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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #52104 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/52104)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Girl's Own Paper, Vol. XX, No. 992,
-December 31, 1898, 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: The Girl's Own Paper, Vol. XX, No. 992, December 31, 1898
-
-Author: Various
-
-Release Date: May 19, 2016 [EBook #52104]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GIRL'S OWN PAPER ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Susan Skinner, Chris Curnow, Pamela Patten and
-the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: THE GIRL'S OWN PAPER
-
-VOL. XX.--NO. 992. DECEMBER 31, 1898. [PRICE ONE PENNY.]
-
-
-
-
-OLD ENGLISH COTTAGE HOMES;
-
-OR,
-
-VILLAGE ARCHITECTURE OF BYGONE TIMES.
-
-
-[Illustration: AT CLARE, SUFFOLK.]
-
-_All rights reserved._]
-
-
-PART III.
-
-We have already pointed out the simplicity of outline observable
-in old English cottages, and the absence of exaggeration and that
-disagreeable fussiness brought about by too much striving after the
-picturesque. It must not, however, from this be concluded that ancient
-village buildings are always plain and do not at times possess elegant
-ornamentation and graceful details.
-
-The general outline, however, is always simple and quiet, for, as will
-be seen by the examples we give (two of the most elaborate cottages in
-England), the roof lines are very little broken up or varied.
-
-The first of these buildings is at Clare in Suffolk, and the second is
-at Newport in Essex, the latter being one of the richest counties in
-England for cottage architecture, many of its villages retaining quite
-a mediæval aspect down to the present time.
-
-We will now say a few words upon the methods of applying ornamental
-detail to cottages adopted in mediæval times, and we shall commence
-with those structures erected in "Post-and-pan" construction. We trust
-that our readers have not forgotten what is meant by the ugly-sounding
-expression "Post-and-pan," and regret that we are quite unable to
-discover or invent some more elegant name for this description of
-building. Some years back a number of architects and archæologists
-were examined before a parliamentary commission. The commission
-objected to the words "Post-and-pan" being used in their report, and
-suggested to the witnesses that they should find some more scientific
-expression for this kind of work! It was found, however, impossible to
-invent any one which conveyed the idea so concisely and satisfactorily,
-so the old-fashioned name "Post-and-pan" received parliamentary
-sanction! This being the case, our girls need not scruple to use it,
-and may it not, after all, be as valuable for the formation of the lips
-as the "prunes" and "prism" of Little Dorritt?
-
-There are several ways of applying ornamentation to "Post-and-pan"
-buildings. The first is to add mouldings, tracery or carving, to the
-doorways, windows, cornices, corbels and other constructive parts of
-the building.
-
-The second is to arrange the "posts" in patterns by introducing curved
-beams amongst them, or other woodwork, forming a kind of tracery
-pattern.
-
-The third is to adorn the "pans" (panels) either with stamped
-plaster-work called "pargeting," or with coloured plaster-work, or
-wood-carving.
-
-The first of these methods is seen in the beautiful example which we
-have sketched at Newport in Essex: here it will be noticed that the
-bow window of the upper storey is adorned with wood tracery, and its
-corbel richly carved with figure subjects, all executed in oak. The
-"spurs," as they are called, which carry the projection of the upper
-storey, are richly moulded and rest upon elegant little colonnettes.
-The pans are filled in with brickwork laid in herring-bone patterns.
-The centre of the building is recessed back, but in order to preserve
-the severe and simple lines of the roof, the latter does not follow
-the line of the recess, but is supported upon an arched beam, from the
-centre of which projects a lifting-crane, a treatment quite peculiar to
-the home counties and the south of England.
-
-Of course this building is far more elaborate than most cottages, and
-the tradition of the place accounts for this by the supposition that it
-was formerly the dwelling of a farm bailiff to the Abbot of Westminster.
-
-The beautiful little village of Newport has several examples of
-interesting domestic work and a very noble church.
-
-The building which we illustrate dates from the 15th century, and is
-still in excellent repair though not in any way restored.
-
-The very elaborate cottage represented in our first sketch is an
-excellent example of pargeting, the surface of the pans being covered
-by a rich kind of shawl-pattern executed in hard plaster, like the
-Newport example. The constructive portions of the building are
-elaborately treated. We are unable to account for the amount of
-elaboration bestowed on this cottage, but as it is close to the church,
-which is a very handsome building and liberally endowed with chantries,
-it is very probable that this may have been the dwelling of one of the
-chantry priests.
-
-Clare was an important place in the Middle Ages and possessed a castle,
-remains of which are still to be seen. Richard Strongbow, the Conqueror
-of Ireland, is said to have lived in it.
-
-The Manor of Clare in later times belonged to Edmund Mortimer, Earl of
-March. There was also a priory here, built in 1248 by Richard, Earl of
-Gloucester.
-
-A very curious poem exists in the form of a dialogue, "betwixt a
-secular askyng and a frere answering at the grave of Dame Johan of
-Acris" (of Clare). It is a quaint example of Old English and begins in
-rather a curious manner.
-
-Q. "What man lyeth here, sey me, Sir Frere?"
-
-A. "No man."
-
-Q. "What ellis?"
-
-A. "It is a woman."
-
-Then follows her pedigree all in rhyme, from which it appears that she
-was a daughter of King Edward I., and the remarkable circumstance is
-stated, that she was borne of her "moder"!
-
-As the poem is about three pages long and all pretty much like the
-sample we have given, we will not inflict it upon our readers.
-
- H. W. BREWER.
-
-[Illustration: AT NEWPORT, ESSEX.]
-
-
-
-
-ABOUT PEGGY SAVILLE.
-
-BY JESSIE MANSERGH (Mrs. G. de Horne Vaizey), Author of "Sisters
-Three," etc.
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-Peggy felt weak and shaken for some days after her fright, and was
-thankful to stay quietly indoors and busy herself with her new task.
-The gas fire could be turned on in her room whenever she desired, and
-at every spare moment she ran upstairs, locked her door behind her, and
-began to write. Robert insisted that the work should be kept secret,
-and that not a word should be said about the competition downstairs,
-for he was sensitive about the remarks of his companions, and anxious
-to keep a possible failure to himself. All the work had to be done
-upstairs therefore, and the frequent absence of the partners from the
-schoolroom, though much regretted, did not seem at all inexplicable to
-the others. It was understood that Peggy and Robert had some interest
-in common, but as winter advanced this was no unusual occurrence in a
-house where Christmas was a carnival, and surprises of an elaborate
-nature were planned by every member of the household. It was taken for
-granted that the work had some connection with Christmas, and inquiries
-were discreetly avoided.
-
-With an old calendar before her as a model for the lettering, Peggy did
-her work neatly and well, and the gilt "arabesques" had an artistic
-flourish which was quite professional. When Robert was shown the first
-half-dozen sheets he whistled with surprise, and exclaimed, "Good old
-Mariquita!" a burst of approval before which Peggy glowed with delight.
-It had been agreed that, after printing the first ten days of January,
-Peggy should go on to the first ten of February, and so on throughout
-the year, so that Rob should be able to use what quotations had already
-been found under each heading, and should not be detained until the
-whole thirty or thirty-one had been chosen.
-
-The partners were most fastidious in their selection at the beginning
-of their work, but when half the time had passed and not one-third of
-the necessary number of quotations had been found, alarm seized upon
-the camp, and it was realised that a little more latitude must be shown.
-
-"We shall have to use up all the old ones which we struck off the
-list," said Rob disconsolately. "I'm sorry; but I never realised
-before that three hundred and sixty-five was such an outrageously
-large number. And we shall have to get books of extracts and read them
-through from beginning to end. Nearly two hundred more to find; a
-hundred and fifty, say, when we have used up those old ones! It will
-take us all our time!"
-
-"I'll get up at six every morning and read by my fire," said Peggy
-firmly. "If it's necessary I'll get up at five, and if I can't find
-bits to suit all the stupid old things, I'll--I'll write some myself!
-There! Why shouldn't I? I often make up things in my head, and you
-wouldn't believe how fine they are. I think of them days afterwards,
-and ask myself, 'Now where did I read that?' and then it comes back to
-me. 'Dear me; I made it up myself!' If we get very short, Rob, there
-wouldn't be any harm in writing a few sentences and signing them
-'Saville,' would there?"
-
-"Not if they were good enough," said Rob, trying to suppress the laugh
-which would have hurt Peggy's feelings, and looking with twinkling eyes
-at the little figure by his side, so comically unprofessional, with her
-lace collar, dainty little feet, and pigtail of dark brown hair. "You
-mustn't get up too early in the morning and overtire yourself. I can't
-allow that!" he added firmly. "You have looked like a little white
-ghost the last few days, and your face is about the size of my hand.
-You must get some colour into your cheeks before the holidays, or that
-beloved Arthur will think we have been ill-treating you when he comes
-down."
-
-Peggy gave a sharp little sigh and relapsed into silence. It was the
-rarest thing in the world to hear her allude to any of her own people.
-When a letter arrived, and Mrs. Asplin asked questions concerning
-father, mother, or brother, she answered readily enough, but she never
-offered information, or voluntarily carried on the conversation.
-Friends less sympathetic might have imagined that she was so happy in
-her new home that she had no care beyond it, but no one in the Vicarage
-made that mistake. When the square Indian letter was handed to her
-across the breakfast table, the flush of delight on the pale cheeks
-brought a reflected smile to every face, and more than one pair of eyes
-watched her tenderly as she sat hugging the precious letter, waiting
-until the moment should come when she could rush upstairs and devour
-its contents in her own room. Once it had happened that mail day had
-arrived and brought no letter, and that had been a melancholy occasion.
-Mrs. Asplin had looked at one envelope after another, had read the
-addresses twice, thrice, even four times over before she summoned
-courage to tell of its absence.
-
-"There is no letter for you to-day, Peggy!" Her voice was full
-of commiseration as she spoke, but Peggy sat in silence, her
-face stiffened, her head thrown back with an assumption of calm
-indifference. "There must have been some delay in the mail. You will
-have two letters next week, dearie, instead of one."
-
-"Probably," said Peggy. Mellicent was staring at her with big, round
-eyes; the Vicar peered over the rim of his spectacles; Esther passed
-the marmalade with eager solicitude; her friends were all full of
-sympathy, but there was a "Touch-me-if-you-dare!" atmosphere about
-Peggy that day which silenced the words on their lip. It was evident
-that she preferred to be left alone, and though her eyes were red
-when she came down to lunch, she held her chin so high, and joined in
-the conversation with such an elegant flow of language, that no one
-dare comment on the fact. Two days later the letter arrived and all
-was sunshine again; but in spite of her cheery spirits, her friends
-realised that Peggy's heart was not in the vicarage, and that there
-were moments when the loneliness of her position pressed on her, and
-when she longed intensely for someone of her very own, whose place
-could not be taken by even the kindest of friends.
-
-Like most undemonstrative people, Peggy dearly loved to be appreciated,
-and to receive marks of favour from those around. Half the zest with
-which she entered into her new labour was owing to the fact that Robert
-had chosen her from all the rest to be his partner. She was aglow with
-satisfaction in this fact, and with pleasure in the work itself, and
-the only cloud which darkened her horizon at the present moment was
-caused by those incidental references to the fair Rosalind, which fell
-so often from her companion's lips.
-
-"Everything," said Peggy impatiently to herself, "everything ends
-in Rosalind! Whatever we are talking about, that stupid girl's name
-is bound to be introduced! I asked Mellicent if she would have a
-scone at tea this afternoon, and she said something about Rosalind
-in reply--Rosalind liked scones, or she didn't like scones, or some
-ridiculous nonsense of the sort! Who wants to know what Rosalind likes?
-I don't! I'm sick of the name! And Mrs. Asplin is as silly as the rest!
-The girls must have new dresses because Rosalind is coming, and they
-will be asked to tea at the Larches! If their green dresses are good
-enough for us, why won't they do for Rosalind, I should like to know?
-Rob is the only sensible one. I asked him if she were really such a
-marvellous creature, and he said she was an affected goose! He ought
-to know better than anyone else! Curls indeed! One would think it was
-something extraordinary to have curls! My hair would curl too, if I
-chose to make it, but I don't; I prefer to have it straight! If she is
-the 'Honourable Rosalind,' I am Mariquita Saville, and I'm not going to
-be patronised by anybody, so there!" and Peggy tossed her head, and
-glared at the reflection in the glass in a lofty and scornful manner,
-as though it were the offending party who had had the audacity to
-assume superiority.
-
-Robert was one with Peggy in hoping that his people would not leave
-town until such time as the calendar should be despatched on its
-travels, for when they were installed at the Larches he was expected to
-be at home each week from Saturday until Monday, and the loss of that
-long holiday afternoon would interfere seriously with the work on hand.
-He had seen so little of his people for the last few years, that he
-would be expected to be sociable during the short time that he was with
-them, and could hardly shut himself up in his room for hours at a time.
-Despair then settled down upon both partners when a letter arrived to
-say that the Darcy family were coming down even earlier than had been
-expected, and summoning Robert to join them at the earliest possible
-moment.
-
-"This is awful!" cried the lad, ruffling his hair with a big, restless
-hand. "I know what it means--not only Saturdays off, but two or three
-nights during the week into the bargain! Between you and me, Mariquita,
-the governor is coming down here to economise and intends to stay much
-longer than usual. Hector has been getting into debt again; he's the
-eldest, you know--the one in the Life Guards. It's a lot too bad, for
-he has had it all his own way so far, and when he runs up bills like
-this, everyone has to suffer for it. Mother hates the country for more
-than a few weeks at a time, and will be wretched if she is kept here
-all through the winter. I know how it will be, she will keep asking
-people down, and getting up all sorts of entertainments to relieve the
-dulness. It's all very well in its way, but just now when I need every
-minute----"
-
-"Shall you give up trying for the prize?" asked Peggy faintly, and Rob
-threw back his head with emphatic disclaimer.
-
-"I never give up a thing when I have made up my mind to do it! There
-are ten days still, and a great deal can be done in ten days. I'll take
-a couple of books upstairs with me every night and see if I can find
-something fresh. There is one good thing about it, I shall have a fresh
-stock of books to choose from at the Larches. It is the last step that
-costs in this case. It was easy enough to fix off the first hundred,
-but the last is a teaser!"
-
-On Saturday morning a dog-cart came over to convey Robert to the
-Larches, and the atmosphere of the vicarage seemed charged with
-expectation and excitement. The Darcys had arrived; to-morrow they
-would appear at church; on Monday they would probably drive over with
-Rob and pay a call. These were all important facts in a quiet country
-life, and seemed to afford unlimited satisfaction to every member
-of the household. Peggy grew so tired of the name of Darcy that she
-retired to her room at eight o'clock, and was busy at work over the
-September batch of cards, when a knock came to the door, and she had
-to cover them over with the blotting paper to admit Mellicent in her
-dressing-gown, with her hair arranged for the night in an extraordinary
-number of little plaited pig-tails.
-
-"Will you fasten the ends for me, Peggy, please?" she requested. "When
-I do it, the threads fall off, and the ends come loose. I want it to be
-specially nice for to-morrow!"
-
-"But it will look simply awful, Mellicent, if you leave it like this.
-It will be frizzed out almost on a level with your head. Let me do it
-up in just two tight plaits, it will be far, far nicer," urged Peggy,
-lifting one little tail after another, and counting their number in
-dismay. But no, Mellicent would not be persuaded. The extra plaits were
-a tribute to Rosalind, a mark of attention to her on her arrival with
-which she would suffer no interference, and as a consequence of her
-stubbornness, she marched to church next morning disfigured by a mop of
-untidy, tangled hair instead of the usual glossy locks.
-
-Peggy preserved a demeanour of stately calm, as she waited for the
-arrival of the Darcy family, but even she felt a tremor of excitement
-when the verger hobbled up to the square pew and stood holding the door
-open in his hand. The heads of the villagers turned with one consent
-to the doorway; only one person in the church disdained to move her
-position, but she heard the clatter of horses' hoofs from without, and
-presently the little procession passed the vicarage pew, and she could
-indulge her curiosity without sacrifice to pride. First of all came
-Lord Darcy, a thin, oldish man, with a face that looked tired and kind,
-and faintly amused by the amount of attention which his entrance had
-attracted. Then his wife, a tall, fair woman, with a beautiful profile,
-and an air of languid discontent who floated past with rustling silken
-skirts, leaving an impression of elegance and luxury, which made Mrs.
-Asplin sigh and Mellicent draw in her breath with a gasp of rapture.
-Then followed Robert with his shaggy head, scowling more fiercely than
-ever in his disgust at finding himself an object of attention, and last
-of all a girlish figure in a grey dress, with a collar of soft, fluffy
-chinchilla, and a velvet hat with drooping brim, beneath which could be
-seen a glimpse of a face pink and white as the blossoms of spring, and
-a mass of shining, golden hair. Peggy shut her lips with a snap, and
-the iron entered into her soul. It was no use pretending any longer!
-This was Rosalind, and she was fairer, sweeter, a hundred times more
-beautiful than she had ever imagined!
-
-(_To be continued._)
-
-
-
-
-GIRLS AS I HAVE KNOWN THEM.
-
-BY ELSA D'ESTERRE-KEELING, Author of "Old Maids and Young."
-
-
-PART III.
-
-THE VULGAR GIRL.
-
-As translated by Cowley, Horace is made to say--
-
- "Hence, ye profane, I hate ye all,
- Both the great vulgar and the small!"
-
-[Illustration: The small vulgar]
-
-There will be no attempt made in this paper to deal with the great
-vulgar, but some attempt will be made in it to deal with the small,
-being the category to which, it may be assumed, belongs the average
-vulgar girl.
-
-It is of course impossible within the limits of a short essay to
-indicate more than a few of the leading characteristics of this girl.
-She it is who not only wants to monopolise the conversation, but who
-wants to confine it to one subject. She should remember the quaint
-counsel, "The honourablest part of talk is to give the occasion,
-and again to moderate, and pass to something else." Moreover in
-conversation she too often follows the rule laid down by a French
-author for those about to write love-letters:
-
-"Begin without knowing what you are going to say, and end without
-knowing what you have said."
-
-If at the end of a conversation she sometimes knew what she had said,
-the vulgar girl, who is not necessarily a callous girl, would feel very
-unhappy.
-
-Her tendency to talk indiscreetly has doubtless its origin in the
-precipitancy which causes her to break in upon the speech of others.
-There is a lesson which she might learn from a certain polite echo.
-This echo may be heard opposite to Mugdock Castle in Scotland. It will
-repeat any sentence of six syllables in the exact tone in which it is
-uttered--waiting till the sentence is finished.
-
-Another result of the lack of deliberation which characterises the
-vulgar girl is seen in the fact that the latest book, the latest play,
-the latest picture, is to her Thingimy by Thingimbob. That nomenclature
-is somewhat vague, and is moreover out of date, but it still commends
-itself to the vulgar girl, as does the soubriquet _The Bard_ for
-Shakespeare.
-
-Her singular phraseology, which she conceives to set her at an
-advantage, in reality sometimes sets the vulgar girl at a disadvantage.
-Of Tennyson she said the other day--
-
-"I don't pretend to understand him any more than Browning, but then he
-tootles on prettily, and that's what I like in poetry."
-
-[Illustration]
-
-A main difference between Browning and Tennyson was here correctly set
-forth, but the phrasing was in questionable taste. "Tootles" is a good
-word, but to say that Tennyson "tootles on prettily," is to understate
-his merits. It shall here be pointed out in passing that "I don't
-pretend" is a favourite form of asseveration with the vulgar girl, and
-is one which she should try to vary, if only because it inferentially
-asserts that other people do pretend.
-
-The vulgar girl is "by way of being" (her own phrase) witty. One part
-of her wit is to say "muchly" for much, and another part of it is to
-say "free gratis" for free of charge.
-
-Flippancy as a substitute for wit so often evokes mirth that the vulgar
-girl as would-be wit not incomprehensibly largely indulges in it. I sat
-beside her once during a performance of Beethoven's Septett, one of
-the loveliest things in music, with here and there a heart-delighting
-gaiety in it. During the fifth movement of it she whispered to me--
-
-"Isn't it like 'The Bogie Man'?"
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The levity in what follows was even more remarkable. The speaker was a
-young bride.
-
-"I didn't feel a bit nervous at my wedding," she said. "You see, I have
-been used to private theatricals."
-
-A girl like that mistakes gaiety of head for gaiety of heart.
-
-[Illustration: Her first appearance in a new role]
-
-As a sample of vulgar girl-wit at its crudest, I give the following, in
-which a girl spoke of a lady--
-
-"She couldn't turn white, but she went the colour of an unripe tomato."
-
-[Illustration: Upset by Tomato sauce]
-
-The vulgar girl who is "by way of being" witty is not "by way of
-being" sentimental, and is rather addicted to signing her letters
-"Your's," which word she believes to be rightly written as above, with
-an apostrophe. This girl, for the rest, is generally good-natured, and
-her vein of censure is more often odd than terrible. Thus she said the
-other day of a dentist--
-
-"He is a horrible little snob, but that doesn't matter when he gets
-into your mouth."
-
-[Illustration: An old Fairy Tale]
-
-As often as not the vulgar girl has both sense and sensibility. Of the
-latter fact she is profoundly ashamed, and has been known to say of a
-book that has deeply agitated her--
-
-"I got to feel quite eye-in-water over it."
-
-She affects to care, only for the gaieties of life, but knows something
-of its gravities, and has often a bit of heroine in her. The worst
-thing about her is her speech. "Jolly" is her favourite adverb. She
-is jolly glad when she is not jolly mad, and she will soon describe
-herself as jolly sad. She uses the verb "mashed" hideously; where her
-prototype of twenty years ago said "swell" she says "swagger;" and
-she does not stick at saying "beastly." For the rest, she has always
-some pet word of the hour. Thus "dotty" is an adjective now much in
-favour with her. Thereby hangs a tale. The vulgar girl sometimes knows
-Italian, and it was she who translated a line from a famous lady's
-epitaph--
-
- "_Vergine magnanime, dotta, divina._"
-
- "A virgin magnanimous, dotty, divine."
-
-On the other hand there are vulgar girls who do not know Latin, and one
-of them has been known to say "effluvia" for "smell," the Latin for
-"smell" being "effluvium."
-
-The pronunciation of her own language is by some thought to offer
-insuperable difficulties to the English vulgar girl, who pronounces
-the "t" in "often" but does not pronounce it in "Westminster," whose
-favourite colour, she has been heard to aver, is "terrar cottar,"
-who plays an instrument which she calls "the varlin," who says
-"to_wards_" and "inter_est_ing," who pronounces "ate" "et," and whose
-vocabulary has been known to include the words "pantomine," "Feb'uary"
-and "sec'etary." So far is this list from exhausting the faults of
-pronunciation of the said vulgar girl, that it must be added that she
-gives to no one vowel its proper sound, while among the consonants
-"h" initial and "g" final stumble her. She is particularly careless
-regarding the latter consonant when the form which her vulgarity takes
-is that of would-be "smartness."
-
-Very abominable to this girl is grammar, which is all but invariably
-set at defiance by her. Thus, even when she does not say "it were," as
-did Mrs. Cluppins, she favours such phrasing as "those sort of," "very
-pleased," "different to" and "between you and I."
-
-[Illustration: A model]
-
-Her predilection for abbreviations is another marked feature of the
-vulgar girl. To "'bus" she has lately added "biz," and "spec" has found
-her approval.
-
-The pity of it!
-
-Just as she has always a favourite word, she has mostly a favourite
-phrase. In one instance known to me it is "You know what I mean," and
-everyone knows what she means, as well everyone may.
-
-Take this assertion--
-
-"It's one of those schools where they sleep in carbuncles--you know
-what I mean."
-
-Of course everyone knows what she means.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Or take this--
-
-"I can't be in six or seven places at one; I'm not omnivorous--you know
-what I mean."
-
-[Illustration: not omnivorous]
-
-Of course everyone knows what she means.
-
-They call her Mrs. Malaprop; but, in point of fact, her case is a
-notable improvement upon that of Sheridan's heroine, the ignorance
-of that lady having been of a shade by just so much deeper that it
-left her unwitting of the fact that she was wrong. The girl here in
-view has a shrewd suspicion that she is wrong, but pays her hearers
-the compliment of assuming that they will understand her. In only one
-instance, so far as has come to my knowledge, has she ever overtaxed
-her listener's powers of comprehension. She spoke of a living novelist.
-
-"I can't bear his books," she said. "They're so very _femme de
-chambre_--you know what I mean."
-
-Not only did the person addressed not know what she meant, but he
-will not now be induced to believe that she meant "_fin de siècle_,"
-and unconsciously used what, it seems to some of us, was a very happy
-substitute for this rather hackneyed phrase.
-
-I have in the foregoing dwelt more particularly on what is to me the
-most striking fact in connection with the vulgar girl, the base uses
-to which she puts her native speech; that my account of her may not,
-however, be wholly inadequate, I have also conferred with persons whose
-views on manners and deportment, as frequently expressed by them, have
-led me to believe that they may be better able than I am to point out
-what, from the social standpoint, constitutes a vulgar girl. Of the
-many _data_ supplied me, I give below a few.
-
-The vulgar girl is "arch."
-
-The vulgar girl is "coy."
-
-The vulgar girl loves "chaff."
-
-The vulgar girl has sidelong looks.
-
-The vulgar girl calls milk "cream" and bacon "ham."
-
-The vulgar girl shouts or whispers.
-
-The vulgar girl thinks all other girls vulgar.
-
-[Illustration: An extreme view]
-
-The vulgar girl has never been told, or has been told in vain, to sit
-up and put her knees together.
-
-The vulgar girl is the girl of whom the vulgar boy says that she is
-"not half a bad sort."
-
-(_To be continued._)
-
-
-
-
-"OUR HERO."
-
-A TALE OF THE FRANCO-ENGLISH WAR NINETY YEARS AGO.
-
-BY AGNES GIBERNE, Author of "Sun, Moon and Stars," "The Girl at the
-Dower House," etc.
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-IN A FORTIFIED TOWN.
-
-It was growing dark when at length they drove through the gates into
-Verdun.
-
-No one then said a needless word, not even Roy. The sense of banishment
-and of captivity pressed upon them all with a new force, at the
-sight of this fortified town, with its massive encircling walls, its
-iron gates, its pervading gendarmerie. If any lack of realisation of
-their true position had helped them hitherto, it had small chance of
-surviving this hour.
-
-At the gate they had to pause, a gendarme coming to the coach door. He
-said something to Denham, which made Colonel Baron ask sharply--
-
-"Eh, what's that?"
-
-"We are to go first to the citadel. Not necessary for Mrs. Baron and
-Roy. You and I might walk it, sir, and send them on."
-
-"No, no," Mrs. Baron interposed; "I cannot go on alone. We will keep
-together."
-
-"A pity," murmured Ivor; and Colonel Baron looked doubtfully from him
-to his wife.
-
-"I am not going to do it," she repeated, with her manner of graceful
-determination; and then, earnestly, "Do not ask it of me--pray do not!"
-No more could be said, and the man was ordered to drive on.
-
-Verdun at that date lay in the then French province of Lorraine, the
-then French department of the Meuse, upon which river it was built.
-Distant from Paris somewhere about one hundred and fifty miles, it was
-also within about fifty miles, in different directions, of two towns
-which have since become vividly historic, Sédan and Metz. The river
-thereabouts follows a tortuous course, and the lower part of Verdun
-stood mainly on little islands in the Meuse, while the upper part led
-to the French citadel, which crowned a rocky summit.
-
-The valley, containing the town, ran north-west and south-east, being
-surrounded by hills.
-
-On reaching the citadel Mrs. Baron and Roy were desired by the Colonel
-to remain in the coach, while he and Denham disappeared within, there
-to be carefully examined and closely questioned, and having again
-to give their parole. After which they came out, the Colonel saying
-shortly--
-
-"That business is done! Tell them where to go, Den. They seem
-determined to know us again."
-
-"Were they civil?" his wife asked.
-
-"No end of a fuss, my dear. As if the word of an English gentleman were
-not sufficient. Close description of us both written in the register."
-
-Once more they drove on, Roy gazing from side to side, noting the
-small insignificant shops, and exclaiming at occasional peeps of the
-river with an interest which never quite failed him. The others were
-for the most part silent. Mrs. Baron's eyes were dim, the Colonel was
-pre-occupied, and Ivor, usually the most observant of men, seemed to
-see nothing.
-
-Presently they stopped before the gateway of a large old house or small
-private "hôtel," with an untidy little courtyard. An old Frenchman,
-in quaint dress, grey-haired, with an imposing pig-tail, came to meet
-them, bowing profoundly to the gentlemen, and still more profoundly to
-Mrs. Baron.
-
-"C'est, sans doute, Monsieur le Colonel--et Madame----"
-
-Colonel Baron's particular gift did not lie in the direction of foreign
-languages. He never could talk French, and probably he never would, no
-matter how many years he might be compelled to live in France.
-
-"Oui, monsieur. Bon jour. C'est nous qui sont viendrai," he responded,
-feeling it incumbent on him to say something, as he descended from the
-old coach. "J'espère que vous êtes bien. Je suis bien aise que nous
-sommes haut--pas bas--pas près de le rivière. Bother their grammar,
-Denham; you can do it better than I. Just say what's suitable."
-
-Denham obeyed, and the next object which dawned upon Roy's perceptions
-was the sad and gentle face of Lucille de St. Roques. He seized her
-hand vehemently.
-
-"I say, mademoiselle, it's nice to find you here. Isn't it, Den?
-Mamma, this is Mademoiselle de St. Roques. Papa, you know she helped
-to nurse me after I'd had small-pox. Are we going to live upstairs,
-mademoiselle? Is that what it's to be? The whole upstairs, all to
-ourselves? What fun! Which way is it? Oh, I see! This way, mamma. Those
-poor horses do look tired, just half-starved, and so skinny. Is there
-a stable for them? Are we to have tea? Dinner! that's right. We didn't
-get half a dinner to-day, and I'm famished. What a droll old staircase?
-Do look out of this window, mamma."
