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<P><PB REF="IMG00003" SEQ="0003" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="TPG001" N="R001">THE





ATLANTIC MONTHLY.

A MAGAZINE OF



Literature,
Sciezzce, Art, cvul Pok~z~s.
VOLUME XVII.

BOSTON:
TICKNOIR AND FIELDS,
124 TREMONT STREET.

LONDON: TRUBNER AND COMPANY.

i866.</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00004" SEQ="0004" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="R002">A 93~/


z




Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year i866, by

TICKNOR AND FIELDS,

in the Clerks Office of the District Court for the District of Massachusetts.


























UNIVERSITY PRESS:

ELEcTROTYPED BY WRLCH, BIGELOW, &#38; Co.,

CAMBRIDGE.</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00005" SEQ="0005" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="VOI001" N="R003">	1)
	/1 /













CONTENTS.
-4-
		Page
Amazonian Picnic, An	Mrs. Agassiz	313
Bad Symptoms	Edward Sftnser					763
Beauty and the Beast	Bayard Taylor					3
Booth, Edwin	E. C. Stedman					585

Chimney-Corner for i866, The. I., II., III., IV., V., VI. Mrs. H. B. SI e 88, 214, 345, 490, 577, 737
Court-Cards		. C ries Y~. S~5ra~ue	178
Communication with the Pacific		 C. C. C~ffin	333

Doctor Johns. XII., XIII., XlV., XV., XVI., XVII. . Do ld G. Mi/chell. 69, 204, 323, 466, 552, 707
English Opinion on the American War	.	.	. W. M. Rosselti	129
Fenian Idea, The	Frances P er Cobbe .			. 572
Freedmans Story, The. I., II	William Parker	.	.	. 152, 276

Griffith Gaunt: or, Jealousy. II., III., IV., V., VI., VII. Charles 11 eade . . 100, 222, 365, 507, 596, 751
Gypsies, The Origin of the			G. W. Hosmer	167
Harmonists, The	A ulkor of L in the Iron-Mills .	529
High Tide of Decemher, The	. .	47
In the Hemlocks	~ohn Burroughs 	. , 			672
Kingdom Coming, The	Gail Hamil/on				8i
Landscape Painter, A				Henry W. s/ames	282
Late Insurrection in Jamaica, The				C. Reynolds	480
Last Days of Walter Savage Landor. I., II., III		Kale Field	. 			385, 540, 684
Lucys Letters			A nue M. Brewster	64
Madam Waldohoroughs Carriage	~. T. Tr bridge				407
Mepisistophelean	Gharles Y. S~5ragne				632
Monuments, Question of	W. D. Howells				646
Nantucket			F. Sheldon	296
Passages from Hawthorne~s Note-Books. I., II., III., IV., V., VI. 			I~ 270, 257, 422, ~ 725
Pioneer Editor, A	743
Poor Chloe	Mrs. L. M. Child	352
President and Congress, The	F. P. WhijIjle	500
Quicksands . . . . .	Mrs. C. A. HojSkinson . . . .	657
Ramhle through the Market, A	.	. .	. B. W. Ball	268
Reconstructionists, Three Months among the	.	.	Sidney Andrew:	237
Sainte-Beuve		7ohu Fosler Kirk					432
Snow-XValkers, The		~ohn Burroughs 					302
Struggle for Shelter, A		Caroline P. Hawes					456
Tied to a Rope	Charles Y~. ~j6rague	722
Were they Crickets9					397
What will it cost us 9				F. H. Derby	622
Wilderness, The				Y~. 7. Trowbridge	39</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00006" SEQ="0006" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="SPI001" N="R004">	iv	Contents.
		 POETRY.
Abraham Davenport		7ohn G. Whittier	539
Among the Laurels		Mrs. Ahers	594
Bells of Lynn, The		H. W. Longfellow	47
CastlesintheAir		W.C.Bryant	a
Dead Ship of Harpswell, The		7ohn G. Whittier	705
De Spiridione Episcopo		C. G. Leland	454
Giottos Tower	H. W. Longfellow					724
In the Sea	Hiram Rich . 			.		344
Killed at the Ford	H. W. Longfellow					479
Mountain, The		E. C. Skdman	734
Mr. Hoses Biglows Speech in March Meeting 		7ames Russell Lowell	635
My Annual		0. W. Holmes	395
Old Mans Idyl, An 	Richard Realf		266
Riviera di Ponente 	7. F. Clarke		202
Snow	T.B.Aldrich		364
To Hersa		311
To-morrow	H. W. Longfellow	552
Two Pictures	7ohn G. Whither	249
Wind the Clock .	.	Hiram Rich	8o



