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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #64994 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/64994)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Chambers's Journal of Popular Literature,
-Science, and Art, Fifth Series, No. 4, Vol. I, January 26, 1884, 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
-will 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,
- Fifth Series, No. 4, Vol. I, January 26, 1884
-
-Author: Various
-
-Release Date: April 05, 2021 [eBook #64994]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Susan Skinner, Eric Hutton and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by The Internet
- Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHAMBERS'S JOURNAL OF POPULAR
-LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART, FIFTH SERIES, NO. 4, VOL. I, JANUARY 26,
-1884 ***
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: CHAMBERS’S JOURNAL
-
-OF
-
-POPULAR
-
-LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART
-
-Fifth Series
-
-ESTABLISHED BY WILLIAM AND ROBERT CHAMBERS, 1832
-
-CONDUCTED BY R. CHAMBERS (SECUNDUS)
-
-NO. 4.—VOL. I. SATURDAY, JANUARY 26, 1884. PRICE 1½_d._]
-
-
-
-
-ANOTHER WORD TO LITERARY BEGINNERS.
-
-
-Within these few years past we have from time to time given a word of
-warning and of encouragement to Literary Aspirants. We do not use the
-latter word in any disparaging sense; but simply as the only one which
-fully embraces the great and constantly increasing class of persons,
-who, as writers of matter good, bad, and indifferent, are now weekly
-and daily knocking for admission at the doors of Literature. We have
-always been favourable to giving encouragement to young writers of
-ability, and never a year passes but we are able to introduce a few
-fresh contributors to the world of periodical literature. But this
-encouragement must necessarily be within certain lines, otherwise evil
-and not good would accrue to many. We are from time to time reminded by
-correspondents of what a popular novelist, possibly in a half-jocular
-mood, advised in this matter. His advice to parents amounted to this,
-that if they had an educated son or daughter with no particular calling
-in life, but in need of one, they had only to supply him or her with
-pens, ink, and paper, and a literary calling might at once be entered
-upon. We fear too many have laid, and daily lay, this flattering
-unction to their souls. In the majority of cases, disappointment and
-heart-sickness can alone be derived from the experiment.
-
-In order to give those outside the circle of editorial cognisance some
-idea of the amount of literary matter sent in by outsiders, and which
-falls to be adjudicated upon on its merits, we subjoin an abstract of
-the number of manuscripts received by us during the twelve months from
-August 1882 to August 1883. During that period we have had offered to
-us in all 3225 manuscripts, of which 2065 were contributions in prose,
-and 1160 in verse. These offerings varied from each other to the utmost
-extent both as to size and subject, from a few stanzas of verse to the
-bulk of a three-volume novel, and came to us from all quarters of the
-English-speaking world, England, Scotland, Ireland, the Continent,
-America, India, Africa, Australia, New Zealand, and elsewhere. Of the
-2065 prose manuscripts, 300 were accepted by us for publication, or
-fourteen per cent. of the whole. Of the 1160 pieces of verse, only
-30 were accepted, or less than three per cent. of the total. Taking
-the two classes of contributions together, of the 3225 manuscripts
-received, 330 were accepted—that is, of every hundred manuscripts
-received, ten were retained by us and ninety returned to their authors.
-If we estimate this pile of contributions according to its bulk, and
-allowing a very moderate average length to each manuscript, the whole,
-if printed, would have filled 9125 pages of this _Journal_, or as much
-as would have sufficed for eleven of our yearly volumes.
-
-The lesson to be derived from this by literary beginners is, not to be
-over-sanguine as to the acceptance of any article offered to magazines,
-knowing the great competition that is constantly going on for a place
-in their pages. It is true that those who possess the literary faculty
-in a sufficient degree will, though not perhaps without suffering many
-rejections and disappointments, ultimately assert their claims and
-obtain the coveted place; but even in such cases, the early struggle
-may sometimes be severe and long-continued. Nor must contributors go
-away under the impression that all rejected offerings are necessarily
-of an inferior quality. This is far from being the case. Great
-numbers of the prose articles in the above enumeration of rejected
-contributions, were articles with which no fault might be found in a
-literary sense. But it must be borne in mind that a magazine is limited
-in its space; and that when a definite part of that space has been
-allotted to articles or tales which have been supplied under previous
-arrangements made between author and editor, the remaining space may
-afford but small room for the number of claimants thereto. An article,
-therefore, which is perfectly equal to the literary standard of a
-magazine, may have to be returned by the editor on various grounds,
-such as that the subject of the paper does not come within the scope of
-his present requirements, or that an article has already appeared or
-been accepted on the same subject, or that some one has been already
-engaged to write upon it; or, in short, a dozen reasons might be found,
-any one of which would be sufficient to cause the rejection of a given
-article. But what one magazine rejects another may be in need of; so
-that a really good article is almost certain of finding its billet
-somewhere.
-
-In these circumstances, while there is nothing that need eventually
-discourage a capable or promising writer, there is much to make parents
-and guardians take warning before they set a young man or woman adrift
-on the sea of life with only his or her pen as a rudder. Literature,
-like painting, affords to persons of inferior or only mediocre powers a
-very precarious means of livelihood. Besides, places are not to be got
-in the literary any more than in the artistic world without evidence of
-genuine capacity being given by the claimant. The number of aspirants
-is no doubt from year to year being winnowed, until the grain shall
-be finally selected from the chaff; but the process, we admit, is not
-pleasant to those who do not come within the metaphorical category of
-grain. Scarcely a week passes but we receive letters requesting us,
-from the specimens of work inclosed, to say whether the contributor
-might hope to become a successful writer for magazines, as he or she
-is presently a clerk or a governess, and would wish to attain a better
-position, which position, ‘kind friends’—often in this same matter, if
-they knew it, very unkind—think, might be reached through the channel
-of literature. It is not difficult, as a rule, to advise in such cases.
-It is, stick to your present occupation, if it is only respectable, and
-on no account throw it up in the hope of having your name engrossed in
-the higher rolls of literary achievement. Even in the case of what may
-be called successful minor contributors to periodical literature, it
-can hardly be possible, we should think, for them to rely _wholly_ upon
-the results for a livelihood. Nor is it necessary to do so. The kind of
-literary work to which we allude can, in general, be carried on side by
-side with the work of an ordinary occupation or profession, as it is
-rarely that the articles of a writer of this class are in such constant
-demand as to make it necessary to give his or her whole time to their
-production. When this combination can be maintained, a useful source of
-income is added, without in all cases necessarily detracting from one’s
-professional industry otherwise.
-
-What we have said is not with the object of repressing literary
-ambition, but of preventing literary aspirants from setting out under
-false ideas, or quitting the successful pursuit of their ordinary
-occupations in the too frequently unrealised hope of rising to literary
-distinction. It must not be forgot that the desire to write does not
-necessarily comprehend the power to write well; or that, even with
-those who succeed in demonstrating their literary capabilities, such
-success is obtained without hard work and long practice. As we have
-said on former occasions, writers must not start, as is too often done,
-on the assumption that their possession of _genius_ is to be taken
-for granted; genius only comes once in a while—once or twice in a
-generation perhaps. It is always safer to begin upon the supposition
-that your faculties are of the kind which, like granite, will only
-shine by polishing; and if genius should be evoked in the process, the
-polishing will not harm it. We would not wish to dim the roseate hues
-which the future has for those who are young; but neither would we wish
-to be responsible for encouraging within them hopes that are not likely
-to be realised, or only realised under special powers of application,
-or by the operation of special natural faculties.
-
-
-
-
-BY MEAD AND STREAM.
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.—ALONE.
-
-It was a strange life that of Mr Lloyd Hadleigh. A solitary life,
-notwithstanding the consciousness of success, the possession of a
-considerable fortune, and the knowledge that it had been earned by
-his own ability. He was still young enough to have the capacity for
-enjoyment, if age were numbered by years; still young enough to have
-been the companion of his children and to have made new friendships.
-But there was something so cold and reserved in his bearing, that
-although he had many acquaintances, he had no friends or companions;
-and the good fortune he possessed made many people resent his
-ungracious manner.
-
-With everything apparently that man could desire to secure happiness,
-he lived absolutely alone. His nearest approach to companionship was
-with his eldest son Coutts Hadleigh. But even with him there was
-constraint, and their companionship appeared to be due more to their
-close association in business than to affection.
-
-This Coutts Hadleigh was a tall, wiry man, who entered into the
-pleasures of the world with discretion, and a cynical smile always on
-his face, as if he were laughing at the pleasures rather than in them.
-He was a captain of Volunteers, and as punctual in his attendance
-upon drill as in attendance at his office. For he was a strict man of
-business, and was now the practical manager as well as leading partner
-in the house of Hadleigh and Co., shipbrokers and bankers. He neither
-laughed at his brother Philip’s indifference to the affairs of the
-office, nor attempted to advise him. Sometimes, however, he would say,
-with one of his dry, cynical smiles: ‘You are doing everything you can,
-Phil, to keep yourself out of a partnership, and you will be sorry for
-it some day—especially if you mean to marry that young lady over the
-way in a hurry. Playing the gentleman at ease is not the way to make
-sure of the ease. However’—— Then he would shrug his shoulders, as if
-washing his hands of the whole matter with the mental exclamation: ‘But
-just as you like; there will be the more for me.’ Only he never uttered
-that exclamation aloud.
-
-‘All right,’ Philip would say with a laugh; ‘my time is coming; and I
-prefer happiness to a banking account.’
-
-There the subject would drop, and Coutts would turn away with a pitying
-smile.
-
-As for the three daughters, they accepted their position with as much
-content as is permitted to young ladies who have nothing whatever
-to do but go through the routine of paying formal visits in their
-carriage, attending garden parties in summer and dining out in winter.
-Miss Hadleigh (Beatrice) had been lately engaged to a thriving young
-merchant, and in consequence assumed a dignified primness. The other
-two, Caroline and Bertha, were looking forward to that happy state;
-and, meanwhile, having just been released from boarding-school,
-found their chief delights in fiction and lawn-tennis. They had
-every opportunity to enjoy themselves in their own ways, for their
-father interfered little with them, whilst he never stinted them in
-pocket-money.
-
-Ringsford Manor was a large old-fashioned building of red brick, with
-a wing added by Mr Hadleigh, when he came into possession, for a new
-dining-room and a billiard-room. The house stood in about twenty acres
-of ground, on the borders of the Forest. The gardens were under the
-care of a Scotchman, named Sam Culver, whose pride it was to produce
-the finest pansies, roses, and geraniums in the neighbourhood or at
-the local flower-shows. He had also obtained a prize at the Crystal
-Palace rose-show, which made him more eager than ever to maintain his
-reputation. The result of this honourable ambition was that the grounds
-of Ringsford were the admiration of the whole county; and as the
-proprietor on certain days of the year threw them open to the public
-and invited bands of school-children to an annual fête, his character
-as a benefactor spread far and wide.
-
-Much, however, as Sam Culver’s skill as a gardener was admired, there
-were many gallants, old as well as young, who declared that the finest
-flower he had ever reared was his daughter, Pansy.
-
-As Mr Hadleigh was returning from his visit to Willowmere, he got
-out of the carriage about half a mile from his own gate and bade the
-coachman drive home. Then he proceeded to walk slowly into the Forest
-in the direction of the King’s Oak.
-
-The rich foliage, the dense clumps of bracken and furze, with their
-changing colours and varying lights and shades looking their best in
-the bright sunshine, did not attract his eyes. His head was bowed and
-his hands tightly clasped behind him, as if his thoughts were bitter
-ones and far away from the lovely scene around him. At times he would
-lift his head with a sudden jerk and look into space, seeing nothing.
-
-But as he approached the broad spreading King’s Oak—so called from some
-legendary association with King Charles—the loud laughter of children
-roused him from his reverie.
-
-Pansy Culver was seated on the ground, threading necklets and
-bracelets of buttercups and daisies for a group of little children
-who were capering and laughing round her. She was herself a child
-still in thought, but verging on womanhood in years; and the soft,
-bright features, brown with the sun, and lit by two dark, merry eyes,
-suggested that her father in his fancy for his favourite flowers had
-given her an appropriate name.
-
-She rose respectfully as Mr Hadleigh approached; and he halted, looking
-for an instant as if he ought to know her and did not. Then his eyes
-took in the whole scene—the bright face, the happy children, and the
-buttercups and daisies. Something in the appearance of the group
-brought a curiously sad expression to his face. He was contrasting
-their condition with his own: the little that made them so joyful, and
-the much that gave him no content.
-
-‘Ah, Pansy,’ he said, ‘what a fortunate girl you are. I wish I could
-change places with you—and yet no; that is an evil wish. Do you not
-think so?’
-
-‘I don’t know, sir; and I don’t know how you should wish to change
-places with me. I do not think many people like you would want to do
-it.’
-
-A slow nodding movement of his head expressed his pity for her
-ignorance of how little is required for real happiness, and how
-the contented ploughman is richer than he who possesses the mines
-of Golconda without content. It was that sort of movement which
-accompanies the low sibilating sound of tst-tst-tst.
-
-‘I hope you will never know, child, why a person like me can wish to
-change places with one like you.’
-
-He passed on slowly, leaving the girl looking after him in wonderment.
-When she told her father of this singular encounter, he only said:
-‘I’m doubtin’ the poor man has something on his mind. But it’s none of
-our business; and you ken there is only one kind o’ riches that brings
-happiness.’
-
-Mr Hadleigh spent the rest of that day in his library. He was writing,
-but not letters. At intervals he would rise and pace the floor, as if
-agitated by what he wrote. Then he seemed to force himself to sit down
-again at the desk and continue writing, and would presently repeat the
-former movement.
-
-By the time that Philip returned, several sheets of closely written
-manuscript had been carefully locked away in a deed-box, and the box
-was locked away in a safe which stood in the darkest corner of the room.
-
-After dinner he desired Philip to come into the library as soon as he
-had finished his cigar. Although he did not smoke himself, he did not
-object to the habit in others.
-
-‘Something queer about the governor to-night,’ said Coutts, sipping his
-wine and smoking leisurely. ‘I have noticed him several times lately
-looking as if he had got a fit of the blues or dyspepsia at least,
-yet I don’t know how that can be with a man who is so careful of his
-digestion. He ought to come into town oftener.’
-
-‘Anything wrong in town?’ inquired Philip, and in his tone there was a
-note of consideration for his father: in that of Coutts there was none.
-
-‘Things never were better since I have known the business. That is not
-the cause of his queer humour, whatever it may be. Might be first touch
-of gout.’
-
-Philip rose and threw away his cigar. He did not like his brother’s
-manner when he spoke in this manner of their parent.
-
-On entering the library, he found it almost in darkness; for the
-curtains were partly drawn and the lamps were not lit. For a moment
-he could not see his father; but presently discovered him standing on
-the hearth, his arms crossed on the broad mantel-shelf, and his brow
-resting on them. He turned slowly, and his face was in deep shadow, so
-that its expression could not be distinguished.
-
-‘I told them I did not want lights yet,’ he said, and there was a
-huskiness in his voice which was very unusual, as it was rather
-metallic in its clearness. ‘Will you excuse it, and sit down?’
-
-‘Certainly, sir; but I hope there is nothing seriously wrong. I trust
-you are not unwell?’
-
-There was no answer for a moment, and the dark outline of the figure
-was like a mysterious silhouette. Then: ‘I am not particularly well at
-present. The matter which I wish to speak to you about is serious; but
-I believe there is nothing wrong in it, and that we can easily come to
-an agreement about it. Will you sit down?’
-
-Philip obeyed, marvelling greatly as to what this mysterious business
-could be which seemed to disturb his father so much, making him speak
-and act so unlike himself.
-
-(_To be continued._)
-
-
-
-
-THE FIRE OF FRENDRAUGHT.
-
-
-About six miles from the thriving market-town of Huntly, in
-Aberdeenshire, stands the mansion-house of Frendraught, built on the
-site and incorporating the ruins of the old castle of that name. In
-the seventeenth century it was the scene of a strange and inexplicable
-event—an event which, on the supposition that it was not accidental,
-might well be regarded as tragic.
-
-The lands of Frendraught, towards the beginning of the seventeenth
-century, were in the possession of James Crichton, a laird or minor
-baron of the period, sufficiently proud of that designation to slight
-and reject the title of viscount which his son accepted in his father’s
-lifetime. His wife was Lady Elizabeth Gordon, a woman of a proud
-and resolute character, daughter of the Earl of Sutherland, and a
-‘near cousin,’ as Spalding expresses it, of the Marquis of Huntly, a
-connection which should be remembered in the course of the narrative.
-On the crest of a knoll that overlooks the river Deveron, stood and
-still stands the Tower of Kinnairdy, another baronial residence of
-Crichton, at the distance of a few miles from Frendraught. Four miles
-above Kinnairdy, on the same river, stood Rothiemay, the home of the
-Gordons of Rothiemay, a sept of that numerous and powerful clan of
-which the Marquis of Huntly was chief. The lairds of Frendraught and
-of Rothiemay were thus neighbours, at a period when neighbourhood as
-surely engendered strife as friction develops heat. It chanced that
-Gordon of Rothiemay sold a portion of his lands adjoining the Deveron
-to the laird of Frendraught.
-
-At the present day, there is perhaps no river in Scotland which at
-certain seasons of the year furnishes better sport to the angler for
-salmon than the Deveron, and its excellence in this respect must
-equally have characterised it two centuries ago; for the right to the
-valuable salmon-fishing appertaining to the land which had been sold
-became the subject of bitter strife between the two lairds. Frendraught
-appealed to the law; but while the cause was winding its way slowly
-through the courts, he managed, by persecution and provocation, to
-hurry Rothiemay into acts of exasperation and illegality, which made
-it easy to procure a decree of outlawry against him. After this,
-as a contemporary historian has it, ‘Rothiemay would hearken to no
-conditions of peace, neither would he follow the advice of his wisest
-friends.’ He made a raid upon the lands of Crichton, who thereupon
-obtained from the Privy-council a commission to apprehend him.
-
-On the 1st of January 1630, the laird of Frendraught, accompanied
-by Sir George Ogilvie of Banff, and, among others of less note, by
-young Leslie of Pitcaple and John Meldrum of Reidhill, set out to
-seize Rothiemay in his own domain. Rothiemay, having learned their
-intention, mustered what forces he could, and marched to meet them. A
-desperate encounter took place. Rothiemay’s horse was killed under him.
-He continued to fight on foot till his followers were driven from the
-field, leaving his son and himself still maintaining a struggle against
-outnumbering foes. At length he fell, whereupon young Rothiemay sought
-safety in flight. His father, covered with wounds, was left for dead on
-the ground; but having been carried home by his friends, survived for
-three days. On Frendraught’s side, one gentleman was slain, and John
-Meldrum—of whom more will be heard—was wounded.
-
-The feud between the two houses, rancorous enough before, was
-prosecuted with the deadliest animosity now that blood had been shed on
-both sides. Deeds of savage reprisal ensued; and as each party sought
-to strengthen itself by enlisting new adherents, the area of strife
-grew wider, and assumed proportions so menacing to the public peace,
-that the Privy-council made earnest but fruitless endeavours to effect
-a reconciliation between the hostile houses.
-
-Young Gordon of Rothiemay feeling himself the weaker in the struggle,
-called to his aid the notorious Highland cateran, James Grant, and
-his band. It is singular that we have neither ballad nor legend
-commemorating the career of this person—a career which, in its
-extraordinary feats of daring insolence, its marvellous escapes,
-and dark deeds of blood, outrivals all that is recorded of Rob Roy.
-At this juncture, while Grant and his followers were mustering at
-Rothiemay House for a raid against Frendraught, and when the Earl of
-Moray, Lieutenant of the North, had confessed himself utterly unable
-to suppress the commotion, a commission, sent by the Privy-council,
-associating itself with the Marquis of Huntly, succeeded in effecting
-an arrangement between the hostile parties. Grant was dismissed to his
-mountain fortresses; Crichton and Rothiemay were persuaded to meet at
-Strathbogie, the residence of the Marquis, where, after much earnest
-intercession, the commissioners succeeded in settling terms of peace
-and reconciliation. The deeds of blood were mutually forgiven, and, as
-a concession to the greatest sufferer, Crichton agreed to pay fifty
-thousand merks to the widow of the slain laird of Rothiemay. Over this
-arrangement all parties shook hands in the orchard of Strathbogie.
-
-Little did they suspect, while congratulating themselves on the
-termination of the quarrel, that one spark had been left smouldering,
-which was soon to blaze into a more destructive conflagration than
-that which had just been extinguished. Among those who had fought on
-Crichton’s side against the laird of Rothiemay we have mentioned one
-John Meldrum as having been wounded. This Meldrum was one of those
-ruffianly retainers, half-gentleman half-groom, who hung on the skirts
-of the more powerful barons, ready for any task assigned them without a
-question or a scruple. At this time he was an outlaw. Conceiving that
-Frendraught had too lightly estimated his service and his sufferings,
-he persecuted the laird with appeals for ampler remuneration, and
-finding them disregarded, took satisfaction in his own way by stealing
-two of the laird’s best horses from a meadow adjoining the castle.
-
-Crichton at first appealed to the law; but Meldrum failed to appear in
-answer to the charge, and was outlawed. Crichton therefore received
-a commission to arrest him; and learning that he had taken refuge
-with the Leslies of Pitcaple, relatives by marriage, set out with a
-small party in quest of him; but the encounter only resulted in one of
-Crichton’s friends wounding a son of Pitcaple.
-
-Afraid of the consequences of this new feud, and remembering the
-good offices of the Marquis of Huntly on a former occasion, Crichton
-solicited his intercession with the laird of Pitcaple. The Marquis
-invited both lairds to the Bog of Gicht, now Gordon Castle; but old
-Leslie remained obdurate, declaring that he would entertain no terms
-of reconciliation until he saw the issue of his son’s wound; and
-departed with unabated resentment. The Marquis detained Crichton two
-days longer, having also as his guest young Gordon of Rothiemay; and on
-Crichton’s departure, fearing that he might be attacked by the Leslies,
-he sent as an escort his second son, Viscount Melgum (who was also
-frequently called Aboyne), and young Rothiemay, with their attendants.
-The party reached Frendraught Castle in the evening (October 8, 1630);
-and the Viscount, with his friend Rothiemay, was induced by the
-entreaties of Crichton and his lady, to remain for the night.