-
-Roy's flow of spirits helped them all. The Colonel and his wife
-gratefully expressed their thanks to the French girl for her past
-kindness to their boy, both being much attracted by her face and her
-pretty manner as she led the way upstairs to the first floor. There
-stood Madame Courant, a fat and smiling little Frenchwoman, ready to
-bestow unlimited welcomes upon the unfortunate foreigners.
-
-Lucille had exchanged bows with Ivor at first, and then had a few
-words with him, scanning his face as she talked, with rather troubled
-glances. There was, however, small leisure at first for any quiet
-conversation. The rooms had to be inspected, and they were found to be
-not at all bad as to size, though meagrely furnished. Lucille had set
-her heart on making everything wear as far as possible an English look,
-using her childish recollections of a home across the Channel; and if
-she was less successful than she had hoped, nobody betrayed the fact.
-It was clear to them all how hard she had worked to render the place
-comfortable.
-
-"But it has been no trouble--non, vraiment--not at all," she assured
-them, with her pensive smile, when they apologised.
-
-While sincerely anxious to help, full of sympathy for their position,
-and most desirous to cheer them up, she plainly feared to be guilty
-of intrusion, and very soon she took herself off with Madame Courant
-to the ground floor. A somewhat clumsy but well-intentioned maiden
-had been deputed to wait upon the upstairs party--probably had been
-hired for the purpose, since Madame Courant did most of her own
-house-work--and dinner was laid in the smaller salon in readiness for
-their arrival.
-
-On the whole that first meal might be reckoned a success. Madame
-Courant was no mean cook; and though not much could be said as to the
-actual waiting, from an English point of view, that was a minor matter,
-compared with the comfort of finding clean and cosy quarters, not to
-speak of a kind reception. Roy did his best to supply all deficiencies
-in the conversational line, and his efforts were seconded, though not
-vigorously, by Denham.
-
-When, however, dinner was at an end, and they had moved into the
-larger salon, which was to be their drawing-room--when a long evening
-lay before them, and there was nothing that had to be done, beyond a
-certain amount of unpacking and arranging, which no one felt disposed
-to begin upon at once--then a change came. Then the shadow of their
-captivity descended heavily upon them all, even upon the valiant Roy;
-and for once the spirit of cheerfulness and of keeping up seemed to
-vanish.
-
-For a quarter of an hour they all remained together, no one speaking.
-No one was able to speak. They had nothing whatever to say. And
-presently, when this had gone on a little while, Mrs. Baron made
-a move, retreating into her own bedroom, avowedly to "see to a
-few things," but in reality, as they all knew, to indulge in a
-breakdown--her husband, after a brief hesitation, going thither also.
-Denham had flagged completely, retreating to a shady corner near the
-big fireplace, where he could scarcely be seen; and for Ivor to flag
-meant the flagging of everybody. As for Roy--but that he would have
-been ashamed, counting himself already almost a man, he could at this
-stage have flung himself on the ground and cried like a little child
-for very home-sickness.
-
-He wanted Molly--oh, most awfully! He wanted her this evening more than
-he had ever wanted anything or anybody in his whole life. The craving
-that took possession of him for Molly's face, Molly's voice, Molly's
-companionship--the passionate desire to have dear little Molly once
-more by his side--was a pain never to be forgotten.
-
-Roy did not know how to bear himself under it. He had nothing to do,
-nothing with which to pass the time. He stood at the window, looking
-out upon the darkness, trying desperately to be cool and stoical, as
-one five minutes crawled by after another. Denham never moved, never
-spoke a word. Roy could just make out his dark outline, as motionless
-as a carved image, a few yards distant. If only Denham would have
-talked, if something would have happened, if somebody would have come
-in, it would have been easier to keep going. But nobody came, nothing
-happened, and Denham did not stir.
-
-Roy drummed with his fingers on the window-sill. He could hear shrill
-voices out in the street, not far off, and the sound of some tuneless
-instrument. One of the two candles was gone with Mrs. Baron, leaving
-the room dim. He tried to listen, tried not to think. And just when
-he counted himself victorious, there was a queer little catch of his
-breath which sounded suspicious. Roy drummed again angrily, hoping that
-Denham had not heard. He might be asleep, he was so still. But, after a
-slight break, he said--
-
-"Come here."
-
-Roy unwillingly obeyed. He would have liked to refuse, but he looked
-upon Ivor as in some sort his commanding officer, so of course he had
-no choice.
-
-"They're making no end of a row out there," he remarked in a tone of
-profound indifference, as he lounged nearer. "Can't think what it's all
-for. Just listen."
-
-"Yes; I wish they would stop."
-
-"Don't know what's it's all about. Something or other--going on. I
-shouldn't wonder--if they're quarrelling."
-
-That odd little catch again.
-
-"Feel very bad this evening, Roy?"
-
-The question took Roy by surprise, and a lump in his throat prevented
-an immediate reply.
-
-Denham understood.
-
-"Never mind," he said. "It's the same with all of us, you know. And
-there's one comfort for you--that Molly wants you at least as much as
-you want her. Some people would give a good deal for that certainty."
-
-Roy tried to explain matters away.
-
-"I didn't say----"
-
-"My dear boy, there's no need for you to say anything; I know well
-enough. Don't you see?"
-
-Denham's chair shook as Roy leant against it, but no further sound
-came. He fought his battle courageously, and Denham waited.
-
-"We shall all feel better to-morrow," the latter presently remarked.
-"It's a strange place, and things look uncomfortable to-night--can't
-well do otherwise. Suppose you and I have a game of chess. Better than
-to sit brooding over what can't be cured. My little travelling set is
-somewhere about, I believe."
-
-"O yes." Roy's voice told of instant relief. "You gave it to me to take
-care of. Don't you mind a game, really? I should like that. Will you
-give me your queen?"
-
-"No; not to-day. I'm not at my best. We'll try on even terms. Get out
-the pieces."
-
-Roy obeyed with alacrity, and whatever the move meant to Denham, it
-served to lift Roy out of his unwonted fit of misery. He was soon
-deeply absorbed in the mimic fight, and for once he found himself on
-the way to win an easy victory. Roy became exultant--till the honour
-and glory of success were impaired by the casual discovery that Ivor
-could not tell a knight from a bishop except by feeling. Roy stared
-wonderingly into the spare bronzed face.
-
-"Why, Den!"
-
-"All right; this is my bishop."
-
-"I say, you didn't take that for a knight?"
-
-"I believe I was under the delusion for a moment."
-
-"But why? There, now it's your turn. Oh, I say!--you're going to move
-my king."
-
-Denham laughed slightly.
-
-"I am rather a futile opponent, seemingly. Never mind. Now it is your
-turn."
-
-"What's the matter? Can't you see?"
-
-"Not well; just a headache. Go on; you'll soon end the game at this
-rate."
-
-Roy showed himself capable of heroism. Though he had never yet beaten
-Denham in full fight, without having some of his adversary's best
-pieces presented to him, though the desire of his heart was for a
-victory, and though he was on the high road to administering checkmate,
-one more glance decided him. He swept his arm over the board.
-
-Denham half smiled, and made no protest.
-
-"You are a kind fellow," he said, as he went back to his former
-retreat; and Roy dropped on the floor to pick up the scattered pieces.
-
-"Why didn't you tell me? You'd no business to play. Can't I do anything
-for you?"
-
-"Yes, if you don't mind"--after a moment's racking of his brain to
-think of anything that might keep the boy occupied. "I wish you would
-unpack my valise--just the things that I shall want to-night."
-
-Roy was delighted and went off at full speed. In the passage he found
-himself face to face with Lucille, and all but rushed into her arms.
-Lucille drew back.
-
-"I say! Oh, I beg your pardon, mademoiselle. I'm going to unpack for
-Den. He's just floored; can't even play chess. It's all this horrid
-beastly bother, having to come to Verdun, you know. He never used to be
-like that. Den was always up to anything. What have you got there?" as
-she held up one hand. "A letter!"
-
-"It is medicine for Monsieur le Capitaine--from England," Lucille said,
-with a look of heartfelt pleasure.
-
-"It really is from England! Won't he be glad? Where did you get it
-from? You shall give it to him yourself. Yes; I declare you shall."
-
-Roy flung open the salon door, and announced, "Here's Mademoiselle de
-St. Roques. Den, she's got something for you! Guess what it is. Come
-in, Mademoiselle."
-
-Ivor stood up, not grateful to Roy at this moment.
-
-"Pray take a seat," he urged.
-
-"It's a letter--a letter--a letter from England," cried the boy.
-
-"You have brought this from the post?" asked Denham, as he received
-from her hand a folded and sealed packet.
-
-"Non, it is not that. The letter arrives from M. de Bertrand. It was
-send to him from England under cover, and he waited till he should
-learn your address and have opportunity to send it with safety. When
-I wrote to him that you all were ordered to Verdun, then he sent the
-letter to me by one travelling this way. It is but now arrived. I am
-glad!" Lucille added, under her breath.
-
-Denham bent nearer to the candle, trying with drawn brows to make out
-the handwriting. As he did so, a curious light crept over his face.
-Lucille thought she could read its meaning.
-
-"You are very good, mademoiselle. I am much indebted to you and to M.
-de Bertrand," he said.
-
-"Den, I do believe it's Polly's writing!" exclaimed Roy.
-
-Denham glanced towards him.
-
-"Yes; it is from Polly."
-
-(_To be continued._)
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-FROCKS FOR TO-MORROW.
-
-BY "THE LADY DRESSMAKER."
-
-
-[Illustration: EVENING DRESSES FOR CHRISTMAS FESTIVITIES.]
-
-The winter is always distinguished by a rather dowdy style of dress,
-especially in town, where, for at least three months of the year, the
-days are so dark and the light so poor at best that everyone says, "It
-really cannot matter what one puts on in such sombre weather as this."
-Such is the sentiment expressed by the general public, but, of course,
-does not apply to those who, having carriages at their disposal, can
-blossom out like the lilies of King Solomon, and be carried over the
-mud and through the gloom without let or hindrance. It is only on sunny
-days during the winter and at Church Parade in Hyde Park that one sees
-the brighter side of winter dress. Otherwise it only blooms in the
-shops, at the dressmakers', and at the endless afternoon teas which
-constitute the main amusement during the winter. One must have at least
-one nice walking-dress for the winter, in spite of the gloom, for these
-last-named festive occasions, and one generally needs a cape or mantle
-as well to wear in turn with our costume or with it as we may require.
-Besides this, most women have a certain amount of "wearing out" to do
-of clothes that must put in a second winter. Those wise people who have
-established a kind of rule for themselves in the purchase of dress get
-a handsome cape or mantle one year and a handsome gown the next, the
-latter becoming less visible and important the second year when worn
-under the new mantle. Both of these should come from first-rate shops,
-in order to get the full value out of them. Then there are the people
-who wait for the sales to supply themselves with winter clothes, and
-say they manage to finish out the last year's stock by this means in
-the still darker and shorter days before Christmas. I always consider
-the wearing out of one's winter things a grievous bother which falls
-most heavily on the shoulders of those who are very careful wearers of
-their garments. I know people who really are never able to wear out
-their clothes, and become quite dispirited at the constant sight of
-them. I know one lady who is able to clothe several others poorer than
-herself because she takes such good care of what she wears, and things
-are hardly worn in appearance when she has them repaired and brushed up.
-
-The class which has the most difficulty in clothing themselves so as
-to present a respectable appearance is composed of these very poor
-ladies, who are governesses, lady-helps, or companions, and no doubt
-my readers will have noticed the moving appeals issued by many of the
-societies and agencies which are interested in procuring work for them.
-As we are always anxious to find out good works for our women and
-girls, we commend to them this one, as one of the most blessed both to
-giver and receiver.
-
-The return to fashion of dresses made from the same material entirely
-instead of those which have been so long in wear, which consisted of a
-blouse, more or less handsome, and a skirt, has brought in a necessity
-for mantles and capes, and so these are really the most fashionable
-of the out-of-door garments for the winter months. There is no fear,
-however, of the skirt and jacket disappearing from amongst us, for they
-have been found too useful to lose their place in our esteem; and the
-winter jackets are, some of them, very pretty and tight-fitting, with
-large buttons, and generally of three-quarter length, though there are
-many quite short ones, but which seem more used for cycling or golf
-than for real walking or driving.
-
-[Illustration: TWO WINTER GOWNS.]
-
-One of these costumes with a tight-fitting coat is shown in our
-illustration of "a gown with braid and fur," which is a very handsome
-example of the walking-gowns of the winter. The skirt is made with the
-fashionable tightness, the much-worn shaped flounce, and the braiding
-is carried down the front on either side in a graceful arabesque
-design, which is wider and fuller in detail at the top near the waist.
-The points are braided in the same manner, and the tops of the sleeves.
-The fronts have revers of mink fur. The dress itself is in dark blue
-cloth, and the braiding is in black. The hat is of blue velvet, with
-white and green wings, and blue and green velvet trimmings. This
-admixture of blue and green seems more popular than ever this winter,
-and I have frequently seen a blue hat with a bright green velvet choux
-bow placed in a conspicuous position in front.
-
-The choux and the Louis XII. or true lovers' knot are the two
-fashionable bows of the season, for hats and bonnets as well as for
-dress. The first-named seems ubiquitous in evening dress, where black
-velvet also appears to be most popular as a trimming.
-
-[Illustration: GOWN WITH BRAID AND FUR.]
-
-Both velvet and velveteen are much worn, and are suited to the fashions
-of the day, and the velveteen blouse retains its popularity, but is
-more dressy and fanciful than it was. In some cases velvet is used
-for the coat-shaped bodices, with short square tails that are much
-seen, and these have almost invariably fancy vests or yokes. In most
-instances, too, these are of finely tucked silk muslin, which, in cream
-or white, is quite the most popular material for them, in spite of its
-perishable nature and apparent unseasonableness.
-
-So far as materials are concerned, everything that is clinging and soft
-is sought after, and even the rustling silks that lined our skirts and
-gave us such a feeling of opulence have been relinquished in favour of
-something more clinging. Cashmere and nuns' veiling are used for the
-lining of day dresses, and China silks for evening ones. For slight
-people this clinging effect is sometimes trying, but where stout people
-are concerned the matter becomes worse, and we shall hear of all kinds
-of cures for obesity in order to wear the new skirts.
-
-Of course, as is usual at this season, many evening dresses for small
-Christmas festivities are simple, and our illustration shows three
-of these, which are inexpensive and pretty. The first seated figure
-to the right wears a pink silk muslin, plain for wearing over the
-accordion-kilted skirt, and having a small black leaf-like pattern on
-it for the pointed overskirt; a ruching of rose-coloured silk goes
-round the latter part of the bodice and sleeves, and the back is
-finished with a wide band and bow with ends of rose colour. This can,
-of course, be carried out in any hue, but in white or cream-colour it
-is very pretty, and there are such numbers of fancy gauzes and nets
-that a pretty choice can be made which would be more inexpensive than
-the model we present.
-
-The centre figure wears a dress of _mousseline-de-soie_ of a pale shade
-of Parma violet, which is trimmed with narrow ribbons, drawn up to
-form small ruches. These are of a slightly darker violet. The small
-Eton jacket is of the same shade of violet velvet or satin, with bands
-of velvet and paste buckles. The standing-up figure wears a dress of
-jet-embroidered net, with bands of _passementerie_ on the front of the
-bodice. The evening wrap is of a soft yellow brocade, which is lined
-with a pale violet, and trimmed with flounces of lace and silk. The
-collar is edged with white fur, and a bow of chiffon ornaments the neck
-at the back. In giving these dresses I should observe that, although
-they seem costly, they can be copied in less expensive materials. Nuns'
-veiling, China silk, velveteen, taffetas, Russian net, and Brussels net
-are all in fashion, and all are comparatively so moderate in price as
-to be attainable by those who have slender purses. This season we also
-have the embroidered net skirts that were introduced last year, with
-the improvement that this season the bodice-piece is sold as well. So
-we have not to make troublesome inquiries and huntings for the material
-to decorate them. There seems to be a tendency likewise to return to
-the use of a three-quarter length sleeve, which fits the arm smoothly
-as far as the elbow and terminates in a frill. The long net and chiffon
-sleeves are still worn, and I notice that there are some very pretty
-high net bodices without sleeves, or, at least, with a few folds
-of satin, which answer the purpose. These will be a novelty if they
-should be adopted, and will be charming for the evening with all thin
-materials.
-
-The illustration of two winter gowns shows one of the new skirts and a
-bodice fastened at the back. The skirt is also fastened there in the
-newest fashion; the trimming consists of rows of fine black braid, the
-dress being of fine cloth, of a _pervenche_ blue. The bodice is trimmed
-with points of velvet, of a darker shade of blue, and the same is used
-for the bows at the back. The second dress is one of those tucked
-throughout. It is of a soft satin cloth, of a pale shade of grey. The
-revers are braided, and there is a front of dark-grey velvet and a
-high collar, with the lining braided, like the revers. I hope you will
-notice that this skirt opens on one side, usually the left, and it is
-finished by a row of tiny buttons, or by a small ruching of ribbon.
-
-A great deal of this ribbon ruching is seen, as well as much piping.
-Silk braids, very fine and very narrow, in black and white, form a
-feature of this year's decorations, and silver braids as well. Crystal
-buttons are more liked than paste or steel ones, and there is a craze
-for old lace and for mixing fur with it. Black and white are in as
-much favour as this mixture has always found during the last four
-years, and the two are constantly mixed in trimmings.
-
-I think I mentioned in my last that the hair was worn low on the
-neck--certainly far lower than has been the custom for some little
-time. But I do not find that the knot of hair is quite so low just now.
-Evidently the idea has not quite "caught on," as the slang phrase has
-it, and most of the well-dressed heads I have lately seen have had the
-coil of hair at the back of the head midway down. Perhaps, later on, we
-shall see more of the low hair dressing than we do now.
-
-Truly the swing of the pendulum has quite carried us away from the neat
-and ever-becoming black stockings, and the new ones are a study in
-colour and design. I think the tartan ones will be worn, and will look
-well; but I cannot say I like the others; nevertheless, that may be
-because one has grown used to a lack of colour for so long.
-
-So far as boots and shoes are concerned, the most fashionable people
-wear the American ones with their extremely pointed toes and narrow
-feet, but it is open to the sensible to wear something more comfortable
-if they do not mind a loss of style, for we cannot be really smart
-unless our poor feet be pinched and pointed to the last degree.
-
-
-
-
-OUR PROSPECTUS PUZZLE REPORT.
-
-
-SOLUTION.
-
-ANOTHER NAUGHT.
-
-A ROUNDEL.
-
- Time hastens onwards to the day
- When our good, trusty printer ought
- Upon our numbers to display
- Another naught.
-
- Oh! how tremendous is the thought:--
- A thousand weeks have passed away
- Since out our magazine was brought!
-
- We love our work, it is but play;
- "_Bon Voyage_" to the bark high-fraught;
- And printer, sing as you in-lay
- Another naught.
-
-
-PRIZE WINNERS.
-
-_Ten Shillings Each._
-
- J. Hunt, 42, Francis Road, Birmingham.
- A. Phillips, 15, South Hill Park, Hampstead.
- Emily M. Wood, Woodbank, Southport.
-
-
-_Five Shillings Each._
-
- Margaret Baggallay, 3, Clarence Lawn, Dover.
- Marie Behrendt, Scanthorpe, Doncaster.
- Lily Belling, Wribbenhall, Bewdley.
- Miss H. M. Brown, Longformacus, Duns, N.B.
- Charlotte D. Cole, 7, High Street, Beckenham.
- M. A. C. Crabb, Ipplepen, Alexandra Road, Hemel Hempstead.
- Agnes Dewhurst, 32, Lethbridge Road, Southport.
- Miss M. Hodgkinson, 2, Feversham Terrace, York.
- Benjamin Marcroft, High Legh, Grosvenor Drive, New Brighton.
- Nellie Meikle, 2, Newsham Drive, Liverpool.
- Henzell G. Robson, 7, Oxford Terrace, Gateshead-on-Tyne.
- F. A. Powell, 75, Hythe Road, Swindon.
- Anne Sifton, 230, Goldhawk Road, Shepherd's Bush.
- M. Stuart, The Shrubbery, Grove Park, Kent.
- Ellen C. Tarrant, 2, Palace Grove, Bromley.
- Violet C. Todd, Ford, Cornhill-on-Tweed.
-
-
-_Very Highly Commended._
-
-Mrs. Acheson, Eliza Acworth, Lottie R. Biddle, E. J. Cameron, Mrs. J.
-Cumming, May Merrall, E. C. Milne, Lilla Patterson, Constance Taylor,
-Connie E. Thompson, Daisy Tyler, Martha Wood.
-
-
-_For Artistic Execution._
-
-Maud Abbott.
-
-
-_Highly Commended._
-
-Annie A. Arnott, Fanny Ashby, Ethel M. Atkins, Margaret Bailey, Eva M.
-Benson, R. S. Benson, E. K. Berry, Mary A. Blagg, Nancy Bolingbroke, M.
-S. Bourne, May Burlinsay, Annie J. Cather, Mabel E. Davis, Mrs. Deane,
-Edward R. Duffield, Alice M. Feurer, Emily Francis, Mrs. W. H. Gotch,
-Mrs. Grubbe, Edith E. Grundy, A. Hughes, George L. Ingram, Annie G.
-Luck, C. Y. MacGibbon, E. Mastin, Jessie Middlemiss, Mrs. Nicholls,
-Percy J. Powell, Alice M. Price, Gertrude Saffery, A. C. Sharp, Isabel
-Snell, Norah M. Sullivan, A. C. T., Phyllis Toker, Ann Toplis, Florence
-Whitlock, Mrs. Wigglesworth, E. Wilson.
-
-
-_Honourable Mention._
-
-S. Ballard, Mary I. Chislett, Helen M. Coulthard, Mrs. H. Keel, K. H.
-Ingram, E. M. Le Mottée, Charlotte Hayward, Florence Hayward, Ethel
-C. Hobbs, Edith L. Howse, Annette E. Jackson, Alice E. Johnson, Fred
-Lindley, Ethel C. McMaster, Elsa P. Neel, Charles Parr, Elizabeth A.
-Reynolds, Annie Saunders, Dorothy Smith, Ellen R. Smith, Gertrude
-Smith, May Tutte, Anna Walker, J. Walker, Julia Waltenberg, John R.
-Whyberd, G. Watherston.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-EXAMINERS' REPORT.
-
-The insatiability of an editor who is clamouring daily for our words
-of wisdom compels us to be very brief. This is all the more to be
-regretted because with such a subject to handle we could have risen to
-great literary heights. But to work!
-
-The title was not "Another aught," the reason being that aught is not
-synonymous with naught. The difference between the two is considerable,
-"aught" signifying anything, "naught" nothing. The importance of this
-pleasing fact is often overlooked, especially by schoolchildren, who
-frequently speak of a cipher as "an aught," or, as they in their
-childish wisdom spell it "ought."
-
-In many solutions the final letter of "onwards" was omitted. Doubtless,
-"onward" is grammatically just as good, but as the "s" was in the
-puzzle it was a pity not to transfer it to the solution.
-
-The beginning of the third line seems to have caused trouble. Those who
-failed to find the true solution generally gave "On our three figures,"
-or "On our first numbers." Both readings are good interpretations of
-the text, but the first is meaningless and the second is incorrect.
-With "On all our numbers "--adopted by a few solvers--we have little
-fault to find.
-
-Many competitors kindly pointed out that the minus sign in line 6 ought
-to have been the sign of division. Let us examine their contention
-closely. Two weeks divided by two yields one week and the beginning of
-the line would run "A thousand one week." Two weeks minus two yields
-weeks, clearly, and we need pursue the instruction no further. Some of
-the readings at this point were remarkable, _e.g._, "A thousand days";
-"Twelve thousand days": "A thousand years," and "A million weeks."
-
-We have always been accustomed to regard THE GIRL'S OWN PAPER with much
-veneration, but the idea of its having first seen the light something
-like fourteen thousand years before Adam is somewhat startling.
-
-In the next line, "G. O. P." often took the place of "magazine." Our
-dislike of such irritating abbreviations did not prevent us from doing
-justice to the reading which is rhythmically correct.
-
-The number of solvers who wrote "barque" for "bark" was amazing. The
-latter was in the puzzle and signifies any small vessel. The former was
-not in the puzzle and defines a vessel of a particular rig. And there
-is really no need for more.
-
-
-
-
-IN THE TWILIGHT SIDE BY SIDE.
-
-BY RUTH LAMB.
-
-
-PART III.
-
-HOW TO GROW OLD.
-
- "They shall still bring forth fruit in old age" (Psalm xcii. 14).
-
-When I was a child a dear old lady, who had been asking questions about
-my lessons, laid her gentle hand on my head and said, "I see you love
-school, my child. 'Learn young, learn fair.'"
-
-You, dear girl friends, will be at no loss to understand the teaching
-of the proverb. It says, in few words, that those lessons which are
-early imprinted on our minds are likely to have an abiding place in our
-memories and a lasting influence over our lives.
-
-There is one lesson amongst many which we ought to be constantly
-learning from the time that we can understand anything. It is, how to
-grow old.
-
-Do I see some of you smiling at each other, as if old age were such
-a far-away subject that it ought not to be introduced to my great
-gathering of girls? Why, if I could have spoken to you as children, one
-by one, I would have asked, "Are you learning how to grow old?"
-
-You ought to be, for the moment you began to live you started on the
-path that leads to old age. From that path none of us can turn aside
-and, perhaps without thinking much of the inevitable ending, we pursue
-our course thereon steadily and uninterruptedly. We may start on many
-other paths--those of duty, work, mental culture, etc.--and we may
-take up certain pursuits and relinquish them at our will, but the one
-onward journey is continuous. We travel by night and by day. Sleeping
-or waking, resting or working, we are ever progressing towards old age,
-whether we live to reach it or not.
-
-It is often said that every age has its special beauty, and yet I
-daresay many of you have never dreamed of associating the idea of
-beauty with old age. You are apt to claim it as the special prerogative
-of youth. Yet I believe that old age may be--and I assert that it ought
-to be in certain senses--the most beautiful of all, despite the white
-hair, the tremulous hand, the feeble step which seeks support from the
-strong arm of the young, and the wrinkles on brows that were once as
-smooth and fair as the fairest amongst yours.
-
-The young often shrink from the very thought of being old. One hears
-the girl in her teens whisper to her companion, as she glances at a
-third who is not out of her twenties, "She is getting to look quite old
-already. She might be five-and-thirty."
-
-The tone is half pitying, half disparaging, as if the object of the
-remark were somehow in fault because a few more years had passed over
-her young head than over the speaker's.
-
-Listen again to words from the lips of a girl who is just "sweet
-seventeen." (Alas that seventeen does not always deserve the
-adjective!) She has just stigmatised a friend of thirty as "a cross old
-thing." And for what? She has only been trying to bring her good common
-sense and sound judgment to bear upon the other's wilfulness. She is
-anxious to save her from doing a foolish thing on which her childish
-will is stubbornly set and which is certain to be followed by remorse
-and trouble.
-
-"Sweet seventeen" purses her pretty lips and tosses her foolish head
-whilst saying, "As if I were going to be ordered about by her! Cross
-old thing!" And she goes on her wilful way and pays for it.
-
-Still we must acknowledge that a dozen extra years do not always bring
-proportionate wisdom, any more than does the seventeenth birthday
-invariably carry sweetness in its train. We have to learn to grow old
-in such wise that each year's passage means also progress in everything
-that is best.
-
-It seems very strange--does it not?--that whilst everyone desires long
-life, so many dislike to look forward to old age in connection with
-themselves. Or, if they do, it is not so much in a frank and natural
-manner as in a secret and stealthy fashion. If they speak of it at
-all, they speak as of something which may be near to others, but is
-still far, far away from themselves. Such people would never tell you
-that they are learning how to grow old--striving each day after some
-knowledge which will tend towards the attainment of a really beautiful
-and lovable old age.
-
-The need for such a study is ignored by so many up to and beyond middle
-age, that one wonders little at its being ignored by the young. Yet
-other questions occupy their earnest attention in connection with
-increasing years.
-
-How to ward off the semblance of old age, for the reality cannot be
-deferred. How to look young in spite of it. How to conceal the number
-of the years that have passed over their heads. How best to utilise art
-so as to simulate the complexion of youth and to hide the marks of time
-on their features.
-
-Time is readily given in order to solve such questions to the exclusion
-of those higher lessons, attention to which would make old age the most
-beautiful and lovely of all.
-
-Girls, dear girls! you are generally keen observers of externals, and
-especially so in matters of female dress and adornment. If one of you
-has been at a social gathering, whether amongst humble workers or
-leaders in society, what is usually the first question asked by sisters
-or acquaintances on her return? Is it not about the dresses worn? You
-inquire how such a one looked, or if another again wore a dress which
-is too well known on account of its age. You want to hear all about
-novelties in the fashioning of new garments, and whether they were of a
-mode likely to be becoming to yourselves. It may be you give a little
-laugh as you say that such a girl would be sure to look dowdy, or
-inquire if the good taste of another was as conspicuous as usual.
-
-I am inclined to doubt whether you were as anxious to know how your
-friend was impressed by the words and conduct of those with whom she
-had been associating, or whether she had, during this little season
-of social enjoyment, received impressions likely to influence her for
-good. We ought to be learners in every place, but not merely in regard
-to externals.
-
-Now I want to ask you a question. I have given you credit for being
-keen observers. Tell me, can you imagine a picture more truly pitiable
-and contemptible than that of a woman on whose face is the stamp of
-age, but who imagines that she has succeeded in hiding it by paint and
-powder?
-
-One who hugs the thought that she has rendered her wrinkles invisible,
-or that her dyed hair, with its tell-tale line of grey near the roots,
-or the cunningly arranged golden hued substitute for whitened locks,
-deceives anyone but herself? All such shams make the old look older
-still. They add to the appearance of age instead of taking from it, and
-they rob old age of much of the beauty which is as real as that which
-pertains to the youth it tries to simulate. I am alluding to externals
-first because everyone sees them.