REVIEWS AND LITERARY NOTICES.
Andrewss South since the War		778
A Nohle Life		65o
Bigelows Address on the Limits of Education		251
Bowless Across the Continent		524
Brownsons American Republic		523
Clarks Mind in Nature		649
Croquet Manuals of . 		772
Doolittles Social Life of the Chinese		779
Footes War of the Rebellion		653
Hans Brinker, or The Silver Skates		779
Herman; or, Young Knighthood		246
Hittells Resources of California		522
Holcombes Literature in Letters		6~o
Jean Ingelows Songs of Seven		222
Leckys Rise and Influence of the Spirit of Rationalism in Europe		248
Life and Letters of Frederick W. Rohertson		119
Life of Michael Angelo		224
Life and Times of Sir Joshua Reynolds		525
McGilchrists Richard Cobden		253
Mets Landers Esperance		525
Perrys Human Hair		255
Piatts Poems		653
Savages History of the Boston Watch and Police		122
Sarmientos Vida de AhranLincoln		252
Smiless Lives of Boulton and Watt		384
Taylors Story of Kennett		775
Towles History of Henrythe Fifth		6~z
Tuckermans Criterion		65i
Whites Poetry of the Civil War		774
Whittiers Snow-Bound		313
Winifred Bertram		384
Works of Edmund Burke, The		222
	RECENT AMERICAN PTJBLICArIONS	225, 256, ~</PB></P>
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</BIBL>
<P><PB REF="IMG00007" SEQ="0007" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="1">THE



ATLANTIC MONTHLY.

A Magazizie of Literature, Science, Art,

aild Politics.

VOL. XVII.  JANUARY, i866.  NO. XCIX.



PASSAGES FROM HAWTHORNES NOTE-BOOKS.

I.

	[Mr. Hawthornes note-books, comprising several volumes of closely written memoranda, were found in
his study after his decease. Extracts from these interesting pages will from time to time he printed in this
magazine, just as he left them. They are the records of his every-day life, and as such will be welcome to
all who appreciate his genius and love his memory.]

SALEM, 7zine 15, 1835.A walk
down to the Juniper. The shore
of the coves strewn with bunches of
sea~weed, driven in by recent winds.
Eel-grass, rolled and bundled up, and
entangled with it, large marine vege-
tables, of an olive cnxlor, with round,
slender, snake-like stalks, four or five
feet long, and nearly two feet broad:
these are the herbage of the deep sea.
Shoals of fishes, at a little distance from
the shore, discernible by their fins out
of water. Among the heaps of sea-
weed there were sometimes small pie-
ces of painted wood, bark, and other
driftage. On the shore, with pebbles of
granite, there were round or oval pieces
of brick, which the waves bad rolled
about, till they resembled a natural min-
eral. Huge stones tossed about, in ev-
ery variety of confusion, some shagged
all over with sea-weed, others only part-
ly covered, others bare. The old ten-
guh battery, at the outer angle of the
Juniper, very verdant, and besprinkled
with white - weed, clover, and butter-
cups. The juniper-trees are very aged
and decayed and 1fl055 - grown. The
grass about the hospital is rank, being
trodden, probably, by nobody but my-
self. There is a representation of a ves-
sel under sail, cut with a penknife, on
the corner of the house.
	Returning by the almshouse, I stopped
a good while to look at the pigs,a great
herd, who seemed to be just finishing
their suppers. They certainly are types
of unmitigated sensuality,some stand-
ing in the trough, in the midst of their
own and others victuals,some thrust-
ing their noses deep into the food,
some rubbing their backs against a post,
some huddled together between sleep-
ing and waking, breathing hard,  all
wallowing about; a gre at boar swagger-
ing round,~and a big sow waddling along

Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 5165, by TICK-NOR AND FIELns, in the Clerks O2ce
of the District Court of the District of Massachusetts.
	VOL. XVII.  NO. 99.</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00008" SEQ="0008" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="2">	2	Passages from Haw//wriles No/c-Books.	[January,

with her huge paunch. Notwithstand-
ing the unspeakable defilement with
which these strange se nsualists spice
all their food, they seem to have a quick
and delicate sense of smell. What ridic-
ulous-looking animals! Swift himself
could not have imagined anything nas-
tier than what they practise by the mere
impulse of natural genius. Yet the
Shakers keep their pigs very clean, and
with great advantage. The legion of
devils in the herd of swine,  what a
scene it must have been
	Sunday evening, going by the jail,
the setting sun kindled up the windows
most cheerfully ; as if there were a
bright, comfortable light within its dark-
some stone wall.

