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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.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #55808 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/55808)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Chambers's Journal of Popular Literature,
-Science, and Art, No. 734, January 19, 18, by Various
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Chambers's Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, No. 734, January 19, 1878
-
-Author: Various
-
-Editor: William Chambers
- Robert Chambers
-
-Release Date: October 24, 2017 [EBook #55808]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHAMBERS JOURNAL OF LITERATURE, JAN 19, 1878 ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Susan Skinner and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: CHAMBERS’S JOURNAL
-
-OF
-
-POPULAR
-
-LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART.
-
-Fourth Series
-
-CONDUCTED BY WILLIAM AND ROBERT CHAMBERS.
-
-NO. 734. SATURDAY, JANUARY 19, 1878. PRICE 1½_d._]
-
-
-
-
-THE STORY OF THIERS.
-
-
-In a densely populated street of the quaint sea-port of Marseilles
-there dwelt a poor locksmith and his family, who were so hard pressed
-by the dearness of provisions and the general hardness of the times,
-that the rent and taxes for the wretched tenement which they called
-a home had been allowed to fall many weeks into arrear. But the good
-people struggled on against their poverty; and the locksmith (who
-was the son of a ruined cloth-merchant), though fallen to the humble
-position of a dock-porter, still managed to wade through life as if
-he had been born to opulence. This poor labourer’s name was Thiers,
-and his wife was a descendant of the poet Chenier; the two being
-destined to become the parents of Louis Adolphe Thiers, one of the most
-remarkable men that ever lived.
-
-The hero of our story was at his birth mentally consigned to oblivion
-by his parents, while the neighbours laughed at the ungainly child,
-and prognosticated for him all kinds of evil in the future. And it is
-more than probable that these evil auguries would have been fulfilled
-had it not been for the extraordinary care bestowed upon him by his
-grandmother. But for her, perhaps our story had never been written.
-
-Under her fostering care the child survived all those diseases which
-were, according to the gossips, to prove fatal to him; but while his
-limbs remained almost stationary, his head and chest grew larger, until
-he became a veritable dwarf. By his mother’s influence with the family
-of André Chenier, the lad was enabled to enter the Marseilles Lyceum
-at the age of nine; and here the remarkable head and chest kept the
-promise they made in his infancy, and soon fulfilled Madame Thiers’
-predictions.
-
-Louis Adolphe Thiers was a brilliant though somewhat erratic pupil. He
-was noted for his practical jokes, his restlessness, and the ready and
-ingenious manner in which he always extricated himself from any scrapes
-into which his bold and restless disposition had led him. Thus the
-child in this case would appear to have been ‘father to the man,’ by
-the manner in which he afterwards released his beloved country from one
-of the greatest ‘scrapes’ she ever experienced.
-
-On leaving school Thiers studied for the law, and was eventually called
-to the bar, though he never practised as a lawyer. He became instead
-a local politician; and so well did the rôle suit him, that he soon
-evinced a strong desire to try his fortune in Paris itself. He swayed
-his auditory, when speaking, in spite of his diminutive stature,
-Punch-like physiognomy, and shrill piping speech; and shout and yell
-as his adversaries might, they could not drown his voice, for it arose
-clear and distinct above all the hubbub around him. While the studious
-youth was thus making himself a name in his native town, he was ever on
-the watch for an opportunity to transfer his fortunes to the capital.
-His almost penniless condition, however, precluded him from carrying
-out his design without extraneous assistance of some kind or other;
-but when such a stupendous ambition as that of governing one of the
-greatest nations of the earth filled the breast of the Marseilles
-student, it was not likely that the opportunity he was seeking would be
-long in coming.
-
-The Academy of Aix offered a prize of a few hundred francs for a
-eulogium on _Vauvenargues_, and here was the opportunity which Louis
-Adolphe Thiers required. He determined to compete for the prize,
-and wrote out two copies of his essay, one of which he sent to the
-Academy’s Secretary, and the other he submitted to the judgment of
-his friends. This latter indiscretion, however, would appear to have
-been the cause of his name being mentioned to the Academicians as a
-competitor; and as they had a spite against him, and disapproved of his
-opinions, they decided to reject any essay which he might submit to
-them.
-
-On the day of the competition they were as good as their word, and
-Thiers received back his essay with only an ‘honourable mention’
-attached to it. The votes, however, had been equally divided, and the
-principal prize could not be adjudged until the next session. The
-future statesman and brilliant journalist was not, however, to be cast
-aside in this contemptuous manner, and he accordingly adopted a _ruse
-de guerre_, which was perfectly justifiable under the circumstances. He
-sent back his first essay for the second competition with his own name
-attached thereto, and at the same time transmitted another essay, by
-means of a friend, through the Paris post-office. This paper was signed
-‘Louis Duval;’ and as M. Thiers knew that they had resolved to reject
-his essay and accept the next best on the list, he made it as near as
-possible equal to the other in point of merit.
-
-The Academicians were thoroughly out-generalled by this clever
-artifice, and the prize was awarded to the essay signed ‘Louis Duval;’
-but the chagrin of the dons when the envelope was opened and the name
-of Louis Adolphe Thiers was read out, can be better imagined than
-described. The prize, which amounted to about twenty pounds, was
-added to another sum of forty pounds gained by his friend Mignet for
-essay-writing; and with this modest amount, the two friends set out
-on their journey to Paris. On their arrival there, both of them were
-at once engaged as writers on the _Globe_ newspaper, and M. Thiers’
-articles soon attracted such attention that the highest political
-destinies were predicted for their author.
-
-Alluding to the small stature of our hero, Prince Talleyrand once
-said: ‘_Il est petit, mais il grandira!_’ (He is little, but he will
-be great!) Meanwhile, the young adventurer, as we may call him, was
-engaged on general literary work for the press, writing political
-leaders one day, art-criticisms the next, and so on, until a publisher
-asked him to write the _History of the French Revolution_. He accepted;
-and when published, the work met with so great a success that it placed
-him in the front rank of literature, and gained for him the proud title
-of ‘National Historian.’ After this the two friends published the
-_National_ newspaper, an undertaking which we are told was conceived
-in Talleyrand’s house, and was largely subscribed to by the Duke
-of Orleans, afterwards King Louis-Philippe. M. Thiers disliked the
-Bourbons; and when, in 1829, Charles X. dissolved a liberal parliament,
-he took the lead in agitating for the reinstating of the people’s
-rights. The king having determined to reply to the re-election of the
-‘221’ by a _coup d’état_, the nature of which was secretly communicated
-to M. Thiers, the latter hastened to the office of the _National_
-and drew up the celebrated Protest of the Journalists, which before
-noon was signed by every writer on the liberal side. As M. Thiers was
-leaving the office, a servant of Prince Talleyrand placed in his hand a
-note, which simply bore the words, ‘Go and gather cherries.’ This was a
-hint that danger was near the young patriot, and that he should repair
-to the house of one of the Prince’s friends at Montmorency--a place
-famous for its cherries--and there lie hidden until the storm had blown
-over.
-
-M. Thiers did not immediately accept the hint, but remained in the
-capital during the day, to watch the course of events and endeavour to
-prevent his friends from doing anything rash. He energetically sought
-to dissuade those who were for resisting the king’s decree by force of
-arms; but did not succeed. When the barricades were raised, he left
-Paris, because he thought that the people were doing an unwise thing,
-which would lead to a fearful slaughter, and perhaps result in himself
-and friends being shot.
-
-When, however, the battle between the army and the people had really
-begun, the indomitable little man returned to Paris, and heedless of
-the bullets that were flying about, he ran here and there trying to
-collect adherents for the Duke of Orleans. He also had a proclamation
-of the Duke, as king, printed, rushed out with it, damp as it was from
-the press, and distributed copies to the victorious insurgents; but
-this operation nearly cost him his life, for the crowds on the Place
-de la Bourse were shouting for a republic, and a cry was immediately
-raised to lynch M. Thiers. He only escaped by dashing into a
-pastry-cook’s shop, and taking a header down the open cellar which led
-to the kitchen.
-
-Nothing daunted by this _contretemps_, however, he sought out M.
-Scheffer, an intimate friend of the Duke of Orleans, and started off
-for Neuilly with him (without consulting anybody else), to offer the
-crown of France to the Duke. When they found the Duke, he despatched
-M. Thiers to Prince Talleyrand to ask his advice on the subject; and
-the latter, who was in bed at the time, said: ‘Let him accept;’ but
-positively refused to put this advice in writing. Thus the Duke of
-Orleans became King of the French under the name of Louis-Philippe, and
-the Marseilles student found himself a step nearer the accomplishment
-of his aim. The poor locksmith’s son had overthrown one king and
-established another!
-
-It was M. Thiers who caused the remains of Napoleon to be removed from
-the gloomy resting-place in St Helena to the church of the Invalides in
-Paris, where they were re-interred amid great pomp and circumstance.
-He it was who also invented or gave currency to the now well-known
-constitutional maxim, ‘The king reigns, but does not govern.’
-
-In this reign M. Thiers commenced his great work on the _Consulate and
-the Empire_, in which he so eulogised the First Napoleon and flattered
-the military fame of France, that he unwittingly paved the way for the
-advent of the second Empire.
-
-The revolution of 1848, which led to the abdication of Louis-Philippe,
-found Thiers but a simple soldier in the National Guard, and parading
-the streets with a musket on his shoulder, despite his diminutive
-stature. A man of his transcendent ability, however, could not be left
-long in so humble a position, and we therefore find the newly elected
-sovereign Louis Napoleon trying hard to win over to his side this
-unique citizen. But Thiers declined the honour, and remained a thorn in
-Napoleon’s side during the whole period of his reign. When the _coup
-d’état_ of 1851 was struck he was one of the leading statesmen whose
-arrest was ordered and carried out. The patriot was seized and forcibly
-taken out of his bed at an early hour in the morning, and imprisoned at
-Mazas for several days. He was then escorted out of the country, and
-became an exile from the land he loved so well.
-
-While the excitement in Paris, which culminated in the outbreak of the
-war with Germany, was at its height, and the whole nation was singing
-the _Marseillaise_ and shouting ‘à Berlin,’ M. Thiers’ voice was the
-only one raised to protest against France precipitating herself into an
-unjust and unnecessary war. He was unheeded at the moment; but a few
-weeks sufficed to prove the soundness of his reasoning; and when the
-Germans were marching on Paris, it was to the locksmith’s son that the
-whole nation turned in its distress.
-
-The Napoleonic dynasty was deposed, and at the elections for the
-National Assembly which afterwards took place, M. Thiers was elected
-for twenty-six Departments--a splendid national testimony to his
-patriotism and ability. As soon as the Assembly met he was at once
-appointed ‘Chief of the Executive Power’ of the French Republic.
-Thus the poor student of the Marseilles Academy had become, almost
-without any effort of his own, the governor of his country; and how he
-acquitted himself of the onerous and self-sacrificing task, let the
-living grief of Frenchmen for his loss at this moment proudly attest.
-
-Previous to this appointment, however, and while the German army was
-thundering at the gates of Paris, the brave old statesman had, in
-his seventy-fourth year, shewn his unalterable devotion to France by
-the famous journey he made to all the European courts to endeavour
-to obtain assistance. Failing in this, he came back, and being made
-President, as above mentioned, he made peace with the Germans on the
-best terms he could get, turned round and beat the Communists in the
-streets of Paris; and within three short years he had not only paid the
-heaviest war indemnity ever known, but had cleared his country of the
-Germans, consolidated her resources, and reorganised her army.
-
-On the morning of the 4th September last, France was suddenly plunged
-into the deepest grief and dismay by the announcement that her greatest
-citizen had been taken from her by death on the previous evening, at a
-time when the whole nation was looking to him as the one man who could
-save it from the dangerous crisis through which it was at that moment
-passing.
-
-The funeral was a magnificent one, and though a wet day, there was not
-a citizen in Paris that did not join the throng, which lined the whole
-of the way to the cemetery. As the body of the great patriot was borne
-along every hat was raised, and many among the crowd shed tears. A riot
-was expected on the occasion, but the people behaved admirably and with
-great forbearance; the greatest tribute of respect which they could
-have shewn to the memory of one who had done so much for his country.
-
-The modesty of this great citizen was in perfect accordance with his
-republican principles; for while President of the French Republic, his
-card never bore anything more on it than the simple ‘Monsieur Thiers;’
-nor did he wear any uniform or decoration other than that one which is
-so dear to the heart and eye of every true Frenchman, ‘the Legion of
-Honour.’ Surely never did a worthier breast bear that famous Cross than
-that of the man who, despite every obstacle both physical and moral,
-and despite evil prognostications, bitter taunts, and the crushing hand
-of poverty, rose by the grand yet simple force of his own indomitable
-will from the position of a labourer’s son to that of the ruler of a
-mighty nation. But even greater than all this was the fact, that having
-attained to this grand position, he was ready, at what he believed
-to be the call of duty, to lay aside his dignity, to step from his
-proud position, and once more to assume the humbler rôle of a private
-citizen. Such a sublime act of self-abnegation was sufficient to assure
-to him the enthusiastic love and respect of an intelligent people,
-and the esteem of the whole world, which may be said to have joined
-with France in weaving a chaplet of immortelles to place upon the tomb
-of one whose memory will be revered by all who respect indomitable
-perseverance and true nobility of character.
-
-
-
-
-HELENA, LADY HARROGATE.
-
-
-CHAPTER III.--THE LETTER.
-
-When Sir Sykes, left alone, addressed himself to the perusal of the
-crumpled letter which he had hitherto crushed in his clenched hand,
-it was with no light repugnance that he applied himself to the task.
-Slowly, and with shaking fingers, he unfolded and smoothed the ruffled
-paper, spread it on the table before him, and not hastily, but with a
-deliberate care that was evidently painful to him, read as follows:
-‘Although a stranger to you, Sir Sykes Denzil, Baronet, I am no
-stranger to what took place on March 24, 18--. Should you wish this
-matter to remain, as it has hitherto done, untalked of by the world,
-I must request that you will meet me this evening at _The Traveller’s
-Rest_, by the cross-roads. I shall wait there for you until ten o’clock
-to-night, and will then name the terms on which alone you can reckon on
-my future silence.--Inquire for yours respectfully, DICK HOLD, staying
-at _The Traveller’s Rest_.’
-
-The baronet read and re-read this letter with the patient endurance of
-a sufferer under the surgeon’s knife. Nothing but his labouring breath
-and the deepening of the lines around his mouth and the furrows on his
-high forehead, betrayed the pain that this precious document, indited
-in a large sprawling hand, occasioned him. When he had gone through
-it for the second time, he rose, and filling a glass with water from
-a bottle that stood on a side-table, he drank a deep draught, and
-then paced to and fro with hasty irregular steps, as some men do when
-suddenly called upon for earnest thought and prompt decision.
-
-‘I will not go!’ he said authoritatively, but in a low voice--‘I will
-not go.’
-
-Such a peremptory summons as that which he had received implied more
-than it stated. It was couched in terms which were sufficiently civil;
-but the tone was still that of command, not of entreaty or persuasion.
-Most gentlemen of the degree of Sir Sykes would have treated such a
-demand either as a piece of insufferable insolence or as the freak
-of a madman. The baronet knew well enough what sort of reception
-his neighbours, Lord Wolverhampton, Carew of Carew, or Fulford of
-Carstennis, would have given to a request so impudent. He was, as they
-were, a justice of the peace and deputy-lieutenant, owner of a fine
-estate, one whose name was mentioned with respect wherever men did
-congregate.
-
-The meekest of us all are apt to rebel against unwarranted dictation.
-And Sir Sykes was not meek. His friends and his servants--lynx-eyed
-as we are apt to be to the foibles of others--knew that he was in
-his unobtrusive way a proud man. The stronger, therefore, must have
-been the influence that drew him, as the magnet draws iron to itself,
-towards that unsavoury house of entertainment whence his unknown
-correspondent had dated his missive. The first dressing-bell clanged
-out its call unheeded, and it was only when the second bell rang that
-Sir Sykes recalled his wandering thoughts sufficiently to remember that
-it was time for him to dress, and that whatever cares might be busy
-at his heart, he must yet wear his mask decorously before the world.
-Dinner on that day at Carbery Court was not a peculiarly genial meal.
-The baronet had taken, with his accustomed regularity, his place at
-the table; but he was pale, and looked older by some years than he had
-done a few hours since. Yet he resented Lucy’s half-timid inquiry: ‘You
-are not ill, papa, I hope?’ and quietly declared that he was perfectly
-well. The domestic relations differ so much in varying conditions of
-life, that there are parents whose every thought and deed appear to
-be the common property of the home circle, and others who sanction no
-trespass on the inner self, the _to auton_ of the Greeks, which each of
-us carries in the recesses of his own heart.
-
-Sir Sykes Denzil was one of those men who, as husband and father, never
-carry their confidences beyond a certain convenient limit. He was no
-tyrant, and his daughters, who fondly loved him and who believed in his
-love for them, looked with regret on the cloud that so often rested
-on his yet handsome features. But he had known how to preserve his
-jealously guarded individuality from the encroachments of affectionate
-interference, so that it was but very rarely that his actions were
-the theme of open comment. Blanche and Lucy, therefore, though with
-feminine nicety of observation they noted that their father could not
-eat, but that he emptied his glass again and again, said nothing;
-while Jasper, as he watched Sir Sykes with a stealthy inquisitiveness,
-made the mental reflection that ‘the governor must be hard hit, very
-hard indeed;’ and secretly determined to turn the occasion to his own
-peculiar profit.
-
-‘Jasper!’ said Lucy anxiously, some time after the dinner had come to
-an end; ‘what is the matter with papa? Do you know if he is really
-unwell, or if anything has gone wrong? I waited here for you, in case
-you might know what is amiss.’
-
-Jasper, who had been intercepted as he was leaving the house for his
-customary twilight stroll, with a cigar between his lips, turned lazily
-round. ‘How can I tell, Lucy?’ he returned indifferently. ‘I’m not the
-keeper of my father’s conscience, as the Lord Chancellor, by a polite
-fiction, is supposed to be of the king’s.’
-
-‘I only meant, has anything occurred, to your knowledge,’ pleaded Miss
-Denzil, ‘calculated to annoy or distress him? Anything, for instance,
-about you?’
-
-‘How about me!’ demanded Jasper with a slight start and a slight frown.
-
-‘Don’t be angry, brother; I only meant, dear, about your--debts,’
-answered the girl, laying her hand on Jasper’s arm.
-
-‘Has he been talking to you on that delightful subject?’ retorted the
-brother, almost roughly. ‘No; I see that he has not; at least not very
-lately. One would think, to hear that eternal refrain of debts, debts,
-debts for ever jangling in my ears, that I was the first fellow who
-ever overran the constable. Surely I’m punished enough, if I _did_
-owe a trifle, by being caged up in this wearisome old Bastille of a
-house, and---- There, there; Lucy, don’t cry. I’ll not say a word more
-against Carbery, and you may set your mind at rest. If the governor has
-anything to vex him, be assured that it is not in the least connected
-with so insignificant a person as myself.’ And, as though weary of the
-subject, he sauntered off.
-
-It was Sir Sykes’s habit on most evenings to spend a short time, half
-an hour or so, in the drawing-room. He liked music; and Blanche, his
-younger daughter, who had been gifted with the sweet voice and delicate
-sense of harmony which are often found in conjunction with frail
-health, knew the airs and the songs that best suited him. He never,
-under any circumstances, remained long in company with his daughters,
-being one of those men to whom the society of women is in itself
-uncongenial; but on this particular evening he went straight from the
-dining-room to the library, and sipped his coffee there, while the
-twilight deepened into the gloom of night.
-
-The day had been fine enough, but the sun had sunk in a cloud-bank of
-black and orange, and there were not wanting signs that a change of
-weather was at hand. The wind had risen, and the clouds gathered as
-the sun went down, and it seemed as though the proverbial fickleness
-of our climate would soon be illustrated. But Sir Sykes, as he went
-forth shortly after the clock on the turret had struck nine, paid no
-heed to the weather, save that once or twice he glanced upwards with
-a sort of half-conscious satisfaction at the darkling sky. The night,
-with its friendly shadows and its threats of a coming storm, suited far
-better with his purpose than cloudless azure and bright moonlight would
-have done. The moon, not as yet long risen, was young and wan, and her
-feeble lustre fell but at rare intervals through the wrack of hurrying
-clouds. The larches in the plantations quivered and the aspens by the
-trout-stream trembled as the gusts of wailing wind went by; while the
-giant trees in the park, each one a citadel of refuge to squirrel and
-song-bird, sent down a rustling sound, as though every one out of their
-million leaves had found a tiny voice of its own to give warning of
-the approaching gale. Sir Sykes skirted the lawn, passed through the
-shrubbery, and struck into a path seldom trodden except by the feet of
-his keepers, which led northwards through the park.
-
-There is something ignominious in the very fact that the master of
-any dwelling, howsoever humble, should steal away from it with as
-earnest a desire to elude observation as though he had been a robber
-of hen-roosts or a purloiner of spoons. And perhaps such a proceeding
-appeared still more so in the case of the owner of so stately a place
-as Carbery. Sir Sykes felt as he glided, unseen as he hoped, past
-paling and thicket, at once angry and ashamed. So repugnant to him was
-the errand on which his mind was bent, that on reaching a private door
-in the northern wall of the park he came to a halt, and held as it were
-parley with himself before proceeding on the quest of the writer of the
-letter.
-
-‘I do not know this fellow,’ he muttered wrathfully: ‘the man’s very
-name is strange to me. But the twenty-fourth of March--_that_ can be no
-mistake, no coincidence. That fatal date has burned itself too deeply
-into my brain for me to disregard or to forget it. Yes, I must go; I
-suppose that I must go.’
-
-And with a heavy sigh, the master of that fair demesne and of many a
-broad acre beyond it felt in his pocket for the key that would open
-the postern before which he stood, unlocked the door, went out, and
-reclosed and fastened it behind him. Then, without further hesitation,
-he entered into a lane, the straggling branches of the hazels that
-grew on the high banks to left and right almost brushing against his
-person as he walked briskly on. So long as he had been within the
-limits of Carbery Chase, Sir Sykes had done his best to escape notice,
-keeping as often as he could tree and bush and rising ground between
-himself and the grand house of which he was absolute proprietor. But
-now he ceased to turn his head and look or listen for any sign that he
-was followed, and pushed on, assured that his clandestine exit from
-Carbery was unknown to any but himself. Sir Sykes, however, was very
-much mistaken. He was dogged by the very pursuer whom, perhaps, of all
-others he would have wished to keep in ignorance as to his conduct.
-Jasper, whose feline vigilance, once awakened, could not readily be
-lulled to sleep, had kept watch upon his father’s actions with a quiet
-patient steadiness which nothing but vengeance or the greed of gain
-could possibly have inspired. There is a certain sympathy, especially
-with crooked motives, which enables us to anticipate the stratagems of
-those with whom we have intercourse, and of this Jasper had his full
-share.
-
-He was scarcely surprised when from his place of espial he saw his
-father quit the house and thread his way through the grounds after such
-a fashion as made it manifest that the baronet desired his excursion
-to remain a secret to those beneath his roof. That something abnormal
-should happen as a consequence of the letter which Sir Sykes had
-received, and the reading of which had so powerfully affected its
-recipient, the captain had considered as so probable, that he thought
-it worth his while to lie in wait for the surprisal of the secret. Of
-two probable hypotheses, Jasper, whose imagination was of a chastened
-and practical order, had chosen rather to fancy that some stranger
-would arrive, than that the baronet should himself go forth to meet
-that stranger. But when he saw his father’s tall figure vanish amidst
-the shadows of the dense evergreens and leafy lime-trees, he was not in
-the least astonished.