-
-Thus far the course of events is clear and intelligible; what followed
-is involved in doubt and obscurity. Spalding, in his _Memorials_,
-says: ‘They [the guests] were well entertained, supped merrily, and
-to bed went joyfully. The Viscount was laid in a bed in the old tower
-(going off of the hall), and standing upon a vault, wherein there was
-a round hole, devised of old just under Aboyne’s bed. Robert Gordon,
-born in Sutherland, his servitor, and English Will, his page, were
-both laid beside him in the same chamber. The laird of Rothiemay, with
-some servants beside him, was laid in an upper chamber just above
-Aboyne’s chamber; and in another room above that chamber were laid
-George Chalmer of Noth, and George Gordon, another of the Viscount’s
-servants, with whom also was laid Captain Rollok, then in Frendraught’s
-own company. Thus all being at rest, about midnight that dolorous
-tower took fire in so sudden and furious a manner, yea, and in a clap,
-that this noble Viscount, the laird of Rothiemay, English Will, Colin
-Eviot, another of Aboyne’s servitors, and other two, being six in
-number, were cruelly burnt and tormented to the death but [without]
-help or relief; the laird of Frendraught, his lady [both of whom had
-slept in a separate wing of the building], and his whole household
-looking on without moving or stirring to deliver them from the fury of
-this fearful fire, as was reported. Robert Gordon, called Sutherland
-Gordon, being in the Viscount’s chamber, escaped this fire with his
-life. George Chalmer and Captain Rollok, being in the third room,
-escaped also this fire; and, as was said, Aboyne might have saved
-himself also, if he had gone out of doors, which he would not do,
-but suddenly ran up-stairs to Rothiemay’s chamber and wakened him to
-rise; and as he is wakening him, the timber passage and lofting of
-the chamber hastily takes fire, so that none of them could win down
-stairs again; so they turned to a window looking to the close, where
-they piteously cried Help, help, many times, for God’s cause. The laird
-and the lady, with their servants, all seeing and hearing this woful
-crying, but made no help nor manner of helping; which they perceiving,
-they cried oftentimes mercy at God’s hand for their sins, then clasped
-in other’s arms, and cheerfully suffered this cruel martyrdom....
-It is reported that upon the morn after this woful fire, the lady
-Frendraught, daughter to the Earl of Sutherland, and near cousin to the
-Marquis, busked in a white plaid, and riding on a small nag, having a
-boy leading her horse, without any more in her company, in this pitiful
-manner came weeping and mourning to the Bog [Gordon Castle], desiring
-entry to speak with my lord; but this was refused; so she returned back
-to her own house the same gate [way] she came, comfortless.’
-
-It is clear from this extract that Spalding’s opinion was that which
-the Marquis of Huntly adopted after consultation with his friends,
-namely, that the fire was not accidental, but the result of a plot,
-in which Frendraught and his lady were accomplices. This belief takes
-forcible expression in the ballad which was composed on the occasion,
-and is still popular in the neighbourhood of Frendraught. It is
-sufficient to cite a few verses:
-
- When steeds were saddled and well bridled,
- And ready for to ride,
- Then out came her and false Frendraught
- Inviting them to bide.
- . . . . .
- When they were dressëd in their cloaths,
- And ready for to boun,
- The doors and windows was all secured,
- The roof-tree burning down.
- . . . . .
- ‘O mercy, mercy, Lady Frendraught!
- Will ye not sink with sin?
- For first your husband killed my father,
- And now you burn his son.’
- . . . . .
- Oh, then outspoke her Lady Frendraught,
- And loudly did she cry—
- ‘It were great pity for good Lord John,
- But none for Rothiemay;
- But the keys are casten in the deep draw-well;
- Ye cannot get away.’
-
-That the laird of Frendraught and his lady either contrived the deed or
-acquiesced in it, is difficult of belief. The presumptions generally
-are against such a conclusion. There is no reason for supposing that
-the laird of Frendraught was not honest in reconciling himself to
-Rothiemay; but even allowing him to be wicked enough to plan the
-destruction by fire of the son of the man whom he had slain, while a
-guest under his roof, how is it possible to believe that he chose a
-plan which must involve the death of Viscount Melgum, a son of the
-Marquis of Huntly, and hitherto his friend?
-
-Crichton was perfectly aware of the popular suspicion; and the
-fruitless visit of his wife to Gordon Castle sufficiently disclosed
-the sentiments of the Marquis. Shortly after the fire, therefore, he
-placed himself under the protection of the Lord Chancellor, offering
-to undergo any trial, and to assist in every way in discovering the
-perpetrators of the crime.
-
-The Privy-council made the most strenuous efforts to pierce the
-mystery. Before the end of the year, John Meldrum and three of his
-servants, and about thirty of the servants or dependents of Crichton,
-had been apprehended, and about as many more summoned to Edinburgh to
-give evidence; but not the slightest clue was obtained as to the origin
-of the fire.
-
-In the following April, a commission, consisting of the Earl Marischal,
-the bishops of Aberdeen and Moray, with three others, was sent to
-investigate the occurrence on the spot. They cautiously reported thus:
-‘We find by all likelihood that the fire whereby the house was burned
-was first raised in a vault, wherein we find evidences of fire in
-three sundry parts; one at the furthest end thereof, another towards
-the middle, and the third on that gable which is hard by the hole that
-is under the bed which was in the chamber above. Your good lordships
-will excuse us if we determine not concerning the fire whether it was
-accidental or of set purpose by the hand of man; only this much it
-seemeth probable unto us, after consideration of the frame of the house
-and other circumstances, that no hand from without could have raised
-the fire without aid from within.’
-
-For a year the Council did nothing, being utterly at a loss as to
-what they should do; but public indignation, and the desire to bring
-home the guilt to the criminals—if guilt there were—had not abated,
-and, stimulated by a message on the subject from the king, the
-Council actually resolved to devote one day every week to further
-investigation. At the same time, John Meldrum was ordered to be tried
-by torture.
-
-In August 1632, John Tosh, master of the household at Frendraught, was
-brought to the bar of the Court of Justiciary on the charge of setting
-fire to the vault from within. It was pleaded for him that, having
-endured the torture of the ‘boots,’ and thereafter of the ‘pilniewinks’
-or thumbikins, and having on oath declared his innocence, he could not
-be put to further trial; and this plea was sustained.
-
-In August 1633—nearly three years after the fire—John Meldrum of
-Reidhill was put upon his trial, charged with having set fire to
-the vault from the outside. It was urged against him, that he had
-associated himself with James Grant, the notorious robber, in order
-to wreak his vengeance on Frendraught; that he had threatened to do
-Frendraught an evil turn some day; and being asked how, had said that
-the laird would be burned; and that he had been seen riding towards
-Frendraught Castle on the evening before the fire. It was suggested
-that he had set fire to the vault by throwing combustibles, such as
-powder, brimstone, and pitch, through the narrow slits that served as
-windows. On such evidence as was offered against him, no jury at the
-present day would convict. The assumption that fire had been introduced
-from the outside was directly against the conclusion of the Council’s
-commission; and Meldrum’s counsel insisted on the impossibility of
-kindling a fire in a vault to which the only access from the outside
-was by narrow slits piercing a wall ten feet thick. Nevertheless,
-Meldrum was convicted, and hanged.
-
-The jury seem to have thought some victim should be offered for the
-public satisfaction, and that no injustice would be done to John
-Meldrum in assigning him as a sacrifice, seeing that he had done quite
-enough to deserve hanging, even if he had no hand in the burning
-of Frendraught Castle. With the execution of Meldrum, all further
-proceedings in the case ceased; but suspicion and animosity rankled
-long in the House of Huntly against Frendraught. The origin of the fire
-still remains a mystery.
-
-
-
-
-TWO DAYS IN A LIFETIME.
-
-A STORY IN EIGHT CHAPTERS.
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-Captain Bowood had spoken truly. Lady Dimsdale and Mr Boyd were
-sauntering slowly in the direction of the house, deep in conversation,
-and quite unaware that they were being watched from a little distance
-by the woman in black whom Mrs Bowood had taken to be an applicant for
-the post of French governess.
-
-Oscar Boyd was a tall, well-built man, verging towards his fortieth
-year. His complexion was deeply imbrowned by years of tropical
-sunshine. He had a silky chestnut beard and moustache, and hair of the
-same colour, which, however, was no longer so plentiful as it once had
-been. He had clear, frank-looking eyes, a firm-set mouth, and a face
-which gave you the impression of a man who was at once both thoughtful
-and shrewd. It was one of those kindly yet resolute faces which seem to
-invite confidence, but would never betray it.
-
-Lady Dimsdale brought quite a heap of flowers into the room. There was
-a large shallow vase on the centre table, which it was her intention to
-fill with her floral spoils. ‘You look as cool as if this were December
-instead of June,’ she said.
-
-‘I have been used to much hotter suns than that of England.’
-
-‘I hardly knew you again at first—not till I heard you speak.’
-
-‘Fifteen years are a long time.’
-
-‘Yet already it seems to me as if I should have known you anywhere. You
-are different, and yet the same.’
-
-‘When I arrived last evening, I did not know that you were here. I
-heard your voice before I saw you, and the fifteen years seemed to
-vanish like a dream.’
-
-‘It seems to me like a dream when I go back in memory to those old days
-at the vicarage, and call to mind all that happened there.’
-
-‘Do you ever think of that evening when you and I parted?’
-
-‘I have not forgotten it,’ answered Lady Dimsdale in a low voice.
-
-‘How little we thought that we should not meet again for so long a
-time!’
-
-‘How little we foresaw all that would happen to us in the interval!’
-
-‘If that telegram had arrived ten minutes later, how different our lots
-in life might have been!’
-
-‘Life seems made up of Ifs and Buts,’ she answered with a little sigh.
-
-‘That evening! The scent of new-mown hay was in the air.’
-
-‘The clock in the old church tower had just struck seven.’
-
-‘Under the hill, a nightingale was singing.’
-
-‘Far off, we heard the murmur of the tide.’
-
-‘Fido lay basking among fallen rose-leaves on the terrace.’
-
-‘Wagging his tail lazily, as if beating time to some tune that was
-running in his head.’
-
-‘We stood by the wicket, watching the last load of hay winding slowly
-through the lanes. I seized the moment’——
-
-‘You seized something else.’
-
-‘Your hand. If you had only known how nervous I was! I pressed your
-fingers to my lips. “Laura, I love you,” I stammered out.’
-
-‘“Darling Laura,” was what he said,’ murmured Lady Dimsdale to herself.
-
-‘Before I had time for another word, Hannah came hurrying down the
-steps.’
-
-‘Dear old Hannah, with her mob-cap and prim white apron. I seem to see
-her now.’
-
-‘She had an open paper in her hand. Your aunt had been taken ill, and
-you were instructed to go to her by the first train. You gave me one
-look—a look that haunted me for years—and went into the house without a
-word. An hour later, I saw you at the train; but your father was there,
-and he kept you by his side till the last moment.’
-
-‘That miserable journey! For the first twenty miles I was alone; then
-an old lady got in. “Dear me, how damp this carriage feels,” she said.
-I rather fancy I had been crying.’
-
-‘And we never met after that, till last evening.’
-
-‘Never!’ murmured Lady Dimsdale almost inaudibly.
-
-‘Two days after our parting, I was ordered abroad; but I wrote to you,
-not once or twice only, but many times.’
-
-‘Not one line from you did I ever receive.’
-
-‘Then my letters must have been intercepted. I addressed them to your
-aunt’s house in Scotland, where you were staying at the time.’
-
-‘Aunt Judith had set her heart on my marrying Sir Thomas Dimsdale.’
-
-‘And would not let my letters reach you. Week after week and month
-after month, I waited for an answer, hoping against hope; but none ever
-came.’
-
-‘Week after week and month after month, I waited for a letter from you;
-but none ever came.’
-
-‘And your Aunt Judith—she who intercepted my letters—was accounted a
-good woman.’
-
-‘An excellent woman. Even on wet Sundays, she always went to church
-twice.’
-
-‘So excellent, that at length she persuaded you to marry Sir Thomas.’
-
-‘It was not her persuasion that induced me to marry. It was to save my
-father from ruin.’
-
-‘What a sacrifice!’
-
-‘You must not say that. How could anything I might do for my father’s
-sake be accounted a sacrifice?’
-
-Oscar Boyd did not answer. Lady Dimsdale’s white slender fingers were
-busy with the arrangement of her flowers, and he seemed absorbed in
-watching them.
-
-‘And you too married?’ she said at length in a low voice.
-
-‘I did—but not till more than a year after I read the notice of your
-marriage in the newspapers. Life seemed no longer worth living. I cared
-not what became of me. I fell into the toils of an adventuress, who
-after a time inveigled me into marrying her.’
-
-‘Your marriage was an unhappy one?’
-
-‘Most unhappy. After a few months, we separated, and I never saw my
-wife again. Her fate was a sad one. A year or two later, a steamer she
-was on board of was lost at sea; and so far as is known, not a soul
-survived to tell the tale.’
-
-‘A sad fate indeed.’
-
-The subject was a painful one to Oscar Boyd. He crossed to the window,
-and stood gazing out for a few moments in silence.
-
-Lady Dimsdale’s thoughts were busy. ‘What is there to hinder him from
-saying again to-day the words he said to me fifteen years ago?’ she
-asked herself. ‘If he only knew!’
-
-‘How strange it seems, Laura, to be alone with you again after all
-these years!’ He spoke from the window.
-
-A beautiful flush spread swiftly over Lady Dimsdale’s face. Her heart
-beat quickly. In a moment she had grown fifteen years younger. ‘He
-calls me Laura!’ she murmured softly to herself. ‘Surely he will say
-the words now.’
-
-‘I could fancy this was the dear never-to-be-forgotten room in the old
-vicarage—that that was the garden outside. In another moment, Fido will
-come bounding in. Hannah will open the door and tell us tea is waiting.
-We shall hear your father whistling softly to himself, while he counts
-the ripening peaches on the wall.’
-
-‘Oscar, don’t!’ cried Lady Dimsdale in a voice that was broken with
-emotion.
-
-Oscar Boyd came slowly back from the window, and stood for a few
-moments watching her in silence. Then he laid a hand gently on one
-of hers, took possession of it, looked at it for a moment, and then
-pressed it to his lips. Then with a lingering pressure, he let it drop,
-and walked away again to the window.
-
-Lady Dimsdale’s eyes followed him; she could have laughed or she could
-have cried; she was on the verge of both. ‘Oh, my dear one, if you only
-knew what stupid creatures you men are!’ she said to herself. ‘Why
-isn’t this leap-year?’
-
-Presently Mr Boyd paced back again to the table; he seemed possessed
-by some demon of restlessness. ‘With your permission, I will relate a
-little apologue to you,’ he said; and then he drew up a chair near to
-the table and sat down. ‘I once had a friend who was a poor man, and
-was in love with a woman who was very rich. He had made up his mind
-to ask her to be his wife, when one day he chanced to hear himself
-stigmatised as a fortune-hunter, as an adventurer who sought to marry
-a rich wife in order that he might live on her money. Then, although
-he loved this woman very dearly, he went away without saying a word of
-that which was in his heart.’
-
-‘Must not your friend have been a weak-minded man, to let the idle talk
-of an empty busybody come between himself and happiness? He deserved
-to lose his prize. But I too have a little apologue to tell to you.
-Once on a time there was a woman whom circumstances compelled against
-her wishes to marry a rich old man. When he died, he left her all his
-wealth, but on one condition—that she should never marry again. Any one
-taking her for his wife must take her—for herself alone.’
-
-Oscar rose and pushed back his chair. His face flushed; a great flame
-of love leaped suddenly into his eyes. Lady Dimsdale was bending over
-her flowers. Neither of them saw the black-robed figure that was
-standing motionless by the open window.
-
-‘Laura!’ said Oscar in a voice that was scarcely raised above a whisper.
-
-She turned her head and looked at him. Their eyes met. For a moment
-each seemed to be gazing into the other’s heart. Then Oscar went a step
-nearer and held out both his hands. An instant later he had his arms
-round her and his lips were pressed to hers. ‘My own at last, after all
-these weary years!’ he murmured.
-
-The figure in black had come a step or two nearer. She flung back her
-veil with a sudden passionate gesture.
-
-‘Oscar Boyd!’ The words were spoken with a sort of slow, deliberate
-emphasis.
-
-The lovers fell apart as though a thunderbolt had dropped between them.
-Oscar’s face changed on the instant to a ghastly pallor. With one hand,
-he clutched the back of a chair; the other went up to his throat, as
-though there were something there which stopped his breathing. For the
-space of a few seconds the ticking of the clock on the chimney-piece
-was the only sound that broke the silence.
-
-Then came the question: ‘Who are you?’ breathed rather than spoken.
-
-In clear incisive tones came the answer: ‘Your wife!’
-
- * * * * *
-
-The day was three hours older.
-
-The news that Mr Boyd’s wife, who was supposed to have been drowned
-several years before, had unexpectedly proved that she was still in
-existence, was not long before it reached the ears of everybody at
-Rosemount, from Captain Bowood himself to the boy in the stables.
-As soon as he had recovered in some degree from the first shock of
-surprise, Oscar had gone in search of Mrs Bowood; and having explained
-to her in as few words as possible what had happened, had asked her to
-grant him the use of one of her parlours for a few hours. Mrs Bowood,
-who was the soul of hospitality, would fain have gone on the instant
-and welcomed Mrs Boyd, as she welcomed all her guests at Rosemount,
-and it may be with even more _empressement_ than usual, considering
-the remarkable circumstances of the case. Mr Boyd, however, vetoed
-her proposition in a way which caused her to suspect that there must
-be something more under the surface than she was aware of; so, with
-ready tact, she forbore to question him further, and at once placed a
-sitting-room at his disposal.
-
-In this room the husband and his newly found wife were shut up
-together. Mr Boyd looked five years older than he had looked a few
-hours previously. He was very pale. A certain hardness in the lines of
-his mouth, unnoticed before, now made itself plainly observable. His
-brows were contracted; all the gladness, all the softness had died out
-of his dark eyes as completely as if they had never had an existence
-there. He was sitting at a table, poring over some railway maps and
-time-tables. On a sofa, separated from him by half the length of the
-room, sat his wife. She was a tall, dark, shapely woman, who had left
-her thirtieth birthday behind her some years ago. She had a profusion
-of black hair, and very bright black eyes, with a certain cold, clear
-directness of gaze in them, which for some men seemed to have a sort of
-special charm. Certainly, they looked like eyes that could never melt
-with sympathy or be softened by tears. She had a long Grecian nose, and
-full red lips; but her chin was too heavy and rounded for the rest of
-her face. Her clear youthful complexion owed probably as much to art
-as it did to nature; but it was art so skilfully applied as sometimes
-to excite the envy of those of her own sex to whom such secrets were
-secrets no longer. In any case, most men conceded that she was still a
-very handsome woman, and it was not likely that she was unaware of the
-fact.
-
-She sat for a little while tapping impatiently with one foot on the
-carpet, and glancing furtively at the impassive face bent over its
-books and maps, which seemed for the time to have forgotten that there
-was any such person as she in existence. At length she could keep
-silent no longer. ‘You do not seem particularly delighted by the return
-of your long-lost wife, who was saved from shipwreck by a miracle. Many
-men would be beside themselves with joy; but you are a philosopher, and
-know how to hide your feelings. _Eh bien!_ if you are not overjoyed to
-see me, I am overjoyed to see you; and I love you so very dearly, that
-I will never leave you again.’ Only a slight foreign accent betrayed
-the fact that she was not an Englishwoman.
-
-Oscar Boyd took no more notice of her than if she had been addressing
-herself to the empty air.
-
-She rose and crossed the room to the fireplace, and glanced at herself
-in the glass. There was a dangerous light in her eyes. ‘If he does not
-speak to me, I shall strike him!’ she said to herself. Then aloud: ‘I
-have travelled six thousand miles in search of you, and now that I have
-found you, you have not even one kiss to greet me with! What a heart of
-marble yours must be!’
-
-Still the impassive figure at the table made no more sign than if it
-had been carved in stone.
-
-There was a pretty Venetian glass ornament on the chimney-piece.
-Mrs Boyd took it up and dashed it savagely on the hearth, where it
-was shattered to a hundred fragments. Then with white face and
-passion-charged eyes, she turned and faced her husband. ‘Oscar Boyd,
-why don’t you speak to your wife?’
-
-‘Because I have nothing to say to her.’ He spoke as coldly and quietly
-as he might have spoken to the veriest stranger.
-
-She controlled her passion with an effort. ‘Nothing to say to me! You
-can at least tell me something of your plans. Are we going to remain
-here, or are we going away, or what are we going to do?’
-
-He began deliberately to fold the map he had been studying. ‘We shall
-start for London by the five o’clock train,’ he said. ‘At the terminus,
-we shall separate, to meet again to-morrow at my lawyer’s office. It
-will not take long to draw up a deed of settlement, by which a certain
-portion of my income will for the future be paid over to you. After
-that, we shall say farewell, and I shall never see you again.’
-
-She stared at him with bewildered eyes. ‘Never see me again!’ she
-gasped out. ‘Me—your wife!’
-
-‘Estelle—you know the reasons which induced me to vow that I would
-never regard you as my wife again. Those reasons have the same force
-now that they had a dozen years ago. We meet, only to part again a few
-hours hence.’
-
-She had regained some portion of her _sang-froid_ by this time. A
-shrill mocking laugh burst from her lips. It was not a pleasant laugh
-to hear. ‘During my husband’s absence, I must try to console myself
-with my husband’s money. You are a rich man, _caro mio_; you have made
-a large fortune abroad; and I shall demand to be treated as a rich
-man’s wife.’
-
-‘You are mistaken,’ he answered, without the least trace of emotion
-in his manner or voice. ‘I am a very poor man. Nearly the whole of my
-fortune was lost by a bank failure a little while ago.’
-
-His words seemed to strike her dumb.
-
-‘In three days I start for Chili,’ continued Oscar. ‘My old appointment
-has not been filled up; I shall apply to be reinstated.’
-
-‘And I have come six thousand miles for this!’ muttered Estelle under
-her breath. She needed a minute or two to recover her equanimity—to
-decide what her next move should be.
-
-Her husband was jotting down a few notes with a pencil. She turned
-and faced him suddenly. ‘Oscar Boyd, I have a proposition to make to
-you,’ she said. ‘If you are as poor a man as you say you are—and I do
-not choose to doubt your word—I have no desire to be a drag on you for
-ever. I have come a long way in search of you, and it will be equally
-far to go back. Listen, then. Give me two thousand pounds—you can
-easily raise that amount among your fine friends—and I will solemnly
-promise to put six thousand miles of ocean between us, and never to
-seek you out or trouble you in any way again.’