	7une i8.A walk in North Salem
in the decline of yesterday afternoon, 
beautiful weather, bright, sunny, with a
western or northwestern wind just cool
enough, and a slight superfluity of heat.
The verdure, both of trees and grass, is
now in its prime, the leaves elastic, all
life. The grass-fields are plenteously
bestrewn with white-weed, large spaces
looking as white as a sheet of snow,
at a distance, yet with an indescribably
warmer tinge than snow,living white,
intermixed with living green. The hills
and hollows beyond the Cold Spring
copiously shaded, principally with oaks
of good growth, and some walnut-trees,
with the rich sun brightening in the
midst of the open spaces, and mellow-
ing and fading into the shade,and sin-
gle trees, with their cool spot of shade
in the waste of sun: quite a picture of
beauty, gently picturesque. The sur-
face of the land is so varied, with wood-
land mingled, that the eye cannot reach
far away, except now and then in vistas
perhaps across the river, showing hous-
es, or a church and surrounding village,
in Upper Beverly. In one of the sunny
bits of pasture, walled irregularly in with
oak-shade, I saw a gray mare feeding,
and, as I drew near, a colt sprang up
from amid the grass,a very small colt.
He looked me in the face, and I tried
to startle him, so as to make him gal-
lop; but he stretched his long legs, one
after another, walked quietly to his
mother, and began to suck, just wet-
ting his lips, not being very hungry.
Then he rubbed his head, alternately,
with each hind leg. He was a graceful
little beast.
	I bathed in the cove, overhung with
maples and walnuts, the water cool and
thrilling. At a distance it sparkled
bright and blue in the breeze and sun.
There were jelly-fish swimming about,
and several left to melt away on the
shore. On the shore, sprouting amongst
the sand and gravel, I found samphire,
growing somewhat like asparagus. It
is an excellent salad at this season, salt,
yet with an herb-like vivacity, and very
tender. I strolled slowly through the
pastures, watching my long shadow
making grave, fantastic gestures in the
sun. It is a pretty sight to see the sun-
shine brightening the entrance of a road
which shortly becomes deeply overshad-
owed by trees on both sides. At the
Cold Spring, three little girls, from six
to nine, were seated on the stones in
which the fountain is set, and paddling
in the water. It was a pretty picture,
and would have been prettier, if they
had shown bare little legs, instead of
pantalets. Very large trees overhung
them, and the sun was so nearly gone
down that a pleasant gloom made the
spot sombre, in contrast with these light
and laughing little figures. On perceiv-
ing me, they rose up, tittering among
themselves. It seemed that there was
a sort of playful malice in those who
first saw me; for they allowed the other
to keep on paddling, without warning
her of my approach. I passed along,
and heard them come chattering be-
hind.

	7zwe 22.  I rode to Boston in the
afternoon with Mr. Proctor. It was a
coolish day, with clouds and intermit-
ting sun shine, and a pretty fresh breeze.
We stopped about an hour at the Mav-
erick House, in the sprouting branch
of the city, at East Boston,  a stylish
house, with doors paintcd in imitation
of oak; a large bar; bells ringing; the
bar-keeper calls out, when a bell rings,</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00009" SEQ="0009" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="3">i866.]