-
-‘When it was a question of nobbling the _Black Prince_,’ he said
-meditatively, ‘I wouldn’t trust myself, nor would Gentleman Pratt, to
-talking it over anywhere but on Bletchley Downs with the vagabonds
-who hocussed the horse, and who would for a fiver have sold their own
-fathers.’
-
-Some recollection that he, Jasper Denzil, late a captain in Her
-Majesty’s service, was at that moment engaged, so far as in him lay,
-in the questionable operation of ‘selling’ his own father, here
-caused a twinge to his callous heart. But we are seldom without some
-moral anodyne wherewith to lull to sleep that troublesome monitor,
-conscience; and Jasper had but need to remember his debts, his
-difficulties, and the fact that men at his club spoke of him as ‘Poor
-Denzil--played out, sir!’ to assuage the momentary pang which some as
-yet smouldering sense of honour occasioned to him.
-
-The skill with which he followed Sir Sykes, keeping the object of his
-pursuit fully in view, yet never for an instant compromising himself
-by coming into the range of vision, should the baronet, as he often
-did, turn his head, would have done credit to a Comanche Indian on the
-war-path. It was by a subtle instinct, not by practice, that he availed
-himself of the shelter of tree and brake and hollow, until at length,
-himself unobserved, he made sure that Sir Sykes was heading towards the
-private door in the northern wall of the park. There was a side-gate
-kept continually unlocked on account of the right of way, some six
-hundred yards to the eastward, and from this the captain could issue
-without difficulty. As for the private door, Sir Sykes had a key to fit
-its lock; Jasper had none. The latter’s mind was instantly made up.
-
-Idle sybarite though he was, the captain was fleet of foot, an
-accomplishment perhaps more common among languid men about town than
-healthy hardy dwellers in the country would readily imagine. He had
-made money once and again by the lightness of his heels, and they did
-him good service now, as, after a rapid rush across the elastic turf of
-the park and a quick traversing of the heathery surface of the rugged
-common-land beyond, he caught a glimpse of his father’s stately figure
-as it passed in between the tall hedges of the lane.
-
-‘It’s lucky I can run a bit!’ gasped out Jasper as he paused for an
-instant to take breath, and then passing his cambric handkerchief
-across his brow, on which the heat-drops stood thickly, plunged into
-the dark lane between the steep banks of which the object of his
-pursuit had disappeared. And now his task was the easier, in that Sir
-Sykes, intent on what lay before him, and confident that his manner of
-leaving his home was unknown, never once turned his head to look back.
-
-A ghastly sight it was--had human eye been there to note it--which the
-wan moon shewed, when at uncertain intervals her white light fell on
-the pale faces of these two men, father and son, so much and so little
-alike, who were wending their way thus along the deep Devonshire lane.
-In front was Sir Sykes, moody indeed and downcast, but a gentleman
-of a goodly presence; while behind him came with feline footfall his
-only son, as craftily eager in the chase as even a garrotter, our
-British Thug, could have been. Once beyond the lane, the baronet and
-his kindred spy had to traverse a tract of ragged and desolate common,
-where the horse-road dwindled to a track of cart-wheels in the peaty
-soil, and where Jasper felt that concealment would have been difficult,
-had the baronet but looked behind him.
-
-But the rain, long threatened, came on, urged by the strength of the
-sobbing wind, and Captain Denzil congratulated himself on the friendly
-darkness that ensued. Nor was it long before Sir Sykes caught sight of
-the dead tree, on a knotted bough of which was the signboard of _The
-Traveller’s Rest_, the dilapidated roof and battered front of which
-could dimly be seen through the gloom of night.
-
-‘After all, why not?’ ejaculated Jasper, as he saw his father, after a
-moment’s hesitation, disappear within the ruinous porch of the roadside
-public-house.
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.--AT THE TRAVELLER’S REST.
-
-‘Person of the name of Hold? I should think so, rather. Want to see
-him, do you? Turn to your right, then; get up them stone steps, and
-just keep straight till you’re past the water-butt, and you’ll twig the
-tap-room door.’
-
-It was a sharp-eyed sharp-tongued boy who spoke, a boy in a tattered
-jacket that had once been blue, and had once been garnished with brass
-anchor buttons; but who retained his Cockney accent and his air of
-brisk effrontery, like that of a London sparrow.
-
-‘Can’t you make out Her Majesty’s English, Mr Stiffback?’ said this
-impudent servitor of _The Traveller’s Rest_, seeing that Sir Sykes
-hesitated.
-
-‘You keep a civil tongue, Deputy,’ broke in a deeper voice from within
-the darkling passage. ‘This, I suppose, is the gentleman who received a
-letter from a party called Hold? Very good. This way, sir, please; and
-mind you don’t hurt your head against the beam, for the ceiling’s low
-and light’s scarce. So. Here we are; and this is the tap-room, and my
-name is Hold. At this end of the room we’ll be quietest.’
-
-And the baronet passively permitted himself to be led up some stone
-steps and down some brick steps, and finally into a long low room,
-at one end of which, although the weather was warm and the season
-summer, there glowed and crackled a large fire of mingled peat and
-wood, around which were clustered seven or eight persons male and
-female, two of whom were smoking short discoloured pipes, while the
-others were conversing in hoarse tones, or sniffing, with somewhat of a
-wolfish expression of countenance, the savoury fumes that arose from a
-frying-pan which a gaunt man in frowsy black was carefully holding over
-the hottest part of the fire.
-
-There was a low wooden screen or partition, about breast-high, which
-stretched across some three-fourths of this delectable apartment, which
-was rudely furnished with some wooden settles and rush-bottomed chairs,
-and a couple of greasy tables, vamped and clamped with sheet-iron to
-repair the injury which excitable customers had done to the woodwork.
-
-‘My name, Sir Sykes, is Hold,’ said the owner of the name, when the
-baronet had taken his seat on one of the mean-looking chairs, and
-his singular correspondent had placed himself on one of the benches
-opposite.
-
-‘I never heard it before, nor, to the best of my recollection, have we
-ever met,’ said Sir Sykes dryly.
-
-‘Ah, yes, but we have met, Sir Sykes Denzil, Baronet,’ returned Hold,
-with a twinkle of satisfaction in his bold black eyes; ‘not that it’s
-any wonder you do not remember so humble a chap as yours truly. I have
-the advantage of you.’
-
-These last words were uttered with a malicious emphasis which caused
-Sir Sykes to look again and keenly in the man’s face, while cudgelling
-his memory, though in vain, to find some guiding clue. He saw a
-hard, fierce, swarthy countenance, dark hair partly grizzled, and a
-powerfully built frame, such as matched well with the face. Had Sir
-Sykes on the Bench been consulted by his brother magistrates as to
-the number of calendar months of imprisonment with hard labour to be
-allotted to such a one as Hold, he would have said at once: ‘Give him
-the heaviest sentence warranted by law, for, unless Lavater’s science
-be false, there could scarcely exist a more dangerous scoundrel.’
-
-Sir Sykes, however, was not on the bench, nor Hold in the dock at
-quarter-sessions. So he merely replied with a steady look: ‘No, Mr
-Hold, or whatever your name may be. To the best of my belief, I never
-in my life saw you.’
-
-‘Very good,’ quietly returned the man, taking out a black pocket-book
-much frayed and battered, and rustling over the dog’s-eared leaves.
-‘Let me see; yes, March the twenty-fourth is the first important date.’
-
-‘And may I ask,’ interposed Sir Sykes, with somewhat of the cold
-haughtiness which had stood him in good stead in many a moral duel,
-‘what is the meaning of these perpetual references to a specified day
-in March?’
-
-Hold’s low inward laugh was one of sincere enjoyment. ‘It’s not only
-at cards, Sir Sykes,’ he said with a chuckle, ‘that the game of brag
-can be played. But come, it’s of no use, Sir Sykes Denzil, Baronet. My
-hand’s too strong--chokeful of court-cards, kings, queens, knaves, and
-aces--to give you a chance. I have entries here’--slapping the black
-pocket-book--‘for more days than one. Take one of ’em at random. You
-have cause to remember the ninth of April in the same year, Sir Sykes.
-So have I.’ And with a nod and a wink, Hold slid back the book into an
-inner pocket of his rough coat.
-
-The baronet’s blanched face and anxious eye betrayed how deeply he was
-agitated by what he had heard.
-
-‘What do you want of me?’ he asked abruptly, but in a tremulous voice.
-
-‘Hark ye, shipmate!’ rejoined the other, leaning his head on his hand,
-while his elbow rested on the stained and chipped table beside him;
-‘all in good time. Business is business, and is not to be disposed of
-in that sort of hop, skip, and jump way. Take another look at me, if
-you like; and since you can’t tell who I am, say _what_ I am.’
-
-‘I should say,’ answered Sir Sykes, gazing with undisguised repugnance
-at the outward man of his dubious acquaintance, ‘that you have been a
-sailor.’
-
-‘No great wit wanted, I reckon,’ retorted Hold roughly, ‘to make
-out that much. The very mermaid on my arm here, and the crown and
-the anchor,’ he continued, baring his brawny wrist so as to exhibit
-the blue tattoo marks which it bore, ‘would tell you that. But I’ve
-followed more trades than one; tried them all in turn, sir. How does
-that idle string of words that schoolboys say, come off the tongue? Ay,
-I have it--Tinker, tailor, soldier, sailor. Why, I’ve been everything
-on the urchin’s roll-call except thief; I never was quite that--or
-gentleman, which is a cut above me.’
-
-‘You have seen the world evidently,’ said Sir Sykes in a bland tone;
-‘but you must remember, Mr Hold, that you have not as yet explained to
-me with sufficient clearness the nature of your business with me.’
-
-‘Labour lost, if I did,’ rejoined Hold with a cynical smile. ‘A secret
-is best of course when it belongs to one only. Two may get some good
-out of it; but once it’s common property, the goose that laid the
-golden eggs is picked bare to the last bone. Do you see,’ he added,
-dropping his voice, ‘our good friends yonder, and do you suppose
-that such as they are not all ears, as it were, to snap up any odds
-and ends of our talk? He with the frying-pan is as knowing a hand as
-any in England--a begging-letter writer, as the newspaper paragraphs
-call it. And the others, well! the others are all on the lay more or
-less, to scratch up a living by their wits. It’s only the cream of
-the cadging profession that can afford to patronise the _Rest_. It’s
-quite a genteel hotel of its class, I assure you. But now you know why
-I don’t speak out. Better deal with me singly, than with all these
-blood-suckers, I should say. And so, as we understand each other, we
-need not enlighten others.’
-
-‘Is there no more private place?’ the baronet began.
-
-But Hold broke curtly in: ‘None, Sir Sykes, in a crib like this.
-Up-stairs, we’d double the risk of being overheard. Walls have ears,
-you know. Now here, where we can see into the garden from this open
-window at my elbow, we’re pretty safe.--Deputy!’ (this was addressed to
-the sharp boy in the ragged jacket) ‘two glasses of rum, d’ye hear?’
-
-Sir Sykes had had time to think, and it was in a firm tone that he now
-spoke.
-
-‘Now, Mr Hold,’ he said, ‘I am a man of the world, and as such will not
-affect indignation or astonishment in the fact that you wish to bargain
-with me, for your own advantage, as to certain painful events of my
-earlier life. Name your terms, but be moderate. The law, as you are
-aware, is not very indulgent towards those who extort money by means of
-threats or calumnies.’
-
-Hold’s face, hitherto good-humoured, wore an ugly scowl. ‘Drop that
-style of argument, if you’re wise, baronet,’ he said resolutely. ‘Dick
-Hold is not often backward, when folks will fire shotted guns instead
-of harmless blank cartridge. Come, come, commodore; if you dared to
-indict me, you’d hardly be here. Try that game, if you choose. It only
-serves the turn of those who can come into court with clean hands.
-Yours mayhap would shew a stain or so.--Here is Deputy with the rum.
-Let us drink, sir, to our better acquaintance, and be friends.’
-
-Sir Sykes, however, pushed back the glass which Hold proffered him.
-Sunk in his own estimation though he might be, he could not stoop to
-pledge a ruffian of the stamp of this one.
-
-‘Your very good health, Sir Sykes Denzil, Baronet,’ said Hold
-unconcernedly, as he tossed off his liquor. ‘We wear well, both of us;
-though many a year has gone over our heads since that ninth of April
-that you know of.’
-
-‘Were you at Sandston, then, on that day?’ asked the baronet, thrown
-off his guard, and a slight quivering of Hold’s eyelid told that a
-point had been scored against his incautious opponent.
-
-‘Not so. At Tunbridge Wells rather,’ returned Hold slowly. ‘I remember
-seeing the funeral--that of the poor little girl of yours who died, Sir
-Sykes.’
-
-Sir Sykes grew almost as white as he had done when first he began the
-reading of the letter which had drawn him to such a rendezvous.
-
-‘You will oblige me, sir,’ he said in a voice that he vainly tried to
-render firm and calm, ‘by being silent in future as to--as to’----
-
-‘So that we understand one another, I agree to anything,’ was Hold’s
-half-sullen rejoinder.
-
-‘And now to come to terms. You want money, no doubt?’ said Sir Sykes
-more composedly.
-
-‘All people, to the best of my belief, want money,’ replied Hold with
-a grin. ‘I am no cormorant, no shearer and skinner of such as come
-under my handling. Just now, Sir Sykes, I will only ask you for five
-hundred--a fleabite!’
-
-The demand, considering the baronet’s rank and means, was unexpectedly
-moderate. Sir Sykes in turn produced his pocket-book. ‘Few men,’ he
-said, ‘keep such a sum in ready cash. But it so happens’--laying down
-a roll of bank-notes upon the squalid table--‘that I have money, two
-hundred and thirty pounds, with me; and here’--pencilling a few words
-on a leaf which he tore out of the book--‘is my written promise for two
-seventy. I will send you a cheque to-morrow.’
-
-‘Nothing,’ observed Hold, ‘could be more satisfactory. Don’t send a
-groom; grooms chatter; the post is safer. You won’t drink the rum, Sir
-Sykes? I will.’ And he swallowed the alcohol at a gulp, and then swept
-notes and paper into his pocket. ‘One thing more, Sir Sykes. I did not
-come here for hush-money and nothing else. I want you to take into your
-house and as a member of your family a person--of my recommending, Sir
-Sykes.’
-
-‘I fail to comprehend you, Mr Hold,’ said the baronet stiffly.
-
-The other laughed. ‘Her name,’ he said, ‘is Ruth.’
-
-‘Ruth!’ exclaimed Sir Sykes, starting from his seat, and speaking so
-unguardedly that the unwashed crew at the firelit end of the room
-turned to peer at him.
-
-‘Yes, Ruth. Don’t you like the name?’ asked the fellow coarsely. ‘My
-sister, Ruth Hold.’
-
-‘Ruth--your sister--yours--at Carbery?’ gasped out the bewildered
-baronet.
-
-‘You need not be afraid,’ was the rough reply: ‘she won’t disgrace your
-fine house or your dainty ways. I doubt if your misses at home are more
-thoroughly the lady than Ruth Hold--my--sister.’
-
-‘You must see, your own good sense must shew you,’ stammered out Sir
-Sykes, looking the picture of abject terror, as the smoky glare of the
-lamp fell on his pale face, ‘that even were I willing to consent to so
-extraordinary---- In short it cannot be.’
-
-‘Sorry for you, then!’ returned Hold with a shrug; ‘for on your
-acceptance of these terms alone is my silence to be bought. Come,
-come, shipmate! hear reason. Ruth shall bear any surname you like, and
-it can’t be hard to account for her coming to Carbery. You knew her
-father--an old friend--military--died in India--left you her guardian,
-Ruth’s guardian; eh, Sir Sykes?’
-
-‘I--I will take time to think of it,’ said the baronet confusedly. ‘You
-shall hear from me to-morrow. And now, I had better go.’
-
-And he rose. Hold re-conducted him, civilly enough, as far as the outer
-door, and watched him depart through the howling wind and driving
-rain towards Carbery. But what neither Hold nor Sir Sykes could have
-conjectured was that Jasper Denzil, hidden in a crazy arbour among the
-sunflowers and pot-herbs of the inn garden, hard by the open window,
-had during the greater portion of the interview played the part of an
-unsuspected eavesdropper, and was now on his way by another route to
-Carbery Chase.
-
-
-
-
-ANALOGIES OF ANIMAL AND PLANT LIFE.
-
-
-The boundary-line between the lowest forms of animal and vegetable
-life is of a most indefinite character. Nature would seem to have
-been guilty of many inconsistencies in her arrangement of these
-organisms; for a being which at one period of its existence exhibits
-the common characteristics of a plant, may at another period possess
-the attributes of an animal. Such an organism is found in the form of a
-fungus which grows on the surface of tan-pits. Under slightly altered
-conditions it becomes a locomotive creature capable of feeding upon
-solid matter. Naturalists have therefore always felt a difficulty in
-deciding which of these doubtful organisms should be classed with the
-one kingdom and which with the other. Indeed it has been seriously
-proposed to form a separate class for their reception, a kind of
-‘no-man’s land’ to which they might by general consent be relegated.
-
-It would at first appear that a sufficient distinction would be made
-if such organisms as possess the power of spontaneous movement were at
-once called animals. But this classification would prove to be most
-erroneous, for many plants possess the power of movement in a very
-high degree. The swarm-spores of such algæ as seaweeds, for instance,
-swim actively about by means of minute filaments or _cilia_. They
-were on this account long supposed to be animalcules, and it was not
-until they were found to ultimately develop into the plants from which
-they sprung, that their real place in nature was determined. These
-swarm-spores, common enough in the sea and in pools and ditches all the
-world over, are particles of matter which detach themselves from their
-parent cells, and after a longer or shorter time of activity, come to
-rest and form new algæ. They are provided with two or more vibratile
-cilia--minute processes which we more fully alluded to in a recent
-paper on ‘Bell Animalcules.’
-
-The suggestion that animals should be distinguished by their motor
-powers is also fallacious, for the reason that many animals do not
-possess this power. Sponges, for instance, are organised bodies which
-remain stationary attached to rocks. But their system of pores and
-vents, through which a constant circulation is maintained, and by means
-of which they are supplied with particles of solid matter as food, most
-certainly entitle them to be ranked as animals.
-
-The similarity between the lowest organisms of the two kingdoms does
-not seem so extraordinary after all, when by the help of the microscope
-we examine their structural details. In both we find a similar
-semi-fluid matter called protoplasm, which has been defined as ‘the
-physical basis of life.’ In the cellular tissues of many plants this
-fluid may, with a sufficiently high magnifying power, be seen in a
-state of ceaseless activity. It is composed of four elements, namely
-carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen. An analogous substance is
-found in white of egg, and protoplasm itself is one of the constituents
-of blood. Many of our readers will know that the colour of blood is due
-to innumerable red bodies called corpuscles, so minute, that myriads
-will be contained in one drop of the vital fluid. But there are also
-other corpuscles quite devoid of colour. These are minute particles
-of protoplasm, and like the same matter in plants, they exhibit
-peculiar phenomena of motion, allied to those seen in the _Amœba_
-or ‘Proteus-animalcule.’ We may therefore conclude that the vital
-principle in both animals and plants is the same, and that the tissues
-of both are built up of this protoplasm; the point of difference being
-that, whereas animals obtain it ready-made from plants, the latter are
-the manufacturers of it from mineral or inorganic sources.
-
-There are of course, besides the mere chemical constituents of
-protoplasm, other conditions necessary to vitality. A certain range
-of temperature would seem to be the most important, if we except
-perhaps the presence of water, without which life can hardly exist.
-But even here a curious exception is presented to us in the Rotifera
-or wheel-animalcules--formerly alluded to in this _Journal_ in an
-article on ‘Suspended Animation’--which may be kept in a state of dried
-dust for many years, and which, on the addition of a drop of water,
-will resume their original vigour and rapid movement. The so-called
-mummy-wheat which is said to germinate after a burial of some thousands
-of years, is an instance of this retention of the life-principle in
-plants. Light as well as heat also plays an important part in the
-mystery of vitality, although it is a curious but well-authenticated
-fact that the mere growth of plants is most rapid in darkness. We may
-see an instance of this in the stems of a growing plant which is placed
-near a window. They will all be bent towards the glass. Hence it is a
-common saying that they are attracted by the light. But the real reason
-for this bent form is, that their darker side grows more rapidly than
-the rest of the plant, forcing it to assume a curved form.
-
-It is in the nature of their food that plants and animals shew the most
-marked points of difference. We may state as a broad rule that all
-living things have the power of taking in foreign matter, wherewith to
-supply and replenish their various parts. This process, in which the
-many units which make up the structure are constantly dying away and
-being reproduced, constitutes what we call growth. In carrying out this
-function, animals convert organic into inorganic matter, whilst plants
-do precisely the reverse. They may both be described as digesting
-their food--if we accept as a definition of the term digestion, that
-process by which insoluble food is reduced to a soluble form fitted for
-absorption. In the animal this process is performed by means of glands
-or their analogues in lower animals, which open upon the internal
-surface of the stomach, and which secrete an acid fluid called the
-gastric juice. This fluid contains pepsine--a dried preparation of
-which, obtained from the stomach of the pig, forms a valuable remedy in
-the treatment of indigestion. Its power of dissolving organic matter
-is so subtle, that even after death it may act upon the stomach
-itself, as well as upon any of the other organs with which it may
-come in contact. The problem as to why the stomach is during life
-preserved from destruction by its own secretion, was long a puzzle to
-physiologists; but it has been decided according to one opinion, that
-the alkalinity of the blood, which constantly circulates through the
-tissues, protects them from injury by its neutralising influence.
-
-In plants the function of digestion is the same in principle, although
-the absence of a mouth and special digestive organs renders it
-different in detail. Plants require inorganic matters for support.
-Potatoes and turnips will, for instance, withdraw immense quantities of
-alkaline matter from the soil. Beans and peas will rob the ground in
-like manner of its lime, while the various kinds of grasses will choose
-silica for their nourishment. It is this selective property of plants
-which renders necessary the rotation of crops. A succession of alkaline
-plants would in time render the ground quite unproductive of vegetation
-of that kind; but if a proper rotation of crops be observed--the soil,
-whilst giving up one of its constituents, is gradually regaining those
-which it has previously lost. A consideration of these conditions of
-agriculture forms the very groundwork of scientific farming.
-
-Exceptions to the rule that plants consume inorganic matter are
-furnished by certain fungi and also by the insectivorous plants. One
-of these latter, the _Dionæa muscipula_, or Venus’s flytrap, we fully
-described some months ago; but the subject is so replete with interest
-that we shall not hesitate to recur to it and to refer to some of the
-other members of the same family.
-
-Without reproducing our description of the _Dionæa_, we may assist
-our readers’ memory by shortly stating that the leaf of the plant is
-formed of two lobes joined by a midrib, and that each half of the leaf
-is furnished with three sensitive hairs. On a fly or other insect
-settling on the leaf and so irritating these hairs, the two lobes
-gradually close and imprison the intruder. The most remarkable property
-of the plant is that it not only kills insects in this way, but that
-it actually _digests_ them in a manner exceedingly similar to that by
-which animals are nourished; for after the prey is secured, a liquid
-secreted in the upper part of the leaf is exuded, and this liquid is
-analogous with that furnished in the case of animals by the glands of
-the digestive mucous membrane. The closeness of the analogy will be
-better understood by referring to an experiment which was made with a
-view to testing the solvent powers of this secretion. A slice chipped
-from a dog’s tooth was placed between the lobes of a _Dionæa_ leaf.