-
-I have no doubt that you have all discovered my liking for proverbial
-expressions. My native county is rich in these pithy sayings which
-convey so much meaning in few words. The subject of our present talk
-brings to mind one of these proverbs, which was often quoted in my
-hearing when I was a girl. I recall one occasion especially. A ruddy
-farmer turned to look after an elderly woman who had just passed him.
-She was girlishly dressed, and she strove to trip along in youthful
-fashion, feeling evidently well satisfied with herself, and claiming
-admiration by every gesture.
-
-What had our countryman to say about her appearance? He jogged his
-neighbour's elbow, and quoted the proverb, as he indicated the
-retreating figure with a jerk of his thumb: "Old ewe dressed lamb
-fashion."
-
-"Aye," said his friend, "and it's no good. Age will show in spite of
-paint and finery. She was turned twenty when I was twelve, and I'm
-over fifty-three to-day. Why, deary me! There's always somebody that
-remembers."
-
-These added words were as true as the proverb itself. There is always
-someone, amongst our many acquaintances and kinsfolk, who has a good
-memory for dates, and who can refer to the number of Life's milestones
-we have passed with unerring accuracy.
-
-I asked you if there could be anything more pitiable and contemptible
-than the sight of an elderly woman trying to defy time and age by such
-means as I have named?
-
-I will answer my own question, "Yes, there is. The sight of a girl
-who, possessing youth, health, and the share of good looks and
-attractiveness which must accompany these two things, is ever striving
-to improve Nature's handiwork by the use of unnatural means." Believe
-me, my dear girl friends, the sight of a young face disfigured by
-artificial colouring and unnaturally whitened by powder, of blackened
-eyebrows and eyelashes, together with similar shams, excites in my mind
-a feeling of true motherly regret. I love girls too well to say hard
-things or to speak of contempt for such practices; though they ought to
-be contemptible in the eyes of all pure and right-minded girls.
-
-One associates the use of them with small minds and natures whose chief
-end and aim are to gratify personal vanity and attract admiration,
-instead of striving to win respect by the exercise of far nobler
-powers. Can any girl be so self-deceived as to think she will win
-honest affection by such means? She may win it in spite of them, but
-it will be because the one who gives it is able to discover something
-better and more deserving of love beneath this miserable upper crust of
-deception.
-
-One is always ready to recognise, with gratitude, even a mistaken
-attempt made by the young with a view of giving pleasure to others. But
-I am sure that self-pleasing and the gratification of vanity are, in
-nearly every case, the incentives to such displays as I have condemned.
-
-In looking round me, I have been struck with the fact that some of the
-girls who use paint, powder, and what are, I am informed, known under
-the general name of "make-ups," are just those to whom Nature has been
-specially liberal in the gift of beauty.
-
-Beauty, when joined to vanity, has an insatiable longing to add to its
-attractions. It is more than conscious of all that it has, but it is
-never satisfied, because it craves to combine, in its own person, the
-attractions of every style which is, from time to time, commended in
-its hearing. Hence all these useless and foolish efforts to improve on
-Nature's handiwork.
-
-Do not misunderstand me so far as to think I condemn the use of many
-little toilet accessories, which add greatly both to comfort and
-health. It would be insulting to the good sense of my girls, if I were
-to specify what things are lawful and useful, and what are contemptible
-and to be avoided.
-
-You would smile, in pitying fashion, at the sight of an old lady, whose
-grey locks having become too scanty to cover her head, had thought fit
-to crown her wrinkled face with a wig and fringe of golden hair. But if
-the addition matched what remained of her own growth, I hope you would
-be glad to think that art had done something on behalf of comfort and
-comeliness for old age, as well as for youth. Depend on it the natural
-colour of your hair is that which agrees best with your features and
-complexion, and if there is anything really wrong with the latter, it
-will be better for you to consult your doctor than a manufacturer of
-cosmetics.
-
-I am glad to think I have not known many girls whose vanity led them to
-spoil their appearance in the manner I hope you join me in condemning,
-but we have all seen plenty of such. I picture two, however, both
-rather exceptionally attractive. One had beautiful, glossy, dark hair,
-with eyes to match, and a complexion like a blush rose.
-
-I did not see her for some time, and when we met I was horrified at
-the change. A mop of yellow, frizzled hair surmounted a face whence
-the blush-rose tint had fled, or been hidden under glaringly false red
-and white. All the dainty charm of the face was gone, and I am fain to
-confess that I went a little out of my way to avoid a closer meeting
-with my changed acquaintance. Happily I can tell of a pleasant sequel
-in this case. Some good influence has been brought to bear, or perhaps
-the girl's innate good sense has overcome her vanity, and she has found
-out that such shams are unworthy of a self-respecting girl.
-
-She has given fair play to Nature, and that just in time to save the
-blush-rose complexion from ruin, and to be once more her bonny self.
-
-The second girl possessed remarkable beauty especially of complexion,
-and her vanity and greed of admiration were in proportion to it. These
-impelled her to be ever experimenting on herself to produce greater
-perfection, with the result that whilst still a girl she looked many
-years older than her age, and I hear, though I do not see her now, that
-she is daily becoming less attractive, though no less vain than of old.
-
-Quite apart from the harm done to personal appearance by these foolish
-practices, but of far greater importance, is the moral injury they
-cause. One might call the exhibition of paint an acted falsehood,
-because it is an attempt to make ourselves appear what we are not.
-
-But such devices are too transparent to deceive. If begun, they become
-more and more injurious and difficult to discontinue, and those who
-practise them live in an atmosphere of anxiety and disappointment.
-Age comes, despite all efforts to delay its progress, and it leaves
-footprints which baffle art to disguise or obliterate.
-
-Doubtless you have all heard this expression used in relation to
-someone you know--"She knows how to grow old gracefully." You
-understand it to picture one who accepts age as the natural and
-inevitable sequence of youth; who is above the paltry vanity which
-would hide it--or, rather, try to hide it--yet who neglects nothing
-which can help to make it externally attractive, and especially to the
-young. For, if age is to have its full legitimate influence over youth,
-it must be beautiful in itself, both without and within.
-
-I will not ask you, my dear ones, to look again at that pitiable
-picture of Vanity battling with Age, despite the certainty of defeat
-and disappointment. But be assured of this--that the girl who starts on
-the same lines will reach the same goal; but it will not be that of a
-beautiful and lovable old age.
-
-Do not imagine that I undervalue externals. I would have you all be
-habitually careful about them. Let your complexion be kept at its best
-by scrupulous cleanliness. If your hair is beautiful and abundant, take
-pains to dress it in the fashion that best sets off such good looks as
-you possess. If you are less favoured in this respect, give the more
-care and pains so as to make the best of what you have.
-
-Exercise good taste in your dress, whilst carefully keeping your
-expenditure within your means. The girl who dresses quietly and
-becomingly will not make herself conspicuous in later years by the use
-of glaring colours or fantastic garments.
-
-Try to be graceful and quiet in your movements, and scrupulous
-in avoiding all little ways and habits likely to be disturbing,
-unpleasant, or offensive to others. And do not be offended if a
-well-meaning friend ventures to point out a tendency to any growing
-habit of the kind, knowing that if once established it will be almost
-impossible for you to overcome it. Bear in mind that such a warning can
-be only intended for your benefit and to help you on your way towards
-growing old gracefully.
-
-Study to modulate your voices so that the sound of them may fall
-pleasantly, even musically, on the ear. Shrill, harsh, and loud
-youthful voices become something too terrible when they accompany age.
-
-I wonder if any of you have heard our dear Queen speak? I regret to say
-that I have not, but friends have told me that they never heard a voice
-which equalled hers for its melodious tone, perfect clearness, and
-faultless enunciation.
-
-Try to avoid affectation in gesture and movement, and any form of
-facial contortion. Habit makes all these painful to witness, and age
-exaggerates them. Sometimes a habit of knitting the brows is contracted
-early in life, with the result that the forehead is furrowed and a
-forbidding expression given to the face which permanently spoils it.
-Age intensifies what is forbidding and disagreeable, but shows to the
-greatest advantage all that is most lastingly attractive in us, just as
-the flower fulfils the promise of the bud.
-
-In this lesson on "How to grow old" I have confined myself to
-externals. It is time for us to part, but when we meet again we will
-study the subject from the highest standpoint.
-
-Before then a new year will have dawned on us. Let me suggest as a
-fitting motto for it, "I will go in the strength of the Lord God." May
-it prove a very happy one to you all.
-
-(_To be continued._)
-
-
-
-
-"SISTER WARWICK": A STORY OF INFLUENCE.
-
-BY H. MARY WILSON, Author of "In Warwick Ward," "In Monmouth Ward,"
-"Miss Elsie," etc.
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-Granny 20 was in one of her most garrulous moods, but who was there to
-listen? She tried to catch a nurse or probationer as they hurried by
-the end of the bed, with a "Listen to me now, nurse." But a smile and a
-nod and a "By-and-by, Granny," was all she got for her pains.
-
-Her nearest bed-fellows were too sleepy for anything, and she had to
-content herself with murmuring to an imaginary audience until Sister
-had a moment's leisure, and came to her bedside.
-
-"I was saying, Sister, that Mrs. 21 there is one with me. We both rue
-our wedding-day! And we thought--bless yer!--we thought, when we stood
-up so proud and made our vows, that we was the luckiest women in the
-world."
-
-"And it all turned out badly, Granny?"
-
-"Oh, well! It might have been wuss for some of us. I won't say it
-mightn't; but me was in too much of a hurry--that was the mischief.
-Why, bless yer! Mrs. 21 there says she wasn't more'n sixteen when she
-took a 'usband! And me? I was only just turned eighteen. We didn't know
-no better. We were took by a 'andsome face."
-
-"Well, Granny, I cannot err on the side of marrying too young, whatever
-I do."
-
-"Sister! You ain't never thinking of matrimoany? Don't 'ee, dear! Don't
-'ee! Just take the advice of a old woman what _knows_. This is what I
-say. If a man comes to you and seems true enough, don't trust him! No,
-not if trust was to sparkle like a diamond from the end of every hair
-on his head, don't trust him!"
-
-Hardly knowing how to contain herself for laughter, Sister promised to
-be very careful, and thanked Granny for her wise words.
-
-"They aire wise. You may well say so," chuckled the old lady. "Now I
-could tell you----"
-
-"Another time, Granny dear--and see! Here's nurse with your tea. A cup
-of tea! There's nothing like it, is there?"
-
-"Bless yer--no!"
-
-And Nurse Hudson--what of her? Had the episode of yesterday's
-carelessness with the words of reproof that followed been the warning
-Sister Warwick hoped? The watchful eyes could detect very little that
-was amiss that day. But she was obliged to acknowledge that the nurse's
-manner towards herself was not what it should be. With her new efforts
-not to repel her nurses by the stiffness of her own manners she ignored
-what she could. Later she felt glad she had done so.
-
-After tea the medicines were given out. It was the staff-nurse's duty
-to-day, and following the instructions on her chart, Hudson went to and
-fro, pouring out the draughts, and bringing them to each bed in order.
-
-Sister, seated by No. 10, watched her silently. But when she brought
-the dose for this "typhoid," she took it from her hand to administer it
-herself.
-
-What instinct made her pause, before giving it, to ask:
-
-"Is this the new medicine, nurse?"
-
-"Of course it is, Sister!" The tone was offensive, but, ignoring it,
-Sister Warwick leant forward to hold the glass to the girl's lips.
-Again she paused. What was it stayed her hand?
-
-She raised the glass, smelt it, and then put it to her own lips and
-tasted the liquid, her eyes on the chart.
-
-"This is an overdose!" she said sternly. "Here are four times the right
-amount!"
-
-For she knew in a flash what the nurse had done, and she shuddered
-at the thought! Hudson had certainly, as she said, given the fresh
-medicine the chart directed, but in her heedlessness she had not
-looked to see if the quantity was altered too. She had poured out two
-tablespoonfuls instead of two teaspoonfuls--a dose that would have
-caused intense suffering, if nothing worse, to the sick girl.
-
-Sister Warwick rose from her chair and looked Nurse Hudson full in the
-face. Her utter scorn and indignation at this culpable carelessness
-rendered her speechless.
-
-But her glance was enough!
-
-Turning on her heel, she carried the medicine-glass into her room,
-placed it in a cupboard there, and locking it up, removed the key.
-
-Nurse Hudson watched it all--miserable and self-condemned--knowing
-what the action meant. Now that it was done, she would have given
-anything to have been more careful. Her colour came and went. She
-stood irresolute. Her better self was urging her to go at once and with
-a humble apology plead for another trial with an earnest promise of a
-different course in the future. But she could not bring herself to do
-that. Pride and Selfishness had been too closely her companions lately,
-excluding better impulses.
-
-No, she would not believe that Sister Warwick meant to report her to
-the Matron. Perhaps she would only ask for her removal to another ward;
-there she could make a fresh start. But she did not ask herself with
-what motive.
-
-Nurse Hudson's work had always been tarnished with the discolouring
-influences of her own low aims. No wonder now that she failed, and did
-not take the one step that might have saved her nursing career.
-
-She left the ward that evening without another word with the
-Sister--miserable, self-pitying, undecided, little thinking that she
-would never enter it again.
-
- * * * * *
-
-"The whole affair shall be stopped at once!" The Matron's voice was
-full of decision and very stern. "I will send for Hudson and tell her
-I cannot keep her here any longer. Nor will I sign her certificate! I
-am not justified, after all you tell me, in sending her away to pass
-herself off as a qualified nurse."
-
-"You take a harder view of her conduct than I do, Matron." And Sister
-Warwick then and there began to plead for the nurse who had been such a
-"thorn in her side."
-
-"You will not move me, Sister! Hudson will go! It will seem right, from
-many points of view, when you can look at it dispassionately. I am only
-very thankful that we so rarely have such a failure among the nurses,
-and thankful most of all that no worse harm has been done. We might
-have had a case for the coroner."
-
-Sister Warwick knew the Matron's words were just. She left her and
-went back to her own room, sinking into her leaning-chair with the
-consciousness that an upset like this "took it out of her" far more
-than even an operation involving pain and suffering to one of her dear
-ward babies. And, sad at heart, she began to think of Ellen Hudson's
-future, then to search back in her own mind for possible opportunities
-missed in the past when she might have helped her more kindly. She
-realised bitterly that she herself might have done better too.
-
-She sat forward then and wrote a little note and sent it round to the
-Nurses' Home, timed to reach Nurse Hudson just after her interview with
-the Matron.
-
-It was to ask her staff-nurse to come and see her before she left. But
-she never came. She passed out of Sister Warwick's life from that hour,
-and her place knew her no more.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Nurse Carden's bright face and ready sympathy were a pleasant
-interruption to the Sister's mournful ruminations that evening. She
-came in a little before her usual time, and the two had a quiet chat in
-the "Sisters' Room" before the night work began.
-
-Here Sister Cumberland joined them. These three women--so different in
-character, so united in aim and purpose--felt then the sustaining power
-of a friendship that was standing the wear and tear of life.
-
-Seeing how worried the elder "Sister" was by the present, the other two
-drew her thoughts back to the past and to their earlier experiences in
-the ward.
-
-"Do you remember?" was the introduction to many reminiscences Sister
-Cumberland recalled that night on duty, when she fought her fiercest
-fight with the craving for sleep.
-
-Nurse Carden talked of Tommie the waif and his whimsical ways. He could
-not be forgotten, for it was not many days since at the lodge-gate of
-her own home she had seen the Tommie of to-day. Such a contrast! A
-sturdy, ruddy, honest country lad, loving his life as a gardener's boy,
-and always ready, if questioned, to say, "Oh, I belong to Nurse Carden,
-I do! I ain't got nobody else! But she is good to me, she is!"
-
-So the three talked until the hour struck which took them to their
-various duties and closed the second of these days my pen has tried to
-describe--days chosen not because they were remarkably different from
-many others, but because they give an average picture of the cares
-and anxieties, the pleasures and interests that belong to a hospital
-Sister's life; because, too, they tell of an experience that had a
-lasting effect in softening Sister Warwick's character and in extending
-her influence over the nurses in her charge.
-
-[THE END.]
-
-
-
-
-GUS.
-
-
-Ya want ti knaw aboot ma maate Gus? Set ya doon, then, an' ah'll tell
-ya all aboot it.
-
-Me an' Gus wer friends fra' t' first. 'E wer a shy, quiet soort o' lad,
-an' t' other chaps didn't seem ti taake ti 'im at first, an' it wer
-soort o' loansoom for a yoong chap lodgin' aloan i' a straange plaace,
-specially as 'e didn't seem ti care mooch for t' public-'oose o' neets.
-Soa wun evening, as we wer leavin' woork, ah says ti 'im, "Coom in an'
-'ave a bit o' soopper wi' ma an' ma missus, lad."
-
-'E looked real pleased, an' said 'e would coom, bud 'e wouldn't coom
-straight 'oam wi' ma, as ah wanted 'im ti. Noa, 'e mun gang back ti 'is
-lodgins an' fettle issen oop.
-
-My missus weant best pleased when sha 'eard 'e wer coming; mebbe, theer
-weant ower mooch for soopper, an' sha niver were fond o' straangers;
-bud 'e 'adn't been i' oor lahtle room aboove 'alf a minute afoor ah
-seed as sha'od taaken a fancy ti 'im. 'E com in rather shy an' bashful
-loike, for all 'e'd maade 'issen soa graand wi' 'is Soonday coate an'
-all, an' ma missus, she says--
-
-"Set ya doon an' maak yersen at whoam, while ah get summat for ya ti
-eat," an' 'e set doon reet theer by t' door, on t' edge o' 'is cheer,
-an' 'adn't a woord to say for 'issen.
-
-Oor lahtle lass Polly--she wer nobbut fooer year owd then--shoo com in
-an' stood starin' at 'im wi' 'er finger i' 'er mooth, an' at sight o'
-'er 'e foond 'is tongue.
-
-"Coom 'ere, lahtle ma'ad," says 'e; "ah'm wonnerful fond o' childer.
-Coom an' see what ah've got i' ma pocket."
-
-Bud t' lahtle lass still stood beside ma, starin' at 'im as if 'e wer
-summat i' a show.
-
-Gus didn't saay nowt moor, but 'e oots wi' 'is knife an' a bit o' wood
-and starts carvin' summat.
-
-"Noo," says 'e, arter a bit, "what shall it be? Shall ah maak tha a
-'orse, or a coo, or what?"
-
-T' lahtle lass foond 'er toongue at that.
-
-"A lad," says she, an' cooms a step nearer ti see what 'e wer at.
-
-"Shoo'll be a rare wun for t' lads when shoo's a bit bigger, ah'se
-warran'," says 'e, wi' a laugh; an' 'e goes on carvin' t' bit o'
-wood in a waay 'at wer wunnerful ti me. Soon t' head an' shoolthers
-appeared, an' then t' legs an' arms, an' all t' while t' tahtle lass
-crept nearer an' nearer, an' by t' tahm t' lad wer doon, shoo wer
-sittin' on 'is knee an' chatterin' awaay ti 'im as if 'e wer' an owd
-friend.
-
-That woon moother's 'eart, for shoo's powerful set on t' lahtle lass,
-seem' shoo's t' oanly wun wi' 'ave--an' ah reckon ah weant far be'ind
-'er i' that--an' befoor 'e left shoo'd arst 'im ti taake 'is dinner
-wi' us Soonday next. Arter that, Gus wer in an' oot continual, an' 'e
-an' t' lahtle lass wer as thick as thieves. It wer pratty ti see 'er
-perched o' 'is knee, wi' 'is arm roond 'er, an' ti 'ear 'er pratty
-prattle, all aboot 'er dolls an' toys an' sooch-like. 'E used ti call
-'er 'is lahtle sweet-'eart, an' saay sha mun marry 'im when sha wer
-growed a bit, an' t' lahtle lass 'ud look oop i' 'is faace, as graave
-as graave, an' promise ti be 'is lahtle wife. 'Twer as pratty a pictur
-as 'eart could wish to see them thegither, an' 'e niver seemed ti tire
-o' 'er coompany, or care ti talk wi' me or t' missus when t' lahtle
-lass wer theer.
-
-Well tahm went on, an' t' job e'd coom doon 'ere for wer nigh
-finished--layin' rails o' new line it wer--an' 'e wer talkin' o'
-leavin', for 'e weant fra' oor parts; when wun daay--ah mind it wer t'
-first o' April, for theer'd been soom foolin' amoong t' lads earlier
-i' t' daay, an' t' blackthorn wer buddin' i' t' 'edges--we wer setting
-on t' railway bank eatin' oor dinners. Gus wer moor talkative than
-ordinary that daay; ah mind 'e'd been tellin' us o' t' waay they did
-'arvestin' i' 'is parts--Lancashire waay--an' 'arvest-'oams, an'
-sooch-like, when all of a soodden ah caught sight o' ma lahtle lass
-runnin' along t' line. It did gie ma a toorn, for t' doon traain 'ad
-been signalled two or three minutes sin', an' even as ah caught sight
-o' 'er, ah 'eerd it roombling along i' t' distance.
-
-"Ma God!" ah cried. "Look theer!"
-
-Jack Wilson--'im as lives i' yon cottage wi' t' creepers doon by t'
-church--shoots as lood as 'e could, "Get oft t' line, bairn! Get off t'
-line!" Bud Polly, sha didn't taak noa 'eed ti 'im.
-
-Then afoor ah 'ad got ma wits aboot ma, or 'ad ony idea what 'e wer
-goin ti do, Gus 'ad joomped doon fra' t' bank, an' were roonnin' for
-'is loife doon t' line ti meet t' lahtle lass. It wer awful to see 'im,
-while every moment t' thoonder o' t' train com nearer.
-
-"Is t' man mad?" cried Wilson. "It's certain death." An' even as 'e
-spoke, t' train com roond t' corner.
-
-Polly stood still, terrified, an' Gus ran on reet inti t' teeth o' t'
-train. Ah turned deadly sick, for ah niver thowt 'e would be i' tahm,
-an' it seemed nobbut a waaste o' two lives; bud 'e reached 'er joost
-afoor t' train did. Ah seed 'im catch 'er oop an' toss 'er on ti t'
-bank, an' then--then t' traan wer on 'im, an' we saw noothing moor till
-it 'ad past. Then ah ran ti wheer 'e wer lyin', an' an awful sight it
-wer. It 'aunts ma yet, thoo it's nigh on ten year sin. 'E wer livin',
-poor chap, an' 'e looked up at ma wi' a smile, though t' death dews
-were gathering on 'is faace.
-
-"T' lahtle lass?" 'e asked anxiously.
-
-"Saafe an' well," ah answered. "Eh, Gus, lad, tha' shouldn't 'a doon
-it. Ah reckon she weant woorth it."
-
-"Niver saay that!" 'e said. "Wheer is sha? Ah'd like fine to bid her
-good-bye."
-
-Polly wer cryin' wi' fright on t' bank cloas at 'and. Ah called 'er,
-bud at first sha 'ung back, not knawin' as it wer 'er friend as lay
-theer, a sickenin' sight, an' not fit for a bairn ti see.
-
-"Niver mind, John," 'e said, sadly enough. "It's better soa. Ah
-wouldn't like 'er ti think o' ma like this." But ah went an' fetched
-'er, an' bade 'er ti thank 'im for saavin' 'er loife.
-
-"Nay, nay," 'e said, smoilin' oop at 'er. "Good-bye, lahtle sweet'eart.
-Tha'lt 'ave ti get anoother lad noo."
-
-"Nay, ah'll waait for thee an' be thy lahtle wife," says Polly
-sturdily, not un'erstan'in', poor lahtle lass, as 'e wer dyin'.
-
-"Tha'lt 'ave ti waait till tha gets ti t' New Jeroosalem, then," 'e
-answers, "if soa be as they'll let ma in." An' at that 'e looks serious.
-
-Ah maade 'aste ti cheer 'im oop.
-
-"Nay, lad, thoo need 'ave noa fear o' that," ah says. "Tha mind hoo He
-said, 'Inasmooch as ye 'a doon it to wun o' t' least o' these, ye 'a
-doon it unto Me.'"
-
-Hoo 'is faace lighted oop at that word! Then a spasm o' agony crossed
-it, an' t' death rattle began i' 'is throat.
-
-'E couldn't speak, bud 'e maade ma a sign ti send t' lahtle lass away,
-an' ah bade 'er roon 'oam ti 'er moother. Then ah knelt doon an' raised
-'im in ma arms, an' it weant long--thank God, it weant long.
-
-Well, it's ten year sin, as ah said, an' it's an owd story noo, an' t'
-grass is green on 'is graave. T' lahtle lass keeps it rare an' gay wi'
-flooers. Shoo's growin' a graat gell noo, an' it weant be long afoor
-t' lads begin ti coom aboot 'er, for shoo's growin' bonny; bud shoo's
-niver forgotten Gus, an' if shoo iver did, ah wouldn't oan 'er as ma
-darter, that ah wouldn't!
-
-
-
-
-ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS.
-
-
-MEDICAL.
-
-FREDA.--Of the cause of exophthalmic goître but little is known for
-certain. Worry or anxiety often precede the onset of the disease.
-Unlike ordinary goître this affection is not limited in any way to
-certain districts, but occurs in every part of the country. "Is it
-curable, and if so, how long should a moderate case take to cure?"
-Yes, many cases do recover. When the disease is very marked, recovery
-is unusual. But now that surgeons have directed their attention to the
-disease there is every reason to believe that the severer grades of the
-affection may yield to operative treatment. We can no more tell you how
-long an attack of exophthalmic goître will last than we could tell you
-the day of your death. Sometimes the disease disappears in six months
-or a year, often it drags on for many years. As a rule, if the symptoms
-develop rapidly, the disease runs a rapid course. Men are comparatively
-rarely attacked. We can, however, call to mind a fair number of cases
-of exophthalmic goître in the male sex. Unmarried women of from twenty
-to thirty years of age are the usual victims of this disease.
-
-WORRIED.--1. In all probability your sister would get better and
-stronger after marriage. Of course it depends a good deal upon the
-cause of her malady. She had far better go to her family doctor and
-get his advice upon the matter. We cannot take the responsibility of
-giving a definite answer to your question from such a very scanty
-amount of information.--2. There are so many books on travel and
-science, suitable to ordinary readers, that it is rather difficult to
-choose any particular volume. One of the best books on science for a
-beginner--that is, a person who is beginning to read science--is a
-little work called _Ants and their Ways_, by the Rev. Farren White. It
-is a charming little volume which will instil into anyone who reads it
-the habit of observation--so all-important in science. The book is very
-moderate in price. It is published by the Religious Tract Society. If
-you turn to the advertisement sheets at the back of this paper you will
-see notices of a number of very good books on both science and travel.
-
-MATRON.--Obviously the book you want is the _British Pharmacopœia_.
-This gives definite instructions how to make up every official
-preparation. There is a new edition just published. For the drugs which
-are not in the _British Pharmacopœia_, Squire's _Companion to the
-British Pharmacopœia_ may be consulted. You will do well to thoroughly
-master the decimal measures, and to use them exclusively, as they
-are now official and will alone be used in the future. The old and
-confusing apothecaries' measures are now out of date.
-
-ALTA.--For the bites and stings of midges, etc., rub a little dilute
-ammonia on the bite. This usually relieves the pain instantly. It is
-better to put a drop of dilute carbolic acid (about 1 in 100) upon the
-bite after using the ammonia. The reason for this is that the trouble
-from an insect's bite is dependent upon two causes. In the first place
-the insect actually drops poison into the bite. This, which is usually
-formic acid, makes the wound smart at once, but its effect passes off
-in a little time. Ammonia neutralises this acid and so gives instant
-relief. But there is a second cause of trouble which is far more
-serious. The bite of a fly has caused more deaths than you would think,
-and from this reason. Flies of all kinds are given to feed on garbage,
-and as they have not yet learnt to use a toothbrush, their mouths are
-always swarming with germs. Usually these germs are not of a very
-virulent kind. But suppose that a midge has been eating the carcase of
-an animal which has died from peritonitis. That fly is now more deadly
-than a viper, for on its tongue it has a poison which is capable of
-rapid increase if it ever finds a suitable home. If this fly bites you,
-you may die from the bite. Everyone knows that often an insect sting
-or bite does not ache or swell at first; but after several hours the
-place becomes hot and swollen, and if the place bitten be the hand,
-the arm begins to swell and the glands in the armpit enlarge. In this
-case a mild dose of microbes has been innoculated. Ammonia will not
-in most cases destroy these microbes. Therefore, we say, put a drop
-of dilute carbolic acid on the place as soon as you can. The ammonia
-simply relieves a little itching (for the poison of the insect itself
-is rarely dangerous), but the carbolic acid destroys organisms which
-are capable of great mischief. Rubbing the face and hands with oil of
-eucalyptus, or paraffin, will sometimes prevent insects from coming
-near you.
-
-LILY, MY QUEENIE.--1. Is the skin round your eyebrows scarred? Hair
-never grows on scars, nor can it be made to do so by any means in our
-power. If there are no scars, try a little white precipitate ointment
-applied carefully to the eyebrows.--2. Moles cannot be cured. They can
-be removed by operation. If they are large and noticeable it is better
-to have them removed. Otherwise leave them severely alone.
-
-PEARL.--Take our advice and see a doctor at once. Severe headache is a
-very common symptom, and though it is usually caused by some trivial
-ailment, it is often the only subjective sign of a serious disease.
-Your attacks suggest megraine, but they might be due to far more
-serious things. Without a complete personal examination no man living
-could diagnose your malady.
-
-FOX.--What size corsets do you wear? Tight lacing is, or rather was,
-a very common cause of fatness about the face. What age are you? It
-is very common for women to get double chins and extra plump cheeks
-when they have passed their thirtieth year. Very many diseases cause
-fatness of the face. Kidney disease is one of the commonest of these.
-All we can advise you to do is to be careful about your diet. Avoid
-farinaceous puddings and sweets. Take plenty of exercise. No drug
-is of much good in obesity of any kind. Some of the mineral waters,
-especially Vichy, are sometimes useful to stout persons.