-
-For a moment he looked up and gazed steadily into her face.
-‘Impossible!’ he said drily, and with that he resumed his notations.
-
-‘Why do you say that? The sum is not a large one. And think! You will
-get rid of me for ever. What happiness! There will be nothing then
-to hinder you from marrying that woman whom I saw in your arms. Oh!
-I am not in the least jealous, although I love you so dearly, and
-although’—here she glanced at herself in the chimney-glass—‘that woman
-is not half so good-looking as I am. No one in this house but she
-knows that I am your wife. You have only to swear to her that I am an
-impostor, and she will believe you—we women are such easy fools where
-we love!—and will marry you. Que dites vous, cher Oscar?’
-
-‘Impossible.’
-
-‘_Peste!_ I have no patience with you. You will never have such an
-offer again. Mais je comprends. Although your words are so cruel,
-you love me too well to let me go. As for that woman whom I saw you
-kissing, I will think no more of her. You did not know I was so near,
-and I forgive you.’ Here she turned to the glass again, gave the
-strings of her bonnet a little twist, and smoothed her left eyebrow.
-‘Make haste, then, my darling husband, and introduce your wife to your
-fine friends, as a gentleman ought to do. I will ring the bell.’
-
-Mr Boyd rose and pushed back his chair. ‘Pardon me—you will do nothing
-of the kind,’ he said, more sternly than he had yet spoken. ‘It is not
-my intention to introduce you to any one in this house. It would be
-useless. We start for London in a couple of hours. I have some final
-preparations to make, and will leave you for a few minutes. Meanwhile,
-I must request that you will not quit this room.’
-
-She clapped her gloved hands together and laughed a shrill discordant
-laugh. ‘And do you really think, Oscar Boyd, that I am the kind of
-woman to submit to all this? You ought to know me better—far better.’
-Then with one of those sudden changes of mood which were characteristic
-of her, she went on: ‘And yet, perhaps—as I have heard some people
-say—a wife’s first duty is submission. Perhaps her second is, never to
-leave her husband. _Eh bien!_ You shall have my submission, but—I will
-never leave you. If you go to Chili, I will follow you there, as I have
-followed you here. I will follow you to the ends of the earth! Do you
-hear? I will haunt you wherever you go! I will dog your footsteps day
-and night! Everywhere I will proclaim myself as your wife!’ She nodded
-her head at him meaningly three times, when she had finished her tirade.
-
-Standing with one hand resting on the back of his chair, while the
-other toyed with his watch-guard, he listened to her attentively, but
-without any visible emotion. ‘You will be good enough not to leave this
-room till my return,’ he said; and without another word, he went out
-and shut the door behind him.
-
-Her straight black eyebrows came together, and a volcanic gleam shot
-from her eyes as she gazed after him. ‘Why did he not lock me in?’ she
-said to herself with a sneer. She began to pace the room as a man might
-have paced it, with her hands behind her back and her fingers tightly
-interlocked. ‘Will nothing move him? Is it for this I have crossed the
-ocean? Is it for this I have tracked him? His fortune gone! I never
-dreamt of that—and they told me he was so rich. What an unlucky wretch
-I am! I should like to stab him—or myself—or some one. If I could but
-set fire to the house at midnight, and’—— She was interrupted by the
-opening of the door and the entrance of Sir Frederick Pinkerton. At the
-sight of a man who was also a gentleman, her face changed in a moment.
-
-(_To be concluded next month._)
-
-
-
-
-LONDON BONDED WAREHOUSES.
-
-
-The thought occurred to the writer the other day, when seated at his
-desk, as an examining officer of Customs, in one of the extensive
-bonded vaults which are within sight of that famous historic pile the
-Tower, that a brief description of these warehouses—which possess in
-some respects features that are unique—might prove interesting to
-general readers. We do not know if any previous attempt has been made
-in this direction; if so, it has not come within the scope of the
-writer’s observation during an experience in London as a Civil servant
-of twenty years.
-
-In this brief sketch there are certain reflections that occur which may
-perhaps be worthy of some consideration. One of these is, that even in
-the most busy parts of the City there are extremely few persons—though
-they may have daily passed along the leading thoroughfares for
-years—who know anything about the interiors of the vast warehouses
-and immense repositories for merchandise of all sorts, which abound
-in the business area of London, east of Temple Bar, extending far
-down both banks of the Thames. We do not refer especially to the
-great docks, such as the London, St Katharine, East and West India,
-Royal Albert, Surrey Commercial, and other similar emporiums of
-commerce, which form so remarkable a feature of the Thames, and are
-only rivalled by the huge docks on the Mersey. Those establishments,
-it must be allowed, attract a large number of visitors, although
-these are chiefly strangers from the country; the strictly commercial
-classes of the City, unless intimately connected with the shipping
-interest, but rarely extending their explorations thitherward. Some
-favoured citizens and ‘country cousins,’ by the privilege of what is
-called technically a ‘tasting order,’ may, however, traverse miles of
-cellars, filled with the choicest vintages, and in the wine-vaults may
-behold the most curious fungoid forms, white as snow, pendent from the
-vaulted roofs. They may survey, as at the London Docks, thirty thousand
-casks of brandy in a single vault; or traverse the famous ‘Spice’
-warehouse, redolent with the aromatic odours of the East; or if they
-have a penchant for Jamaica rum, by extending their visit to the West
-India Dock, they can see the largest collection of rum-casks to be
-found in any bonded warehouse on the habitable globe. But it is not to
-these colossal establishments that we wish now to refer, interesting
-and important as they may be, but rather to the less pretentious
-and smaller warehouses, forming a group styled officially ‘Uptown
-Warehouses.’
-
-No one passing along Crutched Friars—the very name suggests that
-strange blending of the past with modern commercial activity, which is
-observable in London as in other large centres of population—would from
-external signs surmise for a moment, that under his feet and around
-him there were acres of vaults containing tens of thousands of casks
-of port, sherry, and various descriptions of spirit. Yet such is the
-fact; and as a matter of detail, it may be stated that the stock of
-_port_ wine in one of these vaults comprises the finest brands imported
-into the metropolis. The firm of B—— is well known throughout the
-commercial world of London, and is believed to be upwards of a century
-old. The original founder, who sprang from a very humble stock, died
-worth, it is said, two million pounds sterling, amassed by the skilful
-and honourable conduct of a bonding business, which had grown from
-very modest conditions indeed, to rival the huge proportions of the
-docks themselves. In fact, the tendency of the last few years has been
-decidedly to withdraw the bonding trade from these formerly gigantic
-establishments, and to concentrate it in the Uptown Warehouses. The
-result of this has been to lower the shares of the Dock Companies to
-the minimum level compatible with commercial solvency; while, owing
-to the keen rivalry with the smaller and more progressive bonding
-warehouses elsewhere, the charges have been reduced to a point that
-would have surprised merchants of past days. One great reason for the
-modern change which we have noted, is unquestionably the superior
-accessibility of the Uptown Warehouses to the City proper, and their
-comparative nearness to the various railway termini. Time and distance,
-in these days of excessive speed, are prime factors, and must in the
-end assert themselves. Besides, it is evident to all thinking men that
-we have reached a crisis in the transport of merchandise, and that the
-railway is becoming daily more omnipotent.
-
-Though we have hitherto referred only to the casks of vinous liquors,
-technically known as ‘wet goods,’ stored in the vaults, it must not
-be inferred that they constitute the sole description of merchandise
-contained within the walls of these warehouses. Tea, inclosed in
-chests, piled tier upon tier, fills a large space, and yields a very
-considerable amount of revenue to the Crown. Perhaps of all goods
-now comprised in the tariff as ‘dutiable,’ the collection of the tea
-duty, which is at present assessed at sixpence per pound, is the
-simplest and least expensive. In B——’s premises, where the stock is
-comparatively small, the annual yield of duty to the revenue is nearly
-two hundred thousand pounds. It is, however, far otherwise with the
-duty paid on ‘wet goods,’ wine, perhaps, excepted, the rates of which,
-governed by strength, are, for wines containing less than twenty-six
-degrees of alcoholic strength—being mainly of French production—at one
-shilling per gallon; and for those of a greater degree of strength, but
-below the limit of forty-two degrees—which is the usual standard of
-Portuguese and Spanish wines—at two shillings and sixpence per gallon.
-This difference in the assessment of duty on the basis of strength
-between the vintages of France and Portugal, has been for some years
-a sore point with the latter government. Various protests have been
-made against its retention, which it must be admitted seems to press
-somewhat hardly upon the trade of the Iberian peninsula with this
-country; but as yet, while we write, no satisfactory solution has been
-arrived at of what is a real _quæstio vexata_. The collection of the
-spirit duties involves very considerable nicety and calculation—whisky
-perhaps excepted, which is officially known as British Plain Spirits,
-and the duty on which is assessed at ten shillings per gallon of proof
-strength. In the case of all other descriptions of spirits, however,
-the method is rendered more intricate, owing to a recent regulation
-which requires the determination of the degree of what is styled
-‘obscuration’ by distillation, the duty being charged at a uniform rate
-of ten shillings and fourpence per proof gallon.
-
-The laboratory tests are in the Customs establishment of a highly
-scientific character, demanding on the part of the operators
-considerable skill and knowledge of chemistry. The instruments used
-in the various processes—of which Sikes’s hydrometer and Mr Keen’s
-are best known—are of very ingenious construction, and require nice
-handling and steadiness of eye.
-
-The gauging of casks, which is performed by a large staff of, generally
-speaking, skilful and highly meritorious officers, is quite a science
-in itself, and requires years of constant practice to make the operator
-thoroughly proficient. But in this, as in other arts, there are of
-course various degrees of excellence. In the Customs service—and the
-same thing will doubtless apply to the Excise—there are gaugers who
-stand head and shoulders above their fellows, and who appear to have
-the power by merely glancing at a cask, as if by intuition, to tell
-its ‘content,’ as its holding capacity is officially styled. Although
-it has been the usage in certain quarters to speak in contemptuous
-terms of the functions of this deserving class of public servants, and
-to apply to them the opprobrious epithet of ‘dip-sticks,’ we have no
-sympathy with such detraction, which is quite unmerited.
-
-It would be impossible within the brief limits of this paper to
-describe minutely the various operations in bond which are daily going
-on at these stations. Such comprise Vatting, Blending, Mixing, Racking,
-Reducing, Fortifying, Bottling, Filtering, &c., and would in themselves
-suffice for a separate article.
-
-Having given a very meagre outline of the multifarious duties and
-processes carried on at the various bonding vaults in London and
-elsewhere, we may perhaps fitly conclude with a brief description of
-certain antiquarian features of special interest, to be met with in
-Messrs B——’s premises. As previously remarked, the monastic character
-of one of the leading approaches is conveyed in the title of Crutched
-Friars. But it is evident from other and various remains that its
-site includes a most important portion of ancient _Londinum_. A
-considerable extent of the old Roman wall, upwards of a hundred feet,
-in an excellent state of preservation, ‘the squared stones and bonding
-tiles’ being marvellously well defined, forms the boundary of what is
-known as the ‘South’ Vault. On a higher level, styled the Vat Floor, in
-the medieval portion of the City wall, is to be seen a fine specimen
-of the Roman casement, which is said to be the only one now remaining
-in the City. According to the best antiquarian authorities, these
-remains form a part of the circumvallation of London begun in the reign
-of Constantine and completed by Theodosius. As is only natural, these
-relics are highly prized by the Antiquarian Society, which has in no
-ordinary terms expressed its appreciation of the zealous care bestowed
-by the proprietors in preserving these unique and priceless treasures
-of the past.
-
-
-
-
-THE MONTH:
-
-SCIENCE AND ARTS.
-
-
-Professor Janssen, the well-known astronomer of Meudon Observatory,
-who has done more than any man living, perhaps, towards wedding the
-photographic camera with the telescope, has lately published some
-account of a marvellous picture which he obtained of ‘the old moon
-in the new moon’s arms.’ At the time that the picture was taken, the
-moon was only three days old, and an uncovering of the lens for one
-minute only was sufficient to secure the image. This image is feeble,
-but is full of detail, plainly showing the general configuration of
-the lunar surface. Professor Janssen believes that this application of
-photography points to a means of obtaining more precise measurements
-of the light, and of studying the phenomena which are produced by
-the double reflection of the solar light between our earth and
-its satellite. To the uninitiated, in these days of marvellous
-instantaneous pictures, an exposure of one minute may seem rather
-a long period. But let us consider for a moment what a very small
-proportion of the sun’s glory is reflected to us from the moon, even
-on the finest nights. Professor Sir W. Thomson gives some interesting
-information on this point. Comparing the full moon to a standard
-candle, he tells us that the light it affords is equal to that given
-by such a candle at a distance of seven feet and a half. As in the
-above-mentioned photograph the light dealt with came from a moon not
-full, but only three days old, it will be seen that Professor Janssen
-had a very small amount of illumination for his picture, and the only
-wonder is that he was able to obtain any result at all.
-
-It will be remembered that in the autumn of 1882, a series of
-observations were commenced in the polar regions, which had been
-organised by an International Polar Committee. Fourteen expeditions
-from various countries took up positions in that inhospitable area,
-with the intention of carrying out observations for twelve months,
-from which it was hoped that valuable knowledge would be gained. This
-programme has been successfully carried out, ten of the expeditions
-having returned home, many of them laden with rich stores of
-observations. Three remain to continue their work for another year.
-As to the return of the remaining band of observers—belonging to the
-United States—there is as yet no definite information.
-
-On Ailsa Craig, Firth of Clyde, there is being erected, by order of the
-Commissioners of Northern Lights, a mineral-oil gas-work, to supply
-gas for the lighthouse in course of construction there, as well as to
-feed the gas-engines which will be used to drive the fog-signalling
-apparatus. The works are being erected by the patentee of this
-gas-system, Mr James Keith, and will cost three thousand pounds. They
-will be capable of manufacturing two thousand cubic feet of oil-gas
-per hour, of fifty-candle illuminating standard. It has long been the
-opinion of many that the electric light is not the best illuminant for
-lighthouse purposes, and this installation at Ailsa Craig, following
-one on the same principle at the Isle of Man not long ago, would seem
-to indicate that the authorities think so too.
-
-North-east of Afghanistan there lies a piece of country called
-Kafiristan, which, until April last, had never been traversed by the
-foot of a European. In that month, however, Mr W. W. M‘Nair, of the
-Indian medical service, crossed the British frontier, and travelled
-through the little-known region for two months. An interesting account
-of his wanderings formed the subject of a paper read by him at a recent
-meeting of the Royal Geographical Society. The country is inhabited
-by three main tribes—Ramgals, Vaigals, and Bashgals, answering to the
-three chief valleys, and each having a distinctive dialect. The men
-are warlike and brave, but, like many other semi-barbarous peoples,
-leave the heavy work of agriculture to the women. The Mohammedans hem
-them in on all sides; but as the tribes are at peace among themselves,
-they are able to hold their own. Slavery exists to some extent. The
-people acknowledge one supreme being, Imbra, and worship at temples
-presided over by priests; but to neither priests nor idols is excessive
-reverence paid. Bows and arrows form their chief arms; and although a
-few matchlocks have found their way into the country from Cabul, no
-attempt has been made to imitate them. Wealth is reckoned by heads
-of cattle; the staple food is wheat; and the favourite drink pure
-grape-juice, not rendered intoxicating by fermentation or distillation.
-
-Although there is every reason to believe that cruelty to animals is
-far less common than it was, still there are many men who are not so
-merciful to their beasts as they might be. Many of these offend from
-ignorance, and will leave poor creatures exposed to inclement weather
-under the belief that they will not suffer. Professor Shelton, of
-the Kansas State Agricultural College, has lately shown, by careful
-experiment, that it _pays_ to be merciful in the matter of providing
-shelter for pigs; and we have no doubt that if his researches had been
-extended to other animals, a similar result would have been obtained.
-For this experiment, ten pigs, as nearly as possible alike with regard
-to breed, age, &c., were chosen, five being kept in a barn, and five in
-the open, but provided with straw to lie upon. These two families were
-fed twice a day with carefully weighed messes of Indian corn. In the
-sequel, it was found that each bushel of corn produced in the barn-fed
-pigs ten and three-tenths pounds of pork, whilst each bushel given to
-the outsiders formed only nine and seven-tenths. This result of course
-clearly shows that a large proportion of the food given went to keep
-the outdoor pigs warm, instead of adding to their flesh. If the bucolic
-mind will only grasp this fact, we feel sure that more attention will
-be given to the question of shelter for animals.
-
-Professor Cohn, writing from Breslau to _Nature_, calls attention to
-the circumstance that just two hundred years ago there was made in the
-Netherlands a scientific discovery of the greatest importance. In the
-year 1683, Leeuwenhoek gave notice to our Royal Society that by the
-aid of his microscope he had detected in the white substance adhering
-to his teeth ‘very little animals moving in a very lively fashion.’
-‘These,’ says Professor Cohn, ‘_were the first bacteria which the human
-eye ever saw_.’ The descriptions and drawings given by this first
-observer are so correct, that even in these days, when the Germ theory
-of disease has brought forward so many workers in the same field, armed
-with much improved appliances, the organisms drawn by the hand of
-Leeuwenhoek can be easily recognised and compared with their fellows
-of to-day. These drawings have indeed never been surpassed till within
-the last ten years, a fact which speaks volumes for their accuracy and
-value.
-
-The buildings occupied by the International Fisheries Exhibition at
-South Kensington are, in 1884, to be devoted to a no less important
-object, albeit it is not likely to be so popular with the masses. This
-Exhibition will deal with matters relating to Health and Education.
-It will include the food-resources of the world; the best means of
-cooking that food; the costumes of the world, and their bearing upon
-health; the sanitary construction of dwellings; and many other things
-that every one ought to know about, but which very few study. With the
-Prince of Wales as President, assisted by a Council including the names
-of Sir Cunliffe Owen and Mr Birkbeck, the success of the scheme ought
-to be assured.
-
-In Cannon Street, London, an experimental section of roadway of a
-novel kind has lately been laid down. It is the invention of Mr H.
-F. Williams, an engineer of San Francisco, where the system has been
-most successfully employed for the past seven years. Indeed, the roads
-so prepared are said to be as good as when first laid down, allowing
-for a reasonable amount of wear and tear. The process is as follows.
-First of all is provided a good dry concrete foundation; upon this
-are laid blocks of wood, grain-end uppermost, measuring eight inches
-by four, with a thickness of an inch and a half. Each block, before
-being placed in position, is dipped halfway into a boiling mixture of
-asphalt and Trinidad bitumen; this glues the blocks to the foundation
-and to one another, at the same time leaving a narrow space all round
-the upper half of each piece of wood. This space is afterwards filled
-in with boiling asphalt. Above all is spread a half-inch coating of
-asphalt mixed with coarse grit, the object of which is to prevent that
-dangerous slipperiness that is common to asphalt roadways in moist
-states of the atmosphere.
-
-At Brooklyn, the sanitary authorities seem to have a very sensible
-method of dealing with milk-dealers in the matter of adulteration. They
-invited the dealers to meet in the Common Council Chamber, when it was
-explained to them by an expert how they could determine by various
-tests whether the milk purchased from the farms is of the required
-standard. At the conclusion of this conference, it was hinted that the
-licenses of such dealers as were thenceforward detected in selling
-adulterated milk would be peremptorily revoked.
-
-At the end of December last, the first of four large silos on Lord
-Tollemache’s estate in Cheshire was opened in the presence of a large
-number of farmers and scientific agriculturists. It had been filled
-with dry grass, chopped into inch-lengths by a chaff-cutter, and
-pressed down with a weight equal to fifty-six pounds on the square
-foot. The appearance of the ensilage was that of dark-brown moss,
-having a pleasant aroma; but, as in other experiments of the kind,
-the top layer was mouldy and spoiled. Lord Tollemache stated that he
-found that animals did not seem to care for the fodder when first
-offered them, but that they afterwards ate it with evident relish.
-Several samples of ensilage were exhibited at the late Cattle-show
-in London, and it is noteworthy that almost without exception the
-pampered show-animals, when a handful was offered them by way of
-experiment, took the food greedily. On Mr C. Mackenzie’s farm of
-Portmore, in Peeblesshire, a silo was opened in December, the contents
-of which—pressed down while in a moist condition—were found to be
-excellently suited for feeding purposes.
-
-It is worthy of notice that the past year brought with it the fiftieth
-anniversary of the lucifer-match, which was first made in this kingdom
-by John Walker of Stockton-on-Tees in 1833. The same year, a factory
-was started at Vienna; and very soon works of a similar character
-sprang up all over the world. In 1847, a most important improvement
-was made in substituting the red amorphous phosphorus for the more
-common variety. This modification put an end to that terrible disease,
-phosphorus necrosis, which attacked the unfortunate matchmakers. The
-strong agitation which this disease gave rise to against the employment
-of phosphorus, naturally directed the attention of experimenters
-to other means of striking a light; and although phosphorus in its
-harmless amorphous form still holds its own, it is probable that its
-presence in lucifer-matches will some day be dispensed with. We need
-hardly remind our readers that the universal adoption of the electric
-light would greatly curtail the use of matches, for that form of
-illumination does not require an initial spark to set it aglow.
-
-Some artillery officers in Switzerland have been putting their
-snow-clad mountain flanks to a curious experimental use, for they have
-been employing one of them as a gigantic target for their missiles.
-A space on this snow-covered ground measuring two hundred and thirty
-feet by ninety-eight feet—which would represent the area occupied by
-a battalion of infantry in double column—was carefully marked out,
-its centre being occupied by flags. At a distance of about a mile,
-the artillery opened fire upon this mapped-out space until they had
-expended three hundred shots. The ground was then examined; and the
-pits in the snow when counted showed that seventy-eight per cent. of
-the shots had entered the inclosure. Had a veritable battalion occupied
-the ground, there would have been few, if any survivors.
-
-In another experiment, snow was employed as a means of defence against
-artillery. A wall sixteen and a half feet long, and five feet high,
-was built of snow having various thicknesses, but backed by half-inch
-wooden planking. This wall was divided into three sections, having
-a thickness respectively of four and a half feet, three feet, and
-twenty inches. Against the thickest section, twelve shots were fired
-from various distances; but in no case was penetration effected.
-In the three-foot section, shots pierced the snow as far as the
-woodwork, where they were stopped. In the twenty-inch section, all
-the shots fired went completely through the wall. It would seem from
-these experiments that snow, when available, can be made a valuable
-means of defence. But, unfortunately, in the published account of the
-experiments, the calibre of the guns employed is not given; we should,
-however, assume them to be field-artillery of a very light type.