-After some days the lobes were separated, and the piece of tooth was
-found to be in such a soft fibrous condition that it was torn to shreds
-by the slight force employed in removing it. This energetic power of
-the secretion will remind the reader of what we have already said
-regarding the action of the gastric juice upon the animal tissues after
-death. Another curious point of similarity between the two fluids is
-observed in the fact that in both cases the secretion is stimulated by
-the presence of food.
-
-It seems almost incredible to think how such a peculiarity in a plant
-should have, until very recent years, remained in obscurity. It is
-true that more than a century ago an English naturalist described
-it, and submitted his observations to Linnæus. But since that time
-the matter had aroused very little interest, until some few years ago
-when Darwin published his wonderful book on Insectivorous Plants.
-This want of attention is evidently due to the fact that Linnæus
-himself merely looked upon the plant as one, like the sensitive plant,
-having an excitable structure. He regarded the imprisoned insects as
-merely an accidental occurrence, stating it as his opinion that they
-were probably released when the leaf re-opened. The matter was thus
-quietly set at rest by a great authority, and no more was heard of the
-_Dionæa_ until an able naturalist of North Carolina, where the plant is
-indigenous, again called attention to it.
-
-Another plant belonging to this group has several peculiarities which
-are worthy of notice. We allude to the _Sarracenia_, which is found
-in the eastern states of North America. This plant grows in bogs and
-similar moist neighbourhoods. The leaf consists of a trumpet-shaped
-tube half covered with an arched lid. This tube exhibits a smooth
-and slippery surface for some distance down its interior; but lower
-still it is studded with bristles, its lowest depths being filled with
-a fluid of intoxicating properties. Round the mouth of the pitcher
-thus formed exude drops of a sweet viscid fluid. The _Nepenthes_
-form another branch of the family of Pitcher-plants, including many
-different species. Indigenous to the Asiatic Archipelago, their
-appearance is that of a half-shrubby climbing plant, the leaf of which
-terminates in a long stem, to which is attached a hanging pitcher.
-These pitchers vary in length from an inch to a foot, or even more;
-indeed some are large enough to entrap a bird or small quadruped. Their
-structure is not so complicated as those of the _Sarracenia_, although
-in other respects they greatly resemble them; while in both cases the
-digestive functions are closely allied with those of the _Dionæa_. But
-the most seductive of all these traps for unwary insects is certainly
-the _Darlingtonia_. Its victim is first of all attracted by the bright
-colour of its petals, and after it has settled upon the plant, and
-helped to fertilise it by the movement of its body against the pollen,
-it slips into a treacherous pitcher, to be first intoxicated, and then
-totally annihilated. Surely there will be no difficulty in finding an
-analogy here to certain social institutions belonging to the higher
-order of animals!
-
-The electrical phenomena common to both plants and animals must next
-claim our attention. The celebrated Galvani was the first to direct
-attention to the existence of an electrical current in the muscle
-of a frog’s leg. Volta disputed this, and insisted that the current
-produced by Galvani was due to certain metallic connections which he
-employed, and not to any inherent electricity in the muscle itself.
-Since Galvani’s time, however, numerous investigators have followed up
-his researches; and it is now an accepted fact that every exertion of
-muscular force is accompanied by a current analogous to electricity,
-the strength of which is in exact proportion to the mechanical power
-called into play. It is a curious fact that this peculiar force remains
-in the muscle for a certain time after death, but it is totally lost
-so soon as rigidity sets in, and no earthly power can recall it. It
-may therefore be considered as essentially a vital phenomenon. It is
-moreover greater in mammals than in birds, and is least noticeable in
-reptiles and fishes. But we must not omit to mention that among the
-latter are found several which have a powerful electric battery as
-their chief defensive power. The Mediterranean torpedo--one of the Ray
-or Skate family of fishes--after which our most modern engines of war
-are named, is the chief of these.
-
-Although it has long been known that currents of electricity existed
-in plants, such currents were attributed to chemical reaction between
-the external moisture and the internal juices of the plants themselves,
-and also to atmospheric disturbance. They have therefore hitherto
-borne very little analogy to the muscular electricity of animals. But
-very recently the subject has received great attention; in fact the
-electrical disturbance consequent on the excitation of the leaf of our
-old acquaintance the _Dionæa_, formed part of the subject of a paper
-lately read before the Royal Society. The authors of this contribution
-to our knowledge of a very obscure subject, proved by numerous delicate
-experiments that the current which accompanied the closure of the leaf
-in question was in every respect similar to that obtained from the
-muscles of animals.
-
-
-
-
-THE BELL-RINGER.
-
-IN FOUR CHAPTERS.
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.--THE ANTHEM OF THE BELLS.
-
-It was a solemn gathering when two hours later, the physician entered
-Bertram’s room in company with Squire Peregrine, Colonel Lindsay, and
-Gertrude. The change in the Squire was marvellous; his sternness had
-left him; he followed his daughter and his old friend; he hung upon
-every word which fell from the lips of the man of science; and during
-the time when the doctors were alone with their patient and Nathan,
-he paced his room in a state nearly bordering on mental distraction.
-Meeting the doctors as they at length emerged from the sick-room, he
-grasped them by the arm. ‘Will he live? will he live?’ he reiterated
-wildly. ‘Tell me the truth. My son, my son!’
-
-In vain they urged him to be calm; his reasoning powers seemed to have
-deserted him.
-
-‘He must not die; he shall not die!’ he repeated; until Colonel
-Lindsay, laying his hand upon his shoulder, whispered: ‘There is hope.
-Do not despair. My old friend, remember how much yet remains to be
-done for him. The active cause of mischief is at last removed.’ He
-produced a small piece of the blade of a knife, at the sight of which
-the Squire shuddered. ‘Humanly speaking, you owe his life twice over to
-Nathan Boltz. As to the perpetrator of the outrage, he will be dealt
-with according to his deserts; at present, we have no clue to his
-whereabouts.’
-
-This speech of the Colonel’s was intended to answer two purposes--to
-give the Squire time to recover himself, and to arrest any remarks
-which might fall from the medical men, who were to remain all night
-at the Hall. It had the desired effect; they saw that private family
-affairs were connected with this murderous attack and remained silent,
-only insisting that Nathan (whom Bertram had faintly recognised) should
-remain with him. The Squire sent for him, and in the presence of all
-his family, grasped him by the hand and begged him to stay. How he
-overcame all his scruples, how he placed himself in the position of
-a debtor, was made plain to all who heard him; and Gertrude felt her
-heart throb almost to pain as she sat by listening to the words of her
-father, the proudest of the Peregrine race.
-
-Therefore it was that Nathan took his place in the sick-room,
-surrounded by every luxury which appertains to wealth. It was a
-strange position; but he entered upon it with his usual large-hearted
-earnestness, believing he was fulfilling his promise to the mother of
-the sick man.
-
-In the meantime, Patricia was undergoing a torment of fear and
-suspense. A week had elapsed, Oliver had not returned, and no inquiry
-had as yet been made concerning him. She dared not question any one,
-and though many an eye was bent upon her in a half-pitying manner,
-she would not for worlds betray her wretchedness. She asked not to be
-confirmed in her miserable doubts and horrible fears, for she felt
-certain her lover was somehow concerned in her brother’s illness. Yet
-why this change in her father? She could not understand; and pondering
-day by day, became pale and ill, restless and depressed.
-
-Christmas-day came and went much in the same way as other days. There
-were no decorations in the church, and no sound of the sweet loud bells
-of Linden Tower, for Bertram lay hovering between life and death, and
-all bell-ringing was suspended on his account. Another week passed on;
-wearily dragged the hours; when at the close of a dark day of rain and
-wind, a messenger arrived with a note for Patricia, which caused her
-heart to throb and her pulse to rebound with agonising pain. The writer
-of the dirty ill-spelt letter begged her to go at once to a farm-house
-ten miles distant, where Oliver Peregrine lay dying. Now Patricia knew
-she must put away her mask for ever. With eager haste she ran with the
-summons to her father, and the utter wretchedness in her face made him
-full of pity for her.
-
-‘Jenkyns shall bring the carriage for you, my darling, immediately.
-I know the spot; close to the stone quarries--a dangerous place. Be
-brave, Patricia. But you must not go alone; Colonel Lindsay will
-accompany you.’
-
-She made no reply; her white lips moved, but no sound came forth.
-After a vain attempt to speak, she left the room, and shortly after
-was handed by Colonel Lindsay into the carriage. Their drive was
-accomplished in silence. Patricia’s agonising suspense was too great
-for speech; and her gallant companion felt too much to attempt
-commonplaces.
-
-When they arrived at the farm, Patricia descended from the carriage,
-and entered the house alone. In an inner room a woman was busy making
-a clearance of such articles as she could stuff away in corners and
-behind chairs, while a faint moaning told that the unhappy man occupied
-the apartment.
-
-‘I found the gentleman lying at the bottom of a quarry,’ said the man
-who lived on the farm. ‘It’s a fortnight back, sir, that going round
-the place as late as ten o’clock, I heard as it were close to me some
-one groaning as if in dreadful pain. It was some time before I could
-find out where the noise came from. At last my wife and me together
-got down to the bottom of the quarry, and managed between us to drag
-him to the top. He was wonderful bad, but refused to tell his name or
-let a doctor be fetched, and only let my boy run with the note because
-he felt he was dying. We have done what we could, sir; but you see we
-don’t know many folks about here, or we might have helped him more.’
-
-Patricia listened intently as the man gave these particulars, and made
-her way alone to the side of her cousin. He lay upon a bed placed
-hastily on the floor, his face worn to a shadow with intense suffering
-of mind and body. As Patricia gazed upon the helpless sufferer, all her
-love for the man burst forth; she knelt down, covered her face with her
-hands, and wept piteously.
-
-The woman who stood by, with true woman’s instinct, guessed the nature
-of her sorrow, and said gently: ‘You see, miss, the gentleman would
-not say who he were, or we should ha’ sent before. I have done what I
-could; but I fear he’s very, very bad.’ She wanted to break the truth
-as gently as she could, for her experienced eye had noted every change.
-
-‘I am dying,’ said Oliver in a low voice. ‘’Tis nearly over, Patricia;
-but the pain has almost left me; and if I have strength, I must tell
-you a very painful story, for I need your forgiveness, as you will
-find. Do not grieve for me, Patricia.’ He paused. ‘Are you alone?’
-
-Patricia shook her head.
-
-‘Who is with you?’
-
-‘Colonel Lindsay.’
-
-‘Tell him to come here.’
-
-At this crisis, wheels were heard outside, and Colonel Lindsay returned
-with Patricia, bringing with them Mr Downes, the surgeon.
-
-‘Mr Downes is here,’ said the Colonel, ‘through a message which I sent
-him previous to leaving home; he will probably think it advisable to
-remain with us for a time.’
-
-Then Patricia knew that the surgeon was there not only in his medical
-capacity, but as a witness to whatever might fall from the lips of her
-lover; and yet her dread of any unpleasant revelation was intensified
-by her great love for the man whose humiliation and shame she would
-fain have spared. Mr Downes having carefully examined the patient,
-administered a restorative, and Oliver related with pain and difficulty
-the following story.
-
-‘You know that Bertram and I were in college at the same time, where
-my naturally extravagant habits led us both into debt. When we left
-college, my uncle, believing me all that I ought to be, begged me
-to remain at the Hall as companion to his son; at the same time he
-proposed that I should qualify myself for the Church, and behaved to
-me with the kindness of a father. I managed to fix the burden of our
-debts upon Bertram, whose easy disposition and generous nature led
-him to trust me thoroughly. During a London season we again became
-steeped in difficulties beyond our power to remove. Returning to the
-Hall, I fancied myself fascinated by the beauty of Ruth Boltz. How I
-overcame her scruples, and finally induced her to fly to London with
-me, I have no strength to tell; nor how I beguiled her to remain there,
-leading her to hope for marriage. I had come to town for more purposes
-than one. While at the Hall, our creditors had become clamorous; and
-Bertram, in despair of obtaining any help from his father, and not
-daring to tell of his entanglements, took counsel with me as to what
-was to be done. By degrees I opened up my plan, filled in a cheque, and
-forced Bertram by threats of exposure to forge his father’s name. This
-done, I took care that he himself should present it at the banker’s. My
-uncle who was unusually precise and correct in all business matters, at
-once discovered the fraud. It was easy to cast the blame on Bertram,
-whom I had persuaded to remain in London; and the fact of his absence
-sealed his guilt. Ruth’s flight was at once connected with his; and
-enraged beyond expression, his father forbade him the house, tore up
-his letters unopened, and refused ever to acknowledge him again. In
-vain Bertram appealed to me to speak for him; I only traduced him the
-more while appearing to shield him; and persuaded him to go abroad
-while he had the means of doing so. Seven months later, poor Ruth came
-home and applied to me in her distress. Again I promised her marriage,
-and from time to time made her an allowance. She promised to keep my
-secret; yet her presence in the village was a continual annoyance to
-me, for I feared that some time, in her despair, she might reveal the
-truth. But I could not prevail upon her to leave the neighbourhood, and
-I waited year after year before I could mature my plans to secure the
-position which I had always coveted. At last she died, worn out with
-trouble, and would no doubt have spoken out at last. But sending for my
-aunt, the latter arrived too late. Poor suffering Ruth was dead.’...
-
-Here the sufferer paused in mental agony, and after partaking of
-stimulant, resumed his dread confession. ‘Then I was elated with my
-false freedom. My uncle had long since erased Bertram’s name from his
-will, and named me as his heir. I soon proposed to my cousin Patricia,
-and we were on the point of marrying, when my aunt’s death postponed
-it. In the midst of all my prosperity, I had a vague terror of Nathan
-Boltz, believing that he knew my secret, and I hated him for his
-supposed knowledge of it. Once more my marriage was about to take
-place, and again Hilda’s death interposed, and saved Patricia from a
-life of shame. Bertram returned; and deceived by his sister, Nathan
-believed that in him he saw her betrayer. Then the grand principle of
-his life was worked out--forgiveness. The return of Colonel Lindsay
-helped on my ruin. I made a desperate effort to retain the prize which
-I felt slipping from my grasp. After that dreadful scene in the church,
-I fled in frantic haste across the country, eager to escape from
-myself. But the hand of God was upon me; I could not elude that; and
-believing that I had been a murderer, I looked upon myself as paying
-the penalty of my sin, for I knew from the first that I must die. I
-have no more to add, only to express my grief and my repentance, and to
-pray that God may pardon my fearful sin.’
-
-He stopped, greatly exhausted; and Mr Downes again did what he could
-for his relief. All through the night, Patricia sat holding his hand in
-hers, assuring him of their forgiveness, and ministering to his wants;
-and Oliver Peregrine blessed her with the solemnity of a dying man. At
-daybreak it was all over. Patricia’s watching had been a short one; but
-she knew that henceforth she would walk through life alone.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Oliver Peregrine was buried in Linden churchyard; and Nathan, at the
-Squire’s urgent request, witnessed the last rites, and stood uncovered
-while the earth was filled into the grave of the man who had so wronged
-him. Never again, however, would he prepare the narrow resting-place in
-which dust mingles with its kindred dust, or stand in the belfry tower
-as master of the bells. Nathan had parted from the old life, which
-would know him no more. After Bertram’s recovery, he travelled with him
-for two years, and learned to know him as a brother. On their return,
-the village people could scarcely recognise the quondam bell-ringer in
-the accomplished gentleman and travelled man of the world. The soil had
-been ready to receive the seed; but while the intellect was enlarged
-the heart of the man remained the same. Thus it came about that on a
-certain happy day, Nathan, who was the affianced husband of Gertrude,
-stood once more in the belfry tower; and with her by his side, and the
-ringers clustered round, while Bertram and Colonel Lindsay looked on
-from the doorway, he begged that he might try his hand again. A proud
-consent was given, and prouder than ever were the ringers, of him who
-had been their chief. After a slight pause, Nathan’s hand, now white
-and shapely, grasped the rope once more. ‘Now lads!’ he cried--‘now!’
-and the bells chimed out a right merry peal.
-
-
-
-
-UNDER FIRE.
-
-
-Most men who have been under fire will frankly confess that the
-sensation is anything but a pleasant one. But inspired by a sense of
-duty and a lively enthusiasm, the anxious feeling soon passes off. The
-skirmishers load and fire, the gunners work their guns without much
-thought of their own danger. Indeed it is well if this indifference
-does not go too far, for then reckless excitement and careless haste
-take the place of soldierly deliberation and prudence.
-
-At Waterloo the fighting between two armies armed with old weapons
-of short range was all at what we now call close-quarters. The most
-effective range for artillery was about five hundred yards, and
-musketry-fire was exchanged at less than half that distance. Rifled
-weapons of long range have changed all this, and the introduction
-of breech-loading small-arms has worked a perfect revolution on the
-battle-field. In 1866 the Prussian needle-gun shewed in the fighting in
-Bohemia the terrible effects that can be produced by rapid rifle-fire.
-Every army in Europe was soon provided with breech-loading rifles; and
-in the war of 1870, for the first time two great armies thus formidably
-armed met in battle. In the first conflicts of the war the Prussians
-attacked in close order, as they had done in 1866; but in the great
-battle of Gravelotte, fought on August 18, 1870, they learned a lesson
-which made them completely change their tactics; and every European
-army (but one) has followed their example. The lesson was dearly
-bought. On that day the French army, one hundred and twenty thousand
-strong, lay along the hills to the west of Metz, where it was attacked
-by two hundred thousand Germans. The village of St Privat, on holding
-which the security of the whole French position depended, was held by
-Marshal Canrobert’s corps. The village is surrounded by long gentle
-slopes; and in fighting it is always found that it is more difficult
-to storm such a place than one that stands upon a steep hill. The very
-steepness of the ascent in some degree protects the attacking party as
-they ascend, by making the fire of the defenders more vertical; whereas
-on a gentle slope each bullet has a longer course and more chances of
-doing harm. As a preparation for the attack on St Privat, and in order
-in some degree to destroy the steadiness of the defenders, the place
-was bombarded for some time with one hundred and twenty guns; then
-when it was hoped that the artillery-fire had cleared the way, three
-brigades of the Guards, the picked men of the German army, were ordered
-to carry the village.
-
-Massed in close order, with a front of two thousand paces, and covered
-by clouds of skirmishers, the Guards began their advance up the slopes.
-In ten minutes the attack was over, and had utterly failed. Brief as
-it was, it was a terrible time. The German official Report does not
-deal in exaggerated language, and it speaks of the ‘storm of bullets
-that came beating down from St Privat’ and forced the Guardsmen to
-crowd together in every hollow and behind every wave of the ground. The
-French used their chassepots to deadly purpose; in those ten minutes
-six thousand of the Prussian Guard had fallen. But the rapid fire of
-the French had all but emptied their cartridge-boxes, and the defective
-arrangements made by the staff had not provided properly for supplying
-the deficiency. This is always a danger to which men armed with the
-breech-loader are liable, and it is an awkward one, for in modern war
-the man who is without cartridges is virtually disarmed. The cartridges
-of the dead and wounded were collected and distributed; but this was a
-poor resource. The enemy had formed new columns of attack, composed of
-Saxon and Prussian troops, and these, though not without heavy loss,
-carried the village, and decided the battle which shut Marshal Bazaine
-and his great army up in Metz. The day after Gravelotte was fought and
-won, the German headquarters staff published an order that an attack in
-heavy masses like that which had won Sadowa but had failed at St Privat
-should never be attempted again.
-
-The deadliness of breech-loading fire has produced another effect upon
-tactics in battle. The spade has taken a place second only to the
-rifle, and no General occupies a position in battle even for a couple
-of hours without rapidly strengthening it with light intrenchments.
-These consist generally of a shallow trench, the earth from which
-is thrown up towards the enemy, so as to form a little parapet in
-front of it. This is the shelter-trench which we hear of so often in
-war correspondence. Effective shelter-trenches can be constructed in
-from eighteen minutes to half an hour, according to the nature of the
-ground and the skill of the men engaged in the work; and they have this
-advantage, that they can be continually improved, the trench being
-deepened, the parapet raised, and a ditch formed outside it, if the
-position is occupied long enough; so that what was at first a mere
-shelter-trench, gradually becomes a formidable line of earthworks.
-A trench is a very efficient protection against artillery-fire, for
-unless the shells drop actually into it, or upon the parapet, the
-fragments are not likely to hurt the men crouching or lying down in
-it; and such accurate hits are rare, most of the projectiles falling a
-little behind or a little short of the line aimed at.
-
-It is a fact that the actual number of men put _hors de combat_ by
-artillery-fire is very few in any case. It really is meant to produce
-an effect on the _morale_ of the troops attacked; that is to say,
-to make them nervous, excited, liable to panic, and apt to give way
-before a sudden onset. Hundreds of shells exploding on the ground and
-in the air, and scattering showers of fragments on all sides, dropping
-neatly over walls and barricades, crashing through walls and roofs, and
-searching woods and thickets, are apt to gradually break down the nerve
-of all but the steadiest men.
-
-As a matter of actually killing and maiming a large number of the
-enemy, it is coming to be believed that the old artillery of Napoleon’s
-days used at close quarters, that is at about four hundred yards,
-against heavy masses, was more deadly than the modern rifled gun.
-Artillery is now effective up to two thousand five hundred yards, and
-sometimes even beyond that range. Rifle-fire generally begins at four
-hundred yards, though picked marksmen may be engaged at longer ranges.
-The ordinary fighting range of the rifle is thus now equal to that of
-the field-gun of thirty years ago, and the accuracy of the fire is
-increased in even a greater ratio. With the old musket the chances
-of a bullet finding a human billet were extremely uncertain. At one
-hundred yards there was a deviation of two feet to right or left, which
-at two hundred yards had increased to more than six feet. The average
-deviation of the Martini-Henry is about seven inches at three hundred
-yards, a little less than a foot at five hundred, and about twenty
-inches at eight hundred; or less than the error of the old musket
-at one hundred yards. Without aiming, a rapidity of fire equal to
-twenty-five shots per minute has been obtained with the Martini-Henry
-with which our army is now furnished. How different from the weapons
-used in the Peninsula and at Waterloo.
-
-Yet it is singular that the proportion which the loss in battle
-bears to the number of men engaged is on the whole decreasing,
-notwithstanding (or perhaps in consequence of) improved armaments. At
-Marengo in 1800 the loss in killed and wounded amounted to one-sixth of
-the effective force engaged; at Austerlitz (1805) it was one-seventh;
-at Preuss-Eylau (1807), as much as one-third; at Wagram (1809), rather
-more than one-ninth; at Borodino (1812), one-fourth; and at Waterloo
-(1815), rather more than one-sixth. Coming now to more recent battles,
-we find that at Solferino (1859) the loss was only one-fourteenth; at
-Sadowa (1866), one-eleventh; at Gravelotte (1870), one-ninth; at Sedan,
-only one-seventeenth. It would seem that the diminution of the loss is
-the result of the open order, the use of cover, and the briefness of
-the struggle at the decisive points, where, on account of the severity
-of the fighting, it cannot last very long. Men will stand longer under
-a fire that knocks over only one man in a minute, than they will under
-one that kills a score in the same time. The heavy fighting at Plevna
-before its fall, was an exception to this diminution of loss, for in
-one of their attacks the Russians lost as much as one-fifth, but this
-was the result of their fighting in heavy columns, in defiance of the
-experience of 1870. Statistics from both the Russian and the German
-armies shew that at all times the officers in proportion to their
-numbers lose more than the men. Naturally they are liable to attract
-attention and to be picked off by the enemy’s marksmen.