-
-A WEARY AND CAREWORN GIRL.--We are exceedingly sorry that we could not
-answer your letter earlier. The troubles that you have gone through are
-enough to depress any girl of twice your age. We think that all your
-sufferings are due to nervousness resulting from being "run down." What
-the impediment in your speech is, is not quite clear from your letter.
-Probably it is far less than you imagine, else your mother would
-certainly have noticed it. The difficulty which you find in commencing
-to talk is due to nervousness. As your health improves, and as you
-grow older this will tend to disappear. We will publish an article on
-blushing and nervousness next month. To the last of your questions your
-clergyman would be more competent to give you an answer than ever we
-could be. Go to your pastor and tell him your troubles. He is sure to
-be able to comfort you in your affliction and to help you to bear your
-cross with patience for the sake of Him who laid down His life for you.
-
-CROYDEN.--The habit of taking acids to cure indigestion is greatly
-to be deprecated. Acids and bitters are very useful in some forms
-of indigestion, but they should never be taken unless ordered by a
-physician. Alkalis, such as bicarbonate of soda, are on the other hand
-of great value in the majority of cases of indigestion. Indeed we will
-go further than this: we have never met with a case of indigestion
-from any cause which was not benefited, sometimes only temporarily, by
-alkalis. We have seen very few cases of indigestion which have been
-relieved by acids. Our candid opinion is that the habit of taking acids
-and bitters to cure disorders of the stomach or loss of appetite, is a
-very fertile cause of the life-long indigestion so common nowadays.
-
-BLACK EYES.--In an answer to "Fair Isobel," which was published some
-months ago, the treatment of blackheads was thoroughly discussed.
-
-EMILY PHELPS.--Your glasses do not suit you. Go to an oculist and get
-his prescription for another pair. Your symptoms are very common in
-people who use unsuitable spectacles.
-
-BUTTERCUP.--Bunions are due to the pressure of badly-fitting boots. In
-the human foot the great or innermost toe bends away from the other
-toes. This gives to the inner border of the foot a direction slanting
-inwards towards the middle line of the body. Most boots are made
-with their inner border slanting outwards away from the middle line
-so as to meet the outer border of the boots at a more or less acute
-angle. We have therefore the great toe naturally tending to depart
-from its fellows, and we have the boot forcing the great toe towards,
-and possibly under or over, the other toes. The boot is an unyielding
-structure. The inner border of the foot is also practically unyielding,
-except at one spot, the joint of the great toe. The first toe is
-therefore forced inwards and its joint projects as an angle. The boot
-presses upon this joint, a corn forms, inflammation is set up, and
-the joint becomes diseased, forming a bunion. When once a bunion has
-developed, it is no good talking about its prevention. We must attempt
-to cure it, and it is not so very difficult to cure it, and keep it
-cured, if you fully understand how it originated. A bunion is caused by
-pressure upon the joint. The cure of the bunion consists of removing
-the pressure from the joint. To do this you should wear boots in which
-the inner border slopes away from the centre of the boot. We advise you
-to get a pair of boots of this shape made for yourself. If the bunion
-is intractable, you may need a "post" in the boot between the great and
-the second toe. Keep your foot scrupulously clean, and take a foot-bath
-every evening.
-
-J. S. N.--As your mother died from heart disease, it is no wonder that
-you imagine your own symptoms to be likewise due to heart trouble; but
-the symptoms you mention are all characteristic of simple dyspepsia;
-not one of them is common in heart disease. When you say "at times my
-pulse beats very fast and sometimes irregularly," we presume that you
-mean that you feel your heart beating fast or irregularly, in other
-words, that you have palpitation. When the heart is beating fast or
-irregularly, as it frequently does in heart disease, it produces no
-symptoms which might inform the sufferer of her state. It is only by
-feeling the pulse that irregularities in its action can be detected. We
-will not say that heart disease is not hereditary, but the importance
-of this factor has been greatly over-estimated. Disease of the heart
-is very frequently due to rheumatic fever; and the tendency to
-rheumatism is; to a certain extent, hereditary. You will find plenty of
-information about indigestion in our last year's volume.
-
-ESTHER.--We can well understand that you feel a little nervous about
-your chest, when you tell us that both your parents died of phthisis.
-You know that the risk of your developing the disease is considerable,
-yet it by no means follows that you will get phthisis. By no means are
-you certain to get phthisis. You must be very careful about yourself,
-and the least bit of a cough or cold which may attack you must be
-carefully attended to. Indeed we advise you to call in your family
-doctor the moment that you have any cough or other untoward symptom.
-Certainly you would do well to spend your winters in Switzerland.
-
-CANARY.--1. A little dumb-bell exercise every morning will improve
-the form of your back and shoulders. The dumb-bells should be made of
-wood and not weigh more than two pounds each. Heavy bell exercise is
-very dangerous. It has always been considered beautiful for women to
-possess broad hips.--2. Why? Why do so many of our correspondents call
-themselves "constant readers"? Perhaps it is that they think that by
-using that pseudonym they will get answered sooner, or perhaps it is
-merely from lack of sufficient imagination to think of some phrase less
-commonplace.
-
-E. M. WALKER.--Cinnamon is more at home in the pantry than in pharmacy.
-The only medicinal action it possesses is that of all aromatic
-substances. It is occasionally used as a stomachic, but its chief use
-is for flavouring. Sometimes it is given for diarrhœa as it is a mild
-astringent. Cinnamon has no action on cancer, neither has any drug the
-slightest effect upon the course of this disease. Indeed one might put
-down the medicinal action of cinnamon at zero.
-
-MABEL B.--It is not at all uncommon for the hair to fall out after a
-severe illness. It is, however, rare for permanent baldness to result.
-Usually after combing out in large quantities for some weeks or months
-the hair grows quickly and luxuriously again. A mildly stimulating
-hair-wash is often useful in these cases. Brilliantine, bay rum or
-rosemary hair-washes are suitable. We much doubt whether taking
-cod-liver oil would have any effect upon your hair, but it might help
-to restore your strength.
-
-FLORRIE.--1. We know of no recipe which will remove hairs from the face
-without doing serious damage to the skin at the same time.--2. Try
-sulphur soap for a shiny face. Do not use face powder.
-
-HELENA.--Read the answer to "Florrie" above. The Laws of Libel prevent
-us from giving you our opinion on the preparation which you mention. We
-are allowed, however, to warn you to have nothing to do with any patent
-medicine of which you do not know the composition. It has not been our
-experience that peroxide of hydrogen makes the hair grow quickly.
-
-
-STUDY AND STUDIO.
-
-IRISH MAY FLOWER.--It is rather difficult to dispose of such sketches
-as you describe. We should suggest that you took them to any picture
-dealer in your neighbourhood, and asked him to try to sell them for
-you. Or you might write to the Irish Ladies' Work Society, 47, George
-Street, Kingstown, inquiring if that would be of any use to you.
-
-MABEL ENTWISTLE.--We are very glad that you have been enabled through
-our means "to make the acquaintance of two extremely nice French
-girls." Your writing we like very much. It is clear, definite, and
-has a character of its own. If we gave any hint for its improvement,
-it would be to avoid the lapses in the middle of a word, making the
-writing flow consecutively.
-
-LA PETITE VIOLETTE.--We have not forgotten you, and are very glad you
-have taken up some special study. We have placed your request in "Our
-Open Letter Box."
-
-WILD ROSE.--1. Your first quotation is from Tennyson's _In Memoriam_,
-xxvii., stanza 4.
-
- "I hold it true, whate'er befall,
- I feel it when I sorrow most,
- 'Tis better to have loved and lost,
- Than never to have loved at all."
-
-2. Look through the poetry of Thomas Moore for your second extract, and
-if you cannot find it there, send it again and we will place it in "Our
-Open Letter Box."
-
-CATALINA.--1. Apply to the Church Sunday School Institute,
-Serjeant's Inn, Fleet Street, E.C., or to the Sunday School Union
-(undenominational), 57, Ludgate Hill, and you will receive the fullest
-information. The lessons for each Sunday are set forth in certain
-inexpensive books in detail, with comments and information upon every
-verse. In addition to these "lesson helps" you should read and study
-books upon the Old Testament and upon the life of our Lord, such as
-Farrar's _Life of Christ_. The Religious Tract Society has published
-one (_The Life of Jesus Christ the Saviour_, by Mrs. S. Watson), which
-is not too ambitious, and might help you. The net price is 3s. 9d.--2.
-Your writing is good for your age, but might be improved if the tails
-to your "g's," "y's," etc., were less straggling.
-
-ERIN-GO-BRAGH.--1. We have inserted your request, but (as you give a
-pseudonym) not your address.--2. Your handwriting is too upright and
-irregular, but there is the foundation of a good hand in it.
-
-EXILE OF ERIN.--The "Fragment" you enclose is above the average of
-poems submitted to us, but your metre does not flow quite smoothly
-enough. You should avoid too many monosyllables in these long lines.
-
-L. A. T.--We should advise you to read Homer's "Odyssey," translated
-by Butcher and Lang, and if you find difficulty in understanding it,
-a "Primer" on the subject as well. But we think you will enjoy it. As
-for Plato, read "The Trial and Death of Socrates," translated by Dean
-Church, and consult a small history of Greece on the period (399 B.C.)
-Do not attempt too much at once, nor read Plato's deeper "Dialogues"
-to begin with. Your letter, which you ask us to criticise, is clearly
-written, with only one mistake in spelling.
-
-MISS BEALEY.--We undertake no communication by post (see "Rules" in our
-November part and elsewhere). You will find the "Home Reading Union"
-an excellent society; apply to the Secretary, Surrey House, Victoria
-Embankment. Consult this column for amateur societies occasionally
-mentioned.
-
-MISS FLORENCE E. SMITH calls attention to the "Bedford Practising
-Society," of which she is secretary. She will be delighted to send
-particulars to any fellow reader of the GIRL'S OWN PAPER. Address to
-her at Winfrith, The Crescent, Bedford.
-
-HOFFNUNG.--Many thanks for your letter. By all means try again.
-
-
-INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENCE.
-
-MADEMOISELLE MARGUERITE GONTARD (address "Nikopal Mariopol Co.,
-Mariopol, South Russia, Engineer Prauss for M. Gontard"), wishes to be
-put into communication with a young English lady, resident in either of
-the continents of Asia, Africa, America, or Australia. She desires to
-correspond with her either in English or French. We thank Mademoiselle
-Gontard for her pretty English letter. She may certainly write to us in
-French if she prefers to do so.
-
-"ERIN-GO-BRAGH" would like to correspond with a French girl of about
-her own age--twenty-one.
-
-FLORENCE writes a kind letter from which we quote a sentence. "I am
-wondering whether some little girl belonging to the readers of our
-GIRL'S OWN PAPER would care to have an older friend to write to; she
-would receive in return sympathy if in trouble, and an interest would
-be taken in all she might care to confide to one whom she could perhaps
-learn to look upon in the light of an elder sister." We regret that
-it is against our rules to undertake direct postal communication; but
-if any little girl sends us her address, we will insert it here for
-"Florence" to see. Perhaps some lonely, or motherless, or sad little
-girls might be glad to find a friend.
-
-
-OUR OPEN LETTER BOX.
-
-LA PETITE VIOLETTE wishes to find a poem with a refrain to each verse
-"Belle Marquise." She saw a quotation from it as a heading to a chapter
-in a book entitled _Woman and the Shadow_.
-
-MISS M. A. C. CRABB and ELPIS answer LENNOX by referring the verse she
-quotes--
-
- "Alas! how easily things go wrong,"
-
-to a poem in the 19th chapter of George Macdonald's "Phantastes: a
-Faerie Romance." They agree in saying that the second verse is not by
-the same pen.
-
-PETERKIN, GERTRUDE ASHWORTH, KLONDYKE, B. D. WARD, M. E. BATES,
-"STICK," R. M. COOKE, MABEL ENTWISTLE and "THE ELDEST GIRL," inform
-Ethel Rimmer that Christina Rossetti's poem beginning--
-
- "When I am dead, my dearest,
- Sing no sad songs for me,"
-
-has been set to music by Malcolm Lawson, and is entitled "Hereafter,"
-in keys E♭ and G. It appeared in the June number of the _Strand Musical
-Magazine_ for 1895. "A LOVER OF THE 'G.O.P.'" says it has been set to
-music by C. A. Lee, either for a soprano or an alto voice.
-
-R. C. R. suggests to GOLD DUST that the poem "Tit for Tat" is contained
-in "Original Poems for Infant Minds," by Jane Taylor, her sisters and
-brother. If this is the poem sought for, we may add that the volume is
-published by Routledge.
-
-ONE OF THE FIRST READERS, AZIE, asks for the author of a poem entitled
-"Maggie and the Angels," containing two lines--
-
- "Maggie, are they the angels?
- And be they always there?"
-
-PERSEVERANZA would be glad to know the publishers of a picture-book
-of performing frogs or cats from which she could copy for painting on
-dessert doyleys.
-
-L B. N. R. wishes to know the author of the following lines--
-
- "There is a river which flows for ever,
- And the flowers that bloom on its banks
- Grow bright, as they glitter in grateful endeavour
- To vie in a perfume of thanks."
-
-
-MISCELLANEOUS.
-
-EDITH.--The origin of the Lions as a device on the Royal Arms we trace
-to William the Conqueror, who introduced those of Normandy. These two
-original Lions were supplemented by a third, added by Henry III., it is
-generally supposed, for Aquitaine.
-
-MATER.--To make an economical Christmas cake, take half a pound
-of butter, place in a bowl, and break five eggs over it, stirring
-continuously, while a second person sifts in slowly a pound and
-a half of currants (well washed, dried, and carefully picked),
-three-quarters of a pound of flour, and two ounces of citron peel
-chopped to moderately small pieces. Place in a papered shape--not
-buttered--several folds of paper being laid at the bottom of the tin,
-and bake in moderately hot oven during three hours.
-
-SEMPER PARATUS.--We answer two questions, and you have asked nineteen!
-It is impossible to describe the several Scotch tartans otherwise than
-by coloured illustrations. These you will find in a book published by
-W. and A. K. Johnston (Edinburgh and London), entitled, _The Scottish
-Clans and their Tartans_, now in its second (if not third) edition.
-Some account of every Clan is given.
-
-ANXIOUS.--Rheumatism will, no doubt, be made worse by exposure to damp
-and draughts; but the origin is in acidity, which crystallises in the
-joints and muscles. You should abstain for a time from butchers' meat,
-and from sweet things. Attend to the action of the liver, which may
-be torpid; and if the pain be in the arms and shoulders, you should
-perform all kinds of exercises with them, and employ friction and
-rubbing with suitable embrocation. If you do not perform exercises, the
-joints and sinews will become stiff.
-
-A. E. C.--_Noah's Ark_, by Darley Dale, is published as a book by F.
-Warne, Bedford Street, Strand. Price 3s. 6d.
-
-HELEN OF TROY.--You will find several families of the name
-Marshall--though not necessarily related--in Burke's _Landed Gentry_.
-Perhaps you can claim your connection with one of them. The first on
-the list is G. H. Marshall, of Patterdale Hall, Westmoreland, descended
-from John of Yeadon Hall, Co. York, who made a large fortune from
-the mechanical improvements in a branch of the linen manufacture.
-There is Marshall of Treworgley, Cornwall; Marshall of Penwortham
-Hall, descended from M. of Ardwick, near Manchester; Marshall of
-Ward End House, Co. Warwick, descended from M. of Perlethorp, Co.
-Nottinghamshire; and Marshall of Broadwater, Surrey, apparently the
-oldest family of that name, anciently spelt Marchal, and long resident
-in that county. None of these families have the same arms, nor crest.
-The first-named (of Patterdale) has none ascribed to them in the
-_Landed Gentry_. You had better consult the second volume in some
-library.
-
-
-
-
-OUR PUZZLE POEMS.
-
-A NEW DEPARTURE.
-
-
-We are publishing Three Puzzle Poems in succession dealing with
-accidents and the way to meet them, and the following is the second of
-the series. The lines should be carefully committed to memory for the
-sake of the valuable instruction they contain.
-
-In addition to the ordinary monthly prizes THREE SPECIAL PRIZES are
-offered for the best solutions of the whole series.
-
-The first Special Prize will be THREE GUINEAS; the second Special
-Prize, TWO GUINEAS, and the third Special Prize, ONE GUINEA.
-
-A careful record of mistakes will be kept, and these prizes will be
-awarded to those competitors who perpetrate the fewest in all three
-puzzles.
-
-If a winner of one of these prizes has already received an ordinary
-prize in the series, the amount of the smaller prize will be deducted.
-This will then be sent to the most deserving non-prize-winner in the
-list relating to the puzzle for which the prize in question was awarded.
-
-
-OUR NEW PUZZLE POEM.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-⁂ Prizes to the amount of six guineas (one of which will be reserved
-for competitors living abroad) are offered for the best solutions of
-the above Puzzle Poem. The following conditions must be observed.
-
-1. Solutions to be written on one side of the paper only.
-
-2. Each paper to be headed with the name and address of the competitor.
-
-3. Attention must be paid to spelling, punctuation, and neatness.
-
-4. Send by post to Editor, GIRL'S OWN PAPER, 56, Paternoster Row,
-London. "Puzzle Poem" to be written on the top left-hand corner of the
-envelope.
-
-5. The last day for receiving solutions from Great Britain and Ireland
-will be February 17, 1899; from Abroad, April 17, 1899.
-
-The competition is open to all without any restrictions as to sex or
-age.
-
-
-
-
-OUR SUPPLEMENT STORY COMPETITION.
-
-
-SELF OR FRIEND?
-
-A STORY IN MINIATURE.
-
-
-FIRST PRIZE (£2 2s.).
-
-Margaret A. Fish, 49, Foregate Street, Worcester.
-
-
-SECOND PRIZE (£1 1s.).
-
-Rose Cook, 2, South Cliff, Lowestoft.
-
-
-THIRD PRIZE (10s. 6d.).
-
-Edith Ivens, Mayfield, Station Road, Llandaff, nr. Cardiff.
-
-
-VERY HIGHLY COMMENDED.
-
-Emily M. P. Wood, Woodbank, Southport.
-
-
-HONOURABLE MENTION.
-
-Mary Adamson, Eastbourne; Lucy H. Chapman, Weston-super-Mare; "Conor,"
-Bonchurch, I.W.; Rose L. Connor, Greenock, N.B.; "Editha," Birmingham;
-Kate Collins Ensor, Atherstone; "Excelsior," North Bow, E.; Annie F.
-Hepple, N. Shields; E. Marian Jupe, Warminster; "Mignonette," New
-Cross, S.E.; Edith Miller, Judd St., W.C.; Agnes Osborne, Sidcup;
-Minnie Reeves, Twyford; Lucy Richardson, York; Enid G. St. Aubyn,
-Retford; Mary Adéle Venn, West Kensington Park; L. M. Willis,
-Harrogate; Mabel Wilson, Bedford Park.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-TO THE COMPETITORS.
-
-MY DEAR GIRLS,--To the prize winners and to those of you also who
-failed to gain prizes, I offer my hearty congratulations on the
-excellent papers you sent in. The work of selecting the very best
-was much less difficult than that of choosing a few for "Honourable
-Mention," out of hundreds of really good ones.
-
-It may interest you to know why some of you failed to obtain a place
-in the list of honours. Twenty-eight competitors were disqualified
-by breaking the rule as to size of paper and space to be filled.
-Then there were several charming essays on the story which were not
-miniatures of it. In a considerable number necessary parts of the
-outline were omitted, hence the work was incomplete.
-
-It gave me true pleasure to note how thoroughly most of you grasped the
-lesson which the story was intended to convey.
-
-Do not be disheartened. Try again. Such good papers cannot be called
-failures, and the exercise will benefit you whether you gain prizes or
-not.
-
- Your affectionate old friend,
- RUTH LAMB.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-OUR NEXT STORY COMPETITION.
-
-STORIES IN MINIATURE.
-
-_Subject_:--"THE G. O. P. SUPPLEMENT FOR JANUARY."
-
-
-WHEN MY SHIP COMES HOME.
-
-BY SARAH DOUDNEY, Author of "A Cluster of Roses," "A Flower of Light,"
-etc.
-
-We offer three prizes of TWO GUINEAS, ONE GUINEA, and HALF-A-GUINEA
-for the three best papers on our "Story Supplement" for this month.
-The essays are to give a brief account of the plot and action of the
-story in the Competitor's own words; in fact, each paper should be a
-carefully-constructed _Story in Miniature_, telling the reader in a few
-bright words what THE GIRL'S OWN STORY SUPPLEMENT for the month is all
-about.
-
-One page of foolscap only is to be written upon, and is to be signed
-by the writer, followed by her full address, and posted to The Editor,
-GIRL'S OWN PAPER, in an unsealed envelope, with the words "Stories in
-Miniature" written on the left-hand top corner.
-
-The last day for receiving the papers is January 20th; and no papers
-can in any case be returned.
-
-_Examiners_:--The Author of the Story (Sarah Doudney), and the Editor
-of THE GIRL'S OWN PAPER.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Transcriber's Note: The following changes have been made to this text.
-
-Page 218--prevenche changed to pervenche.
-
-Page 222--parafin changed to paraffin.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Girl's Own Paper, Vol. XX, No.
-992, December 31, 1898, by Various
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GIRL'S OWN PAPER ***
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-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Girl's Own Paper, Vol. XX, No. 992,
-December 31, 1898, 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: The Girl's Own Paper, Vol. XX, No. 992, December 31, 1898
-
-Author: Various
-
-Release Date: May 19, 2016 [EBook #52104]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GIRL'S OWN PAPER ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Susan Skinner, Chris Curnow, Pamela Patten and
-the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
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-
-
-</pre>
-
-<h1 class='faux'>THE GIRL'S OWN
-PAPER</h1>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">{209}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w600">
-<img src="images/header.jpg" width="600" height="202" alt="The Girl's Own Paper." />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="" width="100%">
-<tbody><tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Vol. XX.&mdash;No. 992.]</span></td><td align="center">DECEMBER 31, 1898.</td><td align="right"><span class="smcap">[Price One Penny.</span></td></tr>
-</tbody></table></div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center">[Transcriber's Note: This Table of Contents was not present in the original.]</p>
-
-<p class="center">
-<!-- Autogenerated TOC. Modify or delete as required. -->
-
-<a href="#OLD_ENGLISH_COTTAGE_HOMES">OLD ENGLISH COTTAGE HOMES.</a><br />
-<a href="#ABOUT_PEGGY_SAVILLE">ABOUT PEGGY SAVILLE.</a><br />
-<a href="#GIRLS_AS_I_HAVE_KNOWN_THEM">GIRLS AS I HAVE KNOWN THEM.</a><br />
-<a href="#OUR_HERO">"OUR HERO."</a><br />
-<a href="#FROCKS_FOR_TO-MORROW">FROCKS FOR TO-MORROW.</a><br />
-<a href="#OUR_PROSPECTUS_PUZZLE_REPORT">OUR PROSPECTUS PUZZLE REPORT.</a><br />
-<a href="#IN_THE_TWILIGHT_SIDE_BY_SIDE">IN THE TWILIGHT SIDE BY SIDE.</a><br />
-<a href="#SISTER_WARWICK_A_STORY_OF_INFLUENCE">"SISTER WARWICK": A STORY OF INFLUENCE.</a><br />
-<a href="#GUS">GUS.</a><br />
-<a href="#ANSWERS_TO_CORRESPONDENTS">ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS.</a><br />
-<a href="#OUR_PUZZLE_POEMS">OUR PUZZLE POEMS.</a><br />
-<a href="#OUR_SUPPLEMENT_STORY">OUR SUPPLEMENT STORY COMPETITION.</a><br />
-
-<!-- End Autogenerated TOC. -->
-
-</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" /><div>
-<h2><a name="OLD_ENGLISH_COTTAGE_HOMES" id="OLD_ENGLISH_COTTAGE_HOMES">OLD ENGLISH COTTAGE HOMES;</a><br />
-<span class="smalltext">OR,<br /></span>
-VILLAGE ARCHITECTURE OF BYGONE TIMES.</h2>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter w500">
-<img src="images/i_209.jpg" width="500" height="353" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">AT CLARE, SUFFOLK.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='smalltext'><i>All rights reserved.</i>]</p>
-
-
-<h3>PART III.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">We</span> have already pointed out the simplicity
-of outline observable in old English cottages,
-and the absence of exaggeration and that disagreeable
-fussiness brought about by too
-much striving after the picturesque. It must
-not, however, from this be concluded that
-ancient village buildings are always plain and
-do not at times possess elegant ornamentation
-and graceful details.</p>
-
-<p>The general outline, however, is always
-simple and quiet, for, as will be seen by the
-examples we give (two of the most elaborate
-cottages in England), the roof lines are very
-little broken up or varied.</p>
-
-<p>The first of these buildings is at Clare in
-Suffolk, and the second is at Newport in
-Essex, the latter being one of the richest
-counties in England for cottage architecture,
-many of its villages retaining quite a medival
-aspect down to the present time.</p>
-
-<p>We will now say a few words upon the
-methods of applying ornamental detail to
-cottages adopted in medival times, and we
-shall commence with those structures erected
-in "Post-and-pan" construction. We trust
-that our readers have not forgotten what
-is meant by the ugly-sounding expression
-"Post-and-pan," and regret that we are quite
-unable to discover or invent some more
-elegant name for this description of building.
-Some years back a number of architects and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">{210}</a></span>
-archologists were examined before a parliamentary
-commission. The commission objected
-to the words "Post-and-pan" being
-used in their report, and suggested to the
-witnesses that they should find some more
-scientific expression for this kind of work!
-It was found, however, impossible to invent
-any one which conveyed the idea so concisely
-and satisfactorily, so the old-fashioned name
-"Post-and-pan" received parliamentary sanction!
-This being the case, our girls need not
-scruple to use it, and may it not, after all, be
-as valuable for the formation of the lips as
-the "prunes" and "prism" of Little Dorritt?</p>
-
-<p>There are several ways of applying ornamentation
-to "Post-and-pan" buildings. The
-first is to add mouldings, tracery or carving,
-to the doorways, windows, cornices, corbels
-and other constructive parts of the building.</p>
-
-<p>The second is to arrange the "posts" in
-patterns by introducing curved beams amongst
-them, or other woodwork, forming a kind of
-tracery pattern.</p>
-
-<p>The third is to adorn the "pans" (panels)
-either with stamped plaster-work called "pargeting,"
-or with coloured plaster-work, or
-wood-carving.</p>
-
-<p>The first of these methods is seen in the
-beautiful example which we have sketched at
-Newport in Essex: here it will be noticed
-that the bow window of the upper storey is
-adorned with wood tracery, and its corbel
-richly carved with figure subjects, all executed
-in oak. The "spurs," as they are called,
-which carry the projection of the upper storey,
-are richly moulded and rest upon elegant little
-colonnettes. The pans are filled in with
-brickwork laid in herring-bone patterns. The
-centre of the building is recessed back, but
-in order to preserve the severe and simple
-lines of the roof, the latter does not follow
-the line of the recess, but is supported upon
-an arched beam, from the centre of which
-projects a lifting-crane, a treatment quite
-peculiar to the home counties and the south
-of England.</p>
-
-<p>Of course this building is far more elaborate
-than most cottages, and the tradition of the
-place accounts for this by the supposition
-that it was formerly the dwelling of a farm
-bailiff to the Abbot of Westminster.</p>
-
-<p>The beautiful little village of Newport has
-several examples of interesting domestic work
-and a very noble church.</p>
-
-<p>The building which we illustrate dates from
-the 15th century, and is still in excellent repair
-though not in any way restored.</p>
-
-<p>The very elaborate cottage represented
-in our first sketch is an excellent example
-of pargeting, the surface of the pans being
-covered by a rich kind of shawl-pattern
-executed in hard plaster, like the Newport
-example. The constructive portions of the
-building are elaborately treated. We are
-unable to account for the amount of
-elaboration bestowed on this cottage, but as
-it is close to the church, which is a very handsome
-building and liberally endowed with
-chantries, it is very probable that this may
-have been the dwelling of one of the chantry
-priests.</p>
-
-<p>Clare was an important place in the Middle
-Ages and possessed a castle, remains of which
-are still to be seen. Richard Strongbow, the
-Conqueror of Ireland, is said to have lived
-in it.</p>
-
-<p>The Manor of Clare in later times belonged
-to Edmund Mortimer, Earl of March. There
-was also a priory here, built in 1248 by
-Richard, Earl of Gloucester.</p>
-
-<p>A very curious poem exists in the form of
-a dialogue, "betwixt a secular askyng and a
-frere answering at the grave of Dame Johan
-of Acris" (of Clare). It is a quaint example
-of Old English and begins in rather a curious
-manner.</p>
-
-<p>Q. "What man lyeth here, sey me, Sir
-Frere?"</p>
-
-<p>A. "No man."</p>
-
-<p>Q. "What ellis?"</p>
-
-<p>A. "It is a woman."</p>
-
-<p>Then follows her pedigree all in rhyme,
-from which it appears that she was a daughter
-of King Edward I., and the remarkable circumstance
-is stated, that she was borne of her
-"moder"!</p>
-
-<p>As the poem is about three pages long and
-all pretty much like the sample we have given,
-we will not inflict it upon our readers.</p>
-
-<p class='right'>
-<span class="smcap">H. W. Brewer.</span>
-</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w400">
-<img src="images/i_210.jpg" width="400" height="416" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">AT NEWPORT, ESSEX.</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">{211}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="ABOUT_PEGGY_SAVILLE" id="ABOUT_PEGGY_SAVILLE">ABOUT PEGGY SAVILLE.</a></h2>
-
-<p class='ph3'><span class="smcap">By</span> JESSIE MANSERGH (Mrs. G. de Horne Vaizey), Author of "Sisters Three," etc.</p>
-
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XIII.</h3>
-
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap" src="images/i_211.jpg" width="125" height="294" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">Peggy</span> felt weak and
-shaken for some
-days after her
-fright, and was
-thankful to stay
-quietly indoors and
-busy herself with
-her new task. The
-gas fire could be
-turned on in her
-room whenever she
-desired, and at
-every spare moment
-she ran upstairs,
-locked her
-door behind her,
-and began to write.