Number ; then a waiter replies,
Number  answered ; and scampers
up stairs. A ticket is given by the hos-
tler, on taking the horse and chaise,
which is returned to the bar - keeper
when the chaise is wanted. The land-
lord was fashionably dressed, with the
whitest of linen, neatly plaited, and as
courteous as a Lord Chamberlain. Vis-
itors from Boston thronging the house,
 some standing at the bar, watching
the process of preparing tumblers of
punch,  others sitting at the windows
of different parlors,  some with faces
flushed, puffing cigars. The bill of fare
for the day was stuck up beside the bar.
Opposite this principal hotel there was
another, called The Mechanics. which
seemed to be equally thronged. I sus-
lect that the company were about on a
par in each; for at the Maverick House,
though well dressed, they seemed to
be merely Sunday gentlemen,  mostly
young fellows,  clerks in dry -goods
stores being the aristocracy of them.
One, very fashionable in appearance,
with a handsome cane, happened to
stop by me and lift up his foot, and I
noticed that the sole of his boot (which
was exquisitely polished) was all worn
out. I apprehend that some such minor
deficiencies might have been detected
in the general showiness of most of
them. There were girls, too, but not
pretty ones, nor, on the whole, such
good imitations of gentility as the young
men. There were as many people as
are usually collected at a muster, or on
similar occasions, lounging about, with-
out any apparent enjoyment; but the
observation of this may serve me to
make a sketch of the mode of spending
the Sabbath by the majority of unmar-
ried, young, middling-class people, near
a great town. Most of the people had
smart canes and bosom-pins.
	Crossing the ferry into Boston, we
went to the City Tavern, where the bar-
room presented a Sabbath scene of re-
pose,  stage - folk lounging in chairs,
half asleep, smoking cigars, generally
with clean linen and other niceties of
apparel, to mark the day. The doors
and blinds of an oyster and refreshment
3

shop across the street were closed, but
I saw people enter it. There were two
owls in a back court, visible through
a window of the bar-room,  speckled-
gray, with dark-blue eyes,  the queer-
est-looking birds that exist,  so sol-
emn and wise,  dozing away the day,
much like the rest of the people, only
that they looked wiser than any others.
Their hooked beaks looked like hooked
noses. A dull scene this. A stranger,
here and there, poring over a newspa-
per. Many of the stage-folk sitting in
chairs on the pavement, in front of the
door.
	We went to the top of the hill which
formed part of Gardiner Greenes es-
tate, and which is now in the process of
levelling, and pretty much taken away,
except the highest point, and a narrow
path to ascend to it. It gives an admi-
rable view of the city, being almost as
high as the steeples and the dome of
the State House, and overlooking the
whole mass of brick buildings and slat-
ed roofs, with glimpses of streets far
below. It was really a pity to take it
down. I noticed the stump of a very
large elm, recently felled. No house in
the city could have reared its roof so
high as the roots of that tree, if indeed
the church-spires did so.
	On our drive home we passed through
Charlestown. Stages in abundance were
passing the road, burdened with passen-
gers inside and out; also chaises and
barouches, horsemen and footmen. We
are a community of Sabbath-breakers!

	Aug~ist 31. A drive to Nahant yes-
terday afternoon. Stopped at Rices,
and afterwards walked down to the
steamboat wharf to see the passengers
land. It is strange how few good faces
there are in the world, comparatively to
the ugly ones. Scarcely a single come-
ly one in all this collection. Then to
the hotel. Barouches at the doors, and
gentlemen and ladies going to drive, and
gentlemen smoking round the piazza.
The bar-keeper had one of Bentons
mint - drops for a bosom - brooch! It
made a very handsome one. I crossed
the beach for home about sunset.~ The
Pissages from Hawthornes Note-Books.</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00010" SEQ="0010" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="4">	4	Passages from Haw/korne s Note-Books.	[January,

tide was so far down as just to give me
a passage on the hard sand, between the
sea and the loose gravel. The sea was
calm and smooth, with only the surf-
waves whitening along the beach. Sev-
eral ladies and gentlemen on horseback
were cantering and galloping before and
behind me.

	A hint of a story,  some incident
which should bring on a general war;
and the chief actor in the incident to
have something corresponding to the
mischief he had caused.

	1835, Setteml$er 7. A driVe to Ips-
wich with B . At the tavern was
an old, fat, country major, and another
old fellow, laughing and playing off jokes
on each other, one tying a ribbon up-
on the others hat. One had been a
trumpeter to the majors troop. Walk-
ing about town, we knocked, for a whim,
at the door of a dark old house, and in-
quired if Miss Hannah Lord lived there.
A woman of about thirty came to the
door, with rather a confused smile, and
a disorder about the bosom of her dress,
as if she had been disturbed while nurs-
ing her child. She answered us with
great kindness.
	Entering the burial - ground, where
some masons were building a tomb, we
found a good many old monuments, and
several covered with slabs of red free-
stone or slate, and with arms sculptured
on the slab, or an inlaid circle of slate.
On one slate grave-stone, of the Rev.
Nathl. Rogers, there was a portrait of
that worthy, about a third of the size of
life, carved in relief, with his cloak, band,
and wig, in excellent preservation, all
the buttons of his waistcoat being cut
with great minuteness,  the ministers
nose being on a level with his cheeks.
It was an upright grave-stone. Return-
ing home, I held a colloquy with a young
girl about the right road. She had come
out to feed a pig, and was confused, and
also a little suspicious that we were
making fun of her, yet answered us with
a shy laugh and good-nature,  the pig
all the time squealing for his dinner.