-
-With the immense armies of our day the total loss of men is enormous.
-At Sadowa the Prussians lost 10,000 men out of 215,000 engaged; the
-Austrians and Saxons 30,000 out of 220,000. At Gravelotte the French,
-120,000 strong, lost 14,000; the Germans 20,000 out of 200,000. At
-Sedan the losses of the Germans were 10,000; of the French, 14,000. The
-heaviness of the German loss at the battle of Gravelotte was as we have
-already said, largely due to the failure of the Guards at St Privat.
-
-From these statistics of loss in battle it may be imagined what a
-painful task and what severe labour are thrown upon the army which
-remains in possession of a battle-field at the end of the fight. The
-length of the lines in a general engagement like Sadowa is enormous,
-ranging from ten to fifteen miles; and the depth of the tract over
-which the fighting rolls perhaps from two or three to five or six
-miles; so that the ‘battle-field’ is a tract of country from thirty to
-eighty square miles in extent, and this immense tract is strewn with
-thirty or forty thousand killed and wounded. Here they lie scattered,
-so that it is a long walk from one fallen man to another; but over
-there on that hill-side, or in that village where the fight was close
-and hot, they are thrown together in little heaps, and there is no need
-of searching for them. Wherever there is water, wounded men are sure to
-be found, who have dragged themselves down to it. Perhaps they are dead
-at the brink. There is little blood to be seen; the rivers of blood
-shed on the battle-field exist only in poetry. Of the actual blood
-in a pool here and there on the field, most has come from cavalry or
-artillery horses killed by shell-fire.
-
-The victors in the fight have thrown on their hands not only their own
-wounded, but those of the enemy. The hurried telegram which announces
-their success gives also in round numbers a rough estimate of the loss
-on both sides; generally it is an unintentional exaggeration, for it
-is hard to judge correctly. In two or three days the real numbers are
-known; for the dead have been collected, counted, and buried, with
-great mounds of earth that will mark the battle-field for centuries,
-and shew too where the fight was hottest. The wounded, much more
-numerous than the dead, have been collected in the field-hospitals, and
-as many as possible are being sent off by train to the great hospitals
-of distant cities, in order to relieve the strain upon the resources of
-the medical staff and the volunteer aid societies working in the field.
-Hard work it is to deal with the immense mass of suffering men. Think
-what it is to have to arrange suddenly for even two cases of severe
-illness in an ordinary household, and then try to imagine what labour,
-care, and forethought are required to provide for many thousands of
-wounded men in the open country.
-
-The care for the wounded begins while the fight is actually in
-progress. No help is so efficient as that which comes at once. A man is
-hit. If the wound is slight, he perhaps does not know anything about
-it till the fight is over, when he perceives that there is something
-wrong with his leg or his side; or if he does perceive it, he is able
-to bandage it at once with a handkerchief, or the bandage that now is
-carried by almost every soldier. The surgeon of the battalion gives him
-his assistance if he is at hand; but most men have to do without him
-if the work is hot, for he cannot multiply himself or be everywhere,
-though he does his best to accomplish something like it. In most
-armies, if the men are attacking, he can only attend to the slightly
-hurt, who are able to keep up with the rest. It is only when the
-battalion is halted or on the defensive that he can attend to the more
-seriously injured who fall, for they must not be left behind. The first
-help is always the most important; given at once to a slightly wounded
-man, it saves him from having to go into hospital and keeps him in the
-ranks; given to a fallen man, it probably saves his life. The great
-danger is exhaustion from loss of blood or from the nervous shock that
-follows a bullet-wound, which makes a man seem as if he were dying,
-though with a little help it soon passes off. To stop the bleeding with
-a tourniquet or a bandage, to give a drink of water or a little brandy,
-is the aid needed at the outset. This is done actually under fire.
-
-The next help is provided by the field ambulances, or as they are very
-appropriately called in our service, ‘dressing-stations;’ these are
-established in shelter-places upon the actual battle-field in rear
-of the fighting line. Sometimes an inn, a farmhouse, or some barn is
-available for this purpose; if not, there are hospital tents or the
-shade of trees. Here is to be found a staff of surgeons and dressers,
-with appliances for the more necessary operations, and a store of
-stimulants and sustaining food. To bring the wounded men out of the
-firing, there are attached to each regiment a few trained bearers with
-stretchers. These bearers being provided, no man is allowed to leave
-the ranks to help the wounded; otherwise, every man that fell would be
-the means of withdrawing two others from the fight, and whole companies
-might melt rapidly away. The bearers remove as many as they can to the
-dressing-stations; they take those nearest to hand, and the wounded man
-who attracts their attention is lucky. Many more less fortunate than
-he have to wait till the battle is over, for comparatively few can be
-carried off during the actual fighting. Some, though too disabled to
-remain in the fight, can themselves make their way to the stations.
-They ask their way of any bearers they meet; or if they meet none,
-they look out anxiously for the white flag with the red cross that
-flies over the little harbour of refuge of which they are in search.
-The wounded men who are thus brought or come into the stations have
-their wounds dressed by the surgeons, with the help of chloroform if
-necessary; a record of the nature of the wound and of the treatment so
-far, is rapidly written on a card; and if the man will bear removal,
-his stretcher is placed in an ambulance-wagon, and an easy journey of
-three or four miles places him in the field-hospital, established in
-tents or buildings well out of even long-range artillery-fire.
-
-These field-hospitals, rapidly organised with _matériel_ that is
-conveyed with every well-organised army, can accommodate several
-hundreds of men; and while the battle proceeds, fresh field-hospitals
-are being got ready wherever buildings or tents are available, for
-the night will bring in a host of patients. At first there are few
-men in them; most of the wounded that have been treated are still at
-the field ambulances. In the evening they arrive more rapidly; next
-day they come in crowds, and the hospitals are encumbered with them.
-And now the railway system of the country comes to the help of the
-overburdened medical staff. Hospital trains--that is to say trains
-fitted with hanging-beds or stretchers, and provided with nurses and
-surgeons--carry back to the hospitals of great cities in the rear, all
-those of the wounded who can safely bear the journey. Gradually death,
-recovery, or removal clears the field-hospitals; one by one they are
-closed, their _matériel_ and appliances are packed in the wagons of
-the hospital service, and with their staff of surgeons, dressers, and
-nurses, they follow the armies in the field. Meanwhile the hospital
-trains have distributed the wounded into the permanent hospitals at
-home or into special ones provided for the war. If the army is an
-English one, ships comfortably fitted up as hospitals have received the
-wounded at the nearest coast to the battle-field, and they are lying
-in comfortable hammocks, between airy decks, perhaps at anchor in some
-roadstead, or better still, going rapidly under sail and steam towards
-home.
-
-We can dwell with satisfaction on this work of mercy, in which so
-many willing hands engage to repair, as far as can be done, the wreck
-and ruin of war. It is a work of mercy which ought to bind nations
-together, for men of many lands meet to labour under the red cross of
-mercy wherever war devastates Europe. For many, alas! the help comes
-too late; the bullet has done its work swiftly and surely; life is
-gone; or the wound is mortal and the sufferer dies, and will lie under
-the long green battle-mound. An officer will look at the tablet under
-his uniform that gives the name and corps of the fallen man, and make
-an entry in his list of dead; and the news is sent to his friends far
-away at home. These are the messages that give more pain even than the
-bullet or bayonet, and terrible it is to think that when men meet in
-battle the rapid fire of the rifle is doing its work not only in the
-field, but far away in distant cities and villages, where the sound of
-the fighting cannot be heard; and where there are women and children
-and old men to whom that fight will bring sorrow and pain and even
-death, as surely as if the rapid rifle-fire itself had swept them down.
-This is perhaps the darkest side of the picture, the portion of the
-loss caused by war, which our statistics cannot touch.
-
-
-
-
-A NARROW ESCAPE.
-
-FROM THE FRENCH OF ALEXANDRE DUMAS’ ‘LE MAÎTRE D’ARMES.’
-
-
-The death of the famous dog Sutherland--thus named after the
-Englishman who had made a gift of it to the Empress Catharine II. of
-Russia--nearly caused a tragic mistake, in so far as it nearly cost the
-donor, a celebrated banker, his life. The occurrence took place at St
-Petersburg.
-
-One morning, at daybreak, Mr Sutherland, the gentleman who had
-presented the dog to the Empress, and who was consequently a favourite
-with that august personage--was suddenly awoke by his man-servant.
-
-‘Sir,’ said the footman, ‘your house is surrounded with guards, and the
-master of the police demands to speak to you.’
-
-‘What does he wish with me?’ exclaimed the banker, as he leaped from
-his bed, somewhat startled by this announcement.
-
-‘I know not, sir,’ answered the footman; ‘but it appears that it is a
-matter of the highest importance, and which, from what he says, can
-only be communicated to you personally.’
-
-‘Shew him in,’ said Mr Sutherland, as he hastily donned his
-dressing-gown.
-
-The footman departed, and returned some minutes afterwards with His
-Excellency Mr Reliew, upon whose face the banker read at the first
-glance some formidable intelligence. The worthy banker, however,
-maintained his calmness, and welcoming the master of the police with
-his usual urbanity, presented him with a seat. His Excellency, however,
-remained standing, and in a tone the most dolorous which it was
-possible to assume, said:
-
-‘Mr Sutherland, believe me when I assure you that I am truly grieved
-to have been chosen by Her Majesty, my very gracious sovereign, to
-accomplish an order, the severity of which afflicts me, but which has
-without doubt been provoked by some great crime.’
-
-‘By some great crime, Your Excellency!’ exclaimed the banker. ‘And who
-then has committed this crime?’
-
-‘You, doubtless, sir, since it is upon you that the punishment is to
-fall.’
-
-‘Sir, I swear to you that I know not of any reproach with which to
-charge myself as a subject of our sovereign; for I am a naturalised
-Russian, as you must know.’
-
-‘And it is precisely, sir, because you are a naturalised Russian
-that your position is terrible. If you had remained a subject of His
-Britannic Majesty, you would have been able to call in the aid of the
-English consul, and escape thus perhaps the rigour of the order which I
-am, to my very great regret, charged to execute.’
-
-‘Tell me then, Your Excellency, what is this order?’
-
-‘Oh, sir, never will I have the strength to make it known to you.’
-
-‘Have I lost the good graces of Her Majesty?’
-
-‘Oh, if it were only that!’
-
-‘Is it a question to make me depart for England?’
-
-‘Oh! no; even that must not be.’
-
-‘Mon Dieu! you terrify me. Is it an order to send me to Siberia?’
-
-‘Siberia, sir, is a fine country, and which people have calumniated.
-Besides, people return from it.’
-
-‘Am I condemned to prison?’
-
-‘The prison is nothing. Prisoners come out of prison.’
-
-‘Sir, sir!’ cried the banker, more and more affrighted, ‘am I destined
-to the knout?’
-
-‘The knout is a punishment very grievous; but the knout does not kill.’
-
-‘Miserable fate!’ said Sutherland, terrified. ‘I see indeed that it is
-a matter of death.’
-
-‘And what a death!’ exclaimed the master of the police, whilst he
-solemnly raised his eyes with an expression of the most profound pity.
-
-‘How! what a death! Is it not enough to kill me without trial, to
-assassinate me without cause? Catharine orders, yet’----
-
-‘Alas! yes, she orders’----
-
-‘Well, speak, sir! What does she order? I am a man; I have courage.
-Speak!’
-
-‘Alas! my dear sir, she orders---- If it had not been by herself that
-the command had been given, I declare to you, my dear Mr Sutherland,
-that I would not have believed it.’
-
-‘But you make me die a thousand times. Let me see, sir, what has she
-ordered you to do?’
-
-‘She has ordered me to have you STUFFED!’
-
-The poor banker uttered a cry of distress; then looking the master of
-the police in the face, said: ‘But, Your Excellency, it is monstrous
-what you say to me; you must have lost your reason.’
-
-‘No, sir; I have not lost my reason; but I will certainly lose it
-during the operation.’
-
-‘But how have you--you who have said you are my friend a hundred
-times--you, in short, to whom I have had the honour to render certain
-services--how have you, I say, received such an order without
-endeavouring to represent the barbarity of it to Her Majesty?’
-
-‘Alas! sir, I have done what I could, and certainly what no one would
-have dared to do in my place. I besought Her Majesty to renounce her
-design, or at least to charge another than myself with the execution
-of it; and that with tears in my eyes. But Her Majesty said to me with
-that voice which you know well, and which does not admit of a reply:
-“Go, sir, and do not forget that it is your duty to acquit yourself
-without a murmur of the commissions with which I charge you.”’
-
-‘And then?’
-
-‘Then,’ said the master of the police, ‘I lost no time in repairing
-to a very clever naturalist who stuffs animals for the Academy of
-Sciences; for in short, since there was not any alternative, I deemed
-it only proper, and out of respect for your feelings, that you should
-be stuffed in the best manner possible.’
-
-‘And the wretch has consented?’
-
-‘He referred me to his colleague, who stuffs apes, having studied the
-analogy between the human species and the monkey tribe.’
-
-‘Well?’
-
-‘Well, sir, he awaits you.’
-
-‘How! he awaits me! But is the order so peremptory?’
-
-‘Not an instant must be lost, my dear sir; the order of Her Majesty
-does not admit of delay.’
-
-‘Without granting me time to put my affairs in order? But it is
-impossible!’
-
-‘Alas! it is but too true, sir.’
-
-‘But you will allow me first to write a letter to the Empress?’
-
-‘I know not if I ought; my instructions were very emphatic.’
-
-‘Listen! It is a last favour, a favour which is not refused to the
-greatest culprit. I entreat it of you.’
-
-‘But it is my situation which I risk.’
-
-‘And it is my life which is at stake.’
-
-‘Well, write; I permit it. However, I inform you that I do not leave
-you a single instant.’
-
-‘Thanks, thanks. Pray, request one of your officers to come, that he
-may convey my letter.’
-
-The master of the police called a lieutenant of the Royal Guards,
-delivered to him the letter of poor Sutherland, and ordered him to
-bring back the answer to it immediately. Ten minutes afterwards, the
-lieutenant returned with the order to bring the banker to the imperial
-palace. It was all that the sufferer desired.
-
-A carriage stood at the gate. Mr Sutherland entered it, and the
-lieutenant seated himself near him. Five minutes afterwards they were
-at the palace, where Catharine waited. They introduced the condemned
-man to her presence, and found Her Majesty in convulsions of laughter.
-
-It was for Sutherland now to believe her mad. He threw himself at her
-feet, and seizing her hand in his, exclaimed: ‘Mercy, madame! In the
-name of heaven, have mercy on me; or at the least tell me for what
-crime I have deserved a punishment so horrible.’
-
-‘But my dear Monsieur Sutherland,’ replied Catharine with all the
-gravity she could command, ‘this matter does not concern you at all!’
-
-‘How, Your Majesty, is it not a matter concerning me? Then whom _does_
-it concern?’
-
-‘Why, the dog of course which you gave me, and which died yesterday
-of indigestion. Then in my grief at this loss and in my very natural
-desire to preserve at least his skin, I ordered that fool Reliew to
-come to me, and said to him: “Monsieur Reliew, I have to request that
-you will have Sutherland immediately stuffed.” As he hesitated, I
-thought that he was ashamed of such a commission; whereupon I became
-angry and dismissed him on his errand.’
-
-‘Well, madame,’ answered the banker, ‘you can boast that you have in
-the master of the police a faithful servant; but at another time,
-pray, I entreat of you, to explain better to him the orders which he
-receives.’
-
-The four-footed Sutherland was duly promoted to a glass case _vice_ the
-banker--relieved.
-
-
-
-
-AN INTERNATIONAL POLAR EXPEDITION.
-
-
-In a former paper on Polar Colonisation we mentioned that an American
-enthusiast had suggested that, with a view to the achievement of
-greater results, the enterprise of exploring the Arctic regions should
-be made an international one. A somewhat similar idea appears to have
-occurred about the same time to Count Wilczek, and Lieutenant Charles
-Weyprecht, of Arctic fame. After many months of careful consideration,
-these gentlemen lately issued at Vienna the programme of the work
-which they propose should be undertaken by an International Polar
-Expedition. The elaborate scheme therein propounded was originally
-prepared with a view to its details being fully discussed by the
-International Meteorological Congress which was to have met at Rome
-in the month of September of last year, but which, owing to political
-events, it has been found necessary to postpone till the present
-year. The peculiarity of their project is that they aim at purely
-_scientific_ exploration in the Arctic and Antarctic regions, and that
-they leave geographical discovery out of their programme, intending
-that it should be undertaken by a separate expedition. To accomplish
-the highly important end they have in view, they suggest that each of
-the states participating in the work should equip an expedition and
-despatch it to one of the stations enumerated by them. Each of the
-powers interested will be left to decide how long it will continue the
-work and what questions should be studied beyond those laid down in
-the international programme. The investigations to be undertaken in
-common will only include the phenomena of meteorology and terrestrial
-magnetism, _auroræ boreales_, and the laws which govern the movements
-of ice. As of course uniformity and the utmost possible accuracy in
-the observations to be taken are absolutely necessary for purposes
-of comparison, the propounders of the scheme enter into very minute
-details, especially as regards the magnetic observations. The following
-are the places which are considered the most favourable for the
-purposes above indicated: (In the northern hemisphere), the north coast
-of Spitzbergen, the north coast of Novaya Zemlya, the vicinity of the
-North Cape of Finmark, the north coast of Siberia at the mouths of the
-Lena, New Siberia, Point Barrow at the north-east of Behring Strait
-(occupied by Maguire 1852-54), the Danish settlement on the west coast
-of Greenland, and the east coast of Greenland in about latitude 75°;
-(in the southern hemisphere) the neighbourhood of Cape Horn, Kerguelen
-or Macdonald Islands, and one of the groups south of the Auckland
-Islands. Each state interested, it may be mentioned in conclusion, must
-establish a station for a year at least, and conform strictly to the
-terms of the programme.
-
-
-
-
-THE FIRST PRIMROSE.
-
-
- A Primrose awoke from its long winter sleep,
- And stretched out its head through its green leaves to peep;
- But the air was so cold, and the wind was so keen,
- And not a bright flower but itself to be seen.
- ‘Alas!’ sighed the Primrose, ‘how useless am I,
- As here all alone and half hidden I lie;
- But I’ll strive to be cheerful, contented to be,
- Just a simple wild flower growing under a tree.’
- Soon a maiden passed by, looking weary and sad,
- In the bright early spring-time, when all should be glad,
- But she spied the sweet Primrose so bright and so gay,
- And the sight of it charmed all her sadness away;
- And the Primrose gave thanks to the dear Lord above,
- Who had sent it on such a sweet mission of love.
-
- CATHARINE DAVIDSON.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Printed and Published by W. & R. CHAMBERS, 47 Paternoster Row, LONDON,
-and 339 High Street, EDINBURGH.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_All Rights Reserved._
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Chambers's Journal of Popular
-Literature, Science, and Art,, by Various
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Chambers's Journal of Popular Literature,
-Science, and Art, No. 734, January 19, 1878, by Various
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Chambers's Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, No. 734, January 19, 1878
-
-Author: Various
-
-Editor: William Chambers
- Robert Chambers
-
-Release Date: October 24, 2017 [EBook #55808]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHAMBERS JOURNAL OF LITERATURE, JAN 19, 1878 ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Susan Skinner and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">{33}</a></span></p>
-
-<h1>CHAMBERS'S JOURNAL<br />
-OF<br />
-POPULAR<br />
-LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART.</h1>
-
-
-<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
-
-<p class='center'>
-
-<!-- Autogenerated TOC. Modify or delete as required. -->
-
-<a href="#THE_STORY_OF_THIERS">THE STORY OF THIERS.</a><br />
-<a href="#HELENA_LADY_HARROGATE">HELENA, LADY HARROGATE.</a><br />
-<a href="#ANALOGIES_OF_ANIMAL_AND_PLANT">ANALOGIES OF ANIMAL AND PLANT LIFE.</a><br />
-<a href="#THE_BELL-RINGER">THE BELL-RINGER.</a><br />
-<a href="#UNDER_FIRE">UNDER FIRE.</a><br />
-<a href="#A_NARROW_ESCAPE">A NARROW ESCAPE.</a><br />
-<a href="#AN_INTERNATIONAL_POLAR_EXPEDITION">AN INTERNATIONAL POLAR EXPEDITION.</a><br />
-<a href="#THE_FIRST_PRIMROSE">THE FIRST PRIMROSE.</a><br />
-
-<!-- End Autogenerated TOC. -->
-
-</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/header.png" width="600" height="294" alt="Chambers's Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art. Fourth Series. Conducted by William and Robert Chambers." />
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="full" />
-<p class='center'><b><span class="smcap">No.</span> 734.</b> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>SATURDAY, JANUARY 19, 1878.</b> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b><span class="smcap">Price</span> 1<i>d.</i></b></p>
-
-
-<hr class="full" />
-<div>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="THE_STORY_OF_THIERS" id="THE_STORY_OF_THIERS">THE STORY OF THIERS.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">In</span> a densely populated street of the quaint sea-port
-of Marseilles there dwelt a poor locksmith and
-his family, who were so hard pressed by the dearness
-of provisions and the general hardness of the
-times, that the rent and taxes for the wretched
-tenement which they called a home had been
-allowed to fall many weeks into arrear. But the
-good people struggled on against their poverty;
-and the locksmith (who was the son of a ruined
-cloth-merchant), though fallen to the humble position
-of a dock-porter, still managed to wade
-through life as if he had been born to opulence.
-This poor labourer&#8217;s name was Thiers, and his
-wife was a descendant of the poet Chenier; the
-two being destined to become the parents of Louis
-Adolphe Thiers, one of the most remarkable men
-that ever lived.</p>
-
-<p>The hero of our story was at his birth mentally
-consigned to oblivion by his parents, while
-the neighbours laughed at the ungainly child,
-and prognosticated for him all kinds of evil in
-the future. And it is more than probable that
-these evil auguries would have been fulfilled had
-it not been for the extraordinary care bestowed
-upon him by his grandmother. But for her,
-perhaps our story had never been written.</p>
-
-<p>Under her fostering care the child survived all
-those diseases which were, according to the gossips,
-to prove fatal to him; but while his limbs remained
-almost stationary, his head and chest grew
-larger, until he became a veritable dwarf. By his
-mother&#8217;s influence with the family of Andr
-Chenier, the lad was enabled to enter the Marseilles
-Lyceum at the age of nine; and here the
-remarkable head and chest kept the promise they
-made in his infancy, and soon fulfilled Madame
-Thiers&#8217; predictions.</p>
-
-<p>Louis Adolphe Thiers was a brilliant though
-somewhat erratic pupil. He was noted for his
-practical jokes, his restlessness, and the ready and
-ingenious manner in which he always extricated
-himself from any scrapes into which his bold and
-restless disposition had led him. Thus the child
-in this case would appear to have been &#8216;father
-to the man,&#8217; by the manner in which he afterwards
-released his beloved country from one of
-the greatest &#8216;scrapes&#8217; she ever experienced.</p>
-
-<p>On leaving school Thiers studied for the law,
-and was eventually called to the bar, though he
-never practised as a lawyer. He became instead
-a local politician; and so well did the rle suit
-him, that he soon evinced a strong desire to try his
-fortune in Paris itself. He swayed his auditory,
-when speaking, in spite of his diminutive stature,
-Punch-like physiognomy, and shrill piping speech;
-and shout and yell as his adversaries might, they
-could not drown his voice, for it arose clear and
-distinct above all the hubbub around him. While
-the studious youth was thus making himself a
-name in his native town, he was ever on the
-watch for an opportunity to transfer his fortunes
-to the capital. His almost penniless condition,
-however, precluded him from carrying out his
-design without extraneous assistance of some kind
-or other; but when such a stupendous ambition
-as that of governing one of the greatest nations of
-the earth filled the breast of the Marseilles student,
-it was not likely that the opportunity he was
-seeking would be long in coming.</p>
-
-<p>The Academy of Aix offered a prize of a few
-hundred francs for a eulogium on <i>Vauvenargues</i>,
-and here was the opportunity which Louis Adolphe
-Thiers required. He determined to compete for
-the prize, and wrote out two copies of his essay,
-one of which he sent to the Academy&#8217;s Secretary,
-and the other he submitted to the judgment of his
-friends. This latter indiscretion, however, would
-appear to have been the cause of his name being
-mentioned to the Academicians as a competitor;
-and as they had a spite against him, and disapproved
-of his opinions, they decided to reject any
-essay which he might submit to them.</p>
-
-<p>On the day of the competition they were as
-good as their word, and Thiers received back
-his essay with only an &#8216;honourable mention&#8217;
-attached to it. The votes, however, had been
-equally divided, and the principal prize could not
-be adjudged until the next session. The future<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">{34}</a></span>
-statesman and brilliant journalist was not, however,
-to be cast aside in this contemptuous manner,
-and he accordingly adopted a <i>ruse de guerre</i>, which
-was perfectly justifiable under the circumstances.