-Robert insisted
-that the work
-should be kept
-secret, and that
-not a word should
-be said about the competition downstairs,
-for he was sensitive about the remarks
-of his companions, and anxious to keep
-a possible failure to himself. All the
-work had to be done upstairs therefore,
-and the frequent absence of the partners
-from the schoolroom, though much
-regretted, did not seem at all inexplicable
-to the others. It was understood
-that Peggy and Robert had some
-interest in common, but as winter advanced
-this was no unusual occurrence
-in a house where Christmas was a
-carnival, and surprises of an elaborate
-nature were planned by every member of
-the household. It was taken for granted
-that the work had some connection with
-Christmas, and inquiries were discreetly
-avoided.</p>
-
-<p>With an old calendar before her as a
-model for the lettering, Peggy did her
-work neatly and well, and the gilt
-"arabesques" had an artistic flourish
-which was quite professional. When
-Robert was shown the first half-dozen
-sheets he whistled with surprise, and exclaimed,
-"Good old Mariquita!" a burst
-of approval before which Peggy glowed
-with delight. It had been agreed that,
-after printing the first ten days of
-January, Peggy should go on to the
-first ten of February, and so on throughout
-the year, so that Rob should be able
-to use what quotations had already been
-found under each heading, and should
-not be detained until the whole thirty
-or thirty-one had been chosen.</p>
-
-<p>The partners were most fastidious in
-their selection at the beginning of their
-work, but when half the time had passed
-and not one-third of the necessary
-number of quotations had been found,
-alarm seized upon the camp, and it was
-realised that a little more latitude must
-be shown.</p>
-
-<p>"We shall have to use up all the old
-ones which we struck off the list," said
-Rob disconsolately. "I'm sorry; but I
-never realised before that three hundred
-and sixty-five was such an outrageously
-large number. And we shall have to
-get books of extracts and read them
-through from beginning to end. Nearly
-two hundred more to find; a hundred
-and fifty, say, when we have used up
-those old ones! It will take us all our
-time!"</p>
-
-<p>"I'll get up at six every morning and
-read by my fire," said Peggy firmly.
-"If it's necessary I'll get up at five, and
-if I can't find bits to suit all the stupid
-old things, I'll&mdash;I'll write some myself!
-There! Why shouldn't I? I often
-make up things in my head, and you
-wouldn't believe how fine they are. I
-think of them days afterwards, and
-ask myself,'Now where did I read
-that?' and then it comes back to me.
-'Dear me; I made it up myself!' If
-we get very short, Rob, there wouldn't
-be any harm in writing a few sentences
-and signing them 'Saville,' would
-there?"</p>
-
-<p>"Not if they were good enough," said
-Rob, trying to suppress the laugh which
-would have hurt Peggy's feelings, and
-looking with twinkling eyes at the little
-figure by his side, so comically unprofessional,
-with her lace collar, dainty
-little feet, and pigtail of dark brown hair.
-"You mustn't get up too early in the
-morning and overtire yourself. I can't
-allow that!" he added firmly. "You
-have looked like a little white ghost the
-last few days, and your face is about
-the size of my hand. You must get
-some colour into your cheeks before the
-holidays, or that beloved Arthur will
-think we have been ill-treating you when
-he comes down."</p>
-
-<p>Peggy gave a sharp little sigh and
-relapsed into silence. It was the rarest
-thing in the world to hear her allude to
-any of her own people. When a letter
-arrived, and Mrs. Asplin asked questions
-concerning father, mother, or brother,
-she answered readily enough, but she
-never offered information, or voluntarily
-carried on the conversation. Friends
-less sympathetic might have imagined
-that she was so happy in her new home
-that she had no care beyond it, but no
-one in the Vicarage made that mistake.
-When the square Indian letter was
-handed to her across the breakfast table,
-the flush of delight on the pale cheeks
-brought a reflected smile to every face,
-and more than one pair of eyes watched
-her tenderly as she sat hugging the
-precious letter, waiting until the moment
-should come when she could rush
-upstairs and devour its contents in her
-own room. Once it had happened that
-mail day had arrived and brought no
-letter, and that had been a melancholy
-occasion. Mrs. Asplin had looked at
-one envelope after another, had read
-the addresses twice, thrice, even four
-times over before she summoned courage
-to tell of its absence.</p>
-
-<p>"There is no letter for you to-day,
-Peggy!" Her voice was full of commiseration
-as she spoke, but Peggy sat
-in silence, her face stiffened, her head
-thrown back with an assumption of calm
-indifference. "There must have been
-some delay in the mail. You will have
-two letters next week, dearie, instead
-of one."</p>
-
-<p>"Probably," said Peggy. Mellicent
-was staring at her with big, round eyes;
-the Vicar peered over the rim of his
-spectacles; Esther passed the marmalade
-with eager solicitude; her friends
-were all full of sympathy, but there
-was a "Touch-me-if-you-dare!" atmosphere
-about Peggy that day which
-silenced the words on their lip. It was
-evident that she preferred to be left
-alone, and though her eyes were red
-when she came down to lunch, she held
-her chin so high, and joined in the
-conversation with such an elegant flow
-of language, that no one dare comment
-on the fact. Two days later the letter
-arrived and all was sunshine again; but
-in spite of her cheery spirits, her friends
-realised that Peggy's heart was not in
-the vicarage, and that there were moments
-when the loneliness of her position
-pressed on her, and when she longed
-intensely for someone of her very own,
-whose place could not be taken by even
-the kindest of friends.</p>
-
-<p>Like most undemonstrative people,
-Peggy dearly loved to be appreciated,
-and to receive marks of favour from
-those around. Half the zest with which
-she entered into her new labour was
-owing to the fact that Robert had
-chosen her from all the rest to be his
-partner. She was aglow with satisfaction
-in this fact, and with pleasure in
-the work itself, and the only cloud which
-darkened her horizon at the present
-moment was caused by those incidental
-references to the fair Rosalind, which
-fell so often from her companion's lips.</p>
-
-<p>"Everything," said Peggy impatiently
-to herself, "everything ends in Rosalind!
-Whatever we are talking about,
-that stupid girl's name is bound to be
-introduced! I asked Mellicent if she
-would have a scone at tea this afternoon,
-and she said something about Rosalind
-in reply&mdash;Rosalind liked scones, or she
-didn't like scones, or some ridiculous
-nonsense of the sort! Who wants to
-know what Rosalind likes? I don't!
-I'm sick of the name! And Mrs. Asplin
-is as silly as the rest! The girls must
-have new dresses because Rosalind is
-coming, and they will be asked to tea at
-the Larches! If their green dresses are
-good enough for us, why won't they do
-for Rosalind, I should like to know?
-Rob is the only sensible one. I asked
-him if she were really such a marvellous
-creature, and he said she was an affected
-goose! He ought to know better than
-anyone else! Curls indeed! One would
-think it was something extraordinary to
-have curls! My hair would curl too, if
-I chose to make it, but I don't; I prefer
-to have it straight! If she is the
-'Honourable Rosalind,' I am Mariquita
-Saville, and I'm not going to be
-patronised by anybody, so there!" and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">{212}</a></span>
-Peggy tossed her head, and glared at
-the reflection in the glass in a lofty and
-scornful manner, as though it were the
-offending party who had had the
-audacity to assume superiority.</p>
-
-<p>Robert was one with Peggy in hoping
-that his people would not leave town
-until such time as the calendar should
-be despatched on its travels, for when
-they were installed at the Larches he
-was expected to be at home each week
-from Saturday until Monday, and the
-loss of that long holiday afternoon
-would interfere seriously with the work
-on hand. He had seen so little of his
-people for the last few years, that he
-would be expected to be sociable during
-the short time that he was with them,
-and could hardly shut himself up in his
-room for hours at a time. Despair then
-settled down upon both partners when a
-letter arrived to say that the Darcy
-family were coming down even earlier
-than had been expected, and summoning
-Robert to join them at the earliest
-possible moment.</p>
-
-<p>"This is awful!" cried the lad,
-ruffling his hair with a big, restless
-hand. "I know what it means&mdash;not
-only Saturdays off, but two or three
-nights during the week into the bargain!
-Between you and me, Mariquita, the
-governor is coming down here to economise
-and intends to stay much longer
-than usual. Hector has been getting
-into debt again; he's the eldest, you
-know&mdash;the one in the Life Guards. It's
-a lot too bad, for he has had it all his
-own way so far, and when he runs up bills
-like this, everyone has to suffer for it.
-Mother hates the country for more than
-a few weeks at a time, and will be
-wretched if she is kept here all through
-the winter. I know how it will be, she
-will keep asking people down, and
-getting up all sorts of entertainments to
-relieve the dulness. It's all very well in
-its way, but just now when I need every
-minute&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Shall you give up trying for the
-prize?" asked Peggy faintly, and Rob
-threw back his head with emphatic
-disclaimer.</p>
-
-<p>"I never give up a thing when I have
-made up my mind to do it! There are
-ten days still, and a great deal can be
-done in ten days. I'll take a couple of
-books upstairs with me every night and
-see if I can find something fresh. There
-is one good thing about it, I shall have
-a fresh stock of books to choose from
-at the Larches. It is the last step that
-costs in this case. It was easy enough
-to fix off the first hundred, but the last
-is a teaser!"</p>
-
-<p>On Saturday morning a dog-cart came
-over to convey Robert to the Larches,
-and the atmosphere of the vicarage
-seemed charged with expectation and
-excitement. The Darcys had arrived;
-to-morrow they would appear at church;
-on Monday they would probably drive
-over with Rob and pay a call. These
-were all important facts in a quiet
-country life, and seemed to afford
-unlimited satisfaction to every member
-of the household. Peggy grew so tired
-of the name of Darcy that she retired
-to her room at eight o'clock, and was
-busy at work over the September batch
-of cards, when a knock came to the
-door, and she had to cover them over
-with the blotting paper to admit Mellicent
-in her dressing-gown, with her hair
-arranged for the night in an extraordinary
-number of little plaited pig-tails.</p>
-
-<p>"Will you fasten the ends for me,
-Peggy, please?" she requested. "When
-I do it, the threads fall off, and the ends
-come loose. I want it to be specially
-nice for to-morrow!"</p>
-
-<p>"But it will look simply awful, Mellicent,
-if you leave it like this. It will be
-frizzed out almost on a level with your
-head. Let me do it up in just two tight
-plaits, it will be far, far nicer," urged
-Peggy, lifting one little tail after another,
-and counting their number in dismay.
-But no, Mellicent would not be persuaded.
-The extra plaits were a tribute
-to Rosalind, a mark of attention to her
-on her arrival with which she would
-suffer no interference, and as a consequence
-of her stubbornness, she marched
-to church next morning disfigured by
-a mop of untidy, tangled hair instead of
-the usual glossy locks.</p>
-
-<p>Peggy preserved a demeanour of
-stately calm, as she waited for the
-arrival of the Darcy family, but even
-she felt a tremor of excitement when the
-verger hobbled up to the square pew
-and stood holding the door open in his
-hand. The heads of the villagers turned
-with one consent to the doorway; only
-one person in the church disdained to
-move her position, but she heard the
-clatter of horses' hoofs from without, and
-presently the little procession passed
-the vicarage pew, and she could indulge
-her curiosity without sacrifice to pride.
-First of all came Lord Darcy, a thin, oldish
-man, with a face that looked tired and
-kind, and faintly amused by the amount
-of attention which his entrance had
-attracted. Then his wife, a tall, fair
-woman, with a beautiful profile, and an
-air of languid discontent who floated
-past with rustling silken skirts, leaving
-an impression of elegance and luxury,
-which made Mrs. Asplin sigh and
-Mellicent draw in her breath with a
-gasp of rapture. Then followed Robert
-with his shaggy head, scowling more
-fiercely than ever in his disgust at
-finding himself an object of attention,
-and last of all a girlish figure in a grey
-dress, with a collar of soft, fluffy chinchilla,
-and a velvet hat with drooping
-brim, beneath which could be seen a
-glimpse of a face pink and white as
-the blossoms of spring, and a mass of
-shining, golden hair. Peggy shut her
-lips with a snap, and the iron entered
-into her soul. It was no use pretending
-any longer! This was Rosalind, and she
-was fairer, sweeter, a hundred times
-more beautiful than she had ever
-imagined!</p>
-
-<p class='center'>(<i>To be continued.</i>)</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div>
-
-<h2><a name="GIRLS_AS_I_HAVE_KNOWN_THEM" id="GIRLS_AS_I_HAVE_KNOWN_THEM">GIRLS AS I HAVE KNOWN THEM.</a></h2>
-
-<p class='ph3'><span class="smcap">By</span> ELSA D'ESTERRE-KEELING, Author of "Old Maids and Young."</p>
-
-
-<h3>PART III.</h3>
-
-<p class='ph3'>THE VULGAR GIRL.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">As</span> translated by Cowley,
-Horace is made to say&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">"Hence, ye profane, I hate ye all,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Both the great vulgar and the small!"<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-
-<div class="figcenter w125">
-<img src="images/i_212a.jpg" width="125" height="293" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">The
-small
-vulgar</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>There will be no attempt
-made in this paper to deal with
-the great vulgar, but some
-attempt will be made in it to
-deal with the small, being the
-category to which, it may be
-assumed, belongs the average
-vulgar girl.</p>
-
-<p>It is of course impossible within the limits
-of a short essay to indicate more than a few of
-the leading characteristics of this girl. She it
-is who not only wants to monopolise the
-conversation, but who wants to confine it to
-one subject. She should remember the quaint
-counsel, "The honourablest part of talk is to
-give the occasion, and again to moderate, and
-pass to something else." Moreover in
-conversation she too often follows the rule laid
-down by a French author for those about to
-write love-letters:</p>
-
-<p>"Begin without knowing what you are
-going to say, and end without knowing what
-you have said."</p>
-
-<p>If at the end of a conversation she sometimes
-knew what she had said, the vulgar girl,
-who is not necessarily a callous girl, would feel
-very unhappy.</p>
-
-<p>Her tendency to talk indiscreetly has
-doubtless its origin in the precipitancy which
-causes her to break in upon the speech of
-others. There is a lesson which she might
-learn from a certain polite echo. This echo
-may be heard opposite to Mugdock Castle in
-Scotland. It will repeat any sentence of six
-syllables in the exact tone in which it is uttered&mdash;waiting
-till the sentence is finished.</p>
-
-<p>Another result of the lack of deliberation
-which characterises the vulgar girl is seen in
-the fact that the latest book, the latest play,
-the latest picture, is to her Thingimy by
-Thingimbob. That nomenclature is somewhat
-vague, and is moreover out of date, but it still
-commends itself to the vulgar
-girl, as does the soubriquet <i>The
-Bard</i> for Shakespeare.</p>
-
-<p>Her singular phraseology,
-which she conceives to set her
-at an advantage, in reality sometimes
-sets the vulgar girl at a
-disadvantage. Of Tennyson
-she said the other day&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"I don't pretend to understand
-him any more than
-Browning, but then he tootles
-on prettily, and that's what I
-like in poetry."</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w125">
-<img src="images/i_212b.jpg" width="125" height="259" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">{213}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>A main difference between Browning and
-Tennyson was here correctly set forth, but the
-phrasing was in questionable taste. "Tootles"
-is a good word, but to say that Tennyson
-"tootles on prettily," is to understate his
-merits. It shall here be pointed out in passing
-that "I don't pretend" is a favourite form of
-asseveration with the vulgar girl, and is one
-which she should try to vary, if only because
-it inferentially asserts that other people do
-pretend.</p>
-
-<p>The vulgar girl is "by way of being" (her
-own phrase) witty. One part of her wit is to
-say "muchly" for much, and another part of
-it is to say "free gratis" for free of charge.</p>
-
-<p>Flippancy as a substitute for wit so often
-evokes mirth that the vulgar girl as would-be
-wit not incomprehensibly
-largely indulges in it. I
-sat beside her once during
-a performance of Beethoven's
-Septett, one of the
-loveliest things in music,
-with here and there a
-heart-delighting gaiety in
-it. During the fifth movement
-of it she whispered
-to me&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Isn't it like 'The Bogie Man'?"</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w125">
-<img src="images/i_213a.jpg" width="125" height="167" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p>The levity in what follows was even more
-remarkable. The speaker was a young bride.</p>
-
-<p>"I didn't feel a
-bit nervous at my
-wedding," she
-said. "You see,
-I have been used
-to private theatricals."</p>
-
-<p>A girl like that
-mistakes gaiety of
-head for gaiety of
-heart.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w200">
-<img src="images/i_213b.jpg" width="200" height="204" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">Her
-first
-appearance in a
-new
-role</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>As a sample of
-vulgar girl-wit at
-its crudest, I give the following, in which a
-girl spoke of a lady&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"She couldn't turn white,
-but she went the colour of an
-unripe tomato."</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w125">
-<img src="images/i_213c.jpg" width="125" height="114" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">Upset
-by
-Tomato
-sauce</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The vulgar girl who is "by
-way of being" witty is not "by
-way of being" sentimental, and
-is rather addicted to signing her
-letters "Your's," which word she believes to be
-rightly written as above, with an apostrophe.
-This girl, for the rest, is generally good-natured,
-and her vein of censure is more often
-odd than terrible. Thus she said the other
-day of a dentist&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"He is a horrible little snob, but that
-doesn't matter when
-he gets into your
-mouth."</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w175">
-<img src="images/i_213d.jpg" width="175" height="128" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">An
-old
-Fairy Tale</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>As often as not
-the vulgar girl has
-both sense and sensibility.
-Of the latter
-fact she is profoundly
-ashamed, and has
-been known to say of a book that has deeply
-agitated her&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"I got to feel quite eye-in-water over it."</p>
-
-<p>She affects to care, only for the gaieties of
-life, but knows something of its gravities, and
-has often a bit of heroine in her. The worst
-thing about her is her speech. "Jolly" is
-her favourite adverb. She is jolly glad when
-she is not jolly mad, and she will soon describe
-herself as jolly sad. She uses the verb
-"mashed" hideously; where her prototype
-of twenty years ago said "swell" she says
-"swagger;" and she does not stick at saying
-"beastly." For the rest, she has always
-some pet word of the hour. Thus "dotty"
-is an adjective now much in favour with her.
-Thereby hangs a tale. The vulgar girl sometimes
-knows Italian, and it was she who
-translated a line from a famous lady's epitaph&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">"<i>Vergine magnanime, dotta, divina.</i>"<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">"A virgin magnanimous, dotty, divine."<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>On the other hand there are vulgar girls
-who do not know Latin, and one of them has
-been known to say "effluvia" for "smell,"
-the Latin for "smell" being "effluvium."</p>
-
-<p>The pronunciation of her own language is
-by some thought to offer insuperable difficulties
-to the English vulgar girl, who pronounces the
-"t" in "often" but does not pronounce it in
-"Westminster," whose favourite colour, she
-has been heard to aver, is "terrar cottar,"
-who plays an instrument which she calls "the
-varlin," who says "to<i>wards</i>" and "inter<i>est</i>ing,"
-who pronounces "ate" "et," and
-whose vocabulary has been known to include
-the words "pantomine," "Feb'uary" and
-"sec'etary." So far is this list from exhausting
-the faults of pronunciation of the said
-vulgar girl, that it must be added that she
-gives to no one vowel its proper sound, while
-among the consonants "h" initial and "g"
-final stumble her. She is particularly careless
-regarding the latter consonant when the
-form which her vulgarity takes is that of
-would-be "smartness."</p>
-
-<p>Very abominable to this
-girl is grammar, which is
-all but invariably set at
-defiance by her. Thus,
-even when she does not
-say "it were," as did Mrs.
-Cluppins, she favours such
-phrasing as "those sort of,"
-"very pleased," "different
-to" and "between you
-and I."</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w125">
-<img src="images/i_213e.jpg" width="125" height="207" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">A
-model</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Her predilection for abbreviations
-is another
-marked feature of the vulgar
-girl. To "'bus" she has lately added "biz,"
-and "spec" has found her approval.</p>
-
-<p>The pity of it!</p>
-
-<p>Just as she has always a favourite word, she
-has mostly a favourite phrase. In one instance
-known to me it is "You know what I mean,"
-and everyone knows what she means, as well
-everyone may.</p>
-
-<p>Take this assertion&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"It's one of those schools where they sleep
-in carbuncles&mdash;you know what I mean."</p>
-
-<p>Of course everyone knows what she means.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w250">
-<img src="images/i_213f.jpg" width="250" height="267" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">not
-omnivorous</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Or take this&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"I can't be in six or seven places at one;
-I'm not omnivorous&mdash;you know what I mean."</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w125">
-<img src="images/i_213g.jpg" width="125" height="138" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">An
-extreme
-view</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Of course everyone knows what she means.</p>
-
-<p>They call her Mrs. Malaprop; but, in point
-of fact, her case is a notable improvement
-upon that of Sheridan's heroine, the ignorance
-of that lady having been of a shade by just so
-much deeper that it left her unwitting of the
-fact that she was wrong. The girl here in
-view has a shrewd suspicion that she is wrong,
-but pays her hearers the compliment of
-assuming that they will understand her. In
-only one instance, so far as has come to my
-knowledge, has she ever overtaxed her listener's
-powers of comprehension. She spoke of a
-living novelist.</p>
-
-<p>"I can't bear his books," she said.
-"They're so very <i>femme de chambre</i>&mdash;you
-know what I mean."</p>
-
-<p>Not only did the person addressed not
-know what she meant, but he will not now
-be induced to believe that she meant "<i>fin de
-sicle</i>," and unconsciously used what, it seems
-to some of us, was a very happy substitute
-for this rather hackneyed phrase.</p>
-
-<p>I have in the foregoing dwelt more particularly
-on what is to me the most striking fact
-in connection with the vulgar girl, the base
-uses to which she puts her native speech; that
-my account of her may not, however, be
-wholly inadequate, I have also conferred with
-persons whose views on manners and deportment,
-as frequently expressed by them, have
-led me to believe that they may be better able
-than I am to point out what, from the social
-standpoint, constitutes a vulgar girl. Of the
-many <i>data</i> supplied me, I give below a few.</p>
-
-<p>The vulgar girl is "arch."</p>
-
-<p>The vulgar girl is "coy."</p>
-
-<p>The vulgar girl loves "chaff."</p>
-
-<p>The vulgar girl has sidelong
-looks.</p>
-
-<p>The vulgar girl calls milk
-"cream" and bacon "ham."</p>
-
-<p>The vulgar girl shouts or
-whispers.</p>
-
-<p>The vulgar girl thinks all
-other girls vulgar.</p>
-
-<p>The vulgar girl has never
-been told, or has been told in vain, to sit up
-and put her knees together.</p>
-
-<p>The vulgar girl is the girl of whom the
-vulgar boy says that she is "not half a bad
-sort."</p>
-
-<p class='center'>(<i>To be continued.</i>)</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w300">
-<img src="images/i_213h.jpg" width="300" height="258" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">{214}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="OUR_HERO" id="OUR_HERO">"OUR HERO."</a></h2>
-
-<p class='ph3'>A TALE OF THE FRANCO-ENGLISH WAR NINETY YEARS AGO.</p>
-
-<p class='ph3'><span class="smcap">By</span> AGNES GIBERNE, Author of "Sun, Moon and Stars," "The Girl at the Dower House," etc.</p>
-
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XIV.</h3>
-
-<p class='ph3'>IN A FORTIFIED
-TOWN.</p>
-
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap" src="images/i_214.jpg" width="125" height="229" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">It</span> was growing
-dark when at
-length they
-drove through
-the gates into
-Verdun.</p>
-
-<p>No one then
-said a needless
-word, not
-even Roy. The
-sense of banishment
-and of captivity pressed
-upon them all with a new
-force, at the sight of this
-fortified town, with its
-massive encircling walls,
-its iron gates, its pervading
-gendarmerie. If any lack of
-realisation of their true position had
-helped them hitherto, it had small
-chance of surviving this hour.</p>
-
-<p>At the gate they had to pause, a
-gendarme coming to the coach door.
-He said something to Denham, which
-made Colonel Baron ask sharply&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Eh, what's that?"</p>
-
-<p>"We are to go first to the citadel.
-Not necessary for Mrs. Baron and Roy.
-You and I might walk it, sir, and send
-them on."</p>
-
-<p>"No, no," Mrs. Baron interposed;
-"I cannot go on alone. We will keep
-together."</p>
-
-<p>"A pity," murmured Ivor; and Colonel
-Baron looked doubtfully from him to his
-wife.</p>
-
-<p>"I am not going to do it," she
-repeated, with her manner of graceful
-determination; and then, earnestly,
-"Do not ask it of me&mdash;pray do not!"
-No more could be said, and the man was
-ordered to drive on.</p>
-
-<p>Verdun at that date lay in the then
-French province of Lorraine, the then
-French department of the Meuse, upon
-which river it was built. Distant from
-Paris somewhere about one hundred and
-fifty miles, it was also within about fifty
-miles, in different directions, of two
-towns which have since become vividly
-historic, Sdan and Metz. The river
-thereabouts follows a tortuous course,
-and the lower part of Verdun stood
-mainly on little islands in the Meuse,
-while the upper part led to the French
-citadel, which crowned a rocky summit.</p>
-
-<p>The valley, containing the town, ran
-north-west and south-east, being surrounded
-by hills.</p>
-
-<p>On reaching the citadel Mrs. Baron
-and Roy were desired by the Colonel to
-remain in the coach, while he and
-Denham disappeared within, there to be
-carefully examined and closely questioned,
-and having again to give their
-parole. After which they came out, the
-Colonel saying shortly&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"That business is done! Tell them
-where to go, Den. They seem determined
-to know us again."</p>
-
-<p>"Were they civil?" his wife asked.</p>
-
-<p>"No end of a fuss, my dear. As if
-the word of an English gentleman were
-not sufficient. Close description of us
-both written in the register."</p>
-
-<p>Once more they drove on, Roy gazing
-from side to side, noting the small
-insignificant shops, and exclaiming at
-occasional peeps of the river with an
-interest which never quite failed him.
-The others were for the most part silent.
-Mrs. Baron's eyes were dim, the Colonel
-was pre-occupied, and Ivor, usually the
-most observant of men, seemed to see
-nothing.</p>
-
-<p>Presently they stopped before the gateway
-of a large old house or small private
-"htel," with an untidy little courtyard.
-An old Frenchman, in quaint dress,
-grey-haired, with an imposing pig-tail,
-came to meet them, bowing profoundly
-to the gentlemen, and still more profoundly
-to Mrs. Baron.</p>
-
-<p>"C'est, sans doute, Monsieur le
-Colonel&mdash;et Madame&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>Colonel Baron's particular gift did not
-lie in the direction of foreign languages.
-He never could talk French, and probably
-he never would, no matter how
-many years he might be compelled to
-live in France.</p>
-
-<p>"Oui, monsieur. Bon jour. C'est
-nous qui sont viendrai," he responded,
-feeling it incumbent on him to say something,
-as he descended from the old
-coach. "J'espre que vous tes bien.
-Je suis bien aise que nous sommes haut&mdash;pas
-bas&mdash;pas prs de le rivire. Bother
-their grammar, Denham; you can do
-it better than I. Just say what's
-suitable."</p>
-
-<p>Denham obeyed, and the next object
-which dawned upon Roy's perceptions
-was the sad and gentle face of Lucille
-de St. Roques. He seized her hand
-vehemently.</p>
-
-<p>"I say, mademoiselle, it's nice to
-find you here. Isn't it, Den? Mamma,
-this is Mademoiselle de St. Roques.
-Papa, you know she helped to nurse
-me after I'd had small-pox. Are we
-going to live upstairs, mademoiselle?
-Is that what it's to be? The whole
-upstairs, all to ourselves? What fun!
-Which way is it? Oh, I see! This
-way, mamma. Those poor horses do
-look tired, just half-starved, and so
-skinny. Is there a stable for them?
-Are we to have tea? Dinner! that's
-right. We didn't get half a dinner to-day,
-and I'm famished. What a droll
-old staircase? Do look out of this
-window, mamma."</p>
-
-<p>Roy's flow of spirits helped them all.
-The Colonel and his wife gratefully
-expressed their thanks to the French
-girl for her past kindness to their boy,
-both being much attracted by her
-face and her pretty manner as she led
-the way upstairs to the first floor. There
-stood Madame Courant, a fat and
-smiling little Frenchwoman, ready to
-bestow unlimited welcomes upon the
-unfortunate foreigners.</p>
-
-<p>Lucille had exchanged bows with
-Ivor at first, and then had a few words
-with him, scanning his face as she
-talked, with rather troubled glances.
-There was, however, small leisure at
-first for any quiet conversation. The
-rooms had to be inspected, and they
-were found to be not at all bad as to
-size, though meagrely furnished. Lucille
-had set her heart on making everything
-wear as far as possible an English look,
-using her childish recollections of a home
-across the Channel; and if she was less
-successful than she had hoped, nobody
-betrayed the fact. It was clear to them
-all how hard she had worked to render
-the place comfortable.</p>
-
-<p>"But it has been no trouble&mdash;non,
-vraiment&mdash;not at all," she assured them,
-with her pensive smile, when they
-apologised.</p>
-
-<p>While sincerely anxious to help, full
-of sympathy for their position, and most
-desirous to cheer them up, she plainly
-feared to be guilty of intrusion, and very
-soon she took herself off with Madame
-Courant to the ground floor. A somewhat
-clumsy but well-intentioned maiden
-had been deputed to wait upon the
-upstairs party&mdash;probably had been hired
-for the purpose, since Madame Courant
-did most of her own house-work&mdash;and
-dinner was laid in the smaller salon in
-readiness for their arrival.</p>
-
-<p>On the whole that first meal might be
-reckoned a success. Madame Courant
-was no mean cook; and though not
-much could be said as to the actual
-waiting, from an English point of view,
-that was a minor matter, compared with
-the comfort of finding clean and cosy
-quarters, not to speak of a kind reception.