-
-A new use for the ubiquitous dynamo-electric machine is reported from
-Saxony, and one which seems to fulfil a most useful purpose—namely, the
-ventilation of mines. At the Carola pits, Messrs Siemens and Halske,
-the German electricians, have inaugurated this new system. At the pit
-bank, a dynamo is stationed, which is coupled up by shafting with the
-engine. By means of copper conductors, this machine is connected with
-another dynamo, two thousand five hundred feet away in the depths of
-the mine. This latter is connected with a powerful centrifugal fan. The
-cost of working these combined machines is six shillings and threepence
-per day, which means threepence for every million cubic feet of air
-delivered.
-
-A new employment for the electric light has been found in Bavaria,
-where a Committee has reported upon its use as a head-light for
-locomotive engines. The colour and form of signals can be distinguished
-by the engine-driver on a cloudy night at a distance of eight hundred
-feet. The light burns steadily, and is not affected by the motion of
-the engine; but a special form of arc-lamp is employed, the invention
-of H. Sedlaczek of Vienna. The lamp is so constructed that it moves
-automatically when the engine traverses a curve, so as to light the
-track far in advance. The dynamo is placed just behind the funnel, and
-is easily connected with the moving parts of the machinery by suitable
-gearing.
-
-The new patent law which came into operation on the first of January
-will without doubt give a great impetus to invention in this country,
-for many a man too poor to think of employing a patent agent, and
-paying down nearly ten pounds for a few months’ protection, as he had
-to do under the old conditions, can easily afford the one pound which
-is now the sum fixed for the initial fee. Moreover, a would-be patentee
-can obtain all necessary forms at the nearest post-office, and can send
-in his specification through the same medium, without the intervention
-of the ‘middle-man.’ Of course the law cannot be perfect enough to
-please every one, and a few months’ practice will probably discover
-many points in which it can be improved. One curious provision has put
-certain manufacturers in a quandary, for it rules that no article must
-bear the word ‘patent’ unless it is really the subject of a patent
-specification.
-
-A powerful antiseptic and deodoriser can be made by mixing together
-carbolic acid and chloride of lime, which, when combined, contains
-sufficiently active properties to correct fermentation. A weak solution
-is used as a dressing in some gangrenous affections, as it does not
-cause irritation. The smell, if objected to, can be disguised by oil of
-lavender.
-
-Fruit may be preserved in a fresh condition for many months by placing
-it in very fine sand sufficiently thick to cover it, after it has been
-well washed and dried and then moistened with brandy. A wooden box is
-the best receptacle to use, and it should be kept well covered and in a
-warm place.
-
-According to some French gardeners, vines and other fruit-trees
-infested with ‘mealy-bug’ should have their bark brushed over with oil
-in November when the leaves are all off, and again in the spring when
-vegetation commences. This mode of treatment is usually very successful
-when it is applied to young and vigorous trees.
-
-At a recent meeting of the Edinburgh Field Naturalists’ Club, a paper
-was communicated by Mr John Turnbull, Galashiels, locally known as a
-clever microscopist, in which he explained a new and simple method of
-obtaining beautiful impressions of the leaves of plants on paper. The
-materials necessary to take these impressions cost almost nothing. A
-piece of carbonised paper plays the principal part in the process; but
-it is of importance to have the carbonised paper fresh, and it should
-be kept in a damp place, for when the paper dries, the pictures that
-may be printed from it are not so effective. The leaf or plant to be
-copied is first of all carefully spread out over the carbonised paper
-on a table, or, better still, a blotting-pad. Next take a piece of thin
-tough paper and lay it on the leaf. Then, with the tips of the fingers,
-rub over the thin paper so as to get the plant thoroughly inked.
-This done, place the leaf on the paper on which the impression is to
-be taken. A smooth printing-paper gives the clearest copy. The thin
-paper is now laid on the plant as before, and the rubbing continued.
-Of course, care must be taken to keep the plant in position, for if
-it moves, the impression will be faulty. However, the matter is so
-very simple that anybody should succeed. Impressions taken in this
-way have all the delicacy of steel engravings and the faithfulness of
-photographs. His discovery is likely to come into favour for decorative
-purposes. The headings of letters on the margins of books might be very
-tastefully adorned with truly artistic representations of plants. The
-wood-engraver also will find it will serve his purpose as well as, if
-not better than, photography. Specimens that have been copied by Mr
-Turnbull’s system, when examined with the microscope, are found to be
-perfect, even to the delicate hairs that are scarcely visible on the
-plant to the naked eye.
-
-
-
-
-BOOK GOSSIP.
-
-
-History is perhaps one of the most popular of modern studies. It
-is more definite in its results than Philosophy, and it widens the
-intellectual horizon more than does the pursuit of particular branches
-of Science, while it has less tendency than either of these to congeal
-into dogma. The methods of historians, also, have undergone a signal
-change within the last fifty years. The historical writers of last
-century, such as Robertson and Hume, were content to collate the
-productions of previous authors, to give a new reading here and a fresh
-deduction there, looking more to literary form than to the production
-of new facts. Such writers troubled themselves little about the People,
-but were intensely interested in the movements of kings, and in the
-sinuosities of statecraft generally. Anything else was beneath ‘the
-dignity of history.’ But this ‘dignity of history’ has long since been
-pushed from its perch, and nobody now regards it. Carlyle, Freeman,
-Froude, Macaulay, Green, and Gardiner, have each and all followed the
-movements of events as they affected the people, and not alone as
-they affected kings and statesmen. The result has been that history
-is fuller of teaching than before, is infused with a truer and deeper
-interest, appeals in stronger terms to our sense of justice, and lays a
-firmer hold upon our sympathy. It has, in short, become more human.
-
-Mr J. R. Seeley, Professor of Modern History in the University of
-Cambridge, has just published a series of lectures under the title of
-_The Expansion of England_ (London: Macmillan & Co.), which shows in
-a striking manner the progress which has been made in our methods of
-studying history and estimating its events. It has long, he says, been
-a favourite maxim of his, that history, while it should be scientific
-in its method, should pursue a practical object. ‘That is, it should
-not merely gratify the reader’s curiosity about the past, but modify
-his view of the present and his forecast of the future.’ The first
-lecture is devoted to an able exposition of this theorem, into which,
-however, we cannot here follow the author. He then proceeds to a study
-of England in the eighteenth century, discusses its old colonial
-system, points out in detail the effect of the New World on the Old,
-reviews the history of our conquest of India, and the mutual influence
-of India and England, and ends by an estimate of the internal and
-external dangers which beset England as the mother of her colonies and
-the mistress of her numerous conquests. The lecturer now and again
-drives his theory to a false issue, and in general gives too great
-weight to logical sequence in historic transactions. History is not
-dominated by logic, but by events; and although we may see in these
-events, from our distant and external standpoint, a distinct chain of
-development and progress, the actors saw no more of the future of them
-than we do to-day of the events presently transpiring. Apart, however,
-from this tendency on the part of Professor Seeley, the lectures
-are full of wise maxims and suggestive thoughts, and cannot fail to
-interest and instruct the historical student.
-
-⁂
-
-The Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge has added to its series
-called ‘The People’s Library’ a most instructive little volume entitled
-_A Chapter of Science; or, What is the Law of Nature?_ It consists
-of six lectures which were delivered to working-men by Mr J. Stuart,
-Professor of Mechanics, Cambridge. The object of the lecturer was to
-present an example of inductive reasoning, and to familiarise his
-hearers to some extent with the principles of scientific inquiry;
-and he has succeeded in his object in a remarkable degree. We do
-not know any book of the same extent which so fully places before
-the unscientific reader, or before the reader who has gathered many
-facts of science without apprehending their bearing upon each other,
-the principles which should guide him in the endeavour to estimate
-and arrange these facts correctly. He reminds his hearers that what
-science itself has to teach us consists not so much in facts, as in
-those lessons and deductions which can be drawn from facts, and which
-can be justly apprehended only by a knowledge of such facts. ‘Those,’
-he aptly says, ‘whose knowledge of science has furnished them with
-only an encyclopædia of facts, are like men who try to warm themselves
-before coals which have not yet been lighted. Those who are furnished
-only with the deductions of science are like men who may have a lighted
-match, but have not the material to construct a fire. That match soon
-burns away uselessly.’ We cannot conceive of any one reading this book,
-even with only an average degree of attention and only a trifling
-modicum of scientific knowledge, and not gleaning from it a clearer
-apprehension of the facts of science and the inductions to be made from
-these facts.
-
-⁂
-
-A beautiful volume comes to us from the pen of an occasional
-contributor to this _Journal_, Dr Gordon Stables. It is entitled
-_Aileen Aroon_ (London: S. W. Partridge & Co.), and consists of tales
-of faithful friends and favourites among the lower animals. The chief
-story of the book, and that which gives it its title, is concerning
-a noble Newfoundland dog called ‘Aileen Aroon;’ but interwoven with
-it are numerous stories of all kinds of domestic pets—dogs, monkeys,
-sheep, squirrels, birds of various kinds, and even that much-abused
-creature the donkey. Dr Stables, as our readers cannot fail to
-have observed, possesses a very happy style of narration; and his
-never-failing sympathy with animal-life gives to his several pictures a
-depth and truth of colouring such as one but rarely meets with in this
-department of anecdotal literature. A better present could not be put
-into the hands of a boy or girl who loves animals, than this handsome
-volume about _Aileen Aroon_ and her many friends.
-
-⁂
-
-_London Cries_ is the title of one of those unique volumes, with
-beautiful and characteristic illustrations, which from time to time
-emanate from the publishing-house of Messrs Field and Tuer, London.
-The text of this volume is written by Mr Andrew W. Tuer, and gives an
-amusing account of the cries, many and various, which have been heard,
-or may still be heard, in the streets of London.—Another volume by the
-same publishers is _Chap-book Chaplets_, containing a number of ballads
-printed in a comically antique fashion, and illustrated by numerous
-grotesque imitations of old ballad-woodcuts. These are cleverly drawn
-by Mr Joseph Crawhall, and are all coloured by hand.—A third volume
-comes from the same source. It is a large folio, entitled _Bygone
-Beauties_, being a republication of ten portraits of ladies of rank and
-fashion, from paintings by John Hoppner, R.A., and engraved by Charles
-Wilkin.
-
-⁂
-
-_Whitaker’s Almanac_ for 1884 exhibits all its former features of
-excellence as an annual, and any changes which have been made are in
-the direction of further improvement. Besides the usual information
-expected in almanacs, _Whitaker’s_ gives very full astronomical notes,
-from month to month, as to the position of the planets in the heavens,
-and other details which must be of interest to many. Its Supplement of
-scientific and other general information contains much that is curious
-and worth knowing.
-
-
-
-
-OCCASIONAL NOTES.
-
-
-AMBULANCE SOCIETIES.
-
-We have this month, in the article ‘An Order of Mercy’ (p. 15
-[Transcriber’s note: See https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/64345.]),
-described the operations of the St John Ambulance Association, London,
-and are pleased to be able to notice that a similar organisation is
-being set on foot in the Scottish metropolis. The subject was recently
-brought before the public by Professor Chiene, of the Edinburgh
-University, in a lecture delivered under the auspices of the Edinburgh
-Health Society. The lecturer spoke of the importance of speedy aid to
-those who are hurt, and to those who are taken suddenly ill in our
-streets. At present, in such cases, he said, such persons came under
-the care of kindly bystanders or the police, none of whom have received
-any instruction whatever in what is now commonly known as ‘first aid
-to the sick or wounded.’ The person was placed either in a cab or
-on a police-stretcher, and the lecturer could imagine nothing worse
-adapted for the conveyance of a patient with a fractured limb than a
-cab. In the case of the police-stretcher, the only advantage it had
-was the recumbent posture of the patient; in every other particular it
-was a most inefficient means of conveyance. He asked if the time had
-not come when they should try and find some remedy. In London, the St
-John Ambulance Association had been in existence for seven years; in
-Glasgow, the St Andrew’s Ambulance Association was now in full working
-order; and surely Edinburgh, with all its charitable organisations,
-with its important hospitals, with the largest medical school in Great
-Britain, should not be behind in this important matter. During the last
-three years an average of seven hundred and twenty cases of accident
-each year had been treated as in-patients in the Royal Infirmary; many
-other cases had been taken there, their wounds and injuries dressed,
-and afterwards sent to their own homes. Many cases of accident were
-conveyed directly to their own homes; many cases of sudden illness were
-conveyed either to the hospital or their own homes, and he did not
-think he was over-estimating it when he said that fifteen hundred cases
-occurred every year in Edinburgh which would benefit from a speedy and
-comfortable means of conveyance from the place of accident to the place
-of treatment. In the formation and working of such a society, he would
-give all the help he could. Mr Cunningham, the secretary of the Glasgow
-Association, had the cause at heart; and he was sure Mr Miller, one of
-the surgeons in the Edinburgh Infirmary, and Dr P. A. Young, both of
-whom had already given ambulance lectures to Volunteers, would give
-their hearty help. Many of the junior practitioners and senior students
-would, he was sure, assist as lecturers; and they would soon have in
-Edinburgh a ready band of certificated assistants, who would give
-efficient first aid to any one who was injured, and would assist the
-police in removing them to the hospital or their own homes.
-
-We are glad to observe that as one result of Professor Chiene’s appeal,
-a Committee of Employers in Edinburgh and Leith is being formed for
-the purpose of having employees instructed in the manner proposed, so
-that many of the latter may be able to give practical assistance in the
-event of accidents happening where they are employed.
-
-
-THE LAST OF THE OLD WESTMINSTER HOUSES.
-
-All who take any interest in the topographical antiquities of the
-ancient city of Westminster will learn—not perhaps without some feeling
-akin to regret—that the last of the old original houses of that old
-medieval city was taken down during the past summer to make room for
-more convenient and spacious premises. The house has been thought
-to be over five hundred years old, having been erected in or about
-the reign of Edward III. It belonged to the Messrs Dent, well-known
-provision-dealers, by whose predecessors the business was founded in
-the year 1750. The shop floor was three steps _below_ the level of the
-pavement outside, and the ceiling of the shop was so low that a small
-man could touch it easily with his hand. The building contained several
-large and commodious rooms up-stairs, the first floor projecting, as
-usual in such houses, beyond the wall about a foot. The beams used
-throughout were heavy, massive, and very hard old English oak; and the
-roof was covered with old-fashioned red tiles. The house stood at the
-western corner of Tothill Street, where that street joins the Broadway.
-A few years ago, several such houses were to be seen on the north side
-of Tothill Street, but as nearly the whole of that side was taken by
-the new Aquarium, the quaint old houses were of course removed. Now
-that the old one above referred to is down, they are all gone, and
-nothing is left of old Westminster city but its grand and matchless
-Abbey; and long may its majestic beauty continue to adorn a spot
-celebrated for so many deeply historical memories.
-
-
-THE RECENT MARVELLOUS SUNSETS.
-
-The marvellous sunsets which have lately been common all over the world
-have led to a mass of correspondence and conjectures upon the part of
-scientific men. Perhaps the fullest and most interesting contribution
-to the literature of the subject is the long article contributed to
-the _Times_ by Mr Norman Lockyer, who, with many others, is disposed
-to attribute the phenomena to the presence in the upper regions of the
-atmosphere of a vast quantity of volcanic dust, the outcome of the
-terrible eruption—one of the most terrible ever recorded—which took
-place at Krakatoa in August last. In corroboration of this hypothesis,
-another correspondent calls attention to the circumstance that similar
-phenomena were observed in 1783, and are recorded in White’s _Selborne_
-as follows: ‘The sun at noon looked as blank as a clouded moon, and
-shed a rose-coloured ferruginous light on the ground and floors of
-rooms, but was particularly lurid and blood-coloured at rising and
-setting. The country-people began to look with superstitious awe at
-the red lowering aspect of the sun; and indeed there was reason for
-the most enlightened person to be apprehensive; for all the while
-Calabria and part of the isle of Sicily were torn and convulsed with
-earthquakes, and about that juncture a volcano sprang out of the sea on
-the coast of Norway.’
-
-
-
-
-NIGHT.
-
-
- O gentle Night! O thought-inspiring Night!
- Humbly I bow before thy sovereign power;
- Sadly I own thy all-unequalled might
- To calm weak mortal in his darkest hour:
- Spreading thy robe o’er all the mass of care,
- Thou bidd’st the sorrowful no more despair.
-
- When high in heaven thou bidd’st thy torches shine,
- Casting on earth a holy, peaceful light,
- My heart adores thee in thy calm divine,
- Is soothed by thee, O hope-inspiring Night!
- All anxious thoughts, all evil bodings fly;
- My soul doth rest, since thou, O Night! art nigh.
-
- When thou hast cast o’er all the sleeping land
- Thy darkened robe, the symbol of thy state,
- Alone beneath heaven’s mightiness I stand,
- Musing on life, eternity, and fate;
- Mayhap with concentrated thought I try
- To pierce the cloud of heaven’s great mystery.
-
- ’Tis then sweet music in the air I hear,
- Like rippling waters falling soft and low;
- With soul enraptured do I list, yet fear—
- ’Tis not such music as we mortals know;
- It wafts the soul from earthly things away,
- Leaving behind the senseless frame of clay.
-
- Friends, kindly faces crowd around me there,
- Friends loved the better since they passed away,
- Leaving a legacy of wild despair—
- And now I see them as in full orb’d day,
- The long-lamented once again descry,
- Bask in each smile, gaze in each speaking eye.
-
- O blest reunion, Night’s almighty gift,
- Lent for a time unto the thoughtful mind;
- When memory can o’er the clouds uplift
- The startled soul away from all mankind,
- Throw wide eternity’s majestic gate,
- And grant a view of the immortal state.
-
- And thou, O Night! who can’st these spirits raise,
- Giv’st immortality to mortal eyes,
- To thee I tune mine unadornèd praise,
- And chant thy glories to the list’ning skies:
- Waft, O ye winds! the floating notes along;
- Ye woods and mountains, echo back the song.
-
- ROBERT A. NEILSON.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Conductor of CHAMBERS’S JOURNAL begs to direct the attention of
-CONTRIBUTORS to the following notice:
-
-_1st._ All communications should be addressed to the ‘Editor, 339
- High Street, Edinburgh.’
-
-_2d._ For its return in case of ineligibility, postage-stamps
- should accompany every manuscript.
-
-_3d._ MANUSCRIPTS should bear the author’s full _Christian_ name,
- Surname, and Address, legibly written; and should be written on
- white (not blue) paper, and on one side of the leaf only.
-
-_4th._ Offerings of Verse should invariably be accompanied by a
- stamped and directed envelope.
-
-_If the above rules are complied with, the Editor will do his best to
-insure the safe return of ineligible papers._
-
- * * * * *
-
-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 CHAMBERS'S JOURNAL OF POPULAR
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-1884 ***
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-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Chambers's Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, Fifth Series, No. 4, Vol. I, January 26, 1884, by Various</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-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 <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Chambers's Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, Fifth Series, No. 4, Vol. I, January 26, 1884</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Various</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: April 05, 2021 [eBook #64994]</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Susan Skinner, Eric Hutton and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHAMBERS'S JOURNAL OF POPULAR LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART, FIFTH SERIES, NO. 4, VOL. I, JANUARY 26, 1884 ***</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_49"></a>{49}</span></p>
-
-<h1>CHAMBERS’S JOURNAL<br />
-OF<br />
-POPULAR<br />
-LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART.</h1>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='center'>
-
-
-
-<!-- Autogenerated TOC. Modify or delete as required. -->
-
-<a href="#ANOTHER_WORD_TO_LITERARY">ANOTHER WORD TO LITERARY BEGINNERS.</a><br />
-<a href="#BY_MEAD_AND_STREAM">BY MEAD AND STREAM.</a><br />
-<a href="#THE_FIRE_OF_FRENDRAUGHT">THE FIRE OF FRENDRAUGHT.</a><br />
-<a href="#TWO_DAYS_IN_A_LIFETIME">TWO DAYS IN A LIFETIME.</a><br />
-<a href="#LONDON_BONDED_WAREHOUSES">LONDON BONDED WAREHOUSES.</a><br />
-<a href="#THE_MONTH">THE MONTH: SCIENCE AND ARTS.</a><br />
-<a href="#BOOK_GOSSIP">BOOK GOSSIP.</a><br />
-<a href="#OCCASIONAL_NOTES">OCCASIONAL NOTES.</a><br />
-<a href="#NIGHT">NIGHT.</a><br />
-
-<!-- End Autogenerated TOC. -->
-
-</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="figcenter" id="header" style="max-width: 37.5em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/header.jpg" alt="Chambers’s Journal of Popular Literature, Science,
-and Art. Fifth Series. Established by William and Robert Chambers, 1832. Conducted by R. Chambers (Secundus)." />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-<div class="center">
-<div class="header">
-<p class="floatl"><span class="smcap">No. 4.—Vol. I.</span></p>
-<p class="floatr"><span class="smcap">Price</span> 1½<em>d.</em></p>
-<p class="floatc">SATURDAY, JANUARY 26, 1884.</p>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="ANOTHER_WORD_TO_LITERARY">ANOTHER WORD TO LITERARY
-BEGINNERS.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Within</span> these few years past we have from time
-to time given a word of warning and of encouragement
-to Literary Aspirants. We do not use the
-latter word in any disparaging sense; but simply
-as the only one which fully embraces the great
-and constantly increasing class of persons, who,
-as writers of matter good, bad, and indifferent,
-are now weekly and daily knocking for admission
-at the doors of Literature. We have always been
-favourable to giving encouragement to young
-writers of ability, and never a year passes but we
-are able to introduce a few fresh contributors to
-the world of periodical literature. But this encouragement
-must necessarily be within certain lines,
-otherwise evil and not good would accrue to many.
-We are from time to time reminded by correspondents
-of what a popular novelist, possibly
-in a half-jocular mood, advised in this matter.
-His advice to parents amounted to this, that
-if they had an educated son or daughter with
-no particular calling in life, but in need of
-one, they had only to supply him or her with
-pens, ink, and paper, and a literary calling might
-at once be entered upon. We fear too many have
-laid, and daily lay, this flattering unction to their
-souls. In the majority of cases, disappointment
-and heart-sickness can alone be derived from the
-experiment.</p>
-
-<p>In order to give those outside the circle of
-editorial cognisance some idea of the amount of
-literary matter sent in by outsiders, and which
-falls to be adjudicated upon on its merits, we
-subjoin an abstract of the number of manuscripts
-received by us during the twelve months from
-August 1882 to August 1883. During that period
-we have had offered to us in all 3225 manuscripts,
-of which 2065 were contributions in prose, and 1160
-in verse. These offerings varied from each other
-to the utmost extent both as to size and subject,
-from a few stanzas of verse to the bulk of a three-volume
-novel, and came to us from all quarters
-of the English-speaking world, England, Scotland,
-Ireland, the Continent, America, India, Africa,
-Australia, New Zealand, and elsewhere. Of the
-2065 prose manuscripts, 300 were accepted by us
-for publication, or fourteen per cent. of the whole.