-He sent back his first essay for the second competition
-with his own name attached thereto, and
-at the same time transmitted another essay, by
-means of a friend, through the Paris post-office.
-This paper was signed &#8216;Louis Duval;&#8217; and as M.
-Thiers knew that they had resolved to reject his
-essay and accept the next best on the list, he made
-it as near as possible equal to the other in point
-of merit.</p>
-
-<p>The Academicians were thoroughly out-generalled
-by this clever artifice, and the prize was
-awarded to the essay signed &#8216;Louis Duval;&#8217; but the
-chagrin of the dons when the envelope was opened
-and the name of Louis Adolphe Thiers was read
-out, can be better imagined than described. The
-prize, which amounted to about twenty pounds, was
-added to another sum of forty pounds gained by
-his friend Mignet for essay-writing; and with this
-modest amount, the two friends set out on their
-journey to Paris. On their arrival there, both of
-them were at once engaged as writers on the <i>Globe</i>
-newspaper, and M. Thiers&#8217; articles soon attracted
-such attention that the highest political destinies
-were predicted for their author.</p>
-
-<p>Alluding to the small stature of our hero,
-Prince Talleyrand once said: &#8216;<i>Il est petit, mais il
-grandira!</i>&#8217; (He is little, but he will be great!)
-Meanwhile, the young adventurer, as we may call
-him, was engaged on general literary work for the
-press, writing political leaders one day, art-criticisms
-the next, and so on, until a publisher asked
-him to write the <i>History of the French Revolution</i>.
-He accepted; and when published, the work met
-with so great a success that it placed him in the
-front rank of literature, and gained for him the
-proud title of &#8216;National Historian.&#8217; After this
-the two friends published the <i>National</i> newspaper,
-an undertaking which we are told was
-conceived in Talleyrand&#8217;s house, and was largely
-subscribed to by the Duke of Orleans, afterwards
-King Louis-Philippe. M. Thiers disliked the Bourbons;
-and when, in 1829, Charles X. dissolved a
-liberal parliament, he took the lead in agitating
-for the reinstating of the people&#8217;s rights. The
-king having determined to reply to the re-election
-of the &#8216;221&#8217; by a <i>coup d&#8217;tat</i>, the nature
-of which was secretly communicated to M. Thiers,
-the latter hastened to the office of the <i>National</i>
-and drew up the celebrated Protest of the Journalists,
-which before noon was signed by every
-writer on the liberal side. As M. Thiers was
-leaving the office, a servant of Prince Talleyrand
-placed in his hand a note, which simply bore
-the words, &#8216;Go and gather cherries.&#8217; This was a
-hint that danger was near the young patriot,
-and that he should repair to the house of one
-of the Prince&#8217;s friends at Montmorency&mdash;a place
-famous for its cherries&mdash;and there lie hidden until
-the storm had blown over.</p>
-
-<p>M. Thiers did not immediately accept the hint,
-but remained in the capital during the day, to
-watch the course of events and endeavour to prevent
-his friends from doing anything rash. He
-energetically sought to dissuade those who were for
-resisting the king&#8217;s decree by force of arms; but did
-not succeed. When the barricades were raised, he
-left Paris, because he thought that the people were
-doing an unwise thing, which would lead to a
-fearful slaughter, and perhaps result in himself
-and friends being shot.</p>
-
-<p>When, however, the battle between the army
-and the people had really begun, the indomitable
-little man returned to Paris, and heedless of the
-bullets that were flying about, he ran here and
-there trying to collect adherents for the Duke of
-Orleans. He also had a proclamation of the Duke,
-as king, printed, rushed out with it, damp as it
-was from the press, and distributed copies to the
-victorious insurgents; but this operation nearly
-cost him his life, for the crowds on the Place de la
-Bourse were shouting for a republic, and a cry was
-immediately raised to lynch M. Thiers. He only
-escaped by dashing into a pastry-cook&#8217;s shop, and
-taking a header down the open cellar which led to
-the kitchen.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing daunted by this <i>contretemps</i>, however,
-he sought out M. Scheffer, an intimate friend of
-the Duke of Orleans, and started off for Neuilly
-with him (without consulting anybody else), to
-offer the crown of France to the Duke. When
-they found the Duke, he despatched M. Thiers to
-Prince Talleyrand to ask his advice on the subject;
-and the latter, who was in bed at the time, said:
-&#8216;Let him accept;&#8217; but positively refused to put this
-advice in writing. Thus the Duke of Orleans
-became King of the French under the name of
-Louis-Philippe, and the Marseilles student found
-himself a step nearer the accomplishment of his
-aim. The poor locksmith&#8217;s son had overthrown
-one king and established another!</p>
-
-<p>It was M. Thiers who caused the remains of
-Napoleon to be removed from the gloomy resting-place
-in St Helena to the church of the Invalides
-in Paris, where they were re-interred amid great
-pomp and circumstance. He it was who also
-invented or gave currency to the now well-known
-constitutional maxim, &#8216;The king reigns,
-but does not govern.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>In this reign M. Thiers commenced his great
-work on the <i>Consulate and the Empire</i>, in which
-he so eulogised the First Napoleon and flattered
-the military fame of France, that he unwittingly
-paved the way for the advent of the second Empire.</p>
-
-<p>The revolution of 1848, which led to the abdication
-of Louis-Philippe, found Thiers but a simple
-soldier in the National Guard, and parading the
-streets with a musket on his shoulder, despite his
-diminutive stature. A man of his transcendent
-ability, however, could not be left long in so
-humble a position, and we therefore find the
-newly elected sovereign Louis Napoleon trying
-hard to win over to his side this unique citizen.
-But Thiers declined the honour, and remained a
-thorn in Napoleon&#8217;s side during the whole period
-of his reign. When the <i>coup d&#8217;tat</i> of 1851 was
-struck he was one of the leading statesmen
-whose arrest was ordered and carried out. The
-patriot was seized and forcibly taken out of his
-bed at an early hour in the morning, and
-imprisoned at Mazas for several days. He was
-then escorted out of the country, and became an
-exile from the land he loved so well.</p>
-
-<p>While the excitement in Paris, which culminated
-in the outbreak of the war with Germany, was
-at its height, and the whole nation was singing
-the <i>Marseillaise</i> and shouting &#8216; Berlin,&#8217; M. Thiers&#8217;
-voice was the only one raised to protest against
-France precipitating herself into an unjust and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">{35}</a></span>
-unnecessary war. He was unheeded at the moment;
-but a few weeks sufficed to prove the soundness
-of his reasoning; and when the Germans were
-marching on Paris, it was to the locksmith&#8217;s son
-that the whole nation turned in its distress.</p>
-
-<p>The Napoleonic dynasty was deposed, and at
-the elections for the National Assembly which
-afterwards took place, M. Thiers was elected for
-twenty-six Departments&mdash;a splendid national testimony
-to his patriotism and ability. As soon as
-the Assembly met he was at once appointed &#8216;Chief
-of the Executive Power&#8217; of the French Republic.
-Thus the poor student of the Marseilles Academy
-had become, almost without any effort of his own,
-the governor of his country; and how he acquitted
-himself of the onerous and self-sacrificing task, let
-the living grief of Frenchmen for his loss at this
-moment proudly attest.</p>
-
-<p>Previous to this appointment, however, and
-while the German army was thundering at the
-gates of Paris, the brave old statesman had, in his
-seventy-fourth year, shewn his unalterable devotion
-to France by the famous journey he made
-to all the European courts to endeavour to obtain
-assistance. Failing in this, he came back, and
-being made President, as above mentioned, he
-made peace with the Germans on the best terms
-he could get, turned round and beat the Communists
-in the streets of Paris; and within three
-short years he had not only paid the heaviest war
-indemnity ever known, but had cleared his country
-of the Germans, consolidated her resources, and
-reorganised her army.</p>
-
-<p>On the morning of the 4th September last,
-France was suddenly plunged into the deepest
-grief and dismay by the announcement that her
-greatest citizen had been taken from her by death
-on the previous evening, at a time when the whole
-nation was looking to him as the one man who
-could save it from the dangerous crisis through
-which it was at that moment passing.</p>
-
-<p>The funeral was a magnificent one, and though
-a wet day, there was not a citizen in Paris that did
-not join the throng, which lined the whole of the
-way to the cemetery. As the body of the great
-patriot was borne along every hat was raised, and
-many among the crowd shed tears. A riot was
-expected on the occasion, but the people behaved
-admirably and with great forbearance; the greatest
-tribute of respect which they could have shewn to
-the memory of one who had done so much for his
-country.</p>
-
-<p>The modesty of this great citizen was in perfect
-accordance with his republican principles; for
-while President of the French Republic, his card
-never bore anything more on it than the simple
-&#8216;Monsieur Thiers;&#8217; nor did he wear any uniform
-or decoration other than that one which is so dear
-to the heart and eye of every true Frenchman,
-&#8216;the Legion of Honour.&#8217; Surely never did a
-worthier breast bear that famous Cross than that
-of the man who, despite every obstacle both
-physical and moral, and despite evil prognostications,
-bitter taunts, and the crushing hand of
-poverty, rose by the grand yet simple force of
-his own indomitable will from the position of
-a labourer&#8217;s son to that of the ruler of a mighty
-nation. But even greater than all this was the
-fact, that having attained to this grand position,
-he was ready, at what he believed to be the call
-of duty, to lay aside his dignity, to step from
-his proud position, and once more to assume the
-humbler rle of a private citizen. Such a sublime
-act of self-abnegation was sufficient to assure to
-him the enthusiastic love and respect of an intelligent
-people, and the esteem of the whole world,
-which may be said to have joined with France
-in weaving a chaplet of immortelles to place upon
-the tomb of one whose memory will be revered
-by all who respect indomitable perseverance and
-true nobility of character.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div>
-<h2><a name="HELENA_LADY_HARROGATE" id="HELENA_LADY_HARROGATE">HELENA, LADY HARROGATE.</a></h2>
-
-
-<h3>CHAPTER III.&mdash;THE LETTER.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">When</span> Sir Sykes, left alone, addressed himself to
-the perusal of the crumpled letter which he had
-hitherto crushed in his clenched hand, it was with
-no light repugnance that he applied himself to the
-task. Slowly, and with shaking fingers, he unfolded
-and smoothed the ruffled paper, spread it on
-the table before him, and not hastily, but with a
-deliberate care that was evidently painful to him,
-read as follows: &#8216;Although a stranger to you, Sir
-Sykes Denzil, Baronet, I am no stranger to what
-took place on March 24, 18&mdash;. Should you wish
-this matter to remain, as it has hitherto done,
-untalked of by the world, I must request that you
-will meet me this evening at <i>The Traveller&#8217;s Rest</i>,
-by the cross-roads. I shall wait there for you until
-ten o&#8217;clock to-night, and will then name the terms
-on which alone you can reckon on my future
-silence.&mdash;Inquire for yours respectfully, <span class="smcap">Dick
-Hold</span>, staying at <i>The Traveller&#8217;s Rest</i>.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>The baronet read and re-read this letter with
-the patient endurance of a sufferer under the
-surgeon&#8217;s knife. Nothing but his labouring breath
-and the deepening of the lines around his mouth
-and the furrows on his high forehead, betrayed
-the pain that this precious document, indited in
-a large sprawling hand, occasioned him. When
-he had gone through it for the second time, he
-rose, and filling a glass with water from a bottle
-that stood on a side-table, he drank a deep draught,
-and then paced to and fro with hasty irregular
-steps, as some men do when suddenly called upon
-for earnest thought and prompt decision.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I will not go!&#8217; he said authoritatively, but in
-a low voice&mdash;&#8216;I will not go.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Such a peremptory summons as that which he
-had received implied more than it stated. It was
-couched in terms which were sufficiently civil;
-but the tone was still that of command, not of
-entreaty or persuasion. Most gentlemen of the
-degree of Sir Sykes would have treated such a
-demand either as a piece of insufferable insolence
-or as the freak of a madman. The baronet knew
-well enough what sort of reception his neighbours,
-Lord Wolverhampton, Carew of Carew, or Fulford
-of Carstennis, would have given to a request
-so impudent. He was, as they were, a justice
-of the peace and deputy-lieutenant, owner of a
-fine estate, one whose name was mentioned with
-respect wherever men did congregate.</p>
-
-<p>The meekest of us all are apt to rebel against
-unwarranted dictation. And Sir Sykes was not
-meek. His friends and his servants&mdash;lynx-eyed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">{36}</a></span>
-as we are apt to be to the foibles of others&mdash;knew
-that he was in his unobtrusive way a proud man.
-The stronger, therefore, must have been the influence
-that drew him, as the magnet draws iron
-to itself, towards that unsavoury house of entertainment
-whence his unknown correspondent had
-dated his missive. The first dressing-bell clanged
-out its call unheeded, and it was only when the
-second bell rang that Sir Sykes recalled his
-wandering thoughts sufficiently to remember that
-it was time for him to dress, and that whatever
-cares might be busy at his heart, he must yet
-wear his mask decorously before the world.
-Dinner on that day at Carbery Court was not
-a peculiarly genial meal. The baronet had taken,
-with his accustomed regularity, his place at the
-table; but he was pale, and looked older by some
-years than he had done a few hours since. Yet
-he resented Lucy&#8217;s half-timid inquiry: &#8216;You are
-not ill, papa, I hope?&#8217; and quietly declared that
-he was perfectly well. The domestic relations
-differ so much in varying conditions of life, that
-there are parents whose every thought and deed
-appear to be the common property of the home
-circle, and others who sanction no trespass on
-the inner self, the <i>to auton</i> of the Greeks, which
-each of us carries in the recesses of his own heart.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Sykes Denzil was one of those men who, as
-husband and father, never carry their confidences
-beyond a certain convenient limit. He was no
-tyrant, and his daughters, who fondly loved him
-and who believed in his love for them, looked with
-regret on the cloud that so often rested on his yet
-handsome features. But he had known how to
-preserve his jealously guarded individuality from
-the encroachments of affectionate interference, so
-that it was but very rarely that his actions were
-the theme of open comment. Blanche and Lucy,
-therefore, though with feminine nicety of observation
-they noted that their father could not eat,
-but that he emptied his glass again and again, said
-nothing; while Jasper, as he watched Sir Sykes
-with a stealthy inquisitiveness, made the mental
-reflection that &#8216;the governor must be hard hit,
-very hard indeed;&#8217; and secretly determined to turn
-the occasion to his own peculiar profit.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Jasper!&#8217; said Lucy anxiously, some time after
-the dinner had come to an end; &#8216;what is the
-matter with papa? Do you know if he is really
-unwell, or if anything has gone wrong? I waited
-here for you, in case you might know what is
-amiss.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Jasper, who had been intercepted as he was
-leaving the house for his customary twilight stroll,
-with a cigar between his lips, turned lazily round.
-&#8216;How can I tell, Lucy?&#8217; he returned indifferently.
-&#8216;I&#8217;m not the keeper of my father&#8217;s conscience, as
-the Lord Chancellor, by a polite fiction, is supposed
-to be of the king&#8217;s.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I only meant, has anything occurred, to your
-knowledge,&#8217; pleaded Miss Denzil, &#8216;calculated to
-annoy or distress him? Anything, for instance,
-about you?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;How about me!&#8217; demanded Jasper with a
-slight start and a slight frown.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Don&#8217;t be angry, brother; I only meant, dear,
-about your&mdash;debts,&#8217; answered the girl, laying her
-hand on Jasper&#8217;s arm.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Has he been talking to you on that delightful
-subject?&#8217; retorted the brother, almost roughly.
-&#8216;No; I see that he has not; at least not very lately.
-One would think, to hear that eternal refrain of
-debts, debts, debts for ever jangling in my ears,
-that I was the first fellow who ever overran the
-constable. Surely I&#8217;m punished enough, if I <i>did</i>
-owe a trifle, by being caged up in this wearisome
-old Bastille of a house, and&mdash;&mdash; There, there;
-Lucy, don&#8217;t cry. I&#8217;ll not say a word more against
-Carbery, and you may set your mind at rest. If
-the governor has anything to vex him, be assured
-that it is not in the least connected with so
-insignificant a person as myself.&#8217; And, as though
-weary of the subject, he sauntered off.</p>
-
-<p>It was Sir Sykes&#8217;s habit on most evenings to
-spend a short time, half an hour or so, in the
-drawing-room. He liked music; and Blanche, his
-younger daughter, who had been gifted with the
-sweet voice and delicate sense of harmony which
-are often found in conjunction with frail health,
-knew the airs and the songs that best suited him.
-He never, under any circumstances, remained long
-in company with his daughters, being one of those
-men to whom the society of women is in itself
-uncongenial; but on this particular evening he
-went straight from the dining-room to the library,
-and sipped his coffee there, while the twilight
-deepened into the gloom of night.</p>
-
-<p>The day had been fine enough, but the sun had
-sunk in a cloud-bank of black and orange, and
-there were not wanting signs that a change of
-weather was at hand. The wind had risen, and
-the clouds gathered as the sun went down, and it
-seemed as though the proverbial fickleness of
-our climate would soon be illustrated. But Sir
-Sykes, as he went forth shortly after the clock
-on the turret had struck nine, paid no heed to
-the weather, save that once or twice he glanced
-upwards with a sort of half-conscious satisfaction
-at the darkling sky. The night, with its friendly
-shadows and its threats of a coming storm, suited
-far better with his purpose than cloudless azure
-and bright moonlight would have done. The
-moon, not as yet long risen, was young and wan,
-and her feeble lustre fell but at rare intervals
-through the wrack of hurrying clouds. The
-larches in the plantations quivered and the aspens
-by the trout-stream trembled as the gusts of wailing
-wind went by; while the giant trees in the
-park, each one a citadel of refuge to squirrel and
-song-bird, sent down a rustling sound, as though
-every one out of their million leaves had found a
-tiny voice of its own to give warning of the
-approaching gale. Sir Sykes skirted the lawn,
-passed through the shrubbery, and struck into a
-path seldom trodden except by the feet of his
-keepers, which led northwards through the park.</p>
-
-<p>There is something ignominious in the very fact
-that the master of any dwelling, howsoever humble,
-should steal away from it with as earnest a desire
-to elude observation as though he had been a
-robber of hen-roosts or a purloiner of spoons.
-And perhaps such a proceeding appeared still
-more so in the case of the owner of so stately a
-place as Carbery. Sir Sykes felt as he glided,
-unseen as he hoped, past paling and thicket, at
-once angry and ashamed. So repugnant to him
-was the errand on which his mind was bent, that
-on reaching a private door in the northern wall of
-the park he came to a halt, and held as it were
-parley with himself before proceeding on the quest
-of the writer of the letter.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I do not know this fellow,&#8217; he muttered wrathfully:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">{37}</a></span>
-&#8216;the man&#8217;s very name is strange to me.
-But the twenty-fourth of March&mdash;<i>that</i> can be
-no mistake, no coincidence. That fatal date has
-burned itself too deeply into my brain for me to
-disregard or to forget it. Yes, I must go; I
-suppose that I must go.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>And with a heavy sigh, the master of that fair
-demesne and of many a broad acre beyond it felt
-in his pocket for the key that would open the
-postern before which he stood, unlocked the door,
-went out, and reclosed and fastened it behind him.
-Then, without further hesitation, he entered into a
-lane, the straggling branches of the hazels that
-grew on the high banks to left and right almost
-brushing against his person as he walked briskly
-on. So long as he had been within the limits of
-Carbery Chase, Sir Sykes had done his best to
-escape notice, keeping as often as he could tree and
-bush and rising ground between himself and the
-grand house of which he was absolute proprietor.
-But now he ceased to turn his head and look or
-listen for any sign that he was followed, and
-pushed on, assured that his clandestine exit from
-Carbery was unknown to any but himself. Sir
-Sykes, however, was very much mistaken. He
-was dogged by the very pursuer whom, perhaps, of
-all others he would have wished to keep in ignorance
-as to his conduct. Jasper, whose feline
-vigilance, once awakened, could not readily be
-lulled to sleep, had kept watch upon his father&#8217;s
-actions with a quiet patient steadiness which
-nothing but vengeance or the greed of gain could
-possibly have inspired. There is a certain sympathy,
-especially with crooked motives, which
-enables us to anticipate the stratagems of those
-with whom we have intercourse, and of this Jasper
-had his full share.</p>
-
-<p>He was scarcely surprised when from his place
-of espial he saw his father quit the house and
-thread his way through the grounds after such a
-fashion as made it manifest that the baronet desired
-his excursion to remain a secret to those beneath
-his roof. That something abnormal should happen
-as a consequence of the letter which Sir Sykes
-had received, and the reading of which had so
-powerfully affected its recipient, the captain had
-considered as so probable, that he thought it worth
-his while to lie in wait for the surprisal of the
-secret. Of two probable hypotheses, Jasper, whose
-imagination was of a chastened and practical order,
-had chosen rather to fancy that some stranger
-would arrive, than that the baronet should himself
-go forth to meet that stranger. But when he saw
-his father&#8217;s tall figure vanish amidst the shadows
-of the dense evergreens and leafy lime-trees, he
-was not in the least astonished.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;When it was a question of nobbling the <i>Black
-Prince</i>,&#8217; he said meditatively, &#8216;I wouldn&#8217;t trust
-myself, nor would Gentleman Pratt, to talking it
-over anywhere but on Bletchley Downs with the
-vagabonds who hocussed the horse, and who would
-for a fiver have sold their own fathers.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Some recollection that he, Jasper Denzil, late a
-captain in Her Majesty&#8217;s service, was at that
-moment engaged, so far as in him lay, in the
-questionable operation of &#8216;selling&#8217; his own father,
-here caused a twinge to his callous heart. But we
-are seldom without some moral anodyne wherewith
-to lull to sleep that troublesome monitor, conscience;
-and Jasper had but need to remember his
-debts, his difficulties, and the fact that men at his
-club spoke of him as &#8216;Poor Denzil&mdash;played out,
-sir!&#8217; to assuage the momentary pang which some
-as yet smouldering sense of honour occasioned to
-him.</p>
-
-<p>The skill with which he followed Sir Sykes,
-keeping the object of his pursuit fully in view, yet
-never for an instant compromising himself by
-coming into the range of vision, should the baronet,
-as he often did, turn his head, would have done
-credit to a Comanche Indian on the war-path. It
-was by a subtle instinct, not by practice, that he
-availed himself of the shelter of tree and brake
-and hollow, until at length, himself unobserved,
-he made sure that Sir Sykes was heading towards
-the private door in the northern wall of the park.