-Roy did his best to supply all
-deficiencies in the conversational line,
-and his efforts were seconded, though
-not vigorously, by Denham.</p>
-
-<p>When, however, dinner was at an end,
-and they had moved into the larger
-salon, which was to be their drawing-room&mdash;when
-a long evening lay before
-them, and there was nothing that had
-to be done, beyond a certain amount of
-unpacking and arranging, which no one
-felt disposed to begin upon at once&mdash;then
-a change came. Then the shadow
-of their captivity descended heavily
-upon them all, even upon the valiant
-Roy; and for once the spirit of cheerfulness
-and of keeping up seemed to
-vanish.</p>
-
-<p>For a quarter of an hour they all
-remained together, no one speaking.
-No one was able to speak. They had
-nothing whatever to say. And presently,
-when this had gone on a little
-while, Mrs. Baron made a move, retreating
-into her own bedroom, avowedly
-to "see to a few things," but in reality,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">{215}</a></span>
-as they all knew, to indulge in a breakdown&mdash;her
-husband, after a brief hesitation,
-going thither also. Denham had
-flagged completely, retreating to a shady
-corner near the big fireplace, where he
-could scarcely be seen; and for Ivor to
-flag meant the flagging of everybody.
-As for Roy&mdash;but that he would have
-been ashamed, counting himself already
-almost a man, he could at this stage have
-flung himself on the ground and cried
-like a little child for very home-sickness.</p>
-
-<p>He wanted Molly&mdash;oh, most awfully!
-He wanted her this evening more than
-he had ever wanted anything or anybody
-in his whole life. The craving that
-took possession of him for Molly's face,
-Molly's voice, Molly's companionship&mdash;the
-passionate desire to have dear little
-Molly once more by his side&mdash;was a pain
-never to be forgotten.</p>
-
-<p>Roy did not know how to bear himself
-under it. He had nothing to do, nothing
-with which to pass the time. He stood
-at the window, looking out upon the
-darkness, trying desperately to be cool
-and stoical, as one five minutes crawled
-by after another. Denham never moved,
-never spoke a word. Roy could just make
-out his dark outline, as motionless as a
-carved image, a few yards distant. If
-only Denham would have talked, if
-something would have happened, if
-somebody would have come in, it would
-have been easier to keep going. But
-nobody came, nothing happened, and
-Denham did not stir.</p>
-
-<p>Roy drummed with his fingers on the
-window-sill. He could hear shrill voices
-out in the street, not far off, and the
-sound of some tuneless instrument. One
-of the two candles was gone with Mrs.
-Baron, leaving the room dim. He tried
-to listen, tried not to think. And just
-when he counted himself victorious, there
-was a queer little catch of his breath
-which sounded suspicious. Roy drummed
-again angrily, hoping that Denham had
-not heard. He might be asleep, he was so
-still. But, after a slight break, he said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Come here."</p>
-
-<p>Roy unwillingly obeyed. He would
-have liked to refuse, but he looked upon
-Ivor as in some sort his commanding
-officer, so of course he had no choice.</p>
-
-<p>"They're making no end of a row out
-there," he remarked in a tone of profound
-indifference, as he lounged nearer.
-"Can't think what it's all for. Just
-listen."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes; I wish they would stop."</p>
-
-<p>"Don't know what's it's all about.
-Something or other&mdash;going on. I
-shouldn't wonder&mdash;if they're quarrelling."</p>
-
-<p>That odd little catch again.</p>
-
-<p>"Feel very bad this evening, Roy?"</p>
-
-<p>The question took Roy by surprise,
-and a lump in his throat prevented an
-immediate reply.</p>
-
-<p>Denham understood.</p>
-
-<p>"Never mind," he said. "It's the
-same with all of us, you know. And
-there's one comfort for you&mdash;that Molly
-wants you at least as much as you want
-her. Some people would give a good
-deal for that certainty."</p>
-
-<p>Roy tried to explain matters away.</p>
-
-<p>"I didn't say&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"My dear boy, there's no need for you
-to say anything; I know well enough.
-Don't you see?"</p>
-
-<p>Denham's chair shook as Roy leant
-against it, but no further sound came.
-He fought his battle courageously, and
-Denham waited.</p>
-
-<p>"We shall all feel better to-morrow,"
-the latter presently remarked. "It's a
-strange place, and things look uncomfortable
-to-night&mdash;can't well do otherwise.
-Suppose you and I have a game
-of chess. Better than to sit brooding
-over what can't be cured. My little
-travelling set is somewhere about, I
-believe."</p>
-
-<p>"O yes." Roy's voice told of
-instant relief. "You gave it to me to
-take care of. Don't you mind a game,
-really? I should like that. Will you
-give me your queen?"</p>
-
-<p>"No; not to-day. I'm not at my
-best. We'll try on even terms. Get out
-the pieces."</p>
-
-<p>Roy obeyed with alacrity, and whatever
-the move meant to Denham, it
-served to lift Roy out of his unwonted fit
-of misery. He was soon deeply absorbed
-in the mimic fight, and for once he found
-himself on the way to win an easy
-victory. Roy became exultant&mdash;till the
-honour and glory of success were impaired
-by the casual discovery that Ivor
-could not tell a knight from a bishop
-except by feeling. Roy stared wonderingly
-into the spare bronzed face.</p>
-
-<p>"Why, Den!"</p>
-
-<p>"All right; this is my bishop."</p>
-
-<p>"I say, you didn't take that for a
-knight?"</p>
-
-<p>"I believe I was under the delusion
-for a moment."</p>
-
-<p>"But why? There, now it's your
-turn. Oh, I say!&mdash;you're going to move
-my king."</p>
-
-<p>Denham laughed slightly.</p>
-
-<p>"I am rather a futile opponent, seemingly.
-Never mind. Now it is your
-turn."</p>
-
-<p>"What's the matter? Can't you
-see?"</p>
-
-<p>"Not well; just a headache. Go on;
-you'll soon end the game at this rate."</p>
-
-<p>Roy showed himself capable of heroism.
-Though he had never yet beaten
-Denham in full fight, without having
-some of his adversary's best pieces
-presented to him, though the desire
-of his heart was for a victory, and
-though he was on the high road to
-administering checkmate, one more
-glance decided him. He swept his arm
-over the board.</p>
-
-<p>Denham half smiled, and made no
-protest.</p>
-
-<p>"You are a kind fellow," he said, as
-he went back to his former retreat; and
-Roy dropped on the floor to pick up the
-scattered pieces.</p>
-
-<p>"Why didn't you tell me? You'd no
-business to play. Can't I do anything
-for you?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, if you don't mind"&mdash;after a
-moment's racking of his brain to think
-of anything that might keep the boy
-occupied. "I wish you would unpack
-my valise&mdash;just the things that I shall
-want to-night."</p>
-
-<p>Roy was delighted and went off at full
-speed. In the passage he found himself
-face to face with Lucille, and all but
-rushed into her arms. Lucille drew
-back.</p>
-
-<p>"I say! Oh, I beg your pardon,
-mademoiselle. I'm going to unpack for
-Den. He's just floored; can't even play
-chess. It's all this horrid beastly bother,
-having to come to Verdun, you know.
-He never used to be like that. Den was
-always up to anything. What have you
-got there?" as she held up one hand.
-"A letter!"</p>
-
-<p>"It is medicine for Monsieur le Capitaine&mdash;from
-England," Lucille said,
-with a look of heartfelt pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>"It really is from England! Won't
-he be glad? Where did you get it
-from? You shall give it to him yourself.
-Yes; I declare you shall."</p>
-
-<p>Roy flung open the salon door, and
-announced, "Here's Mademoiselle de
-St. Roques. Den, she's got something
-for you! Guess what it is. Come in,
-Mademoiselle."</p>
-
-<p>Ivor stood up, not grateful to Roy at
-this moment.</p>
-
-<p>"Pray take a seat," he urged.</p>
-
-<p>"It's a letter&mdash;a letter&mdash;a letter from
-England," cried the boy.</p>
-
-<p>"You have brought this from the
-post?" asked Denham, as he received
-from her hand a folded and sealed
-packet.</p>
-
-<p>"Non, it is not that. The letter
-arrives from M. de Bertrand. It was
-send to him from England under cover,
-and he waited till he should learn your
-address and have opportunity to send it
-with safety. When I wrote to him that
-you all were ordered to Verdun, then he
-sent the letter to me by one travelling
-this way. It is but now arrived. I
-am glad!" Lucille added, under her
-breath.</p>
-
-<p>Denham bent nearer to the candle,
-trying with drawn brows to make out
-the handwriting. As he did so, a
-curious light crept over his face. Lucille
-thought she could read its meaning.</p>
-
-<p>"You are very good, mademoiselle.
-I am much indebted to you and to M. de
-Bertrand," he said.</p>
-
-<p>"Den, I do believe it's Polly's
-writing!" exclaimed Roy.</p>
-
-<p>Denham glanced towards him.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes; it is from Polly."</p>
-
-<p class='center'>(<i>To be continued.</i>)</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w275">
-<img src="images/i_215.jpg" width="275" height="103" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">{216}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="FROCKS_FOR_TO-MORROW" id="FROCKS_FOR_TO-MORROW">FROCKS FOR TO-MORROW.</a></h2>
-
-<p class='ph3'><span class="smcap">By</span> "THE LADY DRESSMAKER."</p>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter w500">
-<img src="images/i_216.jpg" width="500" height="531" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">EVENING DRESSES FOR CHRISTMAS FESTIVITIES.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> winter is always distinguished by a
-rather dowdy style of dress, especially in
-town, where, for at least three months of the
-year, the days are so dark and the light so
-poor at best that everyone says, "It really
-cannot matter what one puts on in such
-sombre weather as this." Such is the sentiment
-expressed by the general public, but, of
-course, does not apply to those who, having
-carriages at their disposal, can blossom out
-like the lilies of King Solomon, and be
-carried over the mud and through the gloom
-without let or hindrance. It is only on sunny
-days during the winter and at Church Parade
-in Hyde Park that one sees the brighter side
-of winter dress. Otherwise it only blooms in
-the shops, at the dressmakers', and at the
-endless afternoon teas which constitute the
-main amusement during the winter. One
-must have at least one nice walking-dress for
-the winter, in spite of the gloom, for these
-last-named festive occasions, and one generally
-needs a cape or mantle as well to wear
-in turn with our costume or with it as we
-may require. Besides this, most women have
-a certain amount of "wearing out" to do of
-clothes that must put in a second winter.
-Those wise people who have established a
-kind of rule for themselves in the purchase of
-dress get a handsome cape or mantle one
-year and a handsome gown the next, the
-latter becoming less visible and important the
-second year when worn under the new mantle.
-Both of these should come from first-rate
-shops, in order to get the full value out of
-them. Then there are the people who wait
-for the sales to supply themselves with winter
-clothes, and say they manage to finish out the
-last year's stock by this means in the still
-darker and shorter days before Christmas. I
-always consider the wearing out of one's
-winter things a grievous bother which falls
-most heavily on the shoulders of those who
-are very careful wearers of their garments. I
-know people who really are never able to
-wear out their clothes, and become quite
-dispirited at the constant sight of them. I
-know one lady who is able to clothe several
-others poorer than herself because she takes
-such good care of what she wears, and things
-are hardly worn in appearance when she has
-them repaired and brushed up.</p>
-
-<p>The class which has the most difficulty in
-clothing themselves so as to present a respectable
-appearance is composed of these very<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">{217}</a></span>
-poor ladies, who are governesses, lady-helps,
-or companions, and no doubt my readers will
-have noticed the moving appeals issued by
-many of the societies and agencies which are
-interested in procuring work for them. As
-we are always anxious to find out good works
-for our women and girls, we commend to
-them this one, as one of the most blessed both
-to giver and receiver.</p>
-
-<p>The return to fashion of dresses made from
-the same material entirely instead of those
-which have been so long in wear, which
-consisted of a blouse, more or less handsome,
-and a skirt, has brought in a necessity for
-mantles and capes, and so these are really the
-most fashionable of the out-of-door garments
-for the winter months. There is no fear,
-however, of the skirt and jacket disappearing
-from amongst us, for they have been found
-too useful to lose their place in our esteem;
-and the winter jackets are, some of them, very
-pretty and tight-fitting, with large buttons,
-and generally of three-quarter length, though
-there are many quite short ones, but which
-seem more used for cycling or golf than for
-real walking or driving.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w400">
-<img src="images/i_217a.jpg" width="400" height="562" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">TWO WINTER GOWNS.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>One of these costumes with a tight-fitting
-coat is shown in our illustration of "a gown
-with braid and fur," which is a very handsome
-example of the walking-gowns of the winter.
-The skirt is made with the fashionable tightness,
-the much-worn shaped flounce, and the
-braiding is carried down the front on either
-side in a graceful arabesque design, which is
-wider and fuller in detail at the top near the
-waist. The points are braided in the same
-manner, and the tops of the sleeves. The
-fronts have revers of mink fur. The dress
-itself is in dark blue cloth, and the braiding
-is in black. The hat is of blue velvet, with
-white and green wings, and blue and green
-velvet trimmings. This admixture of blue
-and green seems more popular than ever this
-winter, and I have frequently seen a blue hat
-with a bright green velvet choux bow placed
-in a conspicuous position in front.</p>
-
-<p>The choux and the Louis XII. or true
-lovers' knot are the two fashionable bows of
-the season, for hats and bonnets as well as for
-dress. The first-named seems ubiquitous in
-evening dress, where black velvet also appears
-to be most popular as a trimming.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w250">
-<img src="images/i_217b.jpg" width="250" height="458" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">GOWN WITH BRAID AND FUR.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Both velvet and velveteen are much worn,
-and are suited to the fashions of the day, and
-the velveteen blouse retains its popularity,
-but is more dressy and fanciful than it was.
-In some cases velvet is used for the coat-shaped
-bodices, with short square tails that
-are much seen, and these have almost invariably
-fancy vests or yokes. In most instances,
-too, these are of finely tucked silk muslin,
-which, in cream or white, is quite the most
-popular material for them, in spite of its
-perishable nature and apparent unseasonableness.</p>
-
-<p>So far as materials are concerned, everything
-that is clinging and soft is sought after, and
-even the rustling silks that lined our skirts
-and gave us such a feeling of opulence have
-been relinquished in favour of something more
-clinging. Cashmere and nuns' veiling are used
-for the lining of day dresses, and China silks
-for evening ones. For slight people this
-clinging effect is sometimes trying, but where
-stout people are concerned the matter becomes
-worse, and we shall hear of all kinds of cures
-for obesity in order to wear the new skirts.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, as is usual at this season, many
-evening dresses for small Christmas festivities
-are simple, and our illustration shows three of
-these, which are inexpensive and pretty. The
-first seated figure to the right wears a pink
-silk muslin, plain for wearing over the accordion-kilted
-skirt, and having a small black
-leaf-like pattern on it for the pointed overskirt;
-a ruching of rose-coloured silk goes
-round the latter part of the bodice and sleeves,
-and the back is finished with a wide band and
-bow with ends of rose colour. This can, of
-course, be carried out in any hue, but in white
-or cream-colour it is very pretty, and there are
-such numbers of fancy gauzes and nets that a
-pretty choice can be made which would be
-more inexpensive than the model we present.</p>
-
-<p>The centre figure wears a dress of <i>mousseline-de-soie</i>
-of a pale shade of Parma violet,
-which is trimmed with narrow ribbons, drawn<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">{218}</a></span>
-up to form small ruches. These are of a
-slightly darker violet. The small Eton jacket
-is of the same shade of violet velvet or satin,
-with bands of velvet and paste buckles. The
-standing-up figure wears a dress of jet-embroidered
-net, with bands of <i>passementerie</i> on
-the front of the bodice. The evening wrap is
-of a soft yellow brocade, which is lined with
-a pale violet, and trimmed with flounces of
-lace and silk. The collar is edged with white
-fur, and a bow of chiffon ornaments the neck
-at the back. In giving these dresses I should
-observe that, although they seem costly, they
-can be copied in less expensive materials.
-Nuns' veiling, China silk, velveteen, taffetas,
-Russian net, and Brussels net are all in
-fashion, and all are comparatively so moderate
-in price as to be attainable by those who have
-slender purses. This season we also have the
-embroidered net skirts that were introduced
-last year, with the improvement that this
-season the bodice-piece is sold as well. So
-we have not to make troublesome inquiries
-and huntings for the material to decorate
-them. There seems to be a tendency likewise
-to return to the use of a three-quarter length
-sleeve, which fits the arm smoothly as far as
-the elbow and terminates in a frill. The long
-net and chiffon sleeves are still worn, and I
-notice that there are some very pretty high
-net bodices without sleeves, or, at least, with
-a few folds of satin, which answer the purpose.
-These will be a novelty if they should
-be adopted, and will be charming for the
-evening with all thin materials.</p>
-
-<p>The illustration of two winter gowns shows
-one of the new skirts and a bodice fastened at
-the back. The skirt is also fastened there in the
-newest fashion; the trimming consists of rows
-of fine black braid, the dress being of fine
-cloth, of a <i>pervenche</i> blue. The bodice is
-trimmed with points of velvet, of a darker
-shade of blue, and the same is used for the
-bows at the back. The second dress is one of
-those tucked throughout. It is of a soft satin
-cloth, of a pale shade of grey. The revers
-are braided, and there is a front of dark-grey
-velvet and a high collar, with the lining
-braided, like the revers. I hope you will
-notice that this skirt opens on one side, usually
-the left, and it is finished by a row of tiny
-buttons, or by a small ruching of ribbon.</p>
-
-<p>A great deal of this ribbon ruching is seen,
-as well as much piping. Silk braids, very
-fine and very narrow, in black and white,
-form a feature of this year's decorations,
-and silver braids as well. Crystal buttons
-are more liked than paste or steel ones,
-and there is a craze for old lace and for
-mixing fur with it. Black and white are in as
-much favour as this mixture has always found
-during the last four years, and the two are
-constantly mixed in trimmings.</p>
-
-<p>I think I mentioned in my last that the hair
-was worn low on the neck&mdash;certainly far lower
-than has been the custom for some little time.
-But I do not find that the knot of hair is quite
-so low just now. Evidently the idea has not
-quite "caught on," as the slang phrase has it,
-and most of the well-dressed heads I have
-lately seen have had the coil of hair at the
-back of the head midway down. Perhaps,
-later on, we shall see more of the low hair
-dressing than we do now.</p>
-
-<p>Truly the swing of the pendulum has quite
-carried us away from the neat and ever-becoming
-black stockings, and the new ones
-are a study in colour and design. I think the
-tartan ones will be worn, and will look well;
-but I cannot say I like the others; nevertheless,
-that may be because one has grown used to a
-lack of colour for so long.</p>
-
-<p>So far as boots and shoes are concerned,
-the most fashionable people wear the American
-ones with their extremely pointed toes and
-narrow feet, but it is open to the sensible to
-wear something more comfortable if they do
-not mind a loss of style, for we cannot be
-really smart unless our poor feet be pinched
-and pointed to the last degree.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div>
-
-
-<h2><a name="OUR_PROSPECTUS_PUZZLE_REPORT" id="OUR_PROSPECTUS_PUZZLE_REPORT">OUR PROSPECTUS PUZZLE REPORT.</a></h2>
-
-
-<h3>SOLUTION.</h3>
-
-<p class='ph3'>ANOTHER NAUGHT.</p>
-
-<p class='ph3'><span class="smcap">A Roundel.</span></p>
-
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">Time hastens onwards to the day<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">When our good, trusty printer ought<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Upon our numbers to display<br /></span>
-<span class="i18">Another naught.<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i2">Oh! how tremendous is the thought:&mdash;<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">A thousand weeks have passed away<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">Since out our magazine was brought!<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">We love our work, it is but play;<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">"<i>Bon Voyage</i>" to the bark high-fraught;<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">And printer, sing as you in-lay<br /></span>
-<span class="i18">Another naught.<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-
-
-<h4><span class="smcap">Prize Winners.</span></h4>
-
-<p class='center'><i>Ten Shillings Each.</i></p>
-
-
-<ul><li>J. Hunt, 42, Francis Road, Birmingham.</li>
-<li>A. Phillips, 15, South Hill Park, Hampstead.</li>
-<li>Emily M. Wood, Woodbank, Southport.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-<p class='center'><i>Five Shillings Each.</i></p>
-
-
-<ul><li>Margaret Baggallay, 3, Clarence Lawn, Dover.</li>
-<li>Marie Behrendt, Scanthorpe, Doncaster.</li>
-<li>Lily Belling, Wribbenhall, Bewdley.</li>
-<li>Miss H. M. Brown, Longformacus, Duns, N.B.</li>
-<li>Charlotte D. Cole, 7, High Street, Beckenham.</li>
-<li>M. A. C. Crabb, Ipplepen, Alexandra Road, Hemel Hempstead.</li>
-<li>Agnes Dewhurst, 32, Lethbridge Road, Southport.</li>
-<li>Miss M. Hodgkinson, 2, Feversham Terrace, York.</li>
-<li>Benjamin Marcroft, High Legh, Grosvenor Drive, New Brighton.</li>
-<li>Nellie Meikle, 2, Newsham Drive, Liverpool.</li>
-<li>Henzell G. Robson, 7, Oxford Terrace, Gateshead-on-Tyne.</li>
-<li>F. A. Powell, 75, Hythe Road, Swindon.</li>
-<li>Anne Sifton, 230, Goldhawk Road, Shepherd's Bush.</li>
-<li>M. Stuart, The Shrubbery, Grove Park, Kent.</li>
-<li>Ellen C. Tarrant, 2, Palace Grove, Bromley.</li>
-<li>Violet C. Todd, Ford, Cornhill-on-Tweed.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-<p class='center'><i>Very Highly Commended.</i></p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Acheson, Eliza Acworth, Lottie R.
-Biddle, E. J. Cameron, Mrs. J. Cumming,
-May Merrall, E. C. Milne, Lilla Patterson,
-Constance Taylor, Connie E. Thompson,
-Daisy Tyler, Martha Wood.</p>
-
-
-<p class='center'><i>For Artistic Execution.</i></p>
-
-<p>Maud Abbott.</p>
-
-
-<p class='center'><i>Highly Commended.</i></p>
-
-<p>Annie A. Arnott, Fanny Ashby, Ethel M.
-Atkins, Margaret Bailey, Eva M. Benson,
-R. S. Benson, E. K. Berry, Mary A. Blagg,
-Nancy Bolingbroke, M. S. Bourne, May
-Burlinsay, Annie J. Cather, Mabel E. Davis,
-Mrs. Deane, Edward R. Duffield, Alice M.
-Feurer, Emily Francis, Mrs. W. H. Gotch,
-Mrs. Grubbe, Edith E. Grundy, A. Hughes,
-George L. Ingram, Annie G. Luck, C. Y.
-MacGibbon, E. Mastin, Jessie Middlemiss,
-Mrs. Nicholls, Percy J. Powell, Alice M.
-Price, Gertrude Saffery, A. C. Sharp, Isabel
-Snell, Norah M. Sullivan, A. C. T., Phyllis
-Toker, Ann Toplis, Florence Whitlock, Mrs.
-Wigglesworth, E. Wilson.</p>
-
-
-<p class='center'><i>Honourable Mention.</i></p>
-
-<p>S. Ballard, Mary I. Chislett, Helen M.
-Coulthard, Mrs. H. Keel, K. H. Ingram,
-E. M. Le Motte, Charlotte Hayward,
-Florence Hayward, Ethel C. Hobbs, Edith L.
-Howse, Annette E. Jackson, Alice E. Johnson,
-Fred Lindley, Ethel C. McMaster, Elsa P.
-Neel, Charles Parr, Elizabeth A. Reynolds,
-Annie Saunders, Dorothy Smith, Ellen R.
-Smith, Gertrude Smith, May Tutte, Anna
-Walker, J. Walker, Julia Waltenberg, John
-R. Whyberd, G. Watherston.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-
-<h3>EXAMINERS' REPORT.</h3>
-
-<p>The insatiability of an editor who is clamouring
-daily for our words of wisdom compels us
-to be very brief. This is all the more to be
-regretted because with such a subject to
-handle we could have risen to great literary
-heights. But to work!</p>
-
-<p>The title was not "Another aught," the
-reason being that aught is not synonymous
-with naught. The difference between the two
-is considerable, "aught" signifying anything,
-"naught" nothing. The importance of this
-pleasing fact is often overlooked, especially by
-schoolchildren, who frequently speak of a
-cipher as "an aught," or, as they in their
-childish wisdom spell it "ought."</p>
-
-<p>In many solutions the final letter of
-"onwards" was omitted. Doubtless, "onward"
-is grammatically just as good, but as
-the "s" was in the puzzle it was a pity not to
-transfer it to the solution.</p>
-
-<p>The beginning of the third line seems to
-have caused trouble. Those who failed to
-find the true solution generally gave "On our
-three figures," or "On our first numbers."
-Both readings are good interpretations of the
-text, but the first is meaningless and the
-second is incorrect. With "On all our
-numbers "&mdash;adopted by a few solvers&mdash;we
-have little fault to find.</p>
-
-<p>Many competitors kindly pointed out that
-the minus sign in line 6 ought to have been
-the sign of division. Let us examine their
-contention closely. Two weeks divided by
-two yields one week and the beginning of the
-line would run "A thousand one week."
-Two weeks minus two yields weeks, clearly,
-and we need pursue the instruction no further.
-Some of the readings at this point were remarkable,
-<i>e.g.</i>, "A thousand days"; "Twelve
-thousand days": "A thousand years," and
-"A million weeks."</p>
-
-<p>We have always been accustomed to regard
-<span class="smcap">The Girl's Own Paper</span> with much veneration,
-but the idea of its having first seen the
-light something like fourteen thousand years
-before Adam is somewhat startling.</p>
-
-<p>In the next line, "G. O. P." often took the
-place of "magazine." Our dislike of such
-irritating abbreviations did not prevent us
-from doing justice to the reading which is
-rhythmically correct.</p>
-
-<p>The number of solvers who wrote "barque"
-for "bark" was amazing. The latter was in
-the puzzle and signifies any small vessel. The
-former was not in the puzzle and defines a
-vessel of a particular rig. And there is really
-no need for more.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">{219}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="IN_THE_TWILIGHT_SIDE_BY_SIDE" id="IN_THE_TWILIGHT_SIDE_BY_SIDE">IN THE TWILIGHT SIDE BY SIDE.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p class='ph3'><span class="smcap">By</span> RUTH LAMB.</p>
-
-
-<h3>PART III.</h3>
-
-<p class='ph3'>HOW TO GROW OLD.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class='center'>"They shall still bring forth fruit in old
-age" (Psalm xcii. 14).</p></div>
-
-<hr class='tb' />
-
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap" src="images/i_219.jpg" width="250" height="329" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">When</span> I was a child
-a dear old lady,
-who had been asking
-questions about my
-lessons, laid her
-gentle hand on my
-head and said, "I see you love
-school, my child. 'Learn
-young, learn fair.'"</p>
-
-<p>You, dear girl friends, will be at no loss to
-understand the teaching of the proverb. It
-says, in few words, that those lessons which
-are early imprinted on our minds are likely to
-have an abiding place in our memories and a
-lasting influence over our lives.</p>
-
-<p>There is one lesson amongst many which we
-ought to be constantly learning from the time
-that we can understand anything. It is, how
-to grow old.</p>
-
-<p>Do I see some of you smiling at each other,
-as if old age were such a far-away subject that
-it ought not to be introduced to my great
-gathering of girls? Why, if I could have
-spoken to you as children, one by one, I
-would have asked, "Are you learning how to
-grow old?"</p>
-
-<p>You ought to be, for the moment you
-began to live you started on the path that
-leads to old age. From that path none of us
-can turn aside and, perhaps without thinking
-much of the inevitable ending, we pursue our
-course thereon steadily and uninterruptedly.
-We may start on many other paths&mdash;those of
-duty, work, mental culture, etc.&mdash;and we may
-take up certain pursuits and relinquish them
-at our will, but the one onward journey is
-continuous. We travel by night and by day.
-Sleeping or waking, resting or working, we
-are ever progressing towards old age, whether
-we live to reach it or not.</p>
-
-<p>It is often said that every age has its special
-beauty, and yet I daresay many of you have
-never dreamed of associating the idea of beauty
-with old age. You are apt to claim it as the
-special prerogative of youth. Yet I believe
-that old age may be&mdash;and I assert that it
-ought to be in certain senses&mdash;the most
-beautiful of all, despite the white hair, the
-tremulous hand, the feeble step which seeks
-support from the strong arm of the young,
-and the wrinkles on brows that were once
-as smooth and fair as the fairest amongst
-yours.</p>
-
-<p>The young often shrink from the very
-thought of being old. One hears the girl in
-her teens whisper to her companion, as she
-glances at a third who is not out of her
-twenties, "She is getting to look quite old
-already. She might be five-and-thirty."</p>
-
-<p>The tone is half pitying, half disparaging,
-as if the object of the remark were somehow
-in fault because a few more years had passed
-over her young head than over the speaker's.</p>
-
-<p>Listen again to words from the lips of a
-girl who is just "sweet seventeen." (Alas
-that seventeen does not always deserve the
-adjective!) She has just stigmatised a friend
-of thirty as "a cross old thing." And for
-what? She has only been trying to bring her
-good common sense and sound judgment to
-bear upon the other's wilfulness. She is
-anxious to save her from doing a foolish thing
-on which her childish will is stubbornly set
-and which is certain to be followed by remorse
-and trouble.</p>
-
-<p>"Sweet seventeen" purses her pretty lips
-and tosses her foolish head whilst saying, "As
-if I were going to be ordered about by her!
-Cross old thing!" And she goes on her
-wilful way and pays for it.</p>
-
-<p>Still we must acknowledge that a dozen
-extra years do not always bring proportionate
-wisdom, any more than does the seventeenth
-birthday invariably carry sweetness in its train.
