themselves that they have not
-become dumb. Until this explanation was given
-by the governor, I was full of admiration for
-religion, afterwards discovered to be more loud-sounding
-than genuine.</p>
-
-<p>Prisoners condemned to solitary confinement
-are forced to turn to the wall on the approach
-of visitors or the superior officers of the prison.
-'Has my face assumed any terrific aspect? Am
-I so much worse-looking than usual?' This is
-the thought that naturally comes into one's mind
-on walking through a military prison for the first
-time. Each man takes a quick glance at your
-Gorgon head, and then, fast as lightning, turns his
-back to you and his face to the wall, until your
-apparently baneful or bewitching influence has
-passed.</p>
-
-<p>Another humiliation to which prisoners have
-to submit is that of having their hair frequently
-cut short. A man must sink very low indeed
-before he lose altogether personal vanity. It
-would seem as if there were a peacock as well as
-an angel and a beast in each of us. For this
-reason the regulation that requires the hair of all
-prisoners of the third class to be cropped every
-fortnight is no slight punishment. It is especially
-felt by those who leave the prison without having
-been promoted to the second and first classes, in
-which a prisoner's hair is permitted to grow during
-the last fortnight of imprisonment. How can a
-man shew himself in respectable society, or take
-off his hat to a lady, when that common act of
-courtesy would reveal the fact that his hair was
-cut by&mdash;government?</p>
-
-<p>Some may desire to know whether flogging has or
-has not been entirely abolished. To the question,
-we answer: 'Yes; except for aggravated breaches
-of prison discipline.' Nor is it easy to see in what
-other way such cases can be dealt with. A man,
-let us suppose in a fit of sulky stubbornness, does
-not attempt to pick his oakum. He is brought
-before the governor, and sentenced to lose his
-supper and bed; that is, to be obliged to sleep on
-the floor. On going back to his cell he says to
-himself: 'What can I do now to avenge myself on
-the authorities?' and he acts on the impulse that
-seizes him, which is to break the window and
-destroy everything in his cell. Probably this sort
-of stubborn ill-conditioned character is a coward;
-and if this be the case, nothing is found to bring
-him to his senses so well as twenty-five lashes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_800" id="Page_800">{800}</a></span>
-administered in the presence of the governor and
-medical officer.</p>
-
-<p>The punishments which we should like to see
-abolished, if others without equal or greater disadvantages
-could be discovered, are the crank and
-shot-drill. 'What is the crank?' may be asked by
-happy people who have never had to do with
-prisons in any way. It is, we answer, a Sisyphus'
-wheel that the prisoner is forced to turn twelve
-or fourteen thousand times each day, for no other
-reason than because the useless monotonous exercise
-is sufficiently hateful to him to be a real
-punishment. 'To what purpose is this waste?' we
-may ask. Why is this wheel not made to pump
-water or grind corn or do some other useful work?
-Why should a man be degraded into a machine,
-and made to turn a wheel merely for the sake of
-turning it? Will he not in this way lose all self-respect?
-Yes; these are the unanswerable arguments
-against the crank. But then its very uselessness
-is urged as an argument for its retention.
-Suppose, for instance, that prisoners are employed
-in gardens where vegetables are cultivated for
-barrack-use, what will be the consequence? That
-soldiers will desire to abandon their own profession
-for Adam's calling, and for this purpose will
-designedly get into prison. If, again, the crank-wheel
-be utilised in any way, men will feel that
-they are useful members of society, and will probably
-prefer their new work to the dull routine
-and irksome duties of barrack-life. Almost the
-same remarks are applicable to shot-drill, or the
-very humiliating process of lifting six times each
-minute for three hours per diem a thirty-six
-pound cannon-ball, for no other reason than to
-put it down again three paces from where it
-originally lay. Nothing can be more fatiguing
-and worrying than this process of putting the
-shot there and back, there and back, there and
-back! But then we must again remark, that to
-make prisons very comfortable is absolutely to
-make them useless.</p>
-
-<p>Almost all the inmates of military prisons are
-sentenced for such crimes as these: Desertion&mdash;the
-commonest crime of all&mdash;making away with
-kit, breaking out of barracks, insubordination.