-There was a side-gate kept continually unlocked
-on account of the right of way, some six hundred
-yards to the eastward, and from this the captain
-could issue without difficulty. As for the private
-door, Sir Sykes had a key to fit its lock; Jasper
-had none. The latter&#8217;s mind was instantly made
-up.</p>
-
-<p>Idle sybarite though he was, the captain was
-fleet of foot, an accomplishment perhaps more
-common among languid men about town than
-healthy hardy dwellers in the country would
-readily imagine. He had made money once and
-again by the lightness of his heels, and they did
-him good service now, as, after a rapid rush across
-the elastic turf of the park and a quick traversing
-of the heathery surface of the rugged common-land
-beyond, he caught a glimpse of his father&#8217;s stately
-figure as it passed in between the tall hedges of
-the lane.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;It&#8217;s lucky I can run a bit!&#8217; gasped out Jasper
-as he paused for an instant to take breath, and
-then passing his cambric handkerchief across his
-brow, on which the heat-drops stood thickly,
-plunged into the dark lane between the steep
-banks of which the object of his pursuit had disappeared.
-And now his task was the easier, in
-that Sir Sykes, intent on what lay before him, and
-confident that his manner of leaving his home was
-unknown, never once turned his head to look back.</p>
-
-<p>A ghastly sight it was&mdash;had human eye been
-there to note it&mdash;which the wan moon shewed,
-when at uncertain intervals her white light fell
-on the pale faces of these two men, father and son,
-so much and so little alike, who were wending
-their way thus along the deep Devonshire lane.
-In front was Sir Sykes, moody indeed and downcast,
-but a gentleman of a goodly presence; while
-behind him came with feline footfall his only son,
-as craftily eager in the chase as even a garrotter,
-our British Thug, could have been. Once beyond
-the lane, the baronet and his kindred spy had to
-traverse a tract of ragged and desolate common,
-where the horse-road dwindled to a track of cart-wheels
-in the peaty soil, and where Jasper felt
-that concealment would have been difficult, had
-the baronet but looked behind him.</p>
-
-<p>But the rain, long threatened, came on, urged
-by the strength of the sobbing wind, and Captain
-Denzil congratulated himself on the friendly
-darkness that ensued. Nor was it long before
-Sir Sykes caught sight of the dead tree, on a
-knotted bough of which was the signboard of <i>The
-Traveller&#8217;s Rest</i>, the dilapidated roof and battered
-front of which could dimly be seen through the
-gloom of night.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;After all, why not?&#8217; ejaculated Jasper, as he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">{38}</a></span>
-saw his father, after a moment&#8217;s hesitation, disappear
-within the ruinous porch of the roadside
-public-house.</p>
-
-
-<h3>CHAPTER IV.&mdash;AT THE TRAVELLER&#8217;S REST.</h3>
-
-<p>&#8216;Person of the name of Hold? I should think
-so, rather. Want to see him, do you? Turn to
-your right, then; get up them stone steps, and
-just keep straight till you&#8217;re past the water-butt,
-and you&#8217;ll twig the tap-room door.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>It was a sharp-eyed sharp-tongued boy who
-spoke, a boy in a tattered jacket that had once
-been blue, and had once been garnished with brass
-anchor buttons; but who retained his Cockney
-accent and his air of brisk effrontery, like that of
-a London sparrow.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Can&#8217;t you make out Her Majesty&#8217;s English,
-Mr Stiffback?&#8217; said this impudent servitor of <i>The
-Traveller&#8217;s Rest</i>, seeing that Sir Sykes hesitated.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You keep a civil tongue, Deputy,&#8217; broke in a
-deeper voice from within the darkling passage.
-&#8216;This, I suppose, is the gentleman who received
-a letter from a party called Hold? Very good.
-This way, sir, please; and mind you don&#8217;t hurt
-your head against the beam, for the ceiling&#8217;s low
-and light&#8217;s scarce. So. Here we are; and this is
-the tap-room, and my name is Hold. At this end
-of the room we&#8217;ll be quietest.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>And the baronet passively permitted himself to
-be led up some stone steps and down some brick
-steps, and finally into a long low room, at one end
-of which, although the weather was warm and the
-season summer, there glowed and crackled a large
-fire of mingled peat and wood, around which were
-clustered seven or eight persons male and female,
-two of whom were smoking short discoloured
-pipes, while the others were conversing in hoarse
-tones, or sniffing, with somewhat of a wolfish
-expression of countenance, the savoury fumes that
-arose from a frying-pan which a gaunt man in
-frowsy black was carefully holding over the hottest
-part of the fire.</p>
-
-<p>There was a low wooden screen or partition,
-about breast-high, which stretched across some
-three-fourths of this delectable apartment, which
-was rudely furnished with some wooden settles
-and rush-bottomed chairs, and a couple of greasy
-tables, vamped and clamped with sheet-iron to
-repair the injury which excitable customers had
-done to the woodwork.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;My name, Sir Sykes, is Hold,&#8217; said the owner
-of the name, when the baronet had taken his
-seat on one of the mean-looking chairs, and his
-singular correspondent had placed himself on
-one of the benches opposite.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I never heard it before, nor, to the best of
-my recollection, have we ever met,&#8217; said Sir
-Sykes dryly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Ah, yes, but we have met, Sir Sykes Denzil,
-Baronet,&#8217; returned Hold, with a twinkle of satisfaction
-in his bold black eyes; &#8216;not that it&#8217;s any
-wonder you do not remember so humble a chap
-as yours truly. I have the advantage of you.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>These last words were uttered with a malicious
-emphasis which caused Sir Sykes to look again
-and keenly in the man&#8217;s face, while cudgelling
-his memory, though in vain, to find some guiding
-clue. He saw a hard, fierce, swarthy countenance,
-dark hair partly grizzled, and a powerfully built
-frame, such as matched well with the face. Had
-Sir Sykes on the Bench been consulted by his
-brother magistrates as to the number of calendar
-months of imprisonment with hard labour to
-be allotted to such a one as Hold, he would have
-said at once: &#8216;Give him the heaviest sentence
-warranted by law, for, unless Lavater&#8217;s science be
-false, there could scarcely exist a more dangerous
-scoundrel.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Sir Sykes, however, was not on the bench, nor
-Hold in the dock at quarter-sessions. So he
-merely replied with a steady look: &#8216;No, Mr Hold,
-or whatever your name may be. To the best
-of my belief, I never in my life saw you.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Very good,&#8217; quietly returned the man, taking
-out a black pocket-book much frayed and battered,
-and rustling over the dog&#8217;s-eared leaves. &#8216;Let
-me see; yes, March the twenty-fourth is the first
-important date.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;And may I ask,&#8217; interposed Sir Sykes, with
-somewhat of the cold haughtiness which had stood
-him in good stead in many a moral duel, &#8216;what
-is the meaning of these perpetual references to
-a specified day in March?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Hold&#8217;s low inward laugh was one of sincere
-enjoyment. &#8216;It&#8217;s not only at cards, Sir Sykes,&#8217;
-he said with a chuckle, &#8216;that the game of brag
-can be played. But come, it&#8217;s of no use, Sir
-Sykes Denzil, Baronet. My hand&#8217;s too strong&mdash;chokeful
-of court-cards, kings, queens, knaves,
-and aces&mdash;to give you a chance. I have entries
-here&#8217;&mdash;slapping the black pocket-book&mdash;&#8216;for more
-days than one. Take one of &#8217;em at random. You
-have cause to remember the ninth of April in
-the same year, Sir Sykes. So have I.&#8217; And with
-a nod and a wink, Hold slid back the book into
-an inner pocket of his rough coat.</p>
-
-<p>The baronet&#8217;s blanched face and anxious eye
-betrayed how deeply he was agitated by what
-he had heard.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;What do you want of me?&#8217; he asked abruptly,
-but in a tremulous voice.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Hark ye, shipmate!&#8217; rejoined the other, leaning
-his head on his hand, while his elbow rested
-on the stained and chipped table beside him;
-&#8216;all in good time. Business is business, and is
-not to be disposed of in that sort of hop, skip,
-and jump way. Take another look at me, if you
-like; and since you can&#8217;t tell who I am, say <i>what</i>
-I am.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I should say,&#8217; answered Sir Sykes, gazing with
-undisguised repugnance at the outward man of
-his dubious acquaintance, &#8216;that you have been
-a sailor.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;No great wit wanted, I reckon,&#8217; retorted Hold
-roughly, &#8216;to make out that much. The very mermaid
-on my arm here, and the crown and the
-anchor,&#8217; he continued, baring his brawny wrist
-so as to exhibit the blue tattoo marks which it
-bore, &#8216;would tell you that. But I&#8217;ve followed
-more trades than one; tried them all in turn,
-sir. How does that idle string of words that
-schoolboys say, come off the tongue? Ay, I have
-it&mdash;Tinker, tailor, soldier, sailor. Why, I&#8217;ve been
-everything on the urchin&#8217;s roll-call except thief;
-I never was quite that&mdash;or gentleman, which is
-a cut above me.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You have seen the world evidently,&#8217; said Sir
-Sykes in a bland tone; &#8216;but you must remember,
-Mr Hold, that you have not as yet explained to me
-with sufficient clearness the nature of your business
-with me.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">{39}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Labour lost, if I did,&#8217; rejoined Hold with a
-cynical smile. &#8216;A secret is best of course when
-it belongs to one only. Two may get some good
-out of it; but once it&#8217;s common property, the goose
-that laid the golden eggs is picked bare to the last
-bone. Do you see,&#8217; he added, dropping his voice,
-&#8216;our good friends yonder, and do you suppose that
-such as they are not all ears, as it were, to snap up
-any odds and ends of our talk? He with the
-frying-pan is as knowing a hand as any in England&mdash;a
-begging-letter writer, as the newspaper paragraphs
-call it. And the others, well! the others are
-all on the lay more or less, to scratch up a living
-by their wits. It&#8217;s only the cream of the cadging
-profession that can afford to patronise the <i>Rest</i>.
-It&#8217;s quite a genteel hotel of its class, I assure you.
-But now you know why I don&#8217;t speak out. Better
-deal with me singly, than with all these blood-suckers,
-I should say. And so, as we understand
-each other, we need not enlighten others.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Is there no more private place?&#8217; the baronet
-began.</p>
-
-<p>But Hold broke curtly in: &#8216;None, Sir Sykes, in
-a crib like this. Up-stairs, we&#8217;d double the risk
-of being overheard. Walls have ears, you know.
-Now here, where we can see into the garden
-from this open window at my elbow, we&#8217;re pretty
-safe.&mdash;Deputy!&#8217; (this was addressed to the sharp
-boy in the ragged jacket) &#8216;two glasses of rum,
-d&#8217;ye hear?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Sir Sykes had had time to think, and it was in a
-firm tone that he now spoke.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Now, Mr Hold,&#8217; he said, &#8216;I am a man of the
-world, and as such will not affect indignation or
-astonishment in the fact that you wish to bargain
-with me, for your own advantage, as to certain
-painful events of my earlier life. Name your
-terms, but be moderate. The law, as you are
-aware, is not very indulgent towards those who
-extort money by means of threats or calumnies.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Hold&#8217;s face, hitherto good-humoured, wore an
-ugly scowl. &#8216;Drop that style of argument, if
-you&#8217;re wise, baronet,&#8217; he said resolutely. &#8216;Dick
-Hold is not often backward, when folks will
-fire shotted guns instead of harmless blank cartridge.
-Come, come, commodore; if you dared to
-indict me, you&#8217;d hardly be here. Try that game,
-if you choose. It only serves the turn of those
-who can come into court with clean hands. Yours
-mayhap would shew a stain or so.&mdash;Here is
-Deputy with the rum. Let us drink, sir, to our
-better acquaintance, and be friends.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Sir Sykes, however, pushed back the glass
-which Hold proffered him. Sunk in his own
-estimation though he might be, he could not stoop
-to pledge a ruffian of the stamp of this one.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Your very good health, Sir Sykes Denzil,
-Baronet,&#8217; said Hold unconcernedly, as he tossed
-off his liquor. &#8216;We wear well, both of us; though
-many a year has gone over our heads since that
-ninth of April that you know of.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Were you at Sandston, then, on that day?&#8217;
-asked the baronet, thrown off his guard, and a
-slight quivering of Hold&#8217;s eyelid told that a
-point had been scored against his incautious
-opponent.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Not so. At Tunbridge Wells rather,&#8217; returned
-Hold slowly. &#8216;I remember seeing the funeral&mdash;that
-of the poor little girl of yours who died, Sir
-Sykes.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Sir Sykes grew almost as white as he had done
-when first he began the reading of the letter which
-had drawn him to such a rendezvous.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You will oblige me, sir,&#8217; he said in a voice
-that he vainly tried to render firm and calm, &#8216;by
-being silent in future as to&mdash;as to&#8217;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;So that we understand one another, I agree to
-anything,&#8217; was Hold&#8217;s half-sullen rejoinder.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;And now to come to terms. You want money,
-no doubt?&#8217; said Sir Sykes more composedly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;All people, to the best of my belief, want
-money,&#8217; replied Hold with a grin. &#8216;I am no
-cormorant, no shearer and skinner of such as come
-under my handling. Just now, Sir Sykes, I will
-only ask you for five hundred&mdash;a fleabite!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>The demand, considering the baronet&#8217;s rank and
-means, was unexpectedly moderate. Sir Sykes in
-turn produced his pocket-book. &#8216;Few men,&#8217; he said,
-&#8216;keep such a sum in ready cash. But it so happens&#8217;&mdash;laying
-down a roll of bank-notes upon the
-squalid table&mdash;&#8216;that I have money, two hundred
-and thirty pounds, with me; and here&#8217;&mdash;pencilling
-a few words on a leaf which he tore out of the
-book&mdash;&#8216;is my written promise for two seventy.
-I will send you a cheque to-morrow.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Nothing,&#8217; observed Hold, &#8216;could be more satisfactory.
-Don&#8217;t send a groom; grooms chatter;
-the post is safer. You won&#8217;t drink the rum, Sir
-Sykes? I will.&#8217; And he swallowed the alcohol at
-a gulp, and then swept notes and paper into his
-pocket. &#8216;One thing more, Sir Sykes. I did not
-come here for hush-money and nothing else. I
-want you to take into your house and as a member
-of your family a person&mdash;of my recommending,
-Sir Sykes.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I fail to comprehend you, Mr Hold,&#8217; said the
-baronet stiffly.</p>
-
-<p>The other laughed. &#8216;Her name,&#8217; he said, &#8216;is
-Ruth.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Ruth!&#8217; exclaimed Sir Sykes, starting from his
-seat, and speaking so unguardedly that the unwashed
-crew at the firelit end of the room turned
-to peer at him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Yes, Ruth. Don&#8217;t you like the name?&#8217; asked
-the fellow coarsely. &#8216;My sister, Ruth Hold.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Ruth&mdash;your sister&mdash;yours&mdash;at Carbery?&#8217; gasped
-out the bewildered baronet.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You need not be afraid,&#8217; was the rough reply:
-&#8216;she won&#8217;t disgrace your fine house or your dainty
-ways. I doubt if your misses at home are more
-thoroughly the lady than Ruth Hold&mdash;my&mdash;sister.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You must see, your own good sense must shew
-you,&#8217; stammered out Sir Sykes, looking the picture
-of abject terror, as the smoky glare of the lamp
-fell on his pale face, &#8216;that even were I willing to
-consent to so extraordinary&mdash;&mdash; In short it cannot
-be.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Sorry for you, then!&#8217; returned Hold with a
-shrug; &#8216;for on your acceptance of these terms
-alone is my silence to be bought. Come, come,
-shipmate! hear reason. Ruth shall bear any surname
-you like, and it can&#8217;t be hard to account for
-her coming to Carbery. You knew her father&mdash;an
-old friend&mdash;military&mdash;died in India&mdash;left you
-her guardian, Ruth&#8217;s guardian; eh, Sir Sykes?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I&mdash;I will take time to think of it,&#8217; said the
-baronet confusedly. &#8216;You shall hear from me
-to-morrow. And now, I had better go.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>And he rose. Hold re-conducted him, civilly
-enough, as far as the outer door, and watched him
-depart through the howling wind and driving rain
-towards Carbery. But what neither Hold nor Sir<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">{40}</a></span>
-Sykes could have conjectured was that Jasper
-Denzil, hidden in a crazy arbour among the sunflowers
-and pot-herbs of the inn garden, hard by
-the open window, had during the greater portion
-of the interview played the part of an unsuspected
-eavesdropper, and was now on his way by another
-route to Carbery Chase.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div>
-<h2><a name="ANALOGIES_OF_ANIMAL_AND_PLANT" id="ANALOGIES_OF_ANIMAL_AND_PLANT">ANALOGIES OF ANIMAL AND PLANT
-LIFE.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> boundary-line between the lowest forms of
-animal and vegetable life is of a most indefinite
-character. Nature would seem to have been guilty
-of many inconsistencies in her arrangement of
-these organisms; for a being which at one period
-of its existence exhibits the common characteristics
-of a plant, may at another period possess
-the attributes of an animal. Such an organism is
-found in the form of a fungus which grows on the
-surface of tan-pits. Under slightly altered conditions
-it becomes a locomotive creature capable
-of feeding upon solid matter. Naturalists have
-therefore always felt a difficulty in deciding
-which of these doubtful organisms should be
-classed with the one kingdom and which with
-the other. Indeed it has been seriously proposed
-to form a separate class for their reception, a kind
-of &#8216;no-man&#8217;s land&#8217; to which they might by general
-consent be relegated.</p>
-
-<p>It would at first appear that a sufficient distinction
-would be made if such organisms as possess
-the power of spontaneous movement were at once
-called animals. But this classification would prove
-to be most erroneous, for many plants possess the
-power of movement in a very high degree. The
-swarm-spores of such alg as seaweeds, for instance,
-swim actively about by means of minute filaments
-or <i>cilia</i>. They were on this account long supposed
-to be animalcules, and it was not until
-they were found to ultimately develop into the
-plants from which they sprung, that their real
-place in nature was determined. These swarm-spores,
-common enough in the sea and in pools
-and ditches all the world over, are particles of
-matter which detach themselves from their parent
-cells, and after a longer or shorter time of activity,
-come to rest and form new alg. They are provided
-with two or more vibratile cilia&mdash;minute
-processes which we more fully alluded to in a
-recent paper on &#8216;Bell Animalcules.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>The suggestion that animals should be distinguished
-by their motor powers is also fallacious,
-for the reason that many animals do not possess
-this power. Sponges, for instance, are organised
-bodies which remain stationary attached to rocks.
-But their system of pores and vents, through
-which a constant circulation is maintained, and by
-means of which they are supplied with particles
-of solid matter as food, most certainly entitle them
-to be ranked as animals.</p>
-
-<p>The similarity between the lowest organisms of
-the two kingdoms does not seem so extraordinary
-after all, when by the help of the microscope we
-examine their structural details. In both we find
-a similar semi-fluid matter called protoplasm,
-which has been defined as &#8216;the physical basis of
-life.&#8217; In the cellular tissues of many plants this
-fluid may, with a sufficiently high magnifying
-power, be seen in a state of ceaseless activity. It
-is composed of four elements, namely carbon,
-hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen. An analogous
-substance is found in white of egg, and protoplasm
-itself is one of the constituents of blood.
-Many of our readers will know that the colour
-of blood is due to innumerable red bodies
-called corpuscles, so minute, that myriads will
-be contained in one drop of the vital fluid.
-But there are also other corpuscles quite devoid of
-colour. These are minute particles of protoplasm,
-and like the same matter in plants, they exhibit
-peculiar phenomena of motion, allied to those
-seen in the <i>Am&#339;ba</i> or &#8216;Proteus-animalcule.&#8217; We
-may therefore conclude that the vital principle in
-both animals and plants is the same, and that the
-tissues of both are built up of this protoplasm; the
-point of difference being that, whereas animals
-obtain it ready-made from plants, the latter are
-the manufacturers of it from mineral or inorganic
-sources.</p>
-
-<p>There are of course, besides the mere chemical
-constituents of protoplasm, other conditions
-necessary to vitality. A certain range of temperature
-would seem to be the most important, if we
-except perhaps the presence of water, without
-which life can hardly exist. But even here a
-curious exception is presented to us in the Rotifera
-or wheel-animalcules&mdash;formerly alluded to in this
-<i>Journal</i> in an article on &#8216;Suspended Animation&#8217;&mdash;which
-may be kept in a state of dried dust
-for many years, and which, on the addition of
-a drop of water, will resume their original vigour
-and rapid movement. The so-called mummy-wheat
-which is said to germinate after a burial
-of some thousands of years, is an instance of
-this retention of the life-principle in plants.
-Light as well as heat also plays an important
-part in the mystery of vitality, although it is
-a curious but well-authenticated fact that the
-mere growth of plants is most rapid in darkness.
-We may see an instance of this in the stems of a
-growing plant which is placed near a window.
-They will all be bent towards the glass. Hence it
-is a common saying that they are attracted by the
-light. But the real reason for this bent form is,
-that their darker side grows more rapidly than the
-rest of the plant, forcing it to assume a curved
-form.</p>
-
-<p>It is in the nature of their food that plants and
-animals shew the most marked points of difference.
-We may state as a broad rule that all living things
-have the power of taking in foreign matter, wherewith
-to supply and replenish their various parts.
-This process, in which the many units which
-make up the structure are constantly dying away
-and being reproduced, constitutes what we call
-growth. In carrying out this function, animals
-convert organic into inorganic matter, whilst plants
-do precisely the reverse. They may both be described
-as digesting their food&mdash;if we accept as a
-definition of the term digestion, that process by
-which insoluble food is reduced to a soluble form
-fitted for absorption. In the animal this process
-is performed by means of glands or their analogues
-in lower animals, which open upon the internal
-surface of the stomach, and which secrete an
-acid fluid called the gastric juice. This fluid
-contains pepsine&mdash;a dried preparation of which,
-obtained from the stomach of the pig, forms a
-valuable remedy in the treatment of indigestion.