-Of the 1160 pieces of verse, only 30 were accepted,
-or less than three per cent. of the total. Taking
-the two classes of contributions together, of the
-3225 manuscripts received, 330 were accepted—that
-is, of every hundred manuscripts received, ten
-were retained by us and ninety returned to their
-authors. If we estimate this pile of contributions
-according to its bulk, and allowing a very moderate
-average length to each manuscript, the whole, if
-printed, would have filled 9125 pages of this
-<i>Journal</i>, or as much as would have sufficed for
-eleven of our yearly volumes.</p>
-
-<p>The lesson to be derived from this by literary
-beginners is, not to be over-sanguine as to the
-acceptance of any article offered to magazines,
-knowing the great competition that is constantly
-going on for a place in their pages. It is true
-that those who possess the literary faculty in a
-sufficient degree will, though not perhaps without
-suffering many rejections and disappointments,
-ultimately assert their claims and obtain the coveted
-place; but even in such cases, the early struggle
-may sometimes be severe and long-continued.
-Nor must contributors go away under the impression
-that all rejected offerings are necessarily of
-an inferior quality. This is far from being the
-case. Great numbers of the prose articles in the
-above enumeration of rejected contributions, were
-articles with which no fault might be found in a
-literary sense. But it must be borne in mind that
-a magazine is limited in its space; and that when
-a definite part of that space has been allotted to
-articles or tales which have been supplied under
-previous arrangements made between author and
-editor, the remaining space may afford but small
-room for the number of claimants thereto. An
-article, therefore, which is perfectly equal to the
-literary standard of a magazine, may have to be
-returned by the editor on various grounds, such as
-that the subject of the paper does not come within
-the scope of his present requirements, or that an<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_50"></a>{50}</span>
-article has already appeared or been accepted on
-the same subject, or that some one has been
-already engaged to write upon it; or, in short,
-a dozen reasons might be found, any one of which
-would be sufficient to cause the rejection of a
-given article. But what one magazine rejects
-another may be in need of; so that a really good
-article is almost certain of finding its billet somewhere.</p>
-
-<p>In these circumstances, while there is nothing
-that need eventually discourage a capable or promising
-writer, there is much to make parents
-and guardians take warning before they set a
-young man or woman adrift on the sea of life
-with only his or her pen as a rudder. Literature,
-like painting, affords to persons of inferior
-or only mediocre powers a very precarious
-means of livelihood. Besides, places are not
-to be got in the literary any more than in the
-artistic world without evidence of genuine capacity
-being given by the claimant. The number of
-aspirants is no doubt from year to year being
-winnowed, until the grain shall be finally selected
-from the chaff; but the process, we admit, is not
-pleasant to those who do not come within the
-metaphorical category of grain. Scarcely a week
-passes but we receive letters requesting us, from
-the specimens of work inclosed, to say whether
-the contributor might hope to become a successful
-writer for magazines, as he or she is presently
-a clerk or a governess, and would wish
-to attain a better position, which position, ‘kind
-friends’—often in this same matter, if they knew
-it, very unkind—think, might be reached through
-the channel of literature. It is not difficult, as a
-rule, to advise in such cases. It is, stick to your
-present occupation, if it is only respectable, and
-on no account throw it up in the hope of having
-your name engrossed in the higher rolls of literary
-achievement. Even in the case of what may be
-called successful minor contributors to periodical
-literature, it can hardly be possible, we should
-think, for them to rely <i>wholly</i> upon the results
-for a livelihood. Nor is it necessary to do so.
-The kind of literary work to which we allude
-can, in general, be carried on side by side with
-the work of an ordinary occupation or profession,
-as it is rarely that the articles of a writer of
-this class are in such constant demand as to
-make it necessary to give his or her whole time to
-their production. When this combination can be
-maintained, a useful source of income is added,
-without in all cases necessarily detracting from
-one’s professional industry otherwise.</p>
-
-<p>What we have said is not with the object of
-repressing literary ambition, but of preventing
-literary aspirants from setting out under false
-ideas, or quitting the successful pursuit of their
-ordinary occupations in the too frequently unrealised
-hope of rising to literary distinction. It
-must not be forgot that the desire to write does
-not necessarily comprehend the power to write
-well; or that, even with those who succeed in
-demonstrating their literary capabilities, such
-success is obtained without hard work and long
-practice. As we have said on former occasions,
-writers must not start, as is too often done,
-on the assumption that their possession of
-<i>genius</i> is to be taken for granted; genius only
-comes once in a while—once or twice in a generation
-perhaps. It is always safer to begin upon
-the supposition that your faculties are of the kind
-which, like granite, will only shine by polishing;
-and if genius should be evoked in the process, the
-polishing will not harm it. We would not wish
-to dim the roseate hues which the future has for
-those who are young; but neither would we
-wish to be responsible for encouraging within
-them hopes that are not likely to be realised,
-or only realised under special powers of application,
-or by the operation of special natural
-faculties.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak x-ebookmaker-important" id="BY_MEAD_AND_STREAM">BY MEAD AND STREAM.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3>CHAPTER VI.—ALONE.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> was a strange life that of Mr Lloyd Hadleigh.
-A solitary life, notwithstanding the consciousness
-of success, the possession of a considerable fortune,
-and the knowledge that it had been earned by
-his own ability. He was still young enough
-to have the capacity for enjoyment, if age were
-numbered by years; still young enough to have
-been the companion of his children and to have
-made new friendships. But there was something
-so cold and reserved in his bearing, that although
-he had many acquaintances, he had no friends
-or companions; and the good fortune he possessed
-made many people resent his ungracious
-manner.</p>
-
-<p>With everything apparently that man could
-desire to secure happiness, he lived absolutely
-alone. His nearest approach to companionship
-was with his eldest son Coutts Hadleigh. But
-even with him there was constraint, and their
-companionship appeared to be due more to their
-close association in business than to affection.</p>
-
-<p>This Coutts Hadleigh was a tall, wiry man,
-who entered into the pleasures of the world
-with discretion, and a cynical smile always on
-his face, as if he were laughing at the pleasures
-rather than in them. He was a captain of Volunteers,
-and as punctual in his attendance upon
-drill as in attendance at his office. For he was
-a strict man of business, and was now the practical
-manager as well as leading partner in the house
-of Hadleigh and Co., shipbrokers and bankers.
-He neither laughed at his brother Philip’s indifference
-to the affairs of the office, nor attempted
-to advise him. Sometimes, however, he would
-say, with one of his dry, cynical smiles: ‘You
-are doing everything you can, Phil, to keep
-yourself out of a partnership, and you will be
-sorry for it some day—especially if you mean
-to marry that young lady over the way in a
-hurry. Playing the gentleman at ease is not
-the way to make sure of the ease. However’——
-Then he would shrug his shoulders, as if washing
-his hands of the whole matter with the mental
-exclamation: ‘But just as you like; there will
-be the more for me.’ Only he never uttered that
-exclamation aloud.</p>
-
-<p>‘All right,’ Philip would say with a laugh; ‘my
-time is coming; and I prefer happiness to a
-banking account.’</p>
-
-<p>There the subject would drop, and Coutts would
-turn away with a pitying smile.</p>
-
-<p>As for the three daughters, they accepted their
-position with as much content as is permitted to
-young ladies who have nothing whatever to do
-but go through the routine of paying formal<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_51"></a>{51}</span>
-visits in their carriage, attending garden parties
-in summer and dining out in winter. Miss
-Hadleigh (Beatrice) had been lately engaged to a
-thriving young merchant, and in consequence
-assumed a dignified primness. The other two,
-Caroline and Bertha, were looking forward to
-that happy state; and, meanwhile, having just
-been released from boarding-school, found their
-chief delights in fiction and lawn-tennis. They
-had every opportunity to enjoy themselves in
-their own ways, for their father interfered little
-with them, whilst he never stinted them in
-pocket-money.</p>
-
-<p>Ringsford Manor was a large old-fashioned
-building of red brick, with a wing added by Mr
-Hadleigh, when he came into possession, for a
-new dining-room and a billiard-room. The house
-stood in about twenty acres of ground, on the
-borders of the Forest. The gardens were under
-the care of a Scotchman, named Sam Culver,
-whose pride it was to produce the finest pansies,
-roses, and geraniums in the neighbourhood or at
-the local flower-shows. He had also obtained a
-prize at the Crystal Palace rose-show, which made
-him more eager than ever to maintain his reputation.
-The result of this honourable ambition
-was that the grounds of Ringsford were the
-admiration of the whole county; and as the
-proprietor on certain days of the year threw
-them open to the public and invited bands of
-school-children to an annual fête, his character
-as a benefactor spread far and wide.</p>
-
-<p>Much, however, as Sam Culver’s skill as a
-gardener was admired, there were many gallants,
-old as well as young, who declared that the finest
-flower he had ever reared was his daughter,
-Pansy.</p>
-
-<p>As Mr Hadleigh was returning from his visit
-to Willowmere, he got out of the carriage about
-half a mile from his own gate and bade the
-coachman drive home. Then he proceeded to
-walk slowly into the Forest in the direction of
-the King’s Oak.</p>
-
-<p>The rich foliage, the dense clumps of bracken
-and furze, with their changing colours and varying
-lights and shades looking their best in the bright
-sunshine, did not attract his eyes. His head was
-bowed and his hands tightly clasped behind him,
-as if his thoughts were bitter ones and far away
-from the lovely scene around him. At times he
-would lift his head with a sudden jerk and look
-into space, seeing nothing.</p>
-
-<p>But as he approached the broad spreading
-King’s Oak—so called from some legendary association
-with King Charles—the loud laughter of
-children roused him from his reverie.</p>
-
-<p>Pansy Culver was seated on the ground,
-threading necklets and bracelets of buttercups
-and daisies for a group of little children who
-were capering and laughing round her. She was
-herself a child still in thought, but verging on
-womanhood in years; and the soft, bright features,
-brown with the sun, and lit by two dark, merry
-eyes, suggested that her father in his fancy for
-his favourite flowers had given her an appropriate
-name.</p>
-
-<p>She rose respectfully as Mr Hadleigh approached;
-and he halted, looking for an instant
-as if he ought to know her and did not. Then
-his eyes took in the whole scene—the bright face,
-the happy children, and the buttercups and daisies.
-Something in the appearance of the group brought
-a curiously sad expression to his face. He was
-contrasting their condition with his own: the
-little that made them so joyful, and the much
-that gave him no content.</p>
-
-<p>‘Ah, Pansy,’ he said, ‘what a fortunate girl
-you are. I wish I could change places with you—and
-yet no; that is an evil wish. Do you not
-think so?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I don’t know, sir; and I don’t know how you
-should wish to change places with me. I do not
-think many people like you would want to do
-it.’</p>
-
-<p>A slow nodding movement of his head expressed
-his pity for her ignorance of how little is required
-for real happiness, and how the contented ploughman
-is richer than he who possesses the mines
-of Golconda without content. It was that sort
-of movement which accompanies the low sibilating
-sound of tst-tst-tst.</p>
-
-<p>‘I hope you will never know, child, why a
-person like me can wish to change places with
-one like you.’</p>
-
-<p>He passed on slowly, leaving the girl looking
-after him in wonderment. When she told her
-father of this singular encounter, he only said:
-‘I’m doubtin’ the poor man has something on
-his mind. But it’s none of our business; and
-you ken there is only one kind o’ riches that
-brings happiness.’</p>
-
-<p>Mr Hadleigh spent the rest of that day in his
-library. He was writing, but not letters. At
-intervals he would rise and pace the floor, as if
-agitated by what he wrote. Then he seemed to
-force himself to sit down again at the desk and
-continue writing, and would presently repeat the
-former movement.</p>
-
-<p>By the time that Philip returned, several sheets
-of closely written manuscript had been carefully
-locked away in a deed-box, and the box was
-locked away in a safe which stood in the darkest
-corner of the room.</p>
-
-<p>After dinner he desired Philip to come into
-the library as soon as he had finished his cigar.
-Although he did not smoke himself, he did not
-object to the habit in others.</p>
-
-<p>‘Something queer about the governor to-night,’
-said Coutts, sipping his wine and smoking
-leisurely. ‘I have noticed him several times
-lately looking as if he had got a fit of the blues
-or dyspepsia at least, yet I don’t know how that
-can be with a man who is so careful of his
-digestion. He ought to come into town oftener.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Anything wrong in town?’ inquired Philip,
-and in his tone there was a note of consideration
-for his father: in that of Coutts there was
-none.</p>
-
-<p>‘Things never were better since I have known
-the business. That is not the cause of his queer
-humour, whatever it may be. Might be first
-touch of gout.’</p>
-
-<p>Philip rose and threw away his cigar. He did
-not like his brother’s manner when he spoke in
-this manner of their parent.</p>
-
-<p>On entering the library, he found it almost in
-darkness; for the curtains were partly drawn
-and the lamps were not lit. For a moment he
-could not see his father; but presently discovered
-him standing on the hearth, his arms crossed on
-the broad mantel-shelf, and his brow resting on
-them. He turned slowly, and his face was in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_52"></a>{52}</span>
-deep shadow, so that its expression could not be
-distinguished.</p>
-
-<p>‘I told them I did not want lights yet,’ he
-said, and there was a huskiness in his voice which
-was very unusual, as it was rather metallic in its
-clearness. ‘Will you excuse it, and sit down?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Certainly, sir; but I hope there is nothing
-seriously wrong. I trust you are not unwell?’</p>
-
-<p>There was no answer for a moment, and the
-dark outline of the figure was like a mysterious
-silhouette. Then: ‘I am not particularly well at
-present. The matter which I wish to speak to
-you about is serious; but I believe there is
-nothing wrong in it, and that we can easily come
-to an agreement about it. Will you sit down?’</p>
-
-<p>Philip obeyed, marvelling greatly as to what
-this mysterious business could be which seemed
-to disturb his father so much, making him speak
-and act so unlike himself.</p>
-
-<p class="center">(<i>To be continued.</i>)</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_FIRE_OF_FRENDRAUGHT">THE FIRE OF FRENDRAUGHT.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">About</span> six miles from the thriving market-town
-of Huntly, in Aberdeenshire, stands the mansion-house
-of Frendraught, built on the site and
-incorporating the ruins of the old castle of that
-name. In the seventeenth century it was the
-scene of a strange and inexplicable event—an
-event which, on the supposition that it was not
-accidental, might well be regarded as tragic.</p>
-
-<p>The lands of Frendraught, towards the beginning
-of the seventeenth century, were in the
-possession of James Crichton, a laird or minor
-baron of the period, sufficiently proud of that
-designation to slight and reject the title of
-viscount which his son accepted in his father’s
-lifetime. His wife was Lady Elizabeth Gordon,
-a woman of a proud and resolute character,
-daughter of the Earl of Sutherland, and a ‘near
-cousin,’ as Spalding expresses it, of the Marquis
-of Huntly, a connection which should be remembered
-in the course of the narrative. On the
-crest of a knoll that overlooks the river Deveron,
-stood and still stands the Tower of Kinnairdy,
-another baronial residence of Crichton, at the
-distance of a few miles from Frendraught. Four
-miles above Kinnairdy, on the same river, stood
-Rothiemay, the home of the Gordons of Rothiemay,
-a sept of that numerous and powerful clan
-of which the Marquis of Huntly was chief. The
-lairds of Frendraught and of Rothiemay were thus
-neighbours, at a period when neighbourhood as
-surely engendered strife as friction develops heat.
-It chanced that Gordon of Rothiemay sold a
-portion of his lands adjoining the Deveron to
-the laird of Frendraught.</p>
-
-<p>At the present day, there is perhaps no river
-in Scotland which at certain seasons of the year
-furnishes better sport to the angler for salmon
-than the Deveron, and its excellence in this respect
-must equally have characterised it two centuries
-ago; for the right to the valuable salmon-fishing
-appertaining to the land which had been sold
-became the subject of bitter strife between the
-two lairds. Frendraught appealed to the law;
-but while the cause was winding its way slowly
-through the courts, he managed, by persecution
-and provocation, to hurry Rothiemay into acts of
-exasperation and illegality, which made it easy
-to procure a decree of outlawry against him.
-After this, as a contemporary historian has it,
-‘Rothiemay would hearken to no conditions of
-peace, neither would he follow the advice of his
-wisest friends.’ He made a raid upon the lands
-of Crichton, who thereupon obtained from the
-Privy-council a commission to apprehend him.</p>
-
-<p>On the 1st of January 1630, the laird of
-Frendraught, accompanied by Sir George Ogilvie
-of Banff, and, among others of less note, by young
-Leslie of Pitcaple and John Meldrum of Reidhill,
-set out to seize Rothiemay in his own domain.
-Rothiemay, having learned their intention, mustered
-what forces he could, and marched to meet
-them. A desperate encounter took place. Rothiemay’s
-horse was killed under him. He continued
-to fight on foot till his followers were driven
-from the field, leaving his son and himself still
-maintaining a struggle against outnumbering foes.
-At length he fell, whereupon young Rothiemay
-sought safety in flight. His father, covered
-with wounds, was left for dead on the ground;
-but having been carried home by his friends,
-survived for three days. On Frendraught’s side,
-one gentleman was slain, and John Meldrum—of
-whom more will be heard—was wounded.</p>
-
-<p>The feud between the two houses, rancorous
-enough before, was prosecuted with the deadliest
-animosity now that blood had been shed on both
-sides. Deeds of savage reprisal ensued; and as
-each party sought to strengthen itself by enlisting
-new adherents, the area of strife grew wider, and
-assumed proportions so menacing to the public
-peace, that the Privy-council made earnest but
-fruitless endeavours to effect a reconciliation
-between the hostile houses.</p>
-
-<p>Young Gordon of Rothiemay feeling himself
-the weaker in the struggle, called to his aid the
-notorious Highland cateran, James Grant, and his
-band. It is singular that we have neither ballad
-nor legend commemorating the career of this person—a
-career which, in its extraordinary feats of
-daring insolence, its marvellous escapes, and dark
-deeds of blood, outrivals all that is recorded of
-Rob Roy. At this juncture, while Grant and his
-followers were mustering at Rothiemay House
-for a raid against Frendraught, and when the
-Earl of Moray, Lieutenant of the North, had
-confessed himself utterly unable to suppress the
-commotion, a commission, sent by the Privy-council,
-associating itself with the Marquis of
-Huntly, succeeded in effecting an arrangement
-between the hostile parties. Grant was dismissed
-to his mountain fortresses; Crichton and Rothiemay
-were persuaded to meet at Strathbogie, the
-residence of the Marquis, where, after much earnest
-intercession, the commissioners succeeded in settling
-terms of peace and reconciliation. The deeds of
-blood were mutually forgiven, and, as a concession
-to the greatest sufferer, Crichton agreed to
-pay fifty thousand merks to the widow of the
-slain laird of Rothiemay. Over this arrangement
-all parties shook hands in the orchard of
-Strathbogie.</p>
-
-<p>Little did they suspect, while congratulating
-themselves on the termination of the quarrel,
-that one spark had been left smouldering, which
-was soon to blaze into a more destructive conflagration
-than that which had just been extinguished.
-Among those who had fought on
-Crichton’s side against the laird of Rothiemay
-we have mentioned one John Meldrum as having<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_53"></a>{53}</span>
-been wounded. This Meldrum was one of those
-ruffianly retainers, half-gentleman half-groom,
-who hung on the skirts of the more powerful
-barons, ready for any task assigned them without
-a question or a scruple. At this time he was
-an outlaw. Conceiving that Frendraught had
-too lightly estimated his service and his sufferings,
-he persecuted the laird with appeals for
-ampler remuneration, and finding them disregarded,
-took satisfaction in his own way by
-stealing two of the laird’s best horses from a
-meadow adjoining the castle.</p>
-
-<p>Crichton at first appealed to the law; but
-Meldrum failed to appear in answer to the
-charge, and was outlawed. Crichton therefore
-received a commission to arrest him; and learning
-that he had taken refuge with the Leslies of
-Pitcaple, relatives by marriage, set out with a
-small party in quest of him; but the encounter
-only resulted in one of Crichton’s friends wounding
-a son of Pitcaple.</p>
-
-<p>Afraid of the consequences of this new feud,
-and remembering the good offices of the Marquis
-of Huntly on a former occasion, Crichton solicited
-his intercession with the laird of Pitcaple.
-The Marquis invited both lairds to the Bog
-of Gicht, now Gordon Castle; but old Leslie
-remained obdurate, declaring that he would entertain
-no terms of reconciliation until he saw the
-issue of his son’s wound; and departed with
-unabated resentment. The Marquis detained
-Crichton two days longer, having also as his
-guest young Gordon of Rothiemay; and on
-Crichton’s departure, fearing that he might be
-attacked by the Leslies, he sent as an escort his
-second son, Viscount Melgum (who was also frequently
-called Aboyne), and young Rothiemay,
-with their attendants. The party reached Frendraught
-Castle in the evening (October 8, 1630);
-and the Viscount, with his friend Rothiemay,
-was induced by the entreaties of Crichton and
-his lady, to remain for the night.</p>
-
-<p>Thus far the course of events is clear and
-intelligible; what followed is involved in doubt
-and obscurity. Spalding, in his <i>Memorials</i>, says:
-‘They [the guests] were well entertained, supped
-merrily, and to bed went joyfully. The Viscount
-was laid in a bed in the old tower (going off of
-the hall), and standing upon a vault, wherein
-there was a round hole, devised of old just
-under Aboyne’s bed. Robert Gordon, born in
-Sutherland, his servitor, and English Will, his
-page, were both laid beside him in the same
-chamber. The laird of Rothiemay, with some
-servants beside him, was laid in an upper chamber
-just above Aboyne’s chamber; and in another
-room above that chamber were laid George
-Chalmer of Noth, and George Gordon, another
-of the Viscount’s servants, with whom also was
-laid Captain Rollok, then in Frendraught’s own
-company. Thus all being at rest, about midnight
-that dolorous tower took fire in so sudden and
-furious a manner, yea, and in a clap, that this
-noble Viscount, the laird of Rothiemay, English
-Will, Colin Eviot, another of Aboyne’s servitors,
-and other two, being six in number, were cruelly
-burnt and tormented to the death but [without]
-help or relief; the laird of Frendraught, his lady
-[both of whom had slept in a separate wing of the
-building], and his whole household looking on without
-moving or stirring to deliver them from the
-fury of this fearful fire, as was reported. Robert
-Gordon, called Sutherland Gordon, being in the
-Viscount’s chamber, escaped this fire with his life.