-We have to learn to grow old in such wise
-that each year's passage means also progress
-in everything that is best.</p>
-
-<p>It seems very strange&mdash;does it not?&mdash;that
-whilst everyone desires long life, so many
-dislike to look forward to old age in connection
-with themselves. Or, if they do, it is not so
-much in a frank and natural manner as in a
-secret and stealthy fashion. If they speak of
-it at all, they speak as of something which
-may be near to others, but is still far, far away
-from themselves. Such people would never
-tell you that they are learning how to grow
-old&mdash;striving each day after some knowledge
-which will tend towards the attainment of a
-really beautiful and lovable old age.</p>
-
-<p>The need for such a study is ignored by so
-many up to and beyond middle age, that one
-wonders little at its being ignored by the
-young. Yet other questions occupy their
-earnest attention in connection with increasing
-years.</p>
-
-<p>How to ward off the semblance of old age,
-for the reality cannot be deferred. How to
-look young in spite of it. How to conceal
-the number of the years that have passed over
-their heads. How best to utilise art so as to
-simulate the complexion of youth and to hide
-the marks of time on their features.</p>
-
-<p>Time is readily given in order to solve such
-questions to the exclusion of those higher
-lessons, attention to which would make old
-age the most beautiful and lovely of all.</p>
-
-<p>Girls, dear girls! you are generally keen
-observers of externals, and especially so in
-matters of female dress and adornment. If
-one of you has been at a social gathering,
-whether amongst humble workers or leaders
-in society, what is usually the first question
-asked by sisters or acquaintances on her
-return? Is it not about the dresses worn?
-You inquire how such a one looked, or if
-another again wore a dress which is too well
-known on account of its age. You want to
-hear all about novelties in the fashioning of
-new garments, and whether they were of a
-mode likely to be becoming to yourselves. It
-may be you give a little laugh as you say that
-such a girl would be sure to look dowdy, or
-inquire if the good taste of another was as
-conspicuous as usual.</p>
-
-<p>I am inclined to doubt whether you were as
-anxious to know how your friend was impressed
-by the words and conduct of those with whom
-she had been associating, or whether she had,
-during this little season of social enjoyment,
-received impressions likely to influence her for
-good. We ought to be learners in every place,
-but not merely in regard to externals.</p>
-
-<p>Now I want to ask you a question. I have
-given you credit for being keen observers.
-Tell me, can you imagine a picture more truly
-pitiable and contemptible than that of a
-woman on whose face is the stamp of age, but
-who imagines that she has succeeded in hiding
-it by paint and powder?</p>
-
-<p>One who hugs the thought that she has
-rendered her wrinkles invisible, or that her
-dyed hair, with its tell-tale line of grey near
-the roots, or the cunningly arranged golden
-hued substitute for whitened locks, deceives
-anyone but herself? All such shams make
-the old look older still. They add to the
-appearance of age instead of taking from it,
-and they rob old age of much of the beauty
-which is as real as that which pertains to the
-youth it tries to simulate. I am alluding to
-externals first because everyone sees them.</p>
-
-<p>I have no doubt that you have all discovered
-my liking for proverbial expressions. My
-native county is rich in these pithy sayings
-which convey so much meaning in few words.
-The subject of our present talk brings to mind
-one of these proverbs, which was often quoted
-in my hearing when I was a girl. I recall one
-occasion especially. A ruddy farmer turned to
-look after an elderly woman who had just
-passed him. She was girlishly dressed, and
-she strove to trip along in youthful fashion,
-feeling evidently well satisfied with herself,
-and claiming admiration by every gesture.</p>
-
-<p>What had our countryman to say about
-her appearance? He jogged his neighbour's
-elbow, and quoted the proverb, as he indicated
-the retreating figure with a jerk of his
-thumb: "Old ewe dressed lamb fashion."</p>
-
-<p>"Aye," said his friend, "and it's no good.
-Age will show in spite of paint and finery.
-She was turned twenty when I was twelve, and
-I'm over fifty-three to-day. Why, deary me!
-There's always somebody that remembers."</p>
-
-<p>These added words were as true as the
-proverb itself. There is always someone,
-amongst our many acquaintances and kinsfolk,
-who has a good memory for dates, and who
-can refer to the number of Life's milestones we
-have passed with unerring accuracy.</p>
-
-<p>I asked you if there could be anything
-more pitiable and contemptible than the sight
-of an elderly woman trying to defy time and
-age by such means as I have named?</p>
-
-<p>I will answer my own question, "Yes, there
-is. The sight of a girl who, possessing youth,
-health, and the share of good looks and
-attractiveness which must accompany these
-two things, is ever striving to improve Nature's
-handiwork by the use of unnatural means."
-Believe me, my dear girl friends, the sight of
-a young face disfigured by artificial colouring
-and unnaturally whitened by powder, of
-blackened eyebrows and eyelashes, together
-with similar shams, excites in my mind a
-feeling of true motherly regret. I love girls
-too well to say hard things or to speak of
-contempt for such practices; though they
-ought to be contemptible in the eyes of all
-pure and right-minded girls.</p>
-
-<p>One associates the use of them with small
-minds and natures whose chief end and aim
-are to gratify personal vanity and attract
-admiration, instead of striving to win respect
-by the exercise of far nobler powers. Can
-any girl be so self-deceived as to think she
-will win honest affection by such means?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">{220}</a></span>
-She may win it in spite of them, but it will be
-because the one who gives it is able to discover
-something better and more deserving of
-love beneath this miserable upper crust of
-deception.</p>
-
-<p>One is always ready to recognise, with
-gratitude, even a mistaken attempt made by
-the young with a view of giving pleasure to
-others. But I am sure that self-pleasing and
-the gratification of vanity are, in nearly every
-case, the incentives to such displays as I have
-condemned.</p>
-
-<p>In looking round me, I have been struck
-with the fact that some of the girls who use
-paint, powder, and what are, I am informed,
-known under the general name of "make-ups,"
-are just those to whom Nature has
-been specially liberal in the gift of beauty.</p>
-
-<p>Beauty, when joined to vanity, has an
-insatiable longing to add to its attractions.
-It is more than conscious of all that it has,
-but it is never satisfied, because it craves to
-combine, in its own person, the attractions of
-every style which is, from time to time,
-commended in its hearing. Hence all these
-useless and foolish efforts to improve on
-Nature's handiwork.</p>
-
-<p>Do not misunderstand me so far as to think
-I condemn the use of many little toilet accessories,
-which add greatly both to comfort and
-health. It would be insulting to the good
-sense of my girls, if I were to specify what
-things are lawful and useful, and what are
-contemptible and to be avoided.</p>
-
-<p>You would smile, in pitying fashion, at the
-sight of an old lady, whose grey locks having
-become too scanty to cover her head, had
-thought fit to crown her wrinkled face with a
-wig and fringe of golden hair. But if the
-addition matched what remained of her own
-growth, I hope you would be glad to think
-that art had done something on behalf of
-comfort and comeliness for old age, as well as
-for youth. Depend on it the natural colour
-of your hair is that which agrees best with your
-features and complexion, and if there is anything
-really wrong with the latter, it will be
-better for you to consult your doctor than a
-manufacturer of cosmetics.</p>
-
-<p>I am glad to think I have not known many
-girls whose vanity led them to spoil their
-appearance in the manner I hope you join me
-in condemning, but we have all seen plenty of
-such. I picture two, however, both rather
-exceptionally attractive. One had beautiful,
-glossy, dark hair, with eyes to match, and a
-complexion like a blush rose.</p>
-
-<p>I did not see her for some time, and when
-we met I was horrified at the change. A mop
-of yellow, frizzled hair surmounted a face
-whence the blush-rose tint had fled, or been
-hidden under glaringly false red and white.
-All the dainty charm of the face was gone,
-and I am fain to confess that I went a little
-out of my way to avoid a closer meeting with
-my changed acquaintance. Happily I can tell
-of a pleasant sequel in this case. Some good
-influence has been brought to bear, or perhaps
-the girl's innate good sense has overcome her
-vanity, and she has found out that such shams
-are unworthy of a self-respecting girl.</p>
-
-<p>She has given fair play to Nature, and that
-just in time to save the blush-rose complexion
-from ruin, and to be once more her bonny
-self.</p>
-
-<p>The second girl possessed remarkable beauty
-especially of complexion, and her vanity and
-greed of admiration were in proportion to it.
-These impelled her to be ever experimenting
-on herself to produce greater perfection, with
-the result that whilst still a girl she looked
-many years older than her age, and I hear,
-though I do not see her now, that she is daily
-becoming less attractive, though no less vain
-than of old.</p>
-
-<p>Quite apart from the harm done to personal
-appearance by these foolish practices, but of
-far greater importance, is the moral injury they
-cause. One might call the exhibition of paint
-an acted falsehood, because it is an attempt
-to make ourselves appear what we are not.</p>
-
-<p>But such devices are too transparent to
-deceive. If begun, they become more and
-more injurious and difficult to discontinue,
-and those who practise them live in an
-atmosphere of anxiety and disappointment.
-Age comes, despite all efforts to delay its
-progress, and it leaves footprints which baffle
-art to disguise or obliterate.</p>
-
-<p>Doubtless you have all heard this expression
-used in relation to someone you know&mdash;"She
-knows how to grow old gracefully." You
-understand it to picture one who accepts age
-as the natural and inevitable sequence of
-youth; who is above the paltry vanity which
-would hide it&mdash;or, rather, try to hide it&mdash;yet
-who neglects nothing which can help to make
-it externally attractive, and especially to the
-young. For, if age is to have its full
-legitimate influence over youth, it must be
-beautiful in itself, both without and within.</p>
-
-<p>I will not ask you, my dear ones, to look
-again at that pitiable picture of Vanity battling
-with Age, despite the certainty of defeat and
-disappointment. But be assured of this&mdash;that
-the girl who starts on the same lines will reach
-the same goal; but it will not be that of a
-beautiful and lovable old age.</p>
-
-<p>Do not imagine that I undervalue externals.
-I would have you all be habitually careful
-about them. Let your complexion be kept at
-its best by scrupulous cleanliness. If your
-hair is beautiful and abundant, take pains to
-dress it in the fashion that best sets off such
-good looks as you possess. If you are less
-favoured in this respect, give the more care
-and pains so as to make the best of what you
-have.</p>
-
-<p>Exercise good taste in your dress, whilst
-carefully keeping your expenditure within your
-means. The girl who dresses quietly and
-becomingly will not make herself conspicuous
-in later years by the use of glaring colours or
-fantastic garments.</p>
-
-<p>Try to be graceful and quiet in your movements,
-and scrupulous in avoiding all little ways
-and habits likely to be disturbing, unpleasant,
-or offensive to others. And do not be
-offended if a well-meaning friend ventures to
-point out a tendency to any growing habit of
-the kind, knowing that if once established it
-will be almost impossible for you to overcome
-it. Bear in mind that such a warning can be
-only intended for your benefit and to help
-you on your way towards growing old
-gracefully.</p>
-
-<p>Study to modulate your voices so that the
-sound of them may fall pleasantly, even
-musically, on the ear. Shrill, harsh, and loud
-youthful voices become something too terrible
-when they accompany age.</p>
-
-<p>I wonder if any of you have heard our dear
-Queen speak? I regret to say that I have
-not, but friends have told me that they never
-heard a voice which equalled hers for its
-melodious tone, perfect clearness, and faultless
-enunciation.</p>
-
-<p>Try to avoid affectation in gesture and
-movement, and any form of facial contortion.
-Habit makes all these painful to witness, and
-age exaggerates them. Sometimes a habit of
-knitting the brows is contracted early in life,
-with the result that the forehead is furrowed
-and a forbidding expression given to the face
-which permanently spoils it. Age intensifies
-what is forbidding and disagreeable, but shows
-to the greatest advantage all that is most
-lastingly attractive in us, just as the flower
-fulfils the promise of the bud.</p>
-
-<p>In this lesson on "How to grow old" I
-have confined myself to externals. It is time
-for us to part, but when we meet again we
-will study the subject from the highest
-standpoint.</p>
-
-<p>Before then a new year will have dawned
-on us. Let me suggest as a fitting motto for
-it, "I will go in the strength of the Lord
-God." May it prove a very happy one to you
-all.</p>
-
-<p class='center'>(<i>To be continued.</i>)</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div>
-
-
-<h2><a name="SISTER_WARWICK_A_STORY_OF_INFLUENCE" id="SISTER_WARWICK_A_STORY_OF_INFLUENCE">"SISTER WARWICK": A STORY OF INFLUENCE.</a></h2>
-
-<p class='ph3'><span class="smcap">By</span> H. MARY WILSON, Author of "In Warwick Ward," "In Monmouth Ward," "Miss Elsie," etc.</p>
-
-
-<h3>CHAPTER IV.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Granny 20</span> was in one of her most garrulous
-moods, but who was there to listen? She tried
-to catch a nurse or probationer as they hurried
-by the end of the bed, with a "Listen to me
-now, nurse." But a smile and a nod and a
-"By-and-by, Granny," was all she got for
-her pains.</p>
-
-<p>Her nearest bed-fellows were too sleepy
-for anything, and she had to content herself
-with murmuring to an imaginary audience
-until Sister had a moment's leisure, and came
-to her bedside.</p>
-
-<p>"I was saying, Sister, that Mrs. 21 there
-is one with me. We both rue our wedding-day!
-And we thought&mdash;bless yer!&mdash;we
-thought, when we stood up so proud and
-made our vows, that we was the luckiest
-women in the world."</p>
-
-<p>"And it all turned out badly, Granny?"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, well! It might have been wuss for
-some of us. I won't say it mightn't; but me
-was in too much of a hurry&mdash;that was the
-mischief. Why, bless yer! Mrs. 21 there says
-she wasn't more'n sixteen when she took a
-'usband! And me? I was only just turned
-eighteen. We didn't know no better. We
-were took by a 'andsome face."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, Granny, I cannot err on the side of
-marrying too young, whatever I do."</p>
-
-<p>"Sister! You ain't never thinking of matrimoany?
-Don't 'ee, dear! Don't 'ee! Just
-take the advice of a old woman what <i>knows</i>.
-This is what I say. If a man comes to you
-and seems true enough, don't trust him! No,
-not if trust was to sparkle like a diamond
-from the end of every hair on his head, don't
-trust him!"</p>
-
-<p>Hardly knowing how to contain herself
-for laughter, Sister promised to be very
-careful, and thanked Granny for her wise
-words.</p>
-
-<p>"They aire wise. You may well say so,"
-chuckled the old lady. "Now I could tell
-you&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Another time, Granny dear&mdash;and see!
-Here's nurse with your tea. A cup of tea!
-There's nothing like it, is there?"</p>
-
-<p>"Bless yer&mdash;no!"</p>
-
-<p>And Nurse Hudson&mdash;what of her? Had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">{221}</a></span>
-the episode of yesterday's carelessness with
-the words of reproof that followed been the
-warning Sister Warwick hoped? The watchful
-eyes could detect very little that was amiss
-that day. But she was obliged to acknowledge
-that the nurse's manner towards herself was
-not what it should be. With her new efforts
-not to repel her nurses by the stiffness of her
-own manners she ignored what she could.
-Later she felt glad she had done so.</p>
-
-<p>After tea the medicines were given out.
-It was the staff-nurse's duty to-day, and
-following the instructions on her chart, Hudson
-went to and fro, pouring out the draughts, and
-bringing them to each bed in order.</p>
-
-<p>Sister, seated by No. 10, watched her
-silently. But when she brought the dose for
-this "typhoid," she took it from her hand to
-administer it herself.</p>
-
-<p>What instinct made her pause, before
-giving it, to ask:</p>
-
-<p>"Is this the new medicine, nurse?"</p>
-
-<p>"Of course it is, Sister!" The tone was
-offensive, but, ignoring it, Sister Warwick
-leant forward to hold the glass to the girl's
-lips. Again she paused. What was it stayed
-her hand?</p>
-
-<p>She raised the glass, smelt it, and then put
-it to her own lips and tasted the liquid, her
-eyes on the chart.</p>
-
-<p>"This is an overdose!" she said sternly.
-"Here are four times the right amount!"</p>
-
-<p>For she knew in a flash what the nurse had
-done, and she shuddered at the thought!
-Hudson had certainly, as she said, given the
-fresh medicine the chart directed, but in her
-heedlessness she had not looked to see if the
-quantity was altered too. She had poured
-out two tablespoonfuls instead of two teaspoonfuls&mdash;a
-dose that would have caused
-intense suffering, if nothing worse, to the
-sick girl.</p>
-
-<p>Sister Warwick rose from her chair and
-looked Nurse Hudson full in the face. Her
-utter scorn and indignation at this culpable
-carelessness rendered her speechless.</p>
-
-<p>But her glance was enough!</p>
-
-<p>Turning on her heel, she carried the
-medicine-glass into her room, placed it in a
-cupboard there, and locking it up, removed
-the key.</p>
-
-<p>Nurse Hudson watched it all&mdash;miserable
-and self-condemned&mdash;knowing what the action
-meant. Now that it was done, she would
-have given anything to have been more
-careful. Her colour came and went. She
-stood irresolute. Her better self was urging
-her to go at once and with a humble apology
-plead for another trial with an earnest promise
-of a different course in the future. But she
-could not bring herself to do that. Pride and
-Selfishness had been too closely her companions
-lately, excluding better impulses.</p>
-
-<p>No, she would not believe that Sister
-Warwick meant to report her to the Matron.
-Perhaps she would only ask for her removal
-to another ward; there she could make a fresh
-start. But she did not ask herself with what
-motive.</p>
-
-<p>Nurse Hudson's work had always been
-tarnished with the discolouring influences of
-her own low aims. No wonder now that she
-failed, and did not take the one step that
-might have saved her nursing career.</p>
-
-<p>She left the ward that evening without
-another word with the Sister&mdash;miserable, self-pitying,
-undecided, little thinking that she
-would never enter it again.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>"The whole affair shall be stopped at
-once!" The Matron's voice was full of
-decision and very stern. "I will send for
-Hudson and tell her I cannot keep her here
-any longer. Nor will I sign her certificate!
-I am not justified, after all you tell me, in
-sending her away to pass herself off as a
-qualified nurse."</p>
-
-<p>"You take a harder view of her conduct
-than I do, Matron." And Sister Warwick
-then and there began to plead for the
-nurse who had been such a "thorn in her
-side."</p>
-
-<p>"You will not move me, Sister! Hudson
-will go! It will seem right, from many
-points of view, when you can look at it
-dispassionately. I am only very thankful
-that we so rarely have such a failure among
-the nurses, and thankful most of all that no
-worse harm has been done. We might have
-had a case for the coroner."</p>
-
-<p>Sister Warwick knew the Matron's words
-were just. She left her and went back to
-her own room, sinking into her leaning-chair
-with the consciousness that an upset like this
-"took it out of her" far more than even an
-operation involving pain and suffering to one
-of her dear ward babies. And, sad at heart,
-she began to think of Ellen Hudson's future,
-then to search back in her own mind for
-possible opportunities missed in the past
-when she might have helped her more kindly.
-She realised bitterly that she herself might
-have done better too.</p>
-
-<p>She sat forward then and wrote a little note
-and sent it round to the Nurses' Home, timed
-to reach Nurse Hudson just after her interview
-with the Matron.</p>
-
-<p>It was to ask her staff-nurse to come and
-see her before she left. But she never came.
-She passed out of Sister Warwick's life
-from that hour, and her place knew her no
-more.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Nurse Carden's bright face and ready sympathy
-were a pleasant interruption to the
-Sister's mournful ruminations that evening.
-She came in a little before her usual time,
-and the two had a quiet chat in the "Sisters'
-Room" before the night work began.</p>
-
-<p>Here Sister Cumberland joined them. These
-three women&mdash;so different in character, so
-united in aim and purpose&mdash;felt then the
-sustaining power of a friendship that was
-standing the wear and tear of life.</p>
-
-<p>Seeing how worried the elder "Sister" was
-by the present, the other two drew her thoughts
-back to the past and to their earlier experiences
-in the ward.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you remember?" was the introduction
-to many reminiscences Sister Cumberland
-recalled that night on duty, when she fought
-her fiercest fight with the craving for sleep.</p>
-
-<p>Nurse Carden talked of Tommie the waif
-and his whimsical ways. He could not be
-forgotten, for it was not many days since at
-the lodge-gate of her own home she had seen
-the Tommie of to-day. Such a contrast! A
-sturdy, ruddy, honest country lad, loving his
-life as a gardener's boy, and always ready, if
-questioned, to say, "Oh, I belong to Nurse
-Carden, I do! I ain't got nobody else! But
-she is good to me, she is!"</p>
-
-<p>So the three talked until the hour struck
-which took them to their various duties and
-closed the second of these days my pen has
-tried to describe&mdash;days chosen not because
-they were remarkably different from many
-others, but because they give an average picture
-of the cares and anxieties, the pleasures and
-interests that belong to a hospital Sister's
-life; because, too, they tell of an experience
-that had a lasting effect in softening Sister
-Warwick's character and in extending her
-influence over the nurses in her charge.</p>
-
-<p class='center'>[THE END.]</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div>
-
-
-<h2><a name="GUS" id="GUS">GUS.</a></h2>
-
-
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap" src="images/i_221.jpg" width="125" height="125" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">Ya</span> want ti knaw aboot
-ma maate Gus? Set
-ya doon, then, an'
-ah'll tell ya all
-aboot it.</p>
-
-<p>Me an' Gus wer
-friends fra' t' first.
-'E wer a shy, quiet
-soort o' lad, an' t'
-other chaps didn't
-seem ti taake ti 'im
-at first, an' it wer soort o' loansoom for a
-yoong chap lodgin' aloan i' a straange plaace,
-specially as 'e didn't seem ti care mooch for
-t' public-'oose o' neets. Soa wun evening, as
-we wer leavin' woork, ah says ti 'im, "Coom
-in an' 'ave a bit o' soopper wi' ma an' ma
-missus, lad."</p>
-
-<p>'E looked real pleased, an' said 'e would
-coom, bud 'e wouldn't coom straight 'oam
-wi' ma, as ah wanted 'im ti. Noa, 'e mun
-gang back ti 'is lodgins an' fettle issen oop.</p>
-
-<p>My missus weant best pleased when sha
-'eard 'e wer coming; mebbe, theer weant
-ower mooch for soopper, an' sha niver were
-fond o' straangers; bud 'e 'adn't been i' oor
-lahtle room aboove 'alf a minute afoor ah seed
-as sha'od taaken a fancy ti 'im. 'E com in
-rather shy an' bashful loike, for all 'e'd maade
-'issen soa graand wi' 'is Soonday coate an'
-all, an' ma missus, she says&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Set ya doon an' maak yersen at whoam,
-while ah get summat for ya ti eat," an' 'e set
-doon reet theer by t' door, on t' edge o' 'is
-cheer, an' 'adn't a woord to say for 'issen.</p>
-
-<p>Oor lahtle lass Polly&mdash;she wer nobbut
-fooer year owd then&mdash;shoo com in an' stood
-starin' at 'im wi' 'er finger i' 'er mooth, an' at
-sight o' 'er 'e foond 'is tongue.</p>
-
-<p>"Coom 'ere, lahtle ma'ad," says 'e; "ah'm
-wonnerful fond o' childer. Coom an' see
-what ah've got i' ma pocket."</p>
-
-<p>Bud t' lahtle lass still stood beside ma,
-starin' at 'im as if 'e wer summat i' a show.</p>
-
-<p>Gus didn't saay nowt moor, but 'e oots wi'
-'is knife an' a bit o' wood and starts carvin'
-summat.</p>
-
-<p>"Noo," says 'e, arter a bit, "what shall it
-be? Shall ah maak tha a 'orse, or a coo, or
-what?"</p>
-
-<p>T' lahtle lass foond 'er toongue at that.</p>
-
-<p>"A lad," says she, an' cooms a step nearer
-ti see what 'e wer at.</p>
-
-<p>"Shoo'll be a rare wun for t' lads when
-shoo's a bit bigger, ah'se warran'," says 'e,
-wi' a laugh; an' 'e goes on carvin' t' bit o'
-wood in a waay 'at wer wunnerful ti me.
-Soon t' head an' shoolthers appeared, an'
-then t' legs an' arms, an' all t' while t' tahtle
-lass crept nearer an' nearer, an' by t' tahm t'
-lad wer doon, shoo wer sittin' on 'is knee an'
-chatterin' awaay ti 'im as if 'e wer' an owd
-friend.</p>
-
-<p>That woon moother's 'eart, for shoo's
-powerful set on t' lahtle lass, seem' shoo's t'
-oanly wun wi' 'ave&mdash;an' ah reckon ah weant
-far be'ind 'er i' that&mdash;an' befoor 'e left
-shoo'd arst 'im ti taake 'is dinner wi' us
-Soonday next. Arter that, Gus wer in an'
-oot continual, an' 'e an't' lahtle lass wer as
-thick as thieves. It wer pratty ti see 'er
-perched o' 'is knee, wi' 'is arm roond 'er, an'
-ti 'ear 'er pratty prattle, all aboot 'er dolls an'
-toys an' sooch-like. 'E used ti call 'er 'is
-lahtle sweet-'eart, an' saay sha mun marry 'im<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">{222}</a></span>
-when sha wer growed a bit, an' t' lahtle lass
-'ud look oop i' 'is faace, as graave as graave,
-an' promise ti be 'is lahtle wife. 'Twer as
-pratty a pictur as 'eart could wish to see them
-thegither, an' 'e niver seemed ti tire o' 'er
-coompany, or care ti talk wi' me or t' missus
-when t' lahtle lass wer theer.</p>
-
-<p>Well tahm went on, an' t' job e'd coom
-doon 'ere for wer nigh finished&mdash;layin' rails
-o' new line it wer&mdash;an' 'e wer talkin' o'
-leavin', for 'e weant fra' oor parts; when wun
-daay&mdash;ah mind it wer t' first o' April, for
-theer'd been soom foolin' amoong t' lads
-earlier i' t' daay, an' t' blackthorn wer
-buddin' i' t' 'edges&mdash;we wer setting on t'
-railway bank eatin' oor dinners. Gus wer
-moor talkative than ordinary that daay; ah
-mind 'e'd been tellin' us o' t' waay they did
-'arvestin' i' 'is parts&mdash;Lancashire waay&mdash;an'
-'arvest-'oams, an' sooch-like, when all of a
-soodden ah caught sight o' ma lahtle lass
-runnin' along t' line. It did gie ma a toorn,
-for t' doon traain 'ad been signalled two or
-three minutes sin', an' even as ah caught
-sight o' 'er, ah 'eerd it roombling along i' t'
-distance.</p>
-
-<p>"Ma God!" ah cried. "Look theer!"</p>
-
-<p>Jack Wilson&mdash;'im as lives i' yon cottage
-wi' t' creepers doon by t' church&mdash;shoots as
-lood as 'e could, "Get oft t' line, bairn! Get
-off t' line!" Bud Polly, sha didn't taak noa
-'eed ti 'im.</p>
-
-<p>Then afoor ah 'ad got ma wits aboot ma,
-or 'ad ony idea what 'e wer goin ti do, Gus
-'ad joomped doon fra' t' bank, an' were
-roonnin' for 'is loife doon t' line ti meet t'
-lahtle lass. It wer awful to see 'im, while
-every moment t' thoonder o' t' train com
-nearer.</p>
-
-<p>"Is t' man mad?" cried Wilson. "It's
-certain death." An' even as 'e spoke, t'
-train com roond t' corner.</p>
-
-<p>Polly stood still, terrified, an' Gus ran on
-reet inti t' teeth o' t' train. Ah turned
-deadly sick, for ah niver thowt 'e would be i'
-tahm, an' it seemed nobbut a waaste o' two
-lives; bud 'e reached 'er joost afoor t' train
-did. Ah seed 'im catch 'er oop an' toss 'er
-on ti t' bank, an' then&mdash;then t' traan wer on
-'im, an' we saw noothing moor till it 'ad past.
-Then ah ran ti wheer 'e wer lyin', an' an
-awful sight it wer. It 'aunts ma yet, thoo it's
-nigh on ten year sin. 'E wer livin', poor
-chap, an' 'e looked up at ma wi' a smile,
-though t' death dews were gathering on 'is
-faace.</p>
-
-<p>"T' lahtle lass?" 'e asked anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>"Saafe an' well," ah answered. "Eh,
-Gus, lad, tha' shouldn't 'a doon it. Ah
-reckon she weant woorth it."</p>
-
-<p>"Niver saay that!" 'e said. "Wheer is
-sha? Ah'd like fine to bid her good-bye."</p>
-
-<p>Polly wer cryin' wi' fright on t' bank cloas
-at 'and. Ah called 'er, bud at first sha 'ung
-back, not knawin' as it wer 'er friend as lay
-theer, a sickenin' sight, an' not fit for a bairn
-ti see.</p>
-
-<p>"Niver mind, John," 'e said, sadly enough.
-"It's better soa. Ah wouldn't like 'er ti
-think o' ma like this." But ah went an'
-fetched 'er, an' bade 'er ti thank 'im for
-saavin' 'er loife.</p>
-
-<p>"Nay, nay," 'e said, smoilin' oop at 'er.
-"Good-bye, lahtle sweet'eart. Tha'lt 'ave ti
-get anoother lad noo."</p>
-
-<p>"Nay, ah'll waait for thee an' be thy lahtle
-wife," says Polly sturdily, not un'erstan'in',
-poor lahtle lass, as 'e wer dyin'.</p>
-
-<p>"Tha'lt 'ave ti waait till tha gets ti t' New
-Jeroosalem, then," 'e answers, "if soa be as
-they'll let ma in." An' at that 'e looks
-serious.</p>
-
-<p>Ah maade 'aste ti cheer 'im oop.</p>
-
-<p>"Nay, lad, thoo need 'ave noa fear o' that,"
-ah says. "Tha mind hoo He said, 'Inasmooch
-as ye 'a doon it to wun o' t' least o' these, ye
-'a doon it unto Me.'"</p>
-
-<p>Hoo 'is faace lighted oop at that word!