-Its power of dissolving organic matter is so subtle,
-that even after death it may act upon the stomach<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">{41}</a></span>
-itself, as well as upon any of the other organs
-with which it may come in contact. The problem
-as to why the stomach is during life preserved
-from destruction by its own secretion, was long a
-puzzle to physiologists; but it has been decided
-according to one opinion, that the alkalinity of
-the blood, which constantly circulates through the
-tissues, protects them from injury by its neutralising
-influence.</p>
-
-<p>In plants the function of digestion is the same
-in principle, although the absence of a mouth
-and special digestive organs renders it different
-in detail. Plants require inorganic matters for
-support. Potatoes and turnips will, for instance,
-withdraw immense quantities of alkaline matter
-from the soil. Beans and peas will rob the
-ground in like manner of its lime, while the
-various kinds of grasses will choose silica for
-their nourishment. It is this selective property
-of plants which renders necessary the rotation
-of crops. A succession of alkaline plants would
-in time render the ground quite unproductive
-of vegetation of that kind; but if a proper
-rotation of crops be observed&mdash;the soil, whilst
-giving up one of its constituents, is gradually
-regaining those which it has previously lost. A
-consideration of these conditions of agriculture
-forms the very groundwork of scientific farming.</p>
-
-<p>Exceptions to the rule that plants consume inorganic
-matter are furnished by certain fungi and
-also by the insectivorous plants. One of these
-latter, the <i>Diona muscipula</i>, or Venus&#8217;s flytrap, we
-fully described some months ago; but the subject
-is so replete with interest that we shall not hesitate
-to recur to it and to refer to some of the other
-members of the same family.</p>
-
-<p>Without reproducing our description of the
-<i>Diona</i>, we may assist our readers&#8217; memory by
-shortly stating that the leaf of the plant is formed
-of two lobes joined by a midrib, and that each
-half of the leaf is furnished with three sensitive
-hairs. On a fly or other insect settling on the leaf
-and so irritating these hairs, the two lobes gradually
-close and imprison the intruder. The most
-remarkable property of the plant is that it not
-only kills insects in this way, but that it actually
-<i>digests</i> them in a manner exceedingly similar to
-that by which animals are nourished; for after
-the prey is secured, a liquid secreted in the upper
-part of the leaf is exuded, and this liquid is analogous
-with that furnished in the case of animals
-by the glands of the digestive mucous membrane.
-The closeness of the analogy will be better understood
-by referring to an experiment which was
-made with a view to testing the solvent powers of
-this secretion. A slice chipped from a dog&#8217;s tooth
-was placed between the lobes of a <i>Diona</i> leaf.
-After some days the lobes were separated, and the
-piece of tooth was found to be in such a soft
-fibrous condition that it was torn to shreds by the
-slight force employed in removing it. This energetic
-power of the secretion will remind the reader
-of what we have already said regarding the action
-of the gastric juice upon the animal tissues after
-death. Another curious point of similarity between
-the two fluids is observed in the fact that
-in both cases the secretion is stimulated by the
-presence of food.</p>
-
-<p>It seems almost incredible to think how such
-a peculiarity in a plant should have, until very
-recent years, remained in obscurity. It is true
-that more than a century ago an English naturalist
-described it, and submitted his observations to
-Linnus. But since that time the matter had
-aroused very little interest, until some few years
-ago when Darwin published his wonderful book on
-Insectivorous Plants. This want of attention is
-evidently due to the fact that Linnus himself
-merely looked upon the plant as one, like the
-sensitive plant, having an excitable structure. He
-regarded the imprisoned insects as merely an
-accidental occurrence, stating it as his opinion that
-they were probably released when the leaf re-opened.
-The matter was thus quietly set at rest
-by a great authority, and no more was heard of the
-<i>Diona</i> until an able naturalist of North Carolina,
-where the plant is indigenous, again called attention
-to it.</p>
-
-<p>Another plant belonging to this group has
-several peculiarities which are worthy of notice.
-We allude to the <i>Sarracenia</i>, which is found in the
-eastern states of North America. This plant grows
-in bogs and similar moist neighbourhoods. The
-leaf consists of a trumpet-shaped tube half covered
-with an arched lid. This tube exhibits a smooth
-and slippery surface for some distance down its
-interior; but lower still it is studded with bristles,
-its lowest depths being filled with a fluid of intoxicating
-properties. Round the mouth of the
-pitcher thus formed exude drops of a sweet viscid
-fluid. The <i>Nepenthes</i> form another branch of the
-family of Pitcher-plants, including many different
-species. Indigenous to the Asiatic Archipelago,
-their appearance is that of a half-shrubby climbing
-plant, the leaf of which terminates in a long
-stem, to which is attached a hanging pitcher.
-These pitchers vary in length from an inch to a
-foot, or even more; indeed some are large enough
-to entrap a bird or small quadruped. Their
-structure is not so complicated as those of the
-<i>Sarracenia</i>, although in other respects they greatly
-resemble them; while in both cases the digestive
-functions are closely allied with those of the
-<i>Diona</i>. But the most seductive of all these
-traps for unwary insects is certainly the <i>Darlingtonia</i>.
-Its victim is first of all attracted by the
-bright colour of its petals, and after it has settled
-upon the plant, and helped to fertilise it by the
-movement of its body against the pollen, it slips
-into a treacherous pitcher, to be first intoxicated,
-and then totally annihilated. Surely there will
-be no difficulty in finding an analogy here to certain
-social institutions belonging to the higher
-order of animals!</p>
-
-<p>The electrical phenomena common to both plants
-and animals must next claim our attention. The
-celebrated Galvani was the first to direct attention to
-the existence of an electrical current in the muscle
-of a frog&#8217;s leg. Volta disputed this, and insisted
-that the current produced by Galvani was due to
-certain metallic connections which he employed,
-and not to any inherent electricity in the muscle
-itself. Since Galvani&#8217;s time, however, numerous
-investigators have followed up his researches; and
-it is now an accepted fact that every exertion of
-muscular force is accompanied by a current analogous
-to electricity, the strength of which is in exact
-proportion to the mechanical power called into
-play. It is a curious fact that this peculiar force
-remains in the muscle for a certain time after
-death, but it is totally lost so soon as rigidity
-sets in, and no earthly power can recall it. It<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">{42}</a></span>
-may therefore be considered as essentially a vital
-phenomenon. It is moreover greater in mammals
-than in birds, and is least noticeable in reptiles
-and fishes. But we must not omit to mention
-that among the latter are found several which
-have a powerful electric battery as their chief
-defensive power. The Mediterranean torpedo&mdash;one
-of the Ray or Skate family of fishes&mdash;after
-which our most modern engines of war are named,
-is the chief of these.</p>
-
-<p>Although it has long been known that currents
-of electricity existed in plants, such currents
-were attributed to chemical reaction between the
-external moisture and the internal juices of the
-plants themselves, and also to atmospheric disturbance.
-They have therefore hitherto borne
-very little analogy to the muscular electricity of
-animals. But very recently the subject has
-received great attention; in fact the electrical
-disturbance consequent on the excitation of the
-leaf of our old acquaintance the <i>Diona</i>, formed
-part of the subject of a paper lately read before the
-Royal Society. The authors of this contribution
-to our knowledge of a very obscure subject, proved
-by numerous delicate experiments that the current
-which accompanied the closure of the leaf in
-question was in every respect similar to that
-obtained from the muscles of animals.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div>
-<h2><a name="THE_BELL-RINGER" id="THE_BELL-RINGER">THE BELL-RINGER.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="ph3">IN FOUR CHAPTERS.</p>
-
-
-<h3>CHAPTER IV.&mdash;THE ANTHEM OF THE BELLS.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> was a solemn gathering when two hours later,
-the physician entered Bertram&#8217;s room in company
-with Squire Peregrine, Colonel Lindsay, and Gertrude.
-The change in the Squire was marvellous;
-his sternness had left him; he followed his daughter
-and his old friend; he hung upon every word
-which fell from the lips of the man of science;
-and during the time when the doctors were alone
-with their patient and Nathan, he paced his room
-in a state nearly bordering on mental distraction.
-Meeting the doctors as they at length emerged
-from the sick-room, he grasped them by the arm.
-&#8216;Will he live? will he live?&#8217; he reiterated wildly.
-&#8216;Tell me the truth. My son, my son!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>In vain they urged him to be calm; his reasoning
-powers seemed to have deserted him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;He must not die; he shall not die!&#8217; he repeated;
-until Colonel Lindsay, laying his hand upon his
-shoulder, whispered: &#8216;There is hope. Do not
-despair. My old friend, remember how much yet
-remains to be done for him. The active cause of
-mischief is at last removed.&#8217; He produced a small
-piece of the blade of a knife, at the sight of which
-the Squire shuddered. &#8216;Humanly speaking, you
-owe his life twice over to Nathan Boltz. As to the
-perpetrator of the outrage, he will be dealt with
-according to his deserts; at present, we have no
-clue to his whereabouts.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>This speech of the Colonel&#8217;s was intended to
-answer two purposes&mdash;to give the Squire time to
-recover himself, and to arrest any remarks which
-might fall from the medical men, who were to
-remain all night at the Hall. It had the desired
-effect; they saw that private family affairs were
-connected with this murderous attack and remained
-silent, only insisting that Nathan (whom Bertram
-had faintly recognised) should remain with him.
-The Squire sent for him, and in the presence of
-all his family, grasped him by the hand and
-begged him to stay. How he overcame all his
-scruples, how he placed himself in the position of
-a debtor, was made plain to all who heard him;
-and Gertrude felt her heart throb almost to pain
-as she sat by listening to the words of her father,
-the proudest of the Peregrine race.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore it was that Nathan took his place in
-the sick-room, surrounded by every luxury which
-appertains to wealth. It was a strange position;
-but he entered upon it with his usual large-hearted
-earnestness, believing he was fulfilling his promise
-to the mother of the sick man.</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime, Patricia was undergoing a torment
-of fear and suspense. A week had elapsed,
-Oliver had not returned, and no inquiry had as yet
-been made concerning him. She dared not question
-any one, and though many an eye was bent
-upon her in a half-pitying manner, she would not for
-worlds betray her wretchedness. She asked not to
-be confirmed in her miserable doubts and horrible
-fears, for she felt certain her lover was somehow
-concerned in her brother&#8217;s illness. Yet why this
-change in her father? She could not understand;
-and pondering day by day, became pale and ill,
-restless and depressed.</p>
-
-<p>Christmas-day came and went much in the same
-way as other days. There were no decorations
-in the church, and no sound of the sweet loud
-bells of Linden Tower, for Bertram lay hovering
-between life and death, and all bell-ringing was
-suspended on his account. Another week passed
-on; wearily dragged the hours; when at the close
-of a dark day of rain and wind, a messenger
-arrived with a note for Patricia, which caused her
-heart to throb and her pulse to rebound with
-agonising pain. The writer of the dirty ill-spelt
-letter begged her to go at once to a farm-house ten
-miles distant, where Oliver Peregrine lay dying.
-Now Patricia knew she must put away her mask
-for ever. With eager haste she ran with the
-summons to her father, and the utter wretchedness
-in her face made him full of pity for her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Jenkyns shall bring the carriage for you, my
-darling, immediately. I know the spot; close to
-the stone quarries&mdash;a dangerous place. Be brave,
-Patricia. But you must not go alone; Colonel
-Lindsay will accompany you.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She made no reply; her white lips moved, but
-no sound came forth. After a vain attempt to
-speak, she left the room, and shortly after was
-handed by Colonel Lindsay into the carriage.
-Their drive was accomplished in silence. Patricia&#8217;s
-agonising suspense was too great for speech; and
-her gallant companion felt too much to attempt
-commonplaces.</p>
-
-<p>When they arrived at the farm, Patricia descended
-from the carriage, and entered the house
-alone. In an inner room a woman was busy
-making a clearance of such articles as she could
-stuff away in corners and behind chairs, while a
-faint moaning told that the unhappy man occupied
-the apartment.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I found the gentleman lying at the bottom of
-a quarry,&#8217; said the man who lived on the farm.
-&#8216;It&#8217;s a fortnight back, sir, that going round the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">{43}</a></span>
-place as late as ten o&#8217;clock, I heard as it were
-close to me some one groaning as if in dreadful pain.
-It was some time before I could find out where
-the noise came from. At last my wife and me
-together got down to the bottom of the quarry,
-and managed between us to drag him to the top.
-He was wonderful bad, but refused to tell his
-name or let a doctor be fetched, and only let my
-boy run with the note because he felt he was
-dying. We have done what we could, sir; but
-you see we don&#8217;t know many folks about here, or
-we might have helped him more.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Patricia listened intently as the man gave these
-particulars, and made her way alone to the side
-of her cousin. He lay upon a bed placed hastily
-on the floor, his face worn to a shadow with
-intense suffering of mind and body. As Patricia
-gazed upon the helpless sufferer, all her love for
-the man burst forth; she knelt down, covered her
-face with her hands, and wept piteously.</p>
-
-<p>The woman who stood by, with true woman&#8217;s
-instinct, guessed the nature of her sorrow, and
-said gently: &#8216;You see, miss, the gentleman would
-not say who he were, or we should ha&#8217; sent before.
-I have done what I could; but I fear he&#8217;s very,
-very bad.&#8217; She wanted to break the truth as
-gently as she could, for her experienced eye had
-noted every change.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I am dying,&#8217; said Oliver in a low voice. &#8216;&#8217;Tis
-nearly over, Patricia; but the pain has almost
-left me; and if I have strength, I must tell you
-a very painful story, for I need your forgiveness,
-as you will find. Do not grieve for me, Patricia.&#8217;
-He paused. &#8216;Are you alone?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Patricia shook her head.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Who is with you?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Colonel Lindsay.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Tell him to come here.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>At this crisis, wheels were heard outside, and
-Colonel Lindsay returned with Patricia, bringing
-with them Mr Downes, the surgeon.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Mr Downes is here,&#8217; said the Colonel, &#8216;through
-a message which I sent him previous to leaving
-home; he will probably think it advisable to
-remain with us for a time.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Then Patricia knew that the surgeon was there
-not only in his medical capacity, but as a witness
-to whatever might fall from the lips of her lover;
-and yet her dread of any unpleasant revelation
-was intensified by her great love for the man
-whose humiliation and shame she would fain have
-spared. Mr Downes having carefully examined
-the patient, administered a restorative, and Oliver
-related with pain and difficulty the following
-story.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You know that Bertram and I were in college
-at the same time, where my naturally extravagant
-habits led us both into debt. When we left
-college, my uncle, believing me all that I ought
-to be, begged me to remain at the Hall as companion
-to his son; at the same time he proposed
-that I should qualify myself for the Church, and
-behaved to me with the kindness of a father. I
-managed to fix the burden of our debts upon
-Bertram, whose easy disposition and generous
-nature led him to trust me thoroughly. During
-a London season we again became steeped in difficulties
-beyond our power to remove. Returning
-to the Hall, I fancied myself fascinated by
-the beauty of Ruth Boltz. How I overcame her
-scruples, and finally induced her to fly to London
-with me, I have no strength to tell; nor how I
-beguiled her to remain there, leading her to hope
-for marriage. I had come to town for more purposes
-than one. While at the Hall, our creditors
-had become clamorous; and Bertram, in despair of
-obtaining any help from his father, and not daring
-to tell of his entanglements, took counsel with me
-as to what was to be done. By degrees I opened
-up my plan, filled in a cheque, and forced Bertram
-by threats of exposure to forge his father&#8217;s name.
-This done, I took care that he himself should present
-it at the banker&#8217;s. My uncle who was unusually
-precise and correct in all business matters, at
-once discovered the fraud. It was easy to cast the
-blame on Bertram, whom I had persuaded to remain
-in London; and the fact of his absence sealed his
-guilt. Ruth&#8217;s flight was at once connected with
-his; and enraged beyond expression, his father
-forbade him the house, tore up his letters unopened,
-and refused ever to acknowledge him again. In
-vain Bertram appealed to me to speak for him; I
-only traduced him the more while appearing to
-shield him; and persuaded him to go abroad while
-he had the means of doing so. Seven months later,
-poor Ruth came home and applied to me in her
-distress. Again I promised her marriage, and from
-time to time made her an allowance. She promised
-to keep my secret; yet her presence in the village
-was a continual annoyance to me, for I feared
-that some time, in her despair, she might reveal
-the truth. But I could not prevail upon her to
-leave the neighbourhood, and I waited year after
-year before I could mature my plans to secure
-the position which I had always coveted. At last
-she died, worn out with trouble, and would no
-doubt have spoken out at last. But sending for
-my aunt, the latter arrived too late. Poor suffering
-Ruth was dead.&#8217;...</p>
-
-<p>Here the sufferer paused in mental agony, and
-after partaking of stimulant, resumed his dread
-confession. &#8216;Then I was elated with my false
-freedom. My uncle had long since erased Bertram&#8217;s
-name from his will, and named me as his heir. I
-soon proposed to my cousin Patricia, and we were
-on the point of marrying, when my aunt&#8217;s death
-postponed it. In the midst of all my prosperity,
-I had a vague terror of Nathan Boltz, believing
-that he knew my secret, and I hated him for his supposed
-knowledge of it. Once more my marriage was
-about to take place, and again Hilda&#8217;s death interposed,
-and saved Patricia from a life of shame.
-Bertram returned; and deceived by his sister,
-Nathan believed that in him he saw her betrayer.
-Then the grand principle of his life was worked
-out&mdash;forgiveness. The return of Colonel Lindsay
-helped on my ruin. I made a desperate effort to
-retain the prize which I felt slipping from my
-grasp. After that dreadful scene in the church,
-I fled in frantic haste across the country, eager to
-escape from myself. But the hand of God was upon
-me; I could not elude that; and believing that I
-had been a murderer, I looked upon myself as
-paying the penalty of my sin, for I knew from the
-first that I must die. I have no more to add,
-only to express my grief and my repentance, and
-to pray that God may pardon my fearful sin.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He stopped, greatly exhausted; and Mr Downes
-again did what he could for his relief. All
-through the night, Patricia sat holding his hand
-in hers, assuring him of their forgiveness, and
-ministering to his wants; and Oliver Peregrine<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">{44}</a></span>
-blessed her with the solemnity of a dying man.
-At daybreak it was all over. Patricia&#8217;s watching
-had been a short one; but she knew that henceforth
-she would walk through life alone.</p>
-
-
-<p class='p2'>Oliver Peregrine was buried in Linden churchyard;
-and Nathan, at the Squire&#8217;s urgent request,
-witnessed the last rites, and stood uncovered while
-the earth was filled into the grave of the man who
-had so wronged him. Never again, however, would
-he prepare the narrow resting-place in which dust
-mingles with its kindred dust, or stand in the
-belfry tower as master of the bells. Nathan had
-parted from the old life, which would know him
-no more. After Bertram&#8217;s recovery, he travelled
-with him for two years, and learned to know him
-as a brother. On their return, the village people
-could scarcely recognise the quondam bell-ringer
-in the accomplished gentleman and travelled man
-of the world. The soil had been ready to receive
-the seed; but while the intellect was enlarged the
-heart of the man remained the same. Thus it
-came about that on a certain happy day, Nathan,
-who was the affianced husband of Gertrude, stood
-once more in the belfry tower; and with her by
-his side, and the ringers clustered round, while
-Bertram and Colonel Lindsay looked on from the
-doorway, he begged that he might try his hand
-again. A proud consent was given, and prouder
-than ever were the ringers, of him who had been
-their chief. After a slight pause, Nathan&#8217;s hand,
-now white and shapely, grasped the rope once
-more. &#8216;Now lads!&#8217; he cried&mdash;&#8216;now!&#8217; and the
-bells chimed out a right merry peal.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div>
-<h2><a name="UNDER_FIRE" id="UNDER_FIRE">UNDER FIRE.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Most</span> men who have been under fire will frankly
-confess that the sensation is anything but a pleasant
-one. But inspired by a sense of duty and a lively
-enthusiasm, the anxious feeling soon passes off.
-The skirmishers load and fire, the gunners work
-their guns without much thought of their own
-danger. Indeed it is well if this indifference does
-not go too far, for then reckless excitement and
-careless haste take the place of soldierly deliberation
-and prudence.</p>
-
-<p>At Waterloo the fighting between two armies
-armed with old weapons of short range was all
-at what we now call close-quarters. The most
-effective range for artillery was about five hundred
-yards, and musketry-fire was exchanged at less
-than half that distance. Rifled weapons of long
-range have changed all this, and the introduction
-of breech-loading small-arms has worked a perfect
-revolution on the battle-field. In 1866 the
-Prussian needle-gun shewed in the fighting in
-Bohemia the terrible effects that can be produced
-by rapid rifle-fire. Every army in Europe was
-soon provided with breech-loading rifles; and in
-the war of 1870, for the first time two great armies
-thus formidably armed met in battle. In the first
-conflicts of the war the Prussians attacked in close
-order, as they had done in 1866; but in the great
-battle of Gravelotte, fought on August 18, 1870,
-they learned a lesson which made them completely
-change their tactics; and every European army (but
-one) has followed their example. The lesson was
-dearly bought. On that day the French army,
-one hundred and twenty thousand strong, lay along
-the hills to the west of Metz, where it was attacked
-by two hundred thousand Germans. The village
-of St Privat, on holding which the security of the
-whole French position depended, was held by
-Marshal Canrobert&#8217;s corps. The village is surrounded
-by long gentle slopes; and in fighting it is
-always found that it is more difficult to storm such
-a place than one that stands upon a steep hill.
-The very steepness of the ascent in some degree
-protects the attacking party as they ascend, by
-making the fire of the defenders more vertical;
-whereas on a gentle slope each bullet has a longer
-course and more chances of doing harm. As a
-preparation for the attack on St Privat, and in
-order in some degree to destroy the steadiness of
-the defenders, the place was bombarded for some
-time with one hundred and twenty guns; then
-when it was hoped that the artillery-fire had cleared
-the way, three brigades of the Guards, the picked
-men of the German army, were ordered to carry
-the village.</p>
-
-<p>Massed in close order, with a front of two
-thousand paces, and covered by clouds of skirmishers,
-the Guards began their advance up the
-slopes. In ten minutes the attack was over, and
-had utterly failed. Brief as it was, it was a terrible
-time. The German official Report does not
-deal in exaggerated language, and it speaks of the
-&#8216;storm of bullets that came beating down from St
-Privat&#8217; and forced the Guardsmen to crowd together
-in every hollow and behind every wave of
-the ground. The French used their chassepots
-to deadly purpose; in those ten minutes six thousand
-of the Prussian Guard had fallen. But the
-rapid fire of the French had all but emptied their
-cartridge-boxes, and the defective arrangements
-made by the staff had not provided properly
-for supplying the deficiency. This is always a
-danger to which men armed with the breech-loader
-are liable, and it is an awkward one, for in
-modern war the man who is without cartridges
-is virtually disarmed. The cartridges of the dead
-and wounded were collected and distributed;
-but this was a poor resource. The enemy had
-formed new columns of attack, composed of Saxon
-and Prussian troops, and these, though not without
-heavy loss, carried the village, and decided the
-battle which shut Marshal Bazaine and his great
-army up in Metz. The day after Gravelotte was
-fought and won, the German headquarters staff
-published an order that an attack in heavy masses
-like that which had won Sadowa but had failed at
-St Privat should never be attempted again.</p>
-
-<p>The deadliness of breech-loading fire has produced
-another effect upon tactics in battle. The
-spade has taken a place second only to the rifle,
-and no General occupies a position in battle even
-for a couple of hours without rapidly strengthening
-it with light intrenchments. These consist
-generally of a shallow trench, the earth from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">{45}</a></span>
-which is thrown up towards the enemy, so as to
-form a little parapet in front of it. This is the
-shelter-trench which we hear of so often in war
-correspondence. Effective shelter-trenches can be
-constructed in from eighteen minutes to half an
-hour, according to the nature of the ground and
-the skill of the men engaged in the work; and
-they have this advantage, that they can be continually
-improved, the trench being deepened, the
-parapet raised, and a ditch formed outside it, if
-the position is occupied long enough; so that what
-was at first a mere shelter-trench, gradually becomes
-a formidable line of earthworks. A trench
-is a very efficient protection against artillery-fire,
-for unless the shells drop actually into it, or upon
-the parapet, the fragments are not likely to hurt
-the men crouching or lying down in it; and such
-accurate hits are rare, most of the projectiles falling
-a little behind or a little short of the line
-aimed at.</p>
-
-<p>It is a fact that the actual number of men put
-<i>hors de combat</i> by artillery-fire is very few in any
-case. It really is meant to produce an effect on
-the <i>morale</i> of the troops attacked; that is to say, to
-make them nervous, excited, liable to panic, and
-apt to give way before a sudden onset. Hundreds
-of shells exploding on the ground and in the air,
-and scattering showers of fragments on all sides,
-dropping neatly over walls and barricades, crashing
-through walls and roofs, and searching woods
-and thickets, are apt to gradually break down the
-nerve of all but the steadiest men.</p>
-
-<p>As a matter of actually killing and maiming a
-large number of the enemy, it is coming to be
-believed that the old artillery of Napoleon&#8217;s days
-used at close quarters, that is at about four hundred
-yards, against heavy masses, was more deadly than
-the modern rifled gun. Artillery is now effective
-up to two thousand five hundred yards, and sometimes
-even beyond that range. Rifle-fire generally
-begins at four hundred yards, though picked
-marksmen may be engaged at longer ranges. The
-ordinary fighting range of the rifle is thus now
-equal to that of the field-gun of thirty years ago,
-and the accuracy of the fire is increased in even a
-greater ratio. With the old musket the chances of
-a bullet finding a human billet were extremely
-uncertain. At one hundred yards there was a deviation
-of two feet to right or left, which at two
-hundred yards had increased to more than six feet.