-George Chalmer and Captain Rollok, being in
-the third room, escaped also this fire; and, as was
-said, Aboyne might have saved himself also, if
-he had gone out of doors, which he would not
-do, but suddenly ran up-stairs to Rothiemay’s
-chamber and wakened him to rise; and as he
-is wakening him, the timber passage and lofting
-of the chamber hastily takes fire, so that none
-of them could win down stairs again; so they
-turned to a window looking to the close, where
-they piteously cried Help, help, many times,
-for God’s cause. The laird and the lady, with
-their servants, all seeing and hearing this woful
-crying, but made no help nor manner of helping;
-which they perceiving, they cried oftentimes
-mercy at God’s hand for their sins, then clasped
-in other’s arms, and cheerfully suffered this cruel
-martyrdom.... It is reported that upon the
-morn after this woful fire, the lady Frendraught,
-daughter to the Earl of Sutherland, and near
-cousin to the Marquis, busked in a white plaid,
-and riding on a small nag, having a boy leading
-her horse, without any more in her company, in
-this pitiful manner came weeping and mourning
-to the Bog [Gordon Castle], desiring entry to
-speak with my lord; but this was refused; so
-she returned back to her own house the same
-gate [way] she came, comfortless.’</p>
-
-<p>It is clear from this extract that Spalding’s
-opinion was that which the Marquis of Huntly
-adopted after consultation with his friends, namely,
-that the fire was not accidental, but the result
-of a plot, in which Frendraught and his lady
-were accomplices. This belief takes forcible
-expression in the ballad which was composed
-on the occasion, and is still popular in the neighbourhood
-of Frendraught. It is sufficient to
-cite a few verses:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">When steeds were saddled and well bridled,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And ready for to ride,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Then out came her and false Frendraught</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Inviting them to bide.</div>
- <div class="verse indent3">.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">When they were dressëd in their cloaths,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And ready for to boun,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The doors and windows was all secured,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The roof-tree burning down.</div>
- <div class="verse indent3">.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">‘O mercy, mercy, Lady Frendraught!</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Will ye not sink with sin?</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For first your husband killed my father,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And now you burn his son.’</div>
- <div class="verse indent3">.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Oh, then outspoke her Lady Frendraught,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And loudly did she cry—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">‘It were great pity for good Lord John,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">But none for Rothiemay;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But the keys are casten in the deep draw-well;</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Ye cannot get away.’</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>That the laird of Frendraught and his lady
-either contrived the deed or acquiesced in it, is
-difficult of belief. The presumptions generally are
-against such a conclusion. There is no reason for
-supposing that the laird of Frendraught was not
-honest in reconciling himself to Rothiemay;
-but even allowing him to be wicked enough
-to plan the destruction by fire of the son of
-the man whom he had slain, while a guest
-under his roof, how is it possible to believe
-that he chose a plan which must involve the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_54"></a>{54}</span>
-death of Viscount Melgum, a son of the Marquis
-of Huntly, and hitherto his friend?</p>
-
-<p>Crichton was perfectly aware of the popular
-suspicion; and the fruitless visit of his wife
-to Gordon Castle sufficiently disclosed the sentiments
-of the Marquis. Shortly after the fire,
-therefore, he placed himself under the protection
-of the Lord Chancellor, offering to undergo any
-trial, and to assist in every way in discovering
-the perpetrators of the crime.</p>
-
-<p>The Privy-council made the most strenuous
-efforts to pierce the mystery. Before the end
-of the year, John Meldrum and three of his
-servants, and about thirty of the servants or
-dependents of Crichton, had been apprehended,
-and about as many more summoned to Edinburgh
-to give evidence; but not the slightest clue was
-obtained as to the origin of the fire.</p>
-
-<p>In the following April, a commission, consisting
-of the Earl Marischal, the bishops of Aberdeen
-and Moray, with three others, was sent to investigate
-the occurrence on the spot. They cautiously
-reported thus: ‘We find by all likelihood that
-the fire whereby the house was burned was first
-raised in a vault, wherein we find evidences of fire
-in three sundry parts; one at the furthest end
-thereof, another towards the middle, and the
-third on that gable which is hard by the hole
-that is under the bed which was in the chamber
-above. Your good lordships will excuse us if
-we determine not concerning the fire whether it
-was accidental or of set purpose by the hand of
-man; only this much it seemeth probable unto
-us, after consideration of the frame of the house
-and other circumstances, that no hand from
-without could have raised the fire without aid
-from within.’</p>
-
-<p>For a year the Council did nothing, being
-utterly at a loss as to what they should do;
-but public indignation, and the desire to bring
-home the guilt to the criminals—if guilt there
-were—had not abated, and, stimulated by a
-message on the subject from the king, the Council
-actually resolved to devote one day every week
-to further investigation. At the same time, John
-Meldrum was ordered to be tried by torture.</p>
-
-<p>In August 1632, John Tosh, master of the
-household at Frendraught, was brought to the
-bar of the Court of Justiciary on the charge of
-setting fire to the vault from within. It was
-pleaded for him that, having endured the torture
-of the ‘boots,’ and thereafter of the ‘pilniewinks’
-or thumbikins, and having on oath declared his
-innocence, he could not be put to further trial;
-and this plea was sustained.</p>
-
-<p>In August 1633—nearly three years after the
-fire—John Meldrum of Reidhill was put upon
-his trial, charged with having set fire to the
-vault from the outside. It was urged against
-him, that he had associated himself with James
-Grant, the notorious robber, in order to wreak
-his vengeance on Frendraught; that he had
-threatened to do Frendraught an evil turn some
-day; and being asked how, had said that the
-laird would be burned; and that he had been
-seen riding towards Frendraught Castle on the
-evening before the fire. It was suggested that
-he had set fire to the vault by throwing combustibles,
-such as powder, brimstone, and pitch,
-through the narrow slits that served as windows.
-On such evidence as was offered against him,
-no jury at the present day would convict. The
-assumption that fire had been introduced from
-the outside was directly against the conclusion
-of the Council’s commission; and Meldrum’s
-counsel insisted on the impossibility of kindling
-a fire in a vault to which the only access from
-the outside was by narrow slits piercing a wall
-ten feet thick. Nevertheless, Meldrum was convicted,
-and hanged.</p>
-
-<p>The jury seem to have thought some victim
-should be offered for the public satisfaction, and
-that no injustice would be done to John Meldrum
-in assigning him as a sacrifice, seeing that he had
-done quite enough to deserve hanging, even if
-he had no hand in the burning of Frendraught
-Castle. With the execution of Meldrum, all
-further proceedings in the case ceased; but suspicion
-and animosity rankled long in the House
-of Huntly against Frendraught. The origin of
-the fire still remains a mystery.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="TWO_DAYS_IN_A_LIFETIME">TWO DAYS IN A LIFETIME.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph3">A STORY IN EIGHT CHAPTERS.</p>
-
-
-<h3>CHAPTER IV.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Captain Bowood</span> had spoken truly. Lady Dimsdale
-and Mr Boyd were sauntering slowly in the
-direction of the house, deep in conversation, and
-quite unaware that they were being watched from
-a little distance by the woman in black whom Mrs
-Bowood had taken to be an applicant for the post
-of French governess.</p>
-
-<p>Oscar Boyd was a tall, well-built man, verging
-towards his fortieth year. His complexion was
-deeply imbrowned by years of tropical sunshine.
-He had a silky chestnut beard and moustache,
-and hair of the same colour, which, however, was
-no longer so plentiful as it once had been. He
-had clear, frank-looking eyes, a firm-set mouth,
-and a face which gave you the impression of a
-man who was at once both thoughtful and shrewd.
-It was one of those kindly yet resolute faces
-which seem to invite confidence, but would never
-betray it.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Dimsdale brought quite a heap of flowers
-into the room. There was a large shallow vase
-on the centre table, which it was her intention
-to fill with her floral spoils. ‘You look as cool
-as if this were December instead of June,’ she
-said.</p>
-
-<p>‘I have been used to much hotter suns than
-that of England.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I hardly knew you again at first—not till I
-heard you speak.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Fifteen years are a long time.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Yet already it seems to me as if I should have
-known you anywhere. You are different, and
-yet the same.’</p>
-
-<p>‘When I arrived last evening, I did not know
-that you were here. I heard your voice before
-I saw you, and the fifteen years seemed to vanish
-like a dream.’</p>
-
-<p>‘It seems to me like a dream when I go back
-in memory to those old days at the vicarage, and
-call to mind all that happened there.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_55"></a>{55}</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Do you ever think of that evening when you
-and I parted?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I have not forgotten it,’ answered Lady Dimsdale
-in a low voice.</p>
-
-<p>‘How little we thought that we should not
-meet again for so long a time!’</p>
-
-<p>‘How little we foresaw all that would happen
-to us in the interval!’</p>
-
-<p>‘If that telegram had arrived ten minutes later,
-how different our lots in life might have been!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Life seems made up of Ifs and Buts,’ she
-answered with a little sigh.</p>
-
-<p>‘That evening! The scent of new-mown hay
-was in the air.’</p>
-
-<p>‘The clock in the old church tower had just
-struck seven.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Under the hill, a nightingale was singing.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Far off, we heard the murmur of the tide.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Fido lay basking among fallen rose-leaves
-on the terrace.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Wagging his tail lazily, as if beating time to
-some tune that was running in his head.’</p>
-
-<p>‘We stood by the wicket, watching the last load
-of hay winding slowly through the lanes. I
-seized the moment’——</p>
-
-<p>‘You seized something else.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Your hand. If you had only known how
-nervous I was! I pressed your fingers to my
-lips. “Laura, I love you,” I stammered out.’</p>
-
-<p>‘“Darling Laura,” was what he said,’ murmured
-Lady Dimsdale to herself.</p>
-
-<p>‘Before I had time for another word, Hannah
-came hurrying down the steps.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Dear old Hannah, with her mob-cap and prim
-white apron. I seem to see her now.’</p>
-
-<p>‘She had an open paper in her hand. Your
-aunt had been taken ill, and you were instructed
-to go to her by the first train. You gave me one
-look—a look that haunted me for years—and
-went into the house without a word. An hour
-later, I saw you at the train; but your father
-was there, and he kept you by his side till the
-last moment.’</p>
-
-<p>‘That miserable journey! For the first twenty
-miles I was alone; then an old lady got in.
-“Dear me, how damp this carriage feels,” she
-said. I rather fancy I had been crying.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And we never met after that, till last
-evening.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Never!’ murmured Lady Dimsdale almost
-inaudibly.</p>
-
-<p>‘Two days after our parting, I was ordered
-abroad; but I wrote to you, not once or twice
-only, but many times.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Not one line from you did I ever receive.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Then my letters must have been intercepted.
-I addressed them to your aunt’s house in Scotland,
-where you were staying at the time.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Aunt Judith had set her heart on my marrying
-Sir Thomas Dimsdale.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And would not let my letters reach you.
-Week after week and month after month, I waited
-for an answer, hoping against hope; but none
-ever came.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Week after week and month after month, I
-waited for a letter from you; but none ever
-came.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And your Aunt Judith—she who intercepted
-my letters—was accounted a good woman.’</p>
-
-<p>‘An excellent woman. Even on wet Sundays,
-she always went to church twice.’</p>
-
-<p>‘So excellent, that at length she persuaded you
-to marry Sir Thomas.’</p>
-
-<p>‘It was not her persuasion that induced me to
-marry. It was to save my father from ruin.’</p>
-
-<p>‘What a sacrifice!’</p>
-
-<p>‘You must not say that. How could anything
-I might do for my father’s sake be accounted a
-sacrifice?’</p>
-
-<p>Oscar Boyd did not answer. Lady Dimsdale’s
-white slender fingers were busy with the arrangement
-of her flowers, and he seemed absorbed in
-watching them.</p>
-
-<p>‘And you too married?’ she said at length in
-a low voice.</p>
-
-<p>‘I did—but not till more than a year after I
-read the notice of your marriage in the newspapers.
-Life seemed no longer worth living.
-I cared not what became of me. I fell into the
-toils of an adventuress, who after a time inveigled
-me into marrying her.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Your marriage was an unhappy one?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Most unhappy. After a few months, we
-separated, and I never saw my wife again. Her
-fate was a sad one. A year or two later, a
-steamer she was on board of was lost at sea;
-and so far as is known, not a soul survived to
-tell the tale.’</p>
-
-<p>‘A sad fate indeed.’</p>
-
-<p>The subject was a painful one to Oscar Boyd.
-He crossed to the window, and stood gazing out
-for a few moments in silence.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Dimsdale’s thoughts were busy. ‘What
-is there to hinder him from saying again to-day
-the words he said to me fifteen years ago?’ she
-asked herself. ‘If he only knew!’</p>
-
-<p>‘How strange it seems, Laura, to be alone with
-you again after all these years!’ He spoke from
-the window.</p>
-
-<p>A beautiful flush spread swiftly over Lady
-Dimsdale’s face. Her heart beat quickly. In
-a moment she had grown fifteen years younger.
-‘He calls me Laura!’ she murmured softly to
-herself. ‘Surely he will say the words now.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I could fancy this was the dear never-to-be-forgotten
-room in the old vicarage—that that was
-the garden outside. In another moment, Fido
-will come bounding in. Hannah will open the
-door and tell us tea is waiting. We shall hear
-your father whistling softly to himself, while
-he counts the ripening peaches on the wall.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oscar, don’t!’ cried Lady Dimsdale in a voice
-that was broken with emotion.</p>
-
-<p>Oscar Boyd came slowly back from the window,
-and stood for a few moments watching her in
-silence. Then he laid a hand gently on one of
-hers, took possession of it, looked at it for a
-moment, and then pressed it to his lips. Then
-with a lingering pressure, he let it drop, and
-walked away again to the window.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Dimsdale’s eyes followed him; she could
-have laughed or she could have cried; she was
-on the verge of both. ‘Oh, my dear one, if you
-only knew what stupid creatures you men are!’
-she said to herself. ‘Why isn’t this leap-year?’</p>
-
-<p>Presently Mr Boyd paced back again to the
-table; he seemed possessed by some demon of
-restlessness. ‘With your permission, I will relate
-a little apologue to you,’ he said; and then
-he drew up a chair near to the table and sat<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_56"></a>{56}</span>
-down. ‘I once had a friend who was a poor
-man, and was in love with a woman who was
-very rich. He had made up his mind to ask
-her to be his wife, when one day he chanced to
-hear himself stigmatised as a fortune-hunter, as
-an adventurer who sought to marry a rich wife
-in order that he might live on her money. Then,
-although he loved this woman very dearly, he
-went away without saying a word of that which
-was in his heart.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Must not your friend have been a weak-minded
-man, to let the idle talk of an empty
-busybody come between himself and happiness?
-He deserved to lose his prize. But I too have
-a little apologue to tell to you. Once on a time
-there was a woman whom circumstances compelled
-against her wishes to marry a rich old man.
-When he died, he left her all his wealth, but
-on one condition—that she should never marry
-again. Any one taking her for his wife must
-take her—for herself alone.’</p>
-
-<p>Oscar rose and pushed back his chair. His
-face flushed; a great flame of love leaped suddenly
-into his eyes. Lady Dimsdale was bending over
-her flowers. Neither of them saw the black-robed
-figure that was standing motionless by the open
-window.</p>
-
-<p>‘Laura!’ said Oscar in a voice that was scarcely
-raised above a whisper.</p>
-
-<p>She turned her head and looked at him. Their
-eyes met. For a moment each seemed to be
-gazing into the other’s heart. Then Oscar went a
-step nearer and held out both his hands. An
-instant later he had his arms round her and his
-lips were pressed to hers. ‘My own at last, after
-all these weary years!’ he murmured.</p>
-
-<p>The figure in black had come a step or two
-nearer. She flung back her veil with a sudden
-passionate gesture.</p>
-
-<p>‘Oscar Boyd!’ The words were spoken with a
-sort of slow, deliberate emphasis.</p>
-
-<p>The lovers fell apart as though a thunderbolt
-had dropped between them. Oscar’s face changed
-on the instant to a ghastly pallor. With one
-hand, he clutched the back of a chair; the other
-went up to his throat, as though there were
-something there which stopped his breathing.
-For the space of a few seconds the ticking of
-the clock on the chimney-piece was the only
-sound that broke the silence.</p>
-
-<p>Then came the question: ‘Who are you?’
-breathed rather than spoken.</p>
-
-<p>In clear incisive tones came the answer: ‘Your
-wife!’</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2">The day was three hours older.</p>
-
-<p>The news that Mr Boyd’s wife, who was supposed
-to have been drowned several years before,
-had unexpectedly proved that she was still in
-existence, was not long before it reached the ears
-of everybody at Rosemount, from Captain Bowood
-himself to the boy in the stables. As soon as
-he had recovered in some degree from the first
-shock of surprise, Oscar had gone in search of
-Mrs Bowood; and having explained to her in
-as few words as possible what had happened,
-had asked her to grant him the use of one of
-her parlours for a few hours. Mrs Bowood, who
-was the soul of hospitality, would fain have gone
-on the instant and welcomed Mrs Boyd, as she
-welcomed all her guests at Rosemount, and it
-may be with even more <i>empressement</i> than usual,
-considering the remarkable circumstances of the
-case. Mr Boyd, however, vetoed her proposition
-in a way which caused her to suspect that there
-must be something more under the surface than
-she was aware of; so, with ready tact, she forbore
-to question him further, and at once placed a
-sitting-room at his disposal.</p>
-
-<p>In this room the husband and his newly found
-wife were shut up together. Mr Boyd looked
-five years older than he had looked a few hours
-previously. He was very pale. A certain hardness
-in the lines of his mouth, unnoticed before,
-now made itself plainly observable. His brows
-were contracted; all the gladness, all the softness
-had died out of his dark eyes as completely as
-if they had never had an existence there. He
-was sitting at a table, poring over some railway
-maps and time-tables. On a sofa, separated from
-him by half the length of the room, sat his wife.
-She was a tall, dark, shapely woman, who had
-left her thirtieth birthday behind her some years
-ago. She had a profusion of black hair, and
-very bright black eyes, with a certain cold, clear
-directness of gaze in them, which for some men
-seemed to have a sort of special charm. Certainly,
-they looked like eyes that could never melt with
-sympathy or be softened by tears. She had a
-long Grecian nose, and full red lips; but her chin
-was too heavy and rounded for the rest of her
-face. Her clear youthful complexion owed probably
-as much to art as it did to nature; but
-it was art so skilfully applied as sometimes to
-excite the envy of those of her own sex to whom
-such secrets were secrets no longer. In any case,
-most men conceded that she was still a very
-handsome woman, and it was not likely that
-she was unaware of the fact.</p>
-
-<p>She sat for a little while tapping impatiently
-with one foot on the carpet, and glancing furtively
-at the impassive face bent over its books and
-maps, which seemed for the time to have forgotten
-that there was any such person as she in existence.
-At length she could keep silent no longer. ‘You
-do not seem particularly delighted by the return
-of your long-lost wife, who was saved from shipwreck
-by a miracle. Many men would be beside
-themselves with joy; but you are a philosopher,
-and know how to hide your feelings. <i>Eh bien!</i>
-if you are not overjoyed to see me, I am overjoyed
-to see you; and I love you so very dearly, that
-I will never leave you again.’ Only a slight
-foreign accent betrayed the fact that she was not
-an Englishwoman.</p>
-
-<p>Oscar Boyd took no more notice of her than
-if she had been addressing herself to the empty
-air.</p>
-
-<p>She rose and crossed the room to the fireplace,
-and glanced at herself in the glass. There was
-a dangerous light in her eyes. ‘If he does not
-speak to me, I shall strike him!’ she said to herself.
-Then aloud: ‘I have travelled six thousand miles
-in search of you, and now that I have found you,
-you have not even one kiss to greet me with!
-What a heart of marble yours must be!’</p>
-
-<p>Still the impassive figure at the table made
-no more sign than if it had been carved in
-stone.</p>
-
-<p>There was a pretty Venetian glass ornament
-on the chimney-piece. Mrs Boyd took it up and
-dashed it savagely on the hearth, where it was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_57"></a>{57}</span>
-shattered to a hundred fragments. Then with
-white face and passion-charged eyes, she turned
-and faced her husband. ‘Oscar Boyd, why don’t
-you speak to your wife?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Because I have nothing to say to her.’ He
-spoke as coldly and quietly as he might have
-spoken to the veriest stranger.</p>
-
-<p>She controlled her passion with an effort.
-‘Nothing to say to me! You can at least tell
-me something of your plans. Are we going to
-remain here, or are we going away, or what are
-we going to do?’</p>
-
-<p>He began deliberately to fold the map he had
-been studying. ‘We shall start for London by
-the five o’clock train,’ he said. ‘At the terminus,
-we shall separate, to meet again to-morrow at
-my lawyer’s office. It will not take long to draw
-up a deed of settlement, by which a certain
-portion of my income will for the future be paid
-over to you. After that, we shall say farewell,
-and I shall never see you again.’</p>
-
-<p>She stared at him with bewildered eyes.
-‘Never see me again!’ she gasped out. ‘Me—your
-wife!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Estelle—you know the reasons which induced
-me to vow that I would never regard you as
-my wife again. Those reasons have the same
-force now that they had a dozen years ago.
-We meet, only to part again a few hours
-hence.’</p>
-
-<p>She had regained some portion of her <i>sang-froid</i>
-by this time. A shrill mocking laugh burst
-from her lips. It was not a pleasant laugh to
-hear. ‘During my husband’s absence, I must
-try to console myself with my husband’s money.
-You are a rich man, <i>caro mio</i>; you have made
-a large fortune abroad; and I shall demand to
-be treated as a rich man’s wife.’</p>
-
-<p>‘You are mistaken,’ he answered, without the
-least trace of emotion in his manner or voice.
-‘I am a very poor man. Nearly the whole of
-my fortune was lost by a bank failure a little
-while ago.’</p>
-
-<p>His words seemed to strike her dumb.</p>
-
-<p>‘In three days I start for Chili,’ continued
-Oscar. ‘My old appointment has not been filled
-up; I shall apply to be reinstated.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And I have come six thousand miles for this!’