-Then a spasm o' agony crossed it, an' t' death
-rattle began i' 'is throat.</p>
-
-<p>'E couldn't speak, bud 'e maade ma a sign
-ti send t' lahtle lass away, an' ah bade 'er
-roon 'oam ti 'er moother. Then ah knelt
-doon an' raised 'im in ma arms, an' it weant
-long&mdash;thank God, it weant long.</p>
-
-<p>Well, it's ten year sin, as ah said, an' it's
-an owd story noo, an' t' grass is green on 'is
-graave. T' lahtle lass keeps it rare an' gay
-wi' flooers. Shoo's growin' a graat gell noo,
-an' it weant be long afoor t' lads begin ti
-coom aboot 'er, for shoo's growin' bonny;
-bud shoo's niver forgotten Gus, an' if shoo
-iver did, ah wouldn't oan 'er as ma darter,
-that ah wouldn't!</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div>
-
-
-<h2><a name="ANSWERS_TO_CORRESPONDENTS" id="ANSWERS_TO_CORRESPONDENTS">ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS.</a></h2>
-
-
-<h3>MEDICAL.</h3>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Freda.</span>&mdash;Of the cause of exophthalmic gotre but
-little is known for certain. Worry or anxiety often
-precede the onset of the disease. Unlike ordinary
-gotre this affection is not limited in any way to
-certain districts, but occurs in every part of the
-country. "Is it curable, and if so, how long should
-a moderate case take to cure?" Yes, many cases
-do recover. When the disease is very marked, recovery
-is unusual. But now that surgeons have
-directed their attention to the disease there is every
-reason to believe that the severer grades of the
-affection may yield to operative treatment. We
-can no more tell you how long an attack of exophthalmic
-gotre will last than we could tell you the
-day of your death. Sometimes the disease disappears
-in six months or a year, often it drags on
-for many years. As a rule, if the symptoms develop
-rapidly, the disease runs a rapid course.
-Men are comparatively rarely attacked. We can,
-however, call to mind a fair number of cases of
-exophthalmic gotre in the male sex. Unmarried
-women of from twenty to thirty years of age are the
-usual victims of this disease.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Worried.</span>&mdash;1. In all probability your sister would
-get better and stronger after marriage. Of course
-it depends a good deal upon the cause of her malady.
-She had far better go to her family doctor and get
-his advice upon the matter. We cannot take the
-responsibility of giving a definite answer to your
-question from such a very scanty amount of information.&mdash;2.
-There are so many books on travel and
-science, suitable to ordinary readers, that it is rather
-difficult to choose any particular volume. One of
-the best books on science for a beginner&mdash;that is, a
-person who is beginning to read science&mdash;is a little
-work called <i>Ants and their Ways</i>, by the Rev.
-Farren White. It is a charming little volume
-which will instil into anyone who reads it the habit
-of observation&mdash;so all-important in science. The
-book is very moderate in price. It is published by
-the Religious Tract Society. If you turn to the
-advertisement sheets at the back of this paper you
-will see notices of a number of very good books on
-both science and travel.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Matron.</span>&mdash;Obviously the book you want is the <i>British
-Pharmacop&#339;ia</i>. This gives definite instructions
-how to make up every official preparation. There
-is a new edition just published. For the drugs
-which are not in the <i>British Pharmacop&#339;ia</i>, Squire's
-<i>Companion to the British Pharmacop&#339;ia</i> may be
-consulted. You will do well to thoroughly master
-the decimal measures, and to use them exclusively,
-as they are now official and will alone be used in
-the future. The old and confusing apothecaries'
-measures are now out of date.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Alta.</span>&mdash;For the bites and stings of midges, etc., rub
-a little dilute ammonia on the bite. This usually
-relieves the pain instantly. It is better to put a
-drop of dilute carbolic acid (about 1 in 100) upon
-the bite after using the ammonia. The reason for
-this is that the trouble from an insect's bite is dependent
-upon two causes. In the first place the
-insect actually drops poison into the bite. This,
-which is usually formic acid, makes the wound
-smart at once, but its effect passes off in a little
-time. Ammonia neutralises this acid and so gives
-instant relief. But there is a second cause of
-trouble which is far more serious. The bite of a
-fly has caused more deaths than you would think,
-and from this reason. Flies of all kinds are given
-to feed on garbage, and as they have not yet learnt
-to use a toothbrush, their mouths are always swarming
-with germs. Usually these germs are not of a
-very virulent kind. But suppose that a midge has
-been eating the carcase of an animal which has
-died from peritonitis. That fly is now more deadly
-than a viper, for on its tongue it has a poison which
-is capable of rapid increase if it ever finds a suitable
-home. If this fly bites you, you may die from
-the bite. Everyone knows that often an insect
-sting or bite does not ache or swell at first; but
-after several hours the place becomes hot and
-swollen, and if the place bitten be the hand, the
-arm begins to swell and the glands in the armpit
-enlarge. In this case a mild dose of microbes has
-been innoculated. Ammonia will not in most cases
-destroy these microbes. Therefore, we say, put a
-drop of dilute carbolic acid on the place as soon as
-you can. The ammonia simply relieves a little
-itching (for the poison of the insect itself is rarely
-dangerous), but the carbolic acid destroys organisms
-which are capable of great mischief. Rubbing
-the face and hands with oil of eucalyptus, or paraffin,
-will sometimes prevent insects from coming
-near you.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Lily, My Queenie.</span>&mdash;1. Is the skin round your eyebrows
-scarred? Hair never grows on scars, nor
-can it be made to do so by any means in our power.
-If there are no scars, try a little white precipitate
-ointment applied carefully to the eyebrows.&mdash;2.
-Moles cannot be cured. They can be removed by
-operation. If they are large and noticeable it is
-better to have them removed. Otherwise leave
-them severely alone.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Pearl.</span>&mdash;Take our advice and see a doctor at once.
-Severe headache is a very common symptom, and
-though it is usually caused by some trivial ailment,
-it is often the only subjective sign of a serious
-disease. Your attacks suggest megraine, but
-they might be due to far more serious things.
-Without a complete personal examination no man
-living could diagnose your malady.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Fox.</span>&mdash;What size corsets do you wear? Tight lacing
-is, or rather was, a very common cause of fatness
-about the face. What age are you? It is very
-common for women to get double chins and extra
-plump cheeks when they have passed their thirtieth
-year. Very many diseases cause fatness of the
-face. Kidney disease is one of the commonest of
-these. All we can advise you to do is to be careful
-about your diet. Avoid farinaceous puddings and
-sweets. Take plenty of exercise. No drug is of
-much good in obesity of any kind. Some of the
-mineral waters, especially Vichy, are sometimes
-useful to stout persons.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">A Weary and Careworn Girl.</span>&mdash;We are exceedingly
-sorry that we could not answer your letter
-earlier. The troubles that you have gone through
-are enough to depress any girl of twice your age.
-We think that all your sufferings are due to nervousness
-resulting from being "run down." What
-the impediment in your speech is, is not quite clear
-from your letter. Probably it is far less than you
-imagine, else your mother would certainly have
-noticed it. The difficulty which you find in commencing
-to talk is due to nervousness. As your
-health improves, and as you grow older this will
-tend to disappear. We will publish an article on
-blushing and nervousness next month. To the last
-of your questions your clergyman would be more
-competent to give you an answer than ever we
-could be. Go to your pastor and tell him your
-troubles. He is sure to be able to comfort you in
-your affliction and to help you to bear your cross
-with patience for the sake of Him who laid down
-His life for you.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Croyden.</span>&mdash;The habit of taking acids to cure indigestion
-is greatly to be deprecated. Acids and
-bitters are very useful in some forms of indigestion,
-but they should never be taken unless ordered by a
-physician. Alkalis, such as bicarbonate of soda,
-are on the other hand of great value in the majority
-of cases of indigestion. Indeed we will go further
-than this: we have never met with a case of indigestion
-from any cause which was not benefited,
-sometimes only temporarily, by alkalis. We have
-seen very few cases of indigestion which have been
-relieved by acids. Our candid opinion is that the
-habit of taking acids and bitters to cure disorders
-of the stomach or loss of appetite, is a very fertile
-cause of the life-long indigestion so common
-nowadays.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Black Eyes.</span>&mdash;In an answer to "Fair Isobel," which
-was published some months ago, the treatment of
-blackheads was thoroughly discussed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Emily Phelps.</span>&mdash;Your glasses do not suit you. Go
-to an oculist and get his prescription for another
-pair. Your symptoms are very common in people
-who use unsuitable spectacles.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">{223}</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Buttercup.</span>&mdash;Bunions are due to the pressure of
-badly-fitting boots. In the human foot the great
-or innermost toe bends away from the other toes.
-This gives to the inner border of the foot a direction
-slanting inwards towards the middle line of
-the body. Most boots are made with their inner
-border slanting outwards away from the middle
-line so as to meet the outer border of the boots at a
-more or less acute angle. We have therefore the
-great toe naturally tending to depart from its
-fellows, and we have the boot forcing the great toe
-towards, and possibly under or over, the other toes.
-The boot is an unyielding structure. The inner
-border of the foot is also practically unyielding,
-except at one spot, the joint of the great toe. The
-first toe is therefore forced inwards and its joint
-projects as an angle. The boot presses upon this
-joint, a corn forms, inflammation is set up, and the
-joint becomes diseased, forming a bunion. When
-once a bunion has developed, it is no good talking
-about its prevention. We must attempt to cure it,
-and it is not so very difficult to cure it, and keep it
-cured, if you fully understand how it originated.
-A bunion is caused by pressure upon the joint.
-The cure of the bunion consists of removing the
-pressure from the joint. To do this you should
-wear boots in which the inner border slopes away
-from the centre of the boot. We advise you to get
-a pair of boots of this shape made for yourself. If
-the bunion is intractable, you may need a "post"
-in the boot between the great and the second toe.
-Keep your foot scrupulously clean, and take a foot-bath
-every evening.</p>
-
-<p>J. S. N.&mdash;As your mother died from heart disease, it
-is no wonder that you imagine your own symptoms
-to be likewise due to heart trouble; but the symptoms
-you mention are all characteristic of simple
-dyspepsia; not one of them is common in heart
-disease. When you say "at times my pulse beats
-very fast and sometimes irregularly," we presume
-that you mean that you feel your heart beating
-fast or irregularly, in other words, that you have
-palpitation. When the heart is beating fast or
-irregularly, as it frequently does in heart disease,
-it produces no symptoms which might inform the
-sufferer of her state. It is only by feeling the pulse
-that irregularities in its action can be detected.
-We will not say that heart disease is not hereditary,
-but the importance of this factor has been
-greatly over-estimated. Disease of the heart is
-very frequently due to rheumatic fever; and the
-tendency to rheumatism is; to a certain extent,
-hereditary. You will find plenty of information
-about indigestion in our last year's volume.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Esther.</span>&mdash;We can well understand that you feel a
-little nervous about your chest, when you tell us
-that both your parents died of phthisis. You
-know that the risk of your developing the disease
-is considerable, yet it by no means follows that you
-will get phthisis. By no means are you certain to
-get phthisis. You must be very careful about
-yourself, and the least bit of a cough or cold which
-may attack you must be carefully attended to.
-Indeed we advise you to call in your family doctor
-the moment that you have any cough or other untoward
-symptom. Certainly you would do well to
-spend your winters in Switzerland.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Canary.</span>&mdash;1. A little dumb-bell exercise every morning
-will improve the form of your back and shoulders.
-The dumb-bells should be made of wood
-and not weigh more than two pounds each. Heavy
-bell exercise is very dangerous. It has always
-been considered beautiful for women to possess
-broad hips.&mdash;2. Why? Why do so many of our correspondents
-call themselves "constant readers"?
-Perhaps it is that they think that by using that
-pseudonym they will get answered sooner, or perhaps
-it is merely from lack of sufficient imagination
-to think of some phrase less commonplace.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">E. M. Walker.</span>&mdash;Cinnamon is more at home in the
-pantry than in pharmacy. The only medicinal
-action it possesses is that of all aromatic substances.
-It is occasionally used as a stomachic,
-but its chief use is for flavouring. Sometimes it is
-given for diarrh&#339;a as it is a mild astringent. Cinnamon
-has no action on cancer, neither has any
-drug the slightest effect upon the course of this
-disease. Indeed one might put down the medicinal
-action of cinnamon at zero.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mabel B.</span>&mdash;It is not at all uncommon for the hair to
-fall out after a severe illness. It is, however, rare
-for permanent baldness to result. Usually after
-combing out in large quantities for some weeks or
-months the hair grows quickly and luxuriously again.
-A mildly stimulating hair-wash is often useful in
-these cases. Brilliantine, bay rum or rosemary
-hair-washes are suitable. We much doubt whether
-taking cod-liver oil would have any effect upon your
-hair, but it might help to restore your strength.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Florrie.</span>&mdash;1. We know of no recipe which will
-remove hairs from the face without doing serious
-damage to the skin at the same time.&mdash;2. Try
-sulphur soap for a shiny face. Do not use face
-powder.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Helena.</span>&mdash;Read the answer to "Florrie" above. The
-Laws of Libel prevent us from giving you our
-opinion on the preparation which you mention.
-We are allowed, however, to warn you to have
-nothing to do with any patent medicine of which
-you do not know the composition. It has not been
-our experience that peroxide of hydrogen makes
-the hair grow quickly.</p></div>
-
-
-<h3>STUDY AND STUDIO.</h3>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Irish May Flower.</span>&mdash;It is rather difficult to dispose
-of such sketches as you describe. We should suggest
-that you took them to any picture dealer in
-your neighbourhood, and asked him to try to sell
-them for you. Or you might write to the Irish
-Ladies' Work Society, 47, George Street, Kingstown,
-inquiring if that would be of any use to you.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mabel Entwistle.</span>&mdash;We are very glad that you have
-been enabled through our means "to make the
-acquaintance of two extremely nice French girls."
-Your writing we like very much. It is clear, definite,
-and has a character of its own. If we gave any
-hint for its improvement, it would be to avoid the
-lapses in the middle of a word, making the writing
-flow consecutively.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">La Petite Violette.</span>&mdash;We have not forgotten you,
-and are very glad you have taken up some special
-study. We have placed your request in "Our
-Open Letter Box."</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Wild Rose.</span>&mdash;1. Your first quotation is from Tennyson's
-<i>In Memoriam</i>, xxvii., stanza 4.</p>
-
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">"I hold it true, whate'er befall,<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">I feel it when I sorrow most,<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">'Tis better to have loved and lost,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Than never to have loved at all."<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>2. Look through the poetry of Thomas Moore for
-your second extract, and if you cannot find it there,
-send it again and we will place it in "Our Open
-Letter Box."</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Catalina.</span>&mdash;1. Apply to the Church Sunday School
-Institute, Serjeant's Inn, Fleet Street, E.C., or to
-the Sunday School Union (undenominational),
-57, Ludgate Hill, and you will receive the fullest
-information. The lessons for each Sunday are set
-forth in certain inexpensive books in detail, with
-comments and information upon every verse. In
-addition to these "lesson helps" you should read
-and study books upon the Old Testament and upon
-the life of our Lord, such as Farrar's <i>Life of Christ</i>.
-The Religious Tract Society has published one
-(<i>The Life of Jesus Christ the Saviour</i>, by Mrs.
-S. Watson), which is not too ambitious, and might
-help you. The net price is 3s. 9d.&mdash;2. Your writing
-is good for your age, but might be improved if
-the tails to your "g's," "y's," etc., were less
-straggling.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Erin-go-bragh.</span>&mdash;1. We have inserted your request,
-but (as you give a pseudonym) not your address.&mdash;2.
-Your handwriting is too upright and irregular,
-but there is the foundation of a good hand in it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Exile of Erin.</span>&mdash;The "Fragment" you enclose is
-above the average of poems submitted to us, but
-your metre does not flow quite smoothly enough.
-You should avoid too many monosyllables in these
-long lines.</p>
-
-<p>L. A. T.&mdash;We should advise you to read Homer's
-"Odyssey," translated by Butcher and Lang, and
-if you find difficulty in understanding it, a "Primer"
-on the subject as well. But we think you will
-enjoy it. As for Plato, read "The Trial and Death
-of Socrates," translated by Dean Church, and
-consult a small history of Greece on the period
-(399 <span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>) Do not attempt too much at once, nor
-read Plato's deeper "Dialogues" to begin with.
-Your letter, which you ask us to criticise, is clearly
-written, with only one mistake in spelling.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Miss Bealey.</span>&mdash;We undertake no communication by
-post (see "Rules" in our November part and
-elsewhere). You will find the "Home Reading
-Union" an excellent society; apply to the Secretary,
-Surrey House, Victoria Embankment. Consult
-this column for amateur societies occasionally
-mentioned.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Miss Florence E. Smith</span> calls attention to the
-"Bedford Practising Society," of which she is
-secretary. She will be delighted to send particulars
-to any fellow reader of the <span class="smcap">Girl's Own Paper</span>.
-Address to her at Winfrith, The Crescent, Bedford.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Hoffnung.</span>&mdash;Many thanks for your letter. By all
-means try again.</p></div>
-
-
-<h3>INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENCE.</h3>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mademoiselle Marguerite Gontard</span> (address
-"Nikopal Mariopol Co., Mariopol, South Russia,
-Engineer Prauss for M. Gontard"), wishes to be
-put into communication with a young English lady,
-resident in either of the continents of Asia, Africa,
-America, or Australia. She desires to correspond
-with her either in English or French. We thank
-Mademoiselle Gontard for her pretty English
-letter. She may certainly write to us in French if
-she prefers to do so.</p>
-
-<p>"<span class="smcap">Erin-go-bragh</span>" would like to correspond with a
-French girl of about her own age&mdash;twenty-one.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Florence</span> writes a kind letter from which we quote a
-sentence. "I am wondering whether some little
-girl belonging to the readers of our <span class="smcap">Girl's Own
-Paper</span> would care to have an older friend to write
-to; she would receive in return sympathy if in
-trouble, and an interest would be taken in all she
-might care to confide to one whom she could
-perhaps learn to look upon in the light of an elder
-sister." We regret that it is against our rules to
-undertake direct postal communication; but if any
-little girl sends us her address, we will insert it here
-for "Florence" to see. Perhaps some lonely, or
-motherless, or sad little girls might be glad to find
-a friend.</p></div>
-
-
-<h3>OUR OPEN LETTER BOX.</h3>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">La Petite Violette</span> wishes to find a poem with a
-refrain to each verse "Belle Marquise." She saw
-a quotation from it as a heading to a chapter in a
-book entitled <i>Woman and the Shadow</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Miss M. A. C. Crabb</span> and <span class="smcap">Elpis</span> answer <span class="smcap">Lennox</span> by
-referring the verse she quotes&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">"Alas! how easily things go wrong,"<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>to a poem in the 19th chapter of George Macdonald's
-"Phantastes: a Faerie Romance." They
-agree in saying that the second verse is not by the
-same pen.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Peterkin</span>, <span class="smcap">Gertrude Ashworth</span>, <span class="smcap">Klondyke</span>, <span class="smcap">B. D.
-Ward</span>, <span class="smcap">M. E. Bates</span>, "<span class="smcap">Stick</span>," <span class="smcap">R. M. Cooke</span>,
-<span class="smcap">Mabel Entwistle</span> and "<span class="smcap">The Eldest Girl</span>," inform
-Ethel Rimmer that Christina Rossetti's poem
-beginning&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">"When I am dead, my dearest,<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">Sing no sad songs for me,"<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>has been set to music by Malcolm Lawson, and is
-entitled "Hereafter," in keys E&#9837; and G. It appeared
-in the June number of the <i>Strand Musical
-Magazine</i> for 1895. "<span class="smcap">A Lover of the 'G.O.P.'</span>"
-says it has been set to music by C. A. Lee, either for
-a soprano or an alto voice.</p>
-
-<p>R. C. R. suggests to <span class="smcap">Gold Dust</span> that the poem "Tit
-for Tat" is contained in "Original Poems for
-Infant Minds," by Jane Taylor, her sisters and
-brother. If this is the poem sought for, we may
-add that the volume is published by Routledge.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">One of the First Readers, Azie</span>, asks for the
-author of a poem entitled "Maggie and the
-Angels," containing two lines&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">"Maggie, are they the angels?<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">And be they always there?"<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Perseveranza</span> would be glad to know the publishers
-of a picture-book of performing frogs or cats from
-which she could copy for painting on dessert
-doyleys.</p>
-
-<p>L B. N. R. wishes to know the author of the following
-lines&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">"There is a river which flows for ever,<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">And the flowers that bloom on its banks<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Grow bright, as they glitter in grateful endeavour<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">To vie in a perfume of thanks."<br /></span>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-<h3>MISCELLANEOUS.</h3>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Edith.</span>&mdash;The origin of the Lions as a device on the
-Royal Arms we trace to William the Conqueror,
-who introduced those of Normandy. These two
-original Lions were supplemented by a third,
-added by Henry III., it is generally supposed, for
-Aquitaine.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mater.</span>&mdash;To make an economical Christmas cake,
-take half a pound of butter, place in a bowl, and
-break five eggs over it, stirring continuously, while
-a second person sifts in slowly a pound and a half
-of currants (well washed, dried, and carefully
-picked), three-quarters of a pound of flour, and
-two ounces of citron peel chopped to moderately
-small pieces. Place in a papered shape&mdash;not
-buttered&mdash;several folds of paper being laid at the
-bottom of the tin, and bake in moderately hot oven
-during three hours.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Semper paratus.</span>&mdash;We answer two questions, and
-you have asked nineteen! It is impossible to
-describe the several Scotch tartans otherwise than
-by coloured illustrations. These you will find in a
-book published by W. and A. K. Johnston (Edinburgh
-and London), entitled, <i>The Scottish Clans
-and their Tartans</i>, now in its second (if not third)
-edition. Some account of every Clan is given.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Anxious.</span>&mdash;Rheumatism will, no doubt, be made
-worse by exposure to damp and draughts; but the
-origin is in acidity, which crystallises in the joints
-and muscles. You should abstain for a time from
-butchers' meat, and from sweet things. Attend to
-the action of the liver, which may be torpid; and
-if the pain be in the arms and shoulders, you should
-perform all kinds of exercises with them, and
-employ friction and rubbing with suitable embrocation.
-If you do not perform exercises, the joints
-and sinews will become stiff.</p>
-
-<p>A. E. C.&mdash;<i>Noah's Ark</i>, by Darley Dale, is published
-as a book by F. Warne, Bedford Street, Strand.
-Price 3s. 6d.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Helen of Troy.</span>&mdash;You will find several families of
-the name Marshall&mdash;though not necessarily related&mdash;in
-Burke's <i>Landed Gentry</i>. Perhaps you can
-claim your connection with one of them. The first
-on the list is G. H. Marshall, of Patterdale Hall,
-Westmoreland, descended from John of Yeadon
-Hall, Co. York, who made a large fortune from the
-mechanical improvements in a branch of the linen
-manufacture. There is Marshall of Treworgley,
-Cornwall; Marshall of Penwortham Hall, descended
-from M. of Ardwick, near Manchester;
-Marshall of Ward End House, Co. Warwick,
-descended from M. of Perlethorp, Co. Nottinghamshire;
-and Marshall of Broadwater, Surrey,
-apparently the oldest family of that name, anciently
-spelt Marchal, and long resident in that county.
-None of these families have the same arms, nor
-crest. The first-named (of Patterdale) has none
-ascribed to them in the <i>Landed Gentry</i>. You had
-better consult the second volume in some library.</p></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">{224}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="OUR_PUZZLE_POEMS" id="OUR_PUZZLE_POEMS">OUR PUZZLE POEMS.</a></h2>
-
-<p class='ph3'>A NEW DEPARTURE.</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">We</span> are publishing Three Puzzle Poems in succession dealing with accidents and the way to meet them, and
-the following is the second of the series. The lines should be carefully committed to memory for the sake of
-the valuable instruction they contain.</p>
-
-<p>In addition to the ordinary monthly prizes <span class="smcap">Three Special Prizes</span> are offered for the best solutions of the
-whole series.</p>
-
-<p>The first Special Prize will be <span class="smcap">Three Guineas</span>; the second Special Prize, <span class="smcap">Two Guineas</span>, and the third
-Special Prize, <span class="smcap">One Guinea</span>.</p>
-
-<p>A careful record of mistakes will be kept, and these prizes will be awarded to those competitors who
-perpetrate the fewest in all three puzzles.</p>
-
-<p>If a winner of one of these prizes has already received an ordinary prize in the series, the amount of the
-smaller prize will be deducted. This will then be sent to the most deserving non-prize-winner in the list
-relating to the puzzle for which the prize in question was awarded.</p>
-
-
-<h3>OUR NEW PUZZLE POEM.</h3>
-
-<div class="figcenter w450">
-<img src="images/i_224.jpg" width="450" height="665" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p>&#8258; <span class="smcap">Prizes</span> to the amount of six guineas (one of which will be reserved for competitors living abroad)
-are offered for the best solutions of the above Puzzle Poem. The following conditions must be observed.</p>
-
-<p>1. Solutions to be written on one side of the paper only.</p>
-
-<p>2. Each paper to be headed with the name and address of the competitor.</p>
-
-<p>3. Attention must be paid to spelling, punctuation, and neatness.</p>
-
-<p>4. Send by post to Editor, <span class="smcap">Girl's Own Paper</span>, 56, Paternoster Row, London. "Puzzle Poem" to be
-written on the top left-hand corner of the envelope.</p>
-
-<p>5. The last day for receiving solutions from Great Britain and Ireland will be February 17, 1899; from
-Abroad, April 17, 1899.</p>
-
-<p>The competition is open to all without any restrictions as to sex or age.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2><a name="OUR_SUPPLEMENT_STORY" id="OUR_SUPPLEMENT_STORY">OUR SUPPLEMENT STORY
-COMPETITION.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p class='ph3'>SELF OR FRIEND?</p>
-
-<p class='ph3'>A STORY IN MINIATURE.</p>
-
-
-<p class='center'><span class="smcap">First Prize</span> (2 2s.).</p>
-
-<p>Margaret A. Fish, 49, Foregate Street,
-Worcester.</p>
-
-
-<p class='center'><span class="smcap">Second Prize</span> (1 1s.).</p>
-
-<p>Rose Cook, 2, South Cliff, Lowestoft.</p>
-
-
-<p class='center'><span class="smcap">Third Prize</span> (10s. 6d.).</p>
-
-<p>Edith Ivens, Mayfield, Station Road,
-Llandaff, nr. Cardiff.</p>
-
-
-<p class='center'><span class="smcap">Very Highly Commended.</span></p>
-
-<p>Emily M. P. Wood, Woodbank, Southport.</p>
-
-
-<p class='center'><span class="smcap">Honourable Mention.</span></p>
-
-<p>Mary Adamson, Eastbourne; Lucy H.
-Chapman, Weston-super-Mare; "Conor,"
-Bonchurch, I.W.; Rose L. Connor, Greenock,
-N.B.; "Editha," Birmingham; Kate Collins
-Ensor, Atherstone; "Excelsior," North Bow,
-E.; Annie F. Hepple, N. Shields; E. Marian
-Jupe, Warminster; "Mignonette," New
-Cross, S.E.; Edith Miller, Judd St., W.C.;
-Agnes Osborne, Sidcup; Minnie Reeves,
-Twyford; Lucy Richardson, York; Enid G.
-St. Aubyn, Retford; Mary Adle Venn,
-West Kensington Park; L. M. Willis,
-Harrogate; Mabel Wilson, Bedford Park.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-
-<p class='center'><span class="smcap">To the Competitors.</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">My dear Girls</span>,&mdash;To the prize winners and to those
-of you also who failed to gain prizes, I offer my
-hearty congratulations on the excellent papers you
-sent in. The work of selecting the very best was
-much less difficult than that of choosing a few for
-"Honourable Mention," out of hundreds of really
-good ones.</p>
-
-<p>It may interest you to know why some of you failed
-to obtain a place in the list of honours. Twenty-eight
-competitors were disqualified by breaking the
-rule as to size of paper and space to be filled. Then
-there were several charming essays on the story which
-were not miniatures of it. In a considerable number
-necessary parts of the outline were omitted, hence
-the work was incomplete.</p>
-
-<p>It gave me true pleasure to note how thoroughly
-most of you grasped the lesson which the story was
-intended to convey.</p>
-
-<p>Do not be disheartened. Try again. Such good
-papers cannot be called failures, and the exercise
-will benefit you whether you gain prizes or not.</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="ml2">Your affectionate old friend,</span><br />
-<span class="smcap ml4">Ruth Lamb.</span><br />
-</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-
-<p class='ph3'>OUR NEXT STORY COMPETITION.</p>
-
-<p class='ph3'>STORIES IN MINIATURE.</p>
-
-<p class='center'><i>Subject</i>:&mdash;"<span class="smcap">The G. O. P. Supplement for
-January.</span>"</p>
-
-
-<p class='ph3'>WHEN MY SHIP COMES HOME.</p>
-
-<p class='center'><span class="smcap">By</span> SARAH DOUDNEY, Author of "A Cluster
-of Roses," "A Flower of Light," etc.</p>
-
-<p>We offer three prizes of <span class="smcap">Two Guineas</span>,
-<span class="smcap">One Guinea</span>, and <span class="smcap">Half-a-Guinea</span> for the
-three best papers on our "Story Supplement"
-for this month. The essays are to give a brief
-account of the plot and action of the story in
-the Competitor's own words; in fact, each
-paper should be a carefully-constructed <i>Story
-in Miniature</i>, telling the reader in a few
-bright words what <span class="smcap">The Girl's Own Story
-Supplement</span> for the month is all about.</p>
-
-<p>One page of foolscap only is to be written
-upon, and is to be signed by the writer, followed
-by her full address, and posted to The
-Editor, <span class="smcap">Girl's Own Paper</span>, in an unsealed
-envelope, with the words "Stories in Miniature"
-written on the left-hand top corner.</p>
-
-<p>The last day for receiving the papers is
-January 20th; and no papers can in any case
-be returned.</p>
-
-<p><i>Examiners</i>:&mdash;The Author of the Story
-(Sarah Doudney), and the Editor of <span class="smcap">The
-Girl's Own Paper</span>.</p></div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p>Transcriber's Note: The following changes have been made to this text.</p>
-
-<p>Page 218&mdash;prevenche changed to pervenche.</p>
-
-<p>Page 222&mdash;parafin changed to paraffin.</p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Girl's Own Paper, Vol. XX, No.
-992, December 31, 1898, by Various
-
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