-The average deviation of the Martini-Henry is
-about seven inches at three hundred yards, a little
-less than a foot at five hundred, and about twenty
-inches at eight hundred; or less than the error of
-the old musket at one hundred yards. Without
-aiming, a rapidity of fire equal to twenty-five shots
-per minute has been obtained with the Martini-Henry
-with which our army is now furnished.
-How different from the weapons used in the
-Peninsula and at Waterloo.</p>
-
-<p>Yet it is singular that the proportion which the
-loss in battle bears to the number of men engaged
-is on the whole decreasing, notwithstanding (or
-perhaps in consequence of) improved armaments.
-At Marengo in 1800 the loss in killed and wounded
-amounted to one-sixth of the effective force
-engaged; at Austerlitz (1805) it was one-seventh;
-at Preuss-Eylau (1807), as much as one-third; at
-Wagram (1809), rather more than one-ninth; at
-Borodino (1812), one-fourth; and at Waterloo (1815),
-rather more than one-sixth. Coming now to more
-recent battles, we find that at Solferino (1859) the
-loss was only one-fourteenth; at Sadowa (1866), one-eleventh;
-at Gravelotte (1870), one-ninth; at Sedan,
-only one-seventeenth. It would seem that the
-diminution of the loss is the result of the open
-order, the use of cover, and the briefness of the
-struggle at the decisive points, where, on account
-of the severity of the fighting, it cannot last very
-long. Men will stand longer under a fire that
-knocks over only one man in a minute, than they
-will under one that kills a score in the same time.
-The heavy fighting at Plevna before its fall, was
-an exception to this diminution of loss, for in one
-of their attacks the Russians lost as much as one-fifth,
-but this was the result of their fighting in
-heavy columns, in defiance of the experience of
-1870. Statistics from both the Russian and the
-German armies shew that at all times the officers
-in proportion to their numbers lose more than the
-men. Naturally they are liable to attract attention
-and to be picked off by the enemy&#8217;s marksmen.</p>
-
-<p>With the immense armies of our day the total
-loss of men is enormous. At Sadowa the Prussians
-lost 10,000 men out of 215,000 engaged;
-the Austrians and Saxons 30,000 out of 220,000.
-At Gravelotte the French, 120,000 strong, lost
-14,000; the Germans 20,000 out of 200,000. At
-Sedan the losses of the Germans were 10,000; of
-the French, 14,000. The heaviness of the German
-loss at the battle of Gravelotte was as we have
-already said, largely due to the failure of the
-Guards at St Privat.</p>
-
-<p>From these statistics of loss in battle it may
-be imagined what a painful task and what severe
-labour are thrown upon the army which remains in
-possession of a battle-field at the end of the fight.
-The length of the lines in a general engagement
-like Sadowa is enormous, ranging from ten to
-fifteen miles; and the depth of the tract over
-which the fighting rolls perhaps from two or three
-to five or six miles; so that the &#8216;battle-field&#8217; is a
-tract of country from thirty to eighty square miles
-in extent, and this immense tract is strewn with
-thirty or forty thousand killed and wounded. Here
-they lie scattered, so that it is a long walk from
-one fallen man to another; but over there on that
-hill-side, or in that village where the fight was
-close and hot, they are thrown together in little
-heaps, and there is no need of searching for them.
-Wherever there is water, wounded men are sure
-to be found, who have dragged themselves down to
-it. Perhaps they are dead at the brink. There
-is little blood to be seen; the rivers of blood shed
-on the battle-field exist only in poetry. Of the
-actual blood in a pool here and there on the field,
-most has come from cavalry or artillery horses
-killed by shell-fire.</p>
-
-<p>The victors in the fight have thrown on
-their hands not only their own wounded, but
-those of the enemy. The hurried telegram which
-announces their success gives also in round numbers
-a rough estimate of the loss on both sides;
-generally it is an unintentional exaggeration, for
-it is hard to judge correctly. In two or three
-days the real numbers are known; for the dead
-have been collected, counted, and buried, with
-great mounds of earth that will mark the
-battle-field for centuries, and shew too where<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">{46}</a></span>
-the fight was hottest. The wounded, much
-more numerous than the dead, have been collected
-in the field-hospitals, and as many as
-possible are being sent off by train to the great
-hospitals of distant cities, in order to relieve
-the strain upon the resources of the medical staff
-and the volunteer aid societies working in the
-field. Hard work it is to deal with the immense
-mass of suffering men. Think what it is to have
-to arrange suddenly for even two cases of severe
-illness in an ordinary household, and then try to
-imagine what labour, care, and forethought are
-required to provide for many thousands of wounded
-men in the open country.</p>
-
-<p>The care for the wounded begins while the
-fight is actually in progress. No help is so
-efficient as that which comes at once. A man
-is hit. If the wound is slight, he perhaps does
-not know anything about it till the fight is over,
-when he perceives that there is something wrong
-with his leg or his side; or if he does perceive
-it, he is able to bandage it at once with a
-handkerchief, or the bandage that now is carried by
-almost every soldier. The surgeon of the battalion
-gives him his assistance if he is at hand; but most
-men have to do without him if the work is hot, for
-he cannot multiply himself or be everywhere,
-though he does his best to accomplish something
-like it. In most armies, if the men are attacking,
-he can only attend to the slightly hurt, who are
-able to keep up with the rest. It is only when the
-battalion is halted or on the defensive that he can
-attend to the more seriously injured who fall, for
-they must not be left behind. The first help is
-always the most important; given at once to a
-slightly wounded man, it saves him from having to
-go into hospital and keeps him in the ranks; given
-to a fallen man, it probably saves his life. The
-great danger is exhaustion from loss of blood or
-from the nervous shock that follows a bullet-wound,
-which makes a man seem as if he were
-dying, though with a little help it soon passes off.
-To stop the bleeding with a tourniquet or a bandage,
-to give a drink of water or a little brandy,
-is the aid needed at the outset. This is done
-actually under fire.</p>
-
-<p>The next help is provided by the field ambulances,
-or as they are very appropriately called
-in our service, &#8216;dressing-stations;&#8217; these are established
-in shelter-places upon the actual battle-field
-in rear of the fighting line. Sometimes an
-inn, a farmhouse, or some barn is available for
-this purpose; if not, there are hospital tents or the
-shade of trees. Here is to be found a staff of
-surgeons and dressers, with appliances for the more
-necessary operations, and a store of stimulants and
-sustaining food. To bring the wounded men out
-of the firing, there are attached to each regiment a
-few trained bearers with stretchers. These bearers
-being provided, no man is allowed to leave the
-ranks to help the wounded; otherwise, every man
-that fell would be the means of withdrawing two
-others from the fight, and whole companies might
-melt rapidly away. The bearers remove as many
-as they can to the dressing-stations; they take
-those nearest to hand, and the wounded man who
-attracts their attention is lucky. Many more less
-fortunate than he have to wait till the battle is
-over, for comparatively few can be carried off
-during the actual fighting. Some, though too
-disabled to remain in the fight, can themselves
-make their way to the stations. They ask their
-way of any bearers they meet; or if they meet
-none, they look out anxiously for the white flag
-with the red cross that flies over the little harbour
-of refuge of which they are in search. The
-wounded men who are thus brought or come
-into the stations have their wounds dressed by
-the surgeons, with the help of chloroform if
-necessary; a record of the nature of the wound
-and of the treatment so far, is rapidly written on
-a card; and if the man will bear removal, his
-stretcher is placed in an ambulance-wagon, and
-an easy journey of three or four miles places him
-in the field-hospital, established in tents or buildings
-well out of even long-range artillery-fire.</p>
-
-<p>These field-hospitals, rapidly organised with
-<i>matriel</i> that is conveyed with every well-organised
-army, can accommodate several hundreds
-of men; and while the battle proceeds, fresh
-field-hospitals are being got ready wherever buildings
-or tents are available, for the night will bring
-in a host of patients. At first there are few
-men in them; most of the wounded that have
-been treated are still at the field ambulances. In
-the evening they arrive more rapidly; next day
-they come in crowds, and the hospitals are encumbered
-with them. And now the railway system of
-the country comes to the help of the overburdened
-medical staff. Hospital trains&mdash;that is to say trains
-fitted with hanging-beds or stretchers, and provided
-with nurses and surgeons&mdash;carry back to the
-hospitals of great cities in the rear, all those of the
-wounded who can safely bear the journey. Gradually
-death, recovery, or removal clears the field-hospitals;
-one by one they are closed, their <i>matriel</i>
-and appliances are packed in the wagons of the
-hospital service, and with their staff of surgeons,
-dressers, and nurses, they follow the armies in the
-field. Meanwhile the hospital trains have distributed
-the wounded into the permanent hospitals
-at home or into special ones provided for the war.
-If the army is an English one, ships comfortably
-fitted up as hospitals have received the wounded
-at the nearest coast to the battle-field, and they
-are lying in comfortable hammocks, between airy
-decks, perhaps at anchor in some roadstead, or
-better still, going rapidly under sail and steam
-towards home.</p>
-
-<p>We can dwell with satisfaction on this work of
-mercy, in which so many willing hands engage
-to repair, as far as can be done, the wreck and
-ruin of war. It is a work of mercy which ought
-to bind nations together, for men of many lands
-meet to labour under the red cross of mercy
-wherever war devastates Europe. For many,
-alas! the help comes too late; the bullet has done
-its work swiftly and surely; life is gone; or the
-wound is mortal and the sufferer dies, and will lie
-under the long green battle-mound. An officer will
-look at the tablet under his uniform that gives the
-name and corps of the fallen man, and make an
-entry in his list of dead; and the news is sent to
-his friends far away at home. These are the
-messages that give more pain even than the bullet
-or bayonet, and terrible it is to think that when
-men meet in battle the rapid fire of the rifle is
-doing its work not only in the field, but far
-away in distant cities and villages, where the
-sound of the fighting cannot be heard; and where
-there are women and children and old men to
-whom that fight will bring sorrow and pain and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">{47}</a></span>
-even death, as surely as if the rapid rifle-fire
-itself had swept them down. This is perhaps the
-darkest side of the picture, the portion of the loss
-caused by war, which our statistics cannot touch.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div>
-<h2><a name="A_NARROW_ESCAPE" id="A_NARROW_ESCAPE">A NARROW ESCAPE.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="ph3">FROM THE FRENCH OF ALEXANDRE DUMAS&#8217; &#8216;LE MATRE D&#8217;ARMES.&#8217;</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> death of the famous dog Sutherland&mdash;thus
-named after the Englishman who had made a gift
-of it to the Empress Catharine II. of Russia&mdash;nearly
-caused a tragic mistake, in so far as it
-nearly cost the donor, a celebrated banker, his life.
-The occurrence took place at St Petersburg.</p>
-
-<p>One morning, at daybreak, Mr Sutherland, the
-gentleman who had presented the dog to the
-Empress, and who was consequently a favourite
-with that august personage&mdash;was suddenly awoke
-by his man-servant.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Sir,&#8217; said the footman, &#8216;your house is surrounded
-with guards, and the master of the police
-demands to speak to you.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;What does he wish with me?&#8217; exclaimed the
-banker, as he leaped from his bed, somewhat
-startled by this announcement.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I know not, sir,&#8217; answered the footman; &#8216;but
-it appears that it is a matter of the highest importance,
-and which, from what he says, can only be
-communicated to you personally.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Shew him in,&#8217; said Mr Sutherland, as he hastily
-donned his dressing-gown.</p>
-
-<p>The footman departed, and returned some
-minutes afterwards with His Excellency Mr
-Reliew, upon whose face the banker read at the
-first glance some formidable intelligence. The
-worthy banker, however, maintained his calmness,
-and welcoming the master of the police with his
-usual urbanity, presented him with a seat. His
-Excellency, however, remained standing, and in a
-tone the most dolorous which it was possible to
-assume, said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Mr Sutherland, believe me when I assure you
-that I am truly grieved to have been chosen by
-Her Majesty, my very gracious sovereign, to accomplish
-an order, the severity of which afflicts me,
-but which has without doubt been provoked by
-some great crime.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;By some great crime, Your Excellency!&#8217; exclaimed
-the banker. &#8216;And who then has committed
-this crime?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You, doubtless, sir, since it is upon you that
-the punishment is to fall.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Sir, I swear to you that I know not of any
-reproach with which to charge myself as a subject
-of our sovereign; for I am a naturalised Russian,
-as you must know.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;And it is precisely, sir, because you are a naturalised
-Russian that your position is terrible. If
-you had remained a subject of His Britannic
-Majesty, you would have been able to call in the
-aid of the English consul, and escape thus perhaps
-the rigour of the order which I am, to my
-very great regret, charged to execute.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Tell me then, Your Excellency, what is this
-order?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh, sir, never will I have the strength to
-make it known to you.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Have I lost the good graces of Her Majesty?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh, if it were only that!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Is it a question to make me depart for England?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh! no; even that must not be.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Mon Dieu! you terrify me. Is it an order to
-send me to Siberia?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Siberia, sir, is a fine country, and which people
-have calumniated. Besides, people return from it.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Am I condemned to prison?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;The prison is nothing. Prisoners come out of
-prison.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Sir, sir!&#8217; cried the banker, more and more
-affrighted, &#8216;am I destined to the knout?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;The knout is a punishment very grievous; but
-the knout does not kill.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Miserable fate!&#8217; said Sutherland, terrified. &#8216;I
-see indeed that it is a matter of death.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;And what a death!&#8217; exclaimed the master of the
-police, whilst he solemnly raised his eyes with an
-expression of the most profound pity.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;How! what a death! Is it not enough to kill
-me without trial, to assassinate me without cause?
-Catharine orders, yet&#8217;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Alas! yes, she orders&#8217;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Well, speak, sir! What does she order? I am
-a man; I have courage. Speak!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Alas! my dear sir, she orders&mdash;&mdash; If it had
-not been by herself that the command had been
-given, I declare to you, my dear Mr Sutherland,
-that I would not have believed it.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;But you make me die a thousand times. Let
-me see, sir, what has she ordered you to do?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;She has ordered me to have you <span class="smcap">STUFFED</span>!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>The poor banker uttered a cry of distress; then
-looking the master of the police in the face, said:
-&#8216;But, Your Excellency, it is monstrous what you
-say to me; you must have lost your reason.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;No, sir; I have not lost my reason; but I will
-certainly lose it during the operation.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;But how have you&mdash;you who have said you are
-my friend a hundred times&mdash;you, in short, to whom
-I have had the honour to render certain services&mdash;how
-have you, I say, received such an order without
-endeavouring to represent the barbarity of it to
-Her Majesty?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Alas! sir, I have done what I could, and
-certainly what no one would have dared to do
-in my place. I besought Her Majesty to renounce
-her design, or at least to charge another
-than myself with the execution of it; and that
-with tears in my eyes. But Her Majesty said to
-me with that voice which you know well, and
-which does not admit of a reply: &#8220;Go, sir, and do
-not forget that it is your duty to acquit yourself
-without a murmur of the commissions with which
-I charge you.&#8221;&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;And then?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Then,&#8217; said the master of the police, &#8216;I lost no
-time in repairing to a very clever naturalist who
-stuffs animals for the Academy of Sciences; for
-in short, since there was not any alternative, I
-deemed it only proper, and out of respect for your
-feelings, that you should be stuffed in the best
-manner possible.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;And the wretch has consented?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;He referred me to his colleague, who stuffs apes,
-having studied the analogy between the human
-species and the monkey tribe.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Well?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Well, sir, he awaits you.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;How! he awaits me! But is the order so
-peremptory?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Not an instant must be lost, my dear sir; the
-order of Her Majesty does not admit of delay.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">{48}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Without granting me time to put my affairs in
-order? But it is impossible!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Alas! it is but too true, sir.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;But you will allow me first to write a letter to
-the Empress?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I know not if I ought; my instructions were
-very emphatic.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Listen! It is a last favour, a favour which is
-not refused to the greatest culprit. I entreat it of
-you.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;But it is my situation which I risk.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;And it is my life which is at stake.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Well, write; I permit it. However, I inform
-you that I do not leave you a single instant.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Thanks, thanks. Pray, request one of your
-officers to come, that he may convey my letter.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>The master of the police called a lieutenant of the
-Royal Guards, delivered to him the letter of poor
-Sutherland, and ordered him to bring back the
-answer to it immediately. Ten minutes afterwards,
-the lieutenant returned with the order to
-bring the banker to the imperial palace. It was
-all that the sufferer desired.</p>
-
-<p>A carriage stood at the gate. Mr Sutherland
-entered it, and the lieutenant seated himself near
-him. Five minutes afterwards they were at the
-palace, where Catharine waited. They introduced
-the condemned man to her presence, and found
-Her Majesty in convulsions of laughter.</p>
-
-<p>It was for Sutherland now to believe her mad.
-He threw himself at her feet, and seizing her hand
-in his, exclaimed: &#8216;Mercy, madame! In the name
-of heaven, have mercy on me; or at the least tell
-me for what crime I have deserved a punishment
-so horrible.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;But my dear Monsieur Sutherland,&#8217; replied
-Catharine with all the gravity she could command,
-&#8216;this matter does not concern you at all!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;How, Your Majesty, is it not a matter concerning
-me? Then whom <i>does</i> it concern?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Why, the dog of course which you gave me,
-and which died yesterday of indigestion. Then in
-my grief at this loss and in my very natural desire
-to preserve at least his skin, I ordered that fool
-Reliew to come to me, and said to him: &#8220;Monsieur
-Reliew, I have to request that you will have
-Sutherland immediately stuffed.&#8221; As he hesitated,
-I thought that he was ashamed of such a commission;
-whereupon I became angry and dismissed
-him on his errand.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Well, madame,&#8217; answered the banker, &#8216;you can
-boast that you have in the master of the police a
-faithful servant; but at another time, pray, I
-entreat of you, to explain better to him the orders
-which he receives.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>The four-footed Sutherland was duly promoted
-to a glass case <i>vice</i> the banker&mdash;relieved.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div>
-<h2><a name="AN_INTERNATIONAL_POLAR_EXPEDITION" id="AN_INTERNATIONAL_POLAR_EXPEDITION">AN INTERNATIONAL POLAR EXPEDITION.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>In a former paper on Polar Colonisation we mentioned
-that an American enthusiast had suggested
-that, with a view to the achievement of greater
-results, the enterprise of exploring the Arctic
-regions should be made an international one. A
-somewhat similar idea appears to have occurred
-about the same time to Count Wilczek, and Lieutenant
-Charles Weyprecht, of Arctic fame. After
-many months of careful consideration, these gentlemen
-lately issued at Vienna the programme of
-the work which they propose should be undertaken
-by an International Polar Expedition. The
-elaborate scheme therein propounded was originally
-prepared with a view to its details being
-fully discussed by the International Meteorological
-Congress which was to have met at Rome
-in the month of September of last year, but
-which, owing to political events, it has been found
-necessary to postpone till the present year. The
-peculiarity of their project is that they aim at
-purely <i>scientific</i> exploration in the Arctic and
-Antarctic regions, and that they leave geographical
-discovery out of their programme, intending that
-it should be undertaken by a separate expedition.
-To accomplish the highly important end they
-have in view, they suggest that each of the states
-participating in the work should equip an expedition
-and despatch it to one of the stations enumerated
-by them. Each of the powers interested will
-be left to decide how long it will continue the
-work and what questions should be studied beyond
-those laid down in the international programme.
-The investigations to be undertaken in common
-will only include the phenomena of meteorology
-and terrestrial magnetism, <i>auror boreales</i>, and the
-laws which govern the movements of ice. As of
-course uniformity and the utmost possible accuracy
-in the observations to be taken are absolutely
-necessary for purposes of comparison, the propounders
-of the scheme enter into very minute
-details, especially as regards the magnetic observations.
-The following are the places which are
-considered the most favourable for the purposes
-above indicated: (In the northern hemisphere),
-the north coast of Spitzbergen, the north coast of
-Novaya Zemlya, the vicinity of the North Cape of
-Finmark, the north coast of Siberia at the mouths
-of the Lena, New Siberia, Point Barrow at the
-north-east of Behring Strait (occupied by Maguire
-1852-54), the Danish settlement on the west coast
-of Greenland, and the east coast of Greenland in
-about latitude 75; (in the southern hemisphere)
-the neighbourhood of Cape Horn, Kerguelen or
-Macdonald Islands, and one of the groups south
-of the Auckland Islands. Each state interested, it
-may be mentioned in conclusion, must establish a
-station for a year at least, and conform strictly to
-the terms of the programme.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div>
-<h2><a name="THE_FIRST_PRIMROSE" id="THE_FIRST_PRIMROSE">THE FIRST PRIMROSE.</a></h2>
-
-
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse"><span class="smcap">A Primrose</span> awoke from its long winter sleep,</div>
-<div class="verse">And stretched out its head through its green leaves to peep;</div>
-<div class="verse">But the air was so cold, and the wind was so keen,</div>
-<div class="verse">And not a bright flower but itself to be seen.</div>
-<div class="verse">&#8216;Alas!&#8217; sighed the Primrose, &#8216;how useless am I,</div>
-<div class="verse">As here all alone and half hidden I lie;</div>
-<div class="verse">But I&#8217;ll strive to be cheerful, contented to be,</div>
-<div class="verse">Just a simple wild flower growing under a tree.&#8217;</div>
-<div class="verse">Soon a maiden passed by, looking weary and sad,</div>
-<div class="verse">In the bright early spring-time, when all should be glad,</div>
-<div class="verse">But she spied the sweet Primrose so bright and so gay,</div>
-<div class="verse">And the sight of it charmed all her sadness away;</div>
-<div class="verse">And the Primrose gave thanks to the dear Lord above,</div>
-<div class="verse">Who had sent it on such a sweet mission of love.</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class='ml8'>
-<span class="smcap">Catharine Davidson.</span>
-</p></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class='center'>Printed and Published by <span class="smcap">W. &amp; R. Chambers</span>, 47 Paternoster
-Row, <span class="smcap">London</span>, and 339 High Street, <span class="smcap">Edinburgh</span>.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class='center'><i>All Rights Reserved.</i></p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Chambers's Journal of Popular
-Literature, Science, and Art, No. 734, January 19, 1878, by Various
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