-muttered Estelle under her breath. She needed
-a minute or two to recover her equanimity—to
-decide what her next move should be.</p>
-
-<p>Her husband was jotting down a few notes
-with a pencil. She turned and faced him
-suddenly. ‘Oscar Boyd, I have a proposition to
-make to you,’ she said. ‘If you are as poor a
-man as you say you are—and I do not choose
-to doubt your word—I have no desire to be a
-drag on you for ever. I have come a long way
-in search of you, and it will be equally far to
-go back. Listen, then. Give me two thousand
-pounds—you can easily raise that amount among
-your fine friends—and I will solemnly promise
-to put six thousand miles of ocean between us,
-and never to seek you out or trouble you in any
-way again.’</p>
-
-<p>For a moment he looked up and gazed steadily
-into her face. ‘Impossible!’ he said drily, and
-with that he resumed his notations.</p>
-
-<p>‘Why do you say that? The sum is not a large
-one. And think! You will get rid of me for
-ever. What happiness! There will be nothing
-then to hinder you from marrying that woman
-whom I saw in your arms. Oh! I am not in
-the least jealous, although I love you so dearly,
-and although’—here she glanced at herself in
-the chimney-glass—‘that woman is not half so
-good-looking as I am. No one in this house but
-she knows that I am your wife. You have only
-to swear to her that I am an impostor, and she
-will believe you—we women are such easy fools
-where we love!—and will marry you. Que dites
-vous, cher Oscar?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Impossible.’</p>
-
-<p>‘<i>Peste!</i> I have no patience with you. You
-will never have such an offer again. Mais je
-comprends. Although your words are so cruel,
-you love me too well to let me go. As for that
-woman whom I saw you kissing, I will think no
-more of her. You did not know I was so near,
-and I forgive you.’ Here she turned to the glass
-again, gave the strings of her bonnet a little twist,
-and smoothed her left eyebrow. ‘Make haste,
-then, my darling husband, and introduce your
-wife to your fine friends, as a gentleman ought
-to do. I will ring the bell.’</p>
-
-<p>Mr Boyd rose and pushed back his chair.
-‘Pardon me—you will do nothing of the kind,’
-he said, more sternly than he had yet spoken.
-‘It is not my intention to introduce you to any
-one in this house. It would be useless. We
-start for London in a couple of hours. I have
-some final preparations to make, and will leave
-you for a few minutes. Meanwhile, I must
-request that you will not quit this room.’</p>
-
-<p>She clapped her gloved hands together and
-laughed a shrill discordant laugh. ‘And do you
-really think, Oscar Boyd, that I am the kind
-of woman to submit to all this? You ought
-to know me better—far better.’ Then with one
-of those sudden changes of mood which were
-characteristic of her, she went on: ‘And yet,
-perhaps—as I have heard some people say—a
-wife’s first duty is submission. Perhaps her
-second is, never to leave her husband. <i>Eh bien!</i>
-You shall have my submission, but—I will never
-leave you. If you go to Chili, I will follow you
-there, as I have followed you here. I will follow
-you to the ends of the earth! Do you hear? I
-will haunt you wherever you go! I will dog
-your footsteps day and night! Everywhere I
-will proclaim myself as your wife!’ She nodded
-her head at him meaningly three times, when
-she had finished her tirade.</p>
-
-<p>Standing with one hand resting on the back
-of his chair, while the other toyed with his watch-guard,
-he listened to her attentively, but without
-any visible emotion. ‘You will be good enough
-not to leave this room till my return,’ he said;
-and without another word, he went out and shut
-the door behind him.</p>
-
-<p>Her straight black eyebrows came together, and
-a volcanic gleam shot from her eyes as she gazed
-after him. ‘Why did he not lock me in?’ she
-said to herself with a sneer. She began to pace
-the room as a man might have paced it, with her
-hands behind her back and her fingers tightly
-interlocked. ‘Will nothing move him? Is it
-for this I have crossed the ocean? Is it for this
-I have tracked him? His fortune gone! I never
-dreamt of that—and they told me he was so rich.
-What an unlucky wretch I am! I should like
-to stab him—or myself—or some one. If I could<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_58"></a>{58}</span>
-but set fire to the house at midnight, and’—— She
-was interrupted by the opening of the door
-and the entrance of Sir Frederick Pinkerton. At
-the sight of a man who was also a gentleman,
-her face changed in a moment.</p>
-
-<p class="center">(<i>To be concluded next month.</i>)</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="LONDON_BONDED_WAREHOUSES">LONDON BONDED WAREHOUSES.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> thought occurred to the writer the other
-day, when seated at his desk, as an examining
-officer of Customs, in one of the extensive bonded
-vaults which are within sight of that famous
-historic pile the Tower, that a brief description
-of these warehouses—which possess in some
-respects features that are unique—might prove
-interesting to general readers. We do not know
-if any previous attempt has been made in this
-direction; if so, it has not come within the scope
-of the writer’s observation during an experience
-in London as a Civil servant of twenty years.</p>
-
-<p>In this brief sketch there are certain reflections
-that occur which may perhaps be worthy of some
-consideration. One of these is, that even in the
-most busy parts of the City there are extremely
-few persons—though they may have daily passed
-along the leading thoroughfares for years—who
-know anything about the interiors of the vast
-warehouses and immense repositories for merchandise
-of all sorts, which abound in the business
-area of London, east of Temple Bar, extending
-far down both banks of the Thames. We do not
-refer especially to the great docks, such as the
-London, St Katharine, East and West India,
-Royal Albert, Surrey Commercial, and other
-similar emporiums of commerce, which form so
-remarkable a feature of the Thames, and are only
-rivalled by the huge docks on the Mersey. Those
-establishments, it must be allowed, attract a large
-number of visitors, although these are chiefly
-strangers from the country; the strictly commercial
-classes of the City, unless intimately
-connected with the shipping interest, but rarely
-extending their explorations thitherward. Some
-favoured citizens and ‘country cousins,’ by the
-privilege of what is called technically a ‘tasting
-order,’ may, however, traverse miles of cellars,
-filled with the choicest vintages, and in the wine-vaults
-may behold the most curious fungoid forms,
-white as snow, pendent from the vaulted roofs.
-They may survey, as at the London Docks, thirty
-thousand casks of brandy in a single vault; or
-traverse the famous ‘Spice’ warehouse, redolent
-with the aromatic odours of the East; or if they
-have a penchant for Jamaica rum, by extending
-their visit to the West India Dock, they can see
-the largest collection of rum-casks to be found
-in any bonded warehouse on the habitable
-globe. But it is not to these colossal establishments
-that we wish now to refer, interesting
-and important as they may be, but rather to
-the less pretentious and smaller warehouses,
-forming a group styled officially ‘Uptown Warehouses.’</p>
-
-<p>No one passing along Crutched Friars—the
-very name suggests that strange blending of the
-past with modern commercial activity, which is
-observable in London as in other large centres
-of population—would from external signs surmise
-for a moment, that under his feet and around
-him there were acres of vaults containing tens
-of thousands of casks of port, sherry, and various
-descriptions of spirit. Yet such is the fact; and
-as a matter of detail, it may be stated that the
-stock of <i>port</i> wine in one of these vaults comprises
-the finest brands imported into the metropolis.
-The firm of B—— is well known throughout the
-commercial world of London, and is believed
-to be upwards of a century old. The original
-founder, who sprang from a very humble stock,
-died worth, it is said, two million pounds sterling,
-amassed by the skilful and honourable conduct
-of a bonding business, which had grown from
-very modest conditions indeed, to rival the huge
-proportions of the docks themselves. In fact, the
-tendency of the last few years has been decidedly
-to withdraw the bonding trade from these formerly
-gigantic establishments, and to concentrate it in
-the Uptown Warehouses. The result of this has
-been to lower the shares of the Dock Companies
-to the minimum level compatible with commercial
-solvency; while, owing to the keen rivalry with
-the smaller and more progressive bonding warehouses
-elsewhere, the charges have been reduced
-to a point that would have surprised merchants
-of past days. One great reason for the modern
-change which we have noted, is unquestionably
-the superior accessibility of the Uptown Warehouses
-to the City proper, and their comparative
-nearness to the various railway termini. Time
-and distance, in these days of excessive speed, are
-prime factors, and must in the end assert themselves.
-Besides, it is evident to all thinking men
-that we have reached a crisis in the transport of
-merchandise, and that the railway is becoming
-daily more omnipotent.</p>
-
-<p>Though we have hitherto referred only to the
-casks of vinous liquors, technically known as ‘wet
-goods,’ stored in the vaults, it must not be inferred
-that they constitute the sole description of merchandise
-contained within the walls of these
-warehouses. Tea, inclosed in chests, piled tier
-upon tier, fills a large space, and yields a very
-considerable amount of revenue to the Crown.
-Perhaps of all goods now comprised in the tariff
-as ‘dutiable,’ the collection of the tea duty, which
-is at present assessed at sixpence per pound, is
-the simplest and least expensive. In B——’s
-premises, where the stock is comparatively small,
-the annual yield of duty to the revenue is nearly
-two hundred thousand pounds. It is, however,
-far otherwise with the duty paid on ‘wet goods,’
-wine, perhaps, excepted, the rates of which,
-governed by strength, are, for wines containing
-less than twenty-six degrees of alcoholic strength—being
-mainly of French production—at one
-shilling per gallon; and for those of a greater
-degree of strength, but below the limit of forty-two
-degrees—which is the usual standard of
-Portuguese and Spanish wines—at two shillings
-and sixpence per gallon. This difference in the
-assessment of duty on the basis of strength
-between the vintages of France and Portugal,
-has been for some years a sore point with the
-latter government. Various protests have been
-made against its retention, which it must be
-admitted seems to press somewhat hardly upon
-the trade of the Iberian peninsula with this
-country; but as yet, while we write, no satisfactory
-solution has been arrived at of what is a
-real <i>quæstio vexata</i>. The collection of the spirit
-duties involves very considerable nicety and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_59"></a>{59}</span>
-calculation—whisky perhaps excepted, which is
-officially known as British Plain Spirits, and the
-duty on which is assessed at ten shillings per
-gallon of proof strength. In the case of all other
-descriptions of spirits, however, the method is
-rendered more intricate, owing to a recent regulation
-which requires the determination of the
-degree of what is styled ‘obscuration’ by distillation,
-the duty being charged at a uniform
-rate of ten shillings and fourpence per proof
-gallon.</p>
-
-<p>The laboratory tests are in the Customs establishment
-of a highly scientific character, demanding
-on the part of the operators considerable skill
-and knowledge of chemistry. The instruments
-used in the various processes—of which Sikes’s
-hydrometer and Mr Keen’s are best known—are
-of very ingenious construction, and require nice
-handling and steadiness of eye.</p>
-
-<p>The gauging of casks, which is performed by
-a large staff of, generally speaking, skilful and
-highly meritorious officers, is quite a science in
-itself, and requires years of constant practice to
-make the operator thoroughly proficient. But in
-this, as in other arts, there are of course various
-degrees of excellence. In the Customs service—and
-the same thing will doubtless apply to the
-Excise—there are gaugers who stand head and
-shoulders above their fellows, and who appear to
-have the power by merely glancing at a cask, as
-if by intuition, to tell its ‘content,’ as its holding
-capacity is officially styled. Although it has been
-the usage in certain quarters to speak in contemptuous
-terms of the functions of this deserving
-class of public servants, and to apply to them
-the opprobrious epithet of ‘dip-sticks,’ we have
-no sympathy with such detraction, which is quite
-unmerited.</p>
-
-<p>It would be impossible within the brief limits
-of this paper to describe minutely the various
-operations in bond which are daily going on at
-these stations. Such comprise Vatting, Blending,
-Mixing, Racking, Reducing, Fortifying, Bottling,
-Filtering, &amp;c., and would in themselves suffice for
-a separate article.</p>
-
-<p>Having given a very meagre outline of the
-multifarious duties and processes carried on at the
-various bonding vaults in London and elsewhere,
-we may perhaps fitly conclude with a brief
-description of certain antiquarian features of
-special interest, to be met with in Messrs B——’s
-premises. As previously remarked, the monastic
-character of one of the leading approaches is conveyed
-in the title of Crutched Friars. But it
-is evident from other and various remains that
-its site includes a most important portion of
-ancient <i>Londinum</i>. A considerable extent of the
-old Roman wall, upwards of a hundred feet, in
-an excellent state of preservation, ‘the squared
-stones and bonding tiles’ being marvellously well
-defined, forms the boundary of what is known as
-the ‘South’ Vault. On a higher level, styled the
-Vat Floor, in the medieval portion of the City
-wall, is to be seen a fine specimen of the Roman
-casement, which is said to be the only one now
-remaining in the City. According to the best
-antiquarian authorities, these remains form a part
-of the circumvallation of London begun in the
-reign of Constantine and completed by Theodosius.
-As is only natural, these relics are highly prized
-by the Antiquarian Society, which has in no
-ordinary terms expressed its appreciation of the
-zealous care bestowed by the proprietors in preserving
-these unique and priceless treasures of the
-past.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_MONTH">THE MONTH:<br />
-SCIENCE AND ARTS.</h2></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Professor Janssen</span>, the well-known astronomer
-of Meudon Observatory, who has done more than
-any man living, perhaps, towards wedding the
-photographic camera with the telescope, has lately
-published some account of a marvellous picture
-which he obtained of ‘the old moon in the new
-moon’s arms.’ At the time that the picture was
-taken, the moon was only three days old, and
-an uncovering of the lens for one minute only
-was sufficient to secure the image. This image
-is feeble, but is full of detail, plainly showing
-the general configuration of the lunar surface.
-Professor Janssen believes that this application
-of photography points to a means of obtaining
-more precise measurements of the light, and of
-studying the phenomena which are produced by
-the double reflection of the solar light between
-our earth and its satellite. To the uninitiated,
-in these days of marvellous instantaneous pictures,
-an exposure of one minute may seem rather a
-long period. But let us consider for a moment
-what a very small proportion of the sun’s glory
-is reflected to us from the moon, even on the
-finest nights. Professor Sir W. Thomson gives
-some interesting information on this point. Comparing
-the full moon to a standard candle, he tells
-us that the light it affords is equal to that given
-by such a candle at a distance of seven feet and
-a half. As in the above-mentioned photograph
-the light dealt with came from a moon not full,
-but only three days old, it will be seen that
-Professor Janssen had a very small amount of
-illumination for his picture, and the only wonder
-is that he was able to obtain any result at all.</p>
-
-<p>It will be remembered that in the autumn of
-1882, a series of observations were commenced
-in the polar regions, which had been organised
-by an International Polar Committee. Fourteen
-expeditions from various countries took up positions
-in that inhospitable area, with the intention
-of carrying out observations for twelve months,
-from which it was hoped that valuable knowledge
-would be gained. This programme has been
-successfully carried out, ten of the expeditions
-having returned home, many of them laden with
-rich stores of observations. Three remain to continue
-their work for another year. As to the
-return of the remaining band of observers—belonging
-to the United States—there is as yet
-no definite information.</p>
-
-<p>On Ailsa Craig, Firth of Clyde, there is being
-erected, by order of the Commissioners of Northern
-Lights, a mineral-oil gas-work, to supply gas for
-the lighthouse in course of construction there,
-as well as to feed the gas-engines which will be
-used to drive the fog-signalling apparatus. The
-works are being erected by the patentee of this
-gas-system, Mr James Keith, and will cost three
-thousand pounds. They will be capable of manufacturing
-two thousand cubic feet of oil-gas per
-hour, of fifty-candle illuminating standard. It
-has long been the opinion of many that the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_60"></a>{60}</span>
-electric light is not the best illuminant for lighthouse
-purposes, and this installation at Ailsa Craig,
-following one on the same principle at the Isle
-of Man not long ago, would seem to indicate that
-the authorities think so too.</p>
-
-<p>North-east of Afghanistan there lies a piece
-of country called Kafiristan, which, until April
-last, had never been traversed by the foot of
-a European. In that month, however, Mr W.
-W. M‘Nair, of the Indian medical service, crossed
-the British frontier, and travelled through the
-little-known region for two months. An interesting
-account of his wanderings formed the subject
-of a paper read by him at a recent meeting
-of the Royal Geographical Society. The country
-is inhabited by three main tribes—Ramgals,
-Vaigals, and Bashgals, answering to the three chief
-valleys, and each having a distinctive dialect. The
-men are warlike and brave, but, like many other
-semi-barbarous peoples, leave the heavy work of
-agriculture to the women. The Mohammedans
-hem them in on all sides; but as the tribes are
-at peace among themselves, they are able to hold
-their own. Slavery exists to some extent. The
-people acknowledge one supreme being, Imbra,
-and worship at temples presided over by priests;
-but to neither priests nor idols is excessive reverence
-paid. Bows and arrows form their chief
-arms; and although a few matchlocks have found
-their way into the country from Cabul, no attempt
-has been made to imitate them. Wealth is
-reckoned by heads of cattle; the staple food
-is wheat; and the favourite drink pure grape-juice,
-not rendered intoxicating by fermentation
-or distillation.</p>
-
-<p>Although there is every reason to believe that
-cruelty to animals is far less common than it
-was, still there are many men who are not so
-merciful to their beasts as they might be. Many
-of these offend from ignorance, and will leave
-poor creatures exposed to inclement weather under
-the belief that they will not suffer. Professor
-Shelton, of the Kansas State Agricultural College,
-has lately shown, by careful experiment, that it
-<i>pays</i> to be merciful in the matter of providing
-shelter for pigs; and we have no doubt that
-if his researches had been extended to other
-animals, a similar result would have been obtained.
-For this experiment, ten pigs, as nearly as possible
-alike with regard to breed, age, &amp;c., were chosen,
-five being kept in a barn, and five in the open,
-but provided with straw to lie upon. These two
-families were fed twice a day with carefully
-weighed messes of Indian corn. In the sequel,
-it was found that each bushel of corn produced
-in the barn-fed pigs ten and three-tenths pounds
-of pork, whilst each bushel given to the outsiders
-formed only nine and seven-tenths. This
-result of course clearly shows that a large proportion
-of the food given went to keep the outdoor
-pigs warm, instead of adding to their flesh. If
-the bucolic mind will only grasp this fact, we
-feel sure that more attention will be given to the
-question of shelter for animals.</p>
-
-<p>Professor Cohn, writing from Breslau to <i>Nature</i>,
-calls attention to the circumstance that just two
-hundred years ago there was made in the Netherlands
-a scientific discovery of the greatest importance.
-In the year 1683, Leeuwenhoek gave notice
-to our Royal Society that by the aid of his
-microscope he had detected in the white substance
-adhering to his teeth ‘very little animals
-moving in a very lively fashion.’ ‘These,’ says
-Professor Cohn, ‘<i>were the first bacteria which the
-human eye ever saw</i>.’ The descriptions and drawings
-given by this first observer are so correct,
-that even in these days, when the Germ theory
-of disease has brought forward so many workers
-in the same field, armed with much improved
-appliances, the organisms drawn by the hand of
-Leeuwenhoek can be easily recognised and compared
-with their fellows of to-day. These
-drawings have indeed never been surpassed till
-within the last ten years, a fact which speaks
-volumes for their accuracy and value.</p>
-
-<p>The buildings occupied by the International
-Fisheries Exhibition at South Kensington are,
-in 1884, to be devoted to a no less important
-object, albeit it is not likely to be so popular
-with the masses. This Exhibition will deal with
-matters relating to Health and Education. It
-will include the food-resources of the world; the
-best means of cooking that food; the costumes of
-the world, and their bearing upon health; the
-sanitary construction of dwellings; and many
-other things that every one ought to know about,
-but which very few study. With the Prince of
-Wales as President, assisted by a Council including
-the names of Sir Cunliffe Owen and Mr Birkbeck,
-the success of the scheme ought to be assured.</p>
-
-<p>In Cannon Street, London, an experimental
-section of roadway of a novel kind has lately
-been laid down. It is the invention of Mr H. F.
-Williams, an engineer of San Francisco, where
-the system has been most successfully employed
-for the past seven years. Indeed, the roads so
-prepared are said to be as good as when first
-laid down, allowing for a reasonable amount of
-wear and tear. The process is as follows. First
-of all is provided a good dry concrete foundation;
-upon this are laid blocks of wood, grain-end
-uppermost, measuring eight inches by four, with
-a thickness of an inch and a half. Each block,
-before being placed in position, is dipped halfway
-into a boiling mixture of asphalt and
-Trinidad bitumen; this glues the blocks to the
-foundation and to one another, at the same time
-leaving a narrow space all round the upper half
-of each piece of wood. This space is afterwards
-filled in with boiling asphalt. Above all is
-spread a half-inch coating of asphalt mixed with
-coarse grit, the object of which is to prevent that
-dangerous slipperiness that is common to asphalt
-roadways in moist states of the atmosphere.</p>
-
-<p>At Brooklyn, the sanitary authorities seem to
-have a very sensible method of dealing with milk-dealers
-in the matter of adulteration. They
-invited the dealers to meet in the Common
-Council Chamber, when it was explained to them
-by an expert how they could determine by
-various tests whether the milk purchased from
-the farms is of the required standard. At the
-conclusion of this conference, it was hinted that
-the licenses of such dealers as were thenceforward
-detected in selling adulterated milk would be
-peremptorily revoked.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of December last, the first of four
-large silos on Lord Tollemache’s estate in Cheshire
-was opened in the presence of a large number of
-farmers and scientific agriculturists. It had been
-filled with dry grass, chopped into inch-lengths
-by a chaff-cutter, and pressed down with a weight<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_61"></a>{61}</span>
-equal to fifty-six pounds on the square foot. The
-appearance of the ensilage was that of dark-brown
-moss, having a pleasant aroma; but, as in other
-experiments of the kind, the top layer was mouldy
-and spoiled. Lord Tollemache stated that he
-found that animals did not seem to care for the
-fodder when first offered them, but that they
-afterwards ate it with evident relish. Several
-samples of ensilage were exhibited at the late
-Cattle-show in London, and it is noteworthy that
-almost without exception the pampered show-animals,
-when a handful was offered them by way
-of experiment, took the food greedily. On Mr C.
-Mackenzie’s farm of Portmore, in Peeblesshire, a
-silo was opened in December, the contents of
-which—pressed down while in a moist condition—were
-found to be excellently suited for feeding
-purposes.</p>
-
-<p>It is worthy of notice that the past year brought
-with it the fiftieth anniversary of the lucifer-match,
-which was first made in this kingdom
-by John Walker of Stockton-on-Tees in 1833.