-How is desertion to be stopped? This is now a
-very difficult problem with the authorities, and
-almost all officers give it as their opinion that the
-plague of desertion can only be stayed by again
-having recourse to the system lately abolished of
-branding the letter D on the deserter's side. In
-the absence of this <i>Nota bene</i>, there is nothing to
-prevent a soldier from enlisting over and over
-again in different corps, in order to get a bounty
-and new kit on each occasion.</p>
-
-<p>As regards insubordination, when you speak to a
-prisoner on the folly of having resisted or disobeyed
-a non-commissioned officer, he will generally give
-an answer somewhat as follows: 'Well, sir, when
-I came back from foreign service I had a little
-money, and with this I drank with some comrades
-more than was good for me. There is a corporal
-[or sergeant] in the barrack-room who is always
-down on me; and upon that day, having had a
-little too much, I could not stand his going on at
-me; and so I&mdash;though indeed I tried to help myself
-doing so&mdash;just struck him between his eyes.'
-There is no doubt that nine out of every ten
-soldiers in military prisons have got into trouble
-through drink. A soldier was once overheard
-describing the advantages of the Cape as a station
-in these words: 'Drink is cheap, and you are
-always dry.' Men of this stamp fill our military
-prisons.</p>
-
-<p>In some cases the crime of insubordination is
-provoked by the petty bullying and offensive
-manner of non-commissioned officers, though their
-superiors do their best to check them. Officers
-are now easily accessible, and are ready to give
-the youngest private an impartial hearing. In
-all respects the position of a British soldier is
-now greatly improved. Indeed it is not too much
-to say that life in a military prison now is quite as
-endurable as was existence out of it to the well-conducted
-soldier of forty years ago.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div>
-<h2><a name="DESOLATE" id="DESOLATE">DESOLATE.</a></h2>
-
-
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0"><span class="smcap">Like</span> a funereal pall,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Darkness lies over all;<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Weirdly the owl doth call<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">From her lone steep.<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Sadly the night-wind blows<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Over December snows;<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Vain 'tis my eyes to close&mdash;<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">I cannot sleep.<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">Thy voice is in my ear;<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Once more thy words I hear,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Bringing now hope now fear,<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">But always love;<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">And thy sweet face doth rise<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Radiant with starry eyes,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Cloudless as summer skies<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">In heaven above.<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">Once more at night's soft noon,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Under the pensive moon<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Of a long vanished June,<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">With thee I stray:<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">As when in days of old<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">All my heart's love I told,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">And to my pleading bold<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">Thou saidst not nay.<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">When thou wast by my side,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Calmly the days did glide;<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Like an unruffled tide<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">My life did flow.<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Then was each hour too brief;<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Now I but seek relief<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">From my consuming grief,<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">Rest from my woe.<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">Now falls the scalding tear,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Shed for the present drear;<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Shed for the past so dear,<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">So quickly flown.<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Over thy lonely grave,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Hard by the sounding wave,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Madly the wind-gusts rave;<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">I am alone.<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">Yes; but my whole life through<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Leal have I been and true;<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">True shall I be to you,<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">As true as then;<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Till when that life is o'er,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Skyward my soul shall soar,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">And on the heavenly shore<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">We meet again.<br /></span>
-</div>
-
-<p class='right'>
-H. D.
-</p></div></div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class='center'>Printed and Published by <span class="smcap">W. &amp; R. Chambers</span>, 47 Paternoster
-Row, <span class="smcap">London</span>, and 339 High Street, <span class="smcap">Edinburgh</span>.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class='center'><i>All Rights Reserved.</i></p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Chambers's Journal of Popular
-Literature, Science, and Art, No. 729, December 15, 1877, by Various
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