-The same year, a factory was started at Vienna;
-and very soon works of a similar character sprang
-up all over the world. In 1847, a most important
-improvement was made in substituting the red
-amorphous phosphorus for the more common
-variety. This modification put an end to that
-terrible disease, phosphorus necrosis, which
-attacked the unfortunate matchmakers. The
-strong agitation which this disease gave rise to
-against the employment of phosphorus, naturally
-directed the attention of experimenters to other
-means of striking a light; and although phosphorus
-in its harmless amorphous form still
-holds its own, it is probable that its presence
-in lucifer-matches will some day be dispensed
-with. We need hardly remind our readers that
-the universal adoption of the electric light
-would greatly curtail the use of matches, for
-that form of illumination does not require an
-initial spark to set it aglow.</p>
-
-<p>Some artillery officers in Switzerland have
-been putting their snow-clad mountain flanks to
-a curious experimental use, for they have been
-employing one of them as a gigantic target for
-their missiles. A space on this snow-covered
-ground measuring two hundred and thirty feet
-by ninety-eight feet—which would represent the
-area occupied by a battalion of infantry in double
-column—was carefully marked out, its centre
-being occupied by flags. At a distance of about
-a mile, the artillery opened fire upon this mapped-out
-space until they had expended three hundred
-shots. The ground was then examined; and the
-pits in the snow when counted showed that
-seventy-eight per cent. of the shots had entered
-the inclosure. Had a veritable battalion occupied
-the ground, there would have been few, if
-any survivors.</p>
-
-<p>In another experiment, snow was employed as
-a means of defence against artillery. A wall
-sixteen and a half feet long, and five feet high,
-was built of snow having various thicknesses, but
-backed by half-inch wooden planking. This wall
-was divided into three sections, having a thickness
-respectively of four and a half feet, three feet,
-and twenty inches. Against the thickest section,
-twelve shots were fired from various distances;
-but in no case was penetration effected. In the
-three-foot section, shots pierced the snow as far
-as the woodwork, where they were stopped. In
-the twenty-inch section, all the shots fired went
-completely through the wall. It would seem
-from these experiments that snow, when available,
-can be made a valuable means of defence. But,
-unfortunately, in the published account of the
-experiments, the calibre of the guns employed is
-not given; we should, however, assume them to
-be field-artillery of a very light type.</p>
-
-<p>A new use for the ubiquitous dynamo-electric
-machine is reported from Saxony, and one which
-seems to fulfil a most useful purpose—namely,
-the ventilation of mines. At the Carola pits,
-Messrs Siemens and Halske, the German electricians,
-have inaugurated this new system. At
-the pit bank, a dynamo is stationed, which is
-coupled up by shafting with the engine. By
-means of copper conductors, this machine is
-connected with another dynamo, two thousand
-five hundred feet away in the depths of the mine.
-This latter is connected with a powerful centrifugal
-fan. The cost of working these combined
-machines is six shillings and threepence per day,
-which means threepence for every million cubic
-feet of air delivered.</p>
-
-<p>A new employment for the electric light has
-been found in Bavaria, where a Committee has
-reported upon its use as a head-light for locomotive
-engines. The colour and form of signals
-can be distinguished by the engine-driver on a
-cloudy night at a distance of eight hundred feet.
-The light burns steadily, and is not affected by
-the motion of the engine; but a special form of
-arc-lamp is employed, the invention of H.
-Sedlaczek of Vienna. The lamp is so constructed
-that it moves automatically when the engine
-traverses a curve, so as to light the track far
-in advance. The dynamo is placed just behind the
-funnel, and is easily connected with the moving
-parts of the machinery by suitable gearing.</p>
-
-<p>The new patent law which came into operation
-on the first of January will without doubt give
-a great impetus to invention in this country, for
-many a man too poor to think of employing a
-patent agent, and paying down nearly ten pounds
-for a few months’ protection, as he had to do
-under the old conditions, can easily afford the
-one pound which is now the sum fixed for the
-initial fee. Moreover, a would-be patentee can
-obtain all necessary forms at the nearest post-office,
-and can send in his specification through
-the same medium, without the intervention of
-the ‘middle-man.’ Of course the law cannot be
-perfect enough to please every one, and a few
-months’ practice will probably discover many
-points in which it can be improved. One curious
-provision has put certain manufacturers in a
-quandary, for it rules that no article must bear
-the word ‘patent’ unless it is really the subject
-of a patent specification.</p>
-
-<p>A powerful antiseptic and deodoriser can be
-made by mixing together carbolic acid and
-chloride of lime, which, when combined, contains
-sufficiently active properties to correct fermentation.
-A weak solution is used as a dressing in
-some gangrenous affections, as it does not cause
-irritation. The smell, if objected to, can be disguised
-by oil of lavender.</p>
-
-<p>Fruit may be preserved in a fresh condition
-for many months by placing it in very fine sand
-sufficiently thick to cover it, after it has been<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_62"></a>{62}</span>
-well washed and dried and then moistened with
-brandy. A wooden box is the best receptacle
-to use, and it should be kept well covered and
-in a warm place.</p>
-
-<p>According to some French gardeners, vines
-and other fruit-trees infested with ‘mealy-bug’
-should have their bark brushed over with oil
-in November when the leaves are all off, and
-again in the spring when vegetation commences.
-This mode of treatment is usually very successful
-when it is applied to young and vigorous
-trees.</p>
-
-<p>At a recent meeting of the Edinburgh Field
-Naturalists’ Club, a paper was communicated by
-Mr John Turnbull, Galashiels, locally known as
-a clever microscopist, in which he explained a
-new and simple method of obtaining beautiful
-impressions of the leaves of plants on paper.
-The materials necessary to take these impressions
-cost almost nothing. A piece of carbonised
-paper plays the principal part in the process;
-but it is of importance to have the carbonised
-paper fresh, and it should be kept in a damp
-place, for when the paper dries, the pictures that
-may be printed from it are not so effective. The
-leaf or plant to be copied is first of all carefully
-spread out over the carbonised paper on a table,
-or, better still, a blotting-pad. Next take a piece
-of thin tough paper and lay it on the leaf. Then,
-with the tips of the fingers, rub over the thin
-paper so as to get the plant thoroughly inked.
-This done, place the leaf on the paper on which
-the impression is to be taken. A smooth printing-paper
-gives the clearest copy. The thin paper is
-now laid on the plant as before, and the rubbing
-continued. Of course, care must be taken to
-keep the plant in position, for if it moves, the
-impression will be faulty. However, the matter
-is so very simple that anybody should succeed.
-Impressions taken in this way have all the delicacy
-of steel engravings and the faithfulness of
-photographs. His discovery is likely to come into
-favour for decorative purposes. The headings of
-letters on the margins of books might be very
-tastefully adorned with truly artistic representations
-of plants. The wood-engraver also will
-find it will serve his purpose as well as, if not better
-than, photography. Specimens that have been
-copied by Mr Turnbull’s system, when examined
-with the microscope, are found to be perfect, even
-to the delicate hairs that are scarcely visible on
-the plant to the naked eye.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="BOOK_GOSSIP">BOOK GOSSIP.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">History</span> is perhaps one of the most popular
-of modern studies. It is more definite in
-its results than Philosophy, and it widens the intellectual
-horizon more than does the pursuit
-of particular branches of Science, while it has
-less tendency than either of these to congeal into
-dogma. The methods of historians, also, have
-undergone a signal change within the last fifty
-years. The historical writers of last century,
-such as Robertson and Hume, were content to
-collate the productions of previous authors, to
-give a new reading here and a fresh deduction
-there, looking more to literary form than to
-the production of new facts. Such writers
-troubled themselves little about the People, but
-were intensely interested in the movements of
-kings, and in the sinuosities of statecraft generally.
-Anything else was beneath ‘the dignity of history.’
-But this ‘dignity of history’ has long since been
-pushed from its perch, and nobody now regards
-it. Carlyle, Freeman, Froude, Macaulay, Green,
-and Gardiner, have each and all followed the
-movements of events as they affected the people,
-and not alone as they affected kings and statesmen.
-The result has been that history is fuller
-of teaching than before, is infused with a truer
-and deeper interest, appeals in stronger terms to
-our sense of justice, and lays a firmer hold upon
-our sympathy. It has, in short, become more
-human.</p>
-
-<p>Mr J. R. Seeley, Professor of Modern History
-in the University of Cambridge, has just published
-a series of lectures under the title of <i>The Expansion
-of England</i> (London: Macmillan &amp; Co.), which
-shows in a striking manner the progress which has
-been made in our methods of studying history and
-estimating its events. It has long, he says, been
-a favourite maxim of his, that history, while it
-should be scientific in its method, should pursue
-a practical object. ‘That is, it should not merely
-gratify the reader’s curiosity about the past, but
-modify his view of the present and his forecast
-of the future.’ The first lecture is devoted to an
-able exposition of this theorem, into which, however,
-we cannot here follow the author. He then
-proceeds to a study of England in the eighteenth
-century, discusses its old colonial system, points
-out in detail the effect of the New World on the
-Old, reviews the history of our conquest of India,
-and the mutual influence of India and England,
-and ends by an estimate of the internal and
-external dangers which beset England as the
-mother of her colonies and the mistress of
-her numerous conquests. The lecturer now and
-again drives his theory to a false issue, and
-in general gives too great weight to logical
-sequence in historic transactions. History is
-not dominated by logic, but by events; and
-although we may see in these events, from our
-distant and external standpoint, a distinct chain
-of development and progress, the actors saw no
-more of the future of them than we do to-day
-of the events presently transpiring. Apart, however,
-from this tendency on the part of Professor
-Seeley, the lectures are full of wise maxims and
-suggestive thoughts, and cannot fail to interest
-and instruct the historical student.</p>
-
-<p class="center">⁂</p>
-
-<p>The Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge
-has added to its series called ‘The People’s
-Library’ a most instructive little volume entitled
-<i>A Chapter of Science; or, What is the Law of
-Nature?</i> It consists of six lectures which were
-delivered to working-men by Mr J. Stuart,
-Professor of Mechanics, Cambridge. The object
-of the lecturer was to present an example of
-inductive reasoning, and to familiarise his hearers
-to some extent with the principles of scientific
-inquiry; and he has succeeded in his object in a
-remarkable degree. We do not know any book
-of the same extent which so fully places before
-the unscientific reader, or before the reader who
-has gathered many facts of science without apprehending
-their bearing upon each other, the
-principles which should guide him in the
-endeavour to estimate and arrange these facts<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_63"></a>{63}</span>
-correctly. He reminds his hearers that what
-science itself has to teach us consists not so much
-in facts, as in those lessons and deductions which
-can be drawn from facts, and which can be justly
-apprehended only by a knowledge of such facts.
-‘Those,’ he aptly says, ‘whose knowledge of
-science has furnished them with only an encyclopædia
-of facts, are like men who try to warm
-themselves before coals which have not yet been
-lighted. Those who are furnished only with the
-deductions of science are like men who may have
-a lighted match, but have not the material to
-construct a fire. That match soon burns away
-uselessly.’ We cannot conceive of any one
-reading this book, even with only an average
-degree of attention and only a trifling modicum
-of scientific knowledge, and not gleaning from it
-a clearer apprehension of the facts of science and
-the inductions to be made from these facts.</p>
-
-<p class="center">⁂</p>
-
-<p>A beautiful volume comes to us from the pen
-of an occasional contributor to this <i>Journal</i>, Dr
-Gordon Stables. It is entitled <i>Aileen Aroon</i>
-(London: S. W. Partridge &amp; Co.), and consists
-of tales of faithful friends and favourites among
-the lower animals. The chief story of the book,
-and that which gives it its title, is concerning
-a noble Newfoundland dog called ‘Aileen Aroon;’
-but interwoven with it are numerous stories of
-all kinds of domestic pets—dogs, monkeys, sheep,
-squirrels, birds of various kinds, and even that
-much-abused creature the donkey. Dr Stables,
-as our readers cannot fail to have observed,
-possesses a very happy style of narration; and
-his never-failing sympathy with animal-life
-gives to his several pictures a depth and truth
-of colouring such as one but rarely meets with
-in this department of anecdotal literature. A
-better present could not be put into the hands
-of a boy or girl who loves animals, than this
-handsome volume about <i>Aileen Aroon</i> and her
-many friends.</p>
-
-<p class="center">⁂</p>
-
-<p><i>London Cries</i> is the title of one of those unique
-volumes, with beautiful and characteristic illustrations,
-which from time to time emanate from
-the publishing-house of Messrs Field and Tuer,
-London. The text of this volume is written by
-Mr Andrew W. Tuer, and gives an amusing
-account of the cries, many and various, which
-have been heard, or may still be heard, in the
-streets of London.—Another volume by the
-same publishers is <i>Chap-book Chaplets</i>, containing
-a number of ballads printed in a comically
-antique fashion, and illustrated by numerous
-grotesque imitations of old ballad-woodcuts.
-These are cleverly drawn by Mr Joseph Crawhall,
-and are all coloured by hand.—A third volume
-comes from the same source. It is a large folio,
-entitled <i>Bygone Beauties</i>, being a republication of
-ten portraits of ladies of rank and fashion, from
-paintings by John Hoppner, R.A., and engraved
-by Charles Wilkin.</p>
-
-<p class="center">⁂</p>
-
-<p><i>Whitaker’s Almanac</i> for 1884 exhibits all its
-former features of excellence as an annual, and
-any changes which have been made are in the
-direction of further improvement. Besides the
-usual information expected in almanacs, <i>Whitaker’s</i>
-gives very full astronomical notes, from month
-to month, as to the position of the planets in the
-heavens, and other details which must be of
-interest to many. Its Supplement of scientific
-and other general information contains much
-that is curious and worth knowing.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="OCCASIONAL_NOTES">OCCASIONAL NOTES.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3>AMBULANCE SOCIETIES.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">We</span> have this month, in the article ‘An Order of
-Mercy’ (p. 15 [Transcriber’s note: See <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/64345">https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/64345</a>.]), described the operations of the
-St John Ambulance Association, London, and are
-pleased to be able to notice that a similar
-organisation is being set on foot in the Scottish
-metropolis. The subject was recently brought
-before the public by Professor Chiene, of the
-Edinburgh University, in a lecture delivered
-under the auspices of the Edinburgh Health
-Society. The lecturer spoke of the importance of
-speedy aid to those who are hurt, and to those
-who are taken suddenly ill in our streets. At
-present, in such cases, he said, such persons came
-under the care of kindly bystanders or the police,
-none of whom have received any instruction
-whatever in what is now commonly known as
-‘first aid to the sick or wounded.’ The personi
-was placed either in a cab or on a police-stretcher,
-and the lecturer could imagine nothing worse
-adapted for the conveyance of a patient with a
-fractured limb than a cab. In the case of the
-police-stretcher, the only advantage it had was
-the recumbent posture of the patient; in every
-other particular it was a most inefficient means
-of conveyance. He asked if the time had not
-come when they should try and find some remedy.
-In London, the St John Ambulance Association
-had been in existence for seven years; in Glasgow,
-the St Andrew’s Ambulance Association was now
-in full working order; and surely Edinburgh, with
-all its charitable organisations, with its important
-hospitals, with the largest medical school in Great
-Britain, should not be behind in this important
-matter. During the last three years an average
-of seven hundred and twenty cases of accident each
-year had been treated as in-patients in the Royal
-Infirmary; many other cases had been taken
-there, their wounds and injuries dressed, and
-afterwards sent to their own homes. Many cases
-of accident were conveyed directly to their own
-homes; many cases of sudden illness were conveyed
-either to the hospital or their own homes,
-and he did not think he was over-estimating it
-when he said that fifteen hundred cases occurred
-every year in Edinburgh which would benefit
-from a speedy and comfortable means of conveyance
-from the place of accident to the place
-of treatment. In the formation and working of
-such a society, he would give all the help he
-could. Mr Cunningham, the secretary of the
-Glasgow Association, had the cause at heart;
-and he was sure Mr Miller, one of the surgeons
-in the Edinburgh Infirmary, and Dr P. A. Young,
-both of whom had already given ambulance
-lectures to Volunteers, would give their hearty
-help. Many of the junior practitioners and senior
-students would, he was sure, assist as lecturers;
-and they would soon have in Edinburgh a ready
-band of certificated assistants, who would give
-efficient first aid to any one who was injured,
-and would assist the police in removing them to
-the hospital or their own homes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_64"></a>{64}</span></p>
-
-<p>We are glad to observe that as one result
-of Professor Chiene’s appeal, a Committee of
-Employers in Edinburgh and Leith is being
-formed for the purpose of having employees
-instructed in the manner proposed, so that many
-of the latter may be able to give practical
-assistance in the event of accidents happening
-where they are employed.</p>
-
-
-<h3>THE LAST OF THE OLD WESTMINSTER HOUSES.</h3>
-
-<p>All who take any interest in the topographical
-antiquities of the ancient city of Westminster
-will learn—not perhaps without some feeling
-akin to regret—that the last of the old original
-houses of that old medieval city was taken down
-during the past summer to make room for more
-convenient and spacious premises. The house
-has been thought to be over five hundred years
-old, having been erected in or about the reign
-of Edward III. It belonged to the Messrs Dent,
-well-known provision-dealers, by whose predecessors
-the business was founded in the year 1750.
-The shop floor was three steps <i>below</i> the level
-of the pavement outside, and the ceiling of the
-shop was so low that a small man could touch
-it easily with his hand. The building contained
-several large and commodious rooms up-stairs,
-the first floor projecting, as usual in such houses,
-beyond the wall about a foot. The beams used
-throughout were heavy, massive, and very hard
-old English oak; and the roof was covered with
-old-fashioned red tiles. The house stood at the
-western corner of Tothill Street, where that street
-joins the Broadway. A few years ago, several
-such houses were to be seen on the north side
-of Tothill Street, but as nearly the whole of
-that side was taken by the new Aquarium, the
-quaint old houses were of course removed. Now
-that the old one above referred to is down, they
-are all gone, and nothing is left of old Westminster
-city but its grand and matchless Abbey;
-and long may its majestic beauty continue to
-adorn a spot celebrated for so many deeply
-historical memories.</p>
-
-
-<h3>THE RECENT MARVELLOUS SUNSETS.</h3>
-
-<p>The marvellous sunsets which have lately been
-common all over the world have led to a mass
-of correspondence and conjectures upon the part
-of scientific men. Perhaps the fullest and most
-interesting contribution to the literature of the
-subject is the long article contributed to the <i>Times</i>
-by Mr Norman Lockyer, who, with many others,
-is disposed to attribute the phenomena to the
-presence in the upper regions of the atmosphere
-of a vast quantity of volcanic dust, the outcome
-of the terrible eruption—one of the most terrible
-ever recorded—which took place at Krakatoa in
-August last. In corroboration of this hypothesis,
-another correspondent calls attention to the circumstance
-that similar phenomena were observed
-in 1783, and are recorded in White’s <i>Selborne</i> as
-follows: ‘The sun at noon looked as blank as a
-clouded moon, and shed a rose-coloured ferruginous
-light on the ground and floors of rooms, but was
-particularly lurid and blood-coloured at rising
-and setting. The country-people began to look
-with superstitious awe at the red lowering aspect
-of the sun; and indeed there was reason for the
-most enlightened person to be apprehensive; for
-all the while Calabria and part of the isle of Sicily
-were torn and convulsed with earthquakes, and
-about that juncture a volcano sprang out of the
-sea on the coast of Norway.’</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="NIGHT">NIGHT.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0"><span class="smcap">O gentle</span> Night! O thought-inspiring Night!</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Humbly I bow before thy sovereign power;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Sadly I own thy all-unequalled might</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">To calm weak mortal in his darkest hour:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Spreading thy robe o’er all the mass of care,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Thou bidd’st the sorrowful no more despair.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">When high in heaven thou bidd’st thy torches shine,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Casting on earth a holy, peaceful light,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">My heart adores thee in thy calm divine,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Is soothed by thee, O hope-inspiring Night!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">All anxious thoughts, all evil bodings fly;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">My soul doth rest, since thou, O Night! art nigh.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">When thou hast cast o’er all the sleeping land</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Thy darkened robe, the symbol of thy state,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Alone beneath heaven’s mightiness I stand,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Musing on life, eternity, and fate;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Mayhap with concentrated thought I try</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To pierce the cloud of heaven’s great mystery.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">’Tis then sweet music in the air I hear,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Like rippling waters falling soft and low;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">With soul enraptured do I list, yet fear—</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">’Tis not such music as we mortals know;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">It wafts the soul from earthly things away,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Leaving behind the senseless frame of clay.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Friends, kindly faces crowd around me there,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Friends loved the better since they passed away,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Leaving a legacy of wild despair—</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And now I see them as in full orb’d day,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The long-lamented once again descry,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Bask in each smile, gaze in each speaking eye.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">O blest reunion, Night’s almighty gift,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Lent for a time unto the thoughtful mind;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">When memory can o’er the clouds uplift</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The startled soul away from all mankind,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Throw wide eternity’s majestic gate,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And grant a view of the immortal state.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">And thou, O Night! who can’st these spirits raise,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Giv’st immortality to mortal eyes,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To thee I tune mine unadornèd praise,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And chant thy glories to the list’ning skies:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Waft, O ye winds! the floating notes along;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Ye woods and mountains, echo back the song.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><span class="smcap">Robert A. Neilson.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Conductor of <span class="smcap">Chambers’s Journal</span> begs to direct
-the attention of <span class="smcap">Contributors</span> to the following notice:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>1st.</i> All communications should be addressed to the
-‘Editor, 339 High Street, Edinburgh.’</p>
-
-<p><i>2d.</i> For its return in case of ineligibility, postage-stamps
-should accompany every manuscript.</p>
-
-<p><i>3d.</i> <span class="smcap">Manuscripts</span> should bear the author’s full <i>Christian</i>
-name, Surname, and Address, legibly written; and
-should be written on white (not blue) paper, and on
-one side of the leaf only.</p>
-
-<p><i>4th.</i> Offerings of Verse should invariably be accompanied
-by a stamped and directed envelope.</p></div>
-
-<p><i>If the above rules are complied with, the Editor will
-do his best to insure the safe return of ineligible papers.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center">Printed and Published by <span class="smcap">W. &amp; R. Chambers</span>, 47 Paternoster
-Row, <span class="smcap">London</span>, and 339 High Street, <span class="smcap">Edinburgh</span>.</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center"><i>All Rights Reserved.</i></p>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHAMBERS'S JOURNAL OF POPULAR LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART, FIFTH SERIES, NO. 4, VOL. I, JANUARY 26, 1884 ***</div>
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