	Displayed along the walls, and sus
pended from the pillars ot th~ original
Kings Chapel, were coats-of-arms of
the king, the successive governors, and
other distinguished men. In the pulpit
there was an hour-glass on a large and
elaborate brass stand. The organ was
surmounted by a gilt crown in the cen-
tre, supported by a gilt mitre on each
side. The governors pew had Corin-
thian pillars, and crimson damask tap-
estry. In 1727 it was lined with china,
probably tiles.

	Saint Augustin, at mass, charged all
that were accursed to go out of the
church. Then a dead body arose, and
xvent out of the church into the church-
yard, with a white cloth on its head,
and stood there till mass was over. It
was a former lord of the manor, whom
a curate had cursed because he refused
to pay his tithes. A justice also com-
manded the dead curate to arise, and
gave him a rod; and the dead lord,
kneeling, received penance thereby.
He then ordered the lord to go again
to his grave, which he did, and fell im-
mediately to ashes. Saint Augustin
offered to pray for the curate, that he
might remain on earth to confirm men
in their belief; but the curate refused,
because he was in the place of rest.

	A sketch to be given of a modern
reformer,  a type of the extreme doc-
trines on the subject of slaves, cold
water, and other such topics. He goes
about the streets haranguing most elo-
quently, and is on the point of making
many converts, when his labors are
suddenly interrupted by the appearance
of the keeper of a mad-house, whence
he has escaped. Much may be made
of this idea.

	The world is so sad and solemn;
that things meant in jest are liable, by
an overpowering influence, to become
dreadful earnest,  gayly dressed fan-
tasies turning to ghostly and black-clad
images of themselves.

	A story, the hero of which is to be
represented as naturally capable of deep
and strong passion, and looking forward
to the time when he shall feel passion-</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00011" SEQ="0011" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="5">i866.] Passages from Hawthornes Note-Books.
5
ate love, which is to be the great event
of his existence. But it so chances that
he never falls in love; and although
he gives up the expectation of so doing,
and marries calmly, yet it is somewhat
sadly, with sentiments merely of esteem
for his bride. The lady might be one
who had loved him early in life, but
whom then, in his expectation of pas-
sionate love, he had scorned.

	The scene of a story or sketch to be
laid within the light of a street-lantern
the time, when the lamp is near going
out ; and the catastrophe to be simul-
taneous xvith the last flickering gleam.

	The peculiar weariness and depres-
sion of spirits which is felt after a day
wasted in turning over a magazine or
other light miscellany, different from
the state of the mind after severe study;
because there has been no excitement,
no difficulties to be overcome, but the
spirits have evaporated insensibly.

	To represent the process by wihch
sober truth gradually strips off all the
beautiful draperies with which imagi-
nation has enveloped a beloved object,
till from an angel she turns out to be
a merely ordinary woman. This to be
done without caricature, perhaps with
a quiet humor interfused, but the pre-
vailing impression to be a sad one.
The story might consist of the various
alterations in the feelings of the absent
lover, caused by successive events that
display the true character of his mis-
tress ; and the catastrophe should take
place at their meeting, when he finds
himself equally disappointed in her per-
son; or the whole spirit of the thing
may here be reproduced.

	Last evening, from the opposite shore
of the North River, a view of the town
mirrored in the water, which was as
smooth as glass, with no perceptible
tide or agitation, except a trifling swell
and reflux on the sand, although the
shadow of the moon danced in it. The
picture of the town perfect in the wa-
ter,  towers of churches, houses, with
here and there a light gleaming near
the shore above, and more faintly glim-
mering under water,  all perfect, but
somewhat more hazy and indistinct than
the reality. There were many clouds
flitting about the sky; and the picture
of each could be traced in the water, 
the ghost of what was itself unsubstan-
tial. The rattling of wheels heard long
and far through the town. Voices of
people talking on the other side of the
river, the tones being so distinguish-
able in all their variations that it seem-
ed as if what was there said might be
understood; but it was not so.

	Two persons might be bitter enemies
through life, and mutually cause the ru-
in of one another, and of all that were
dear to them. Finally, meeting at the
funeral of a grandchild, the offspring
of a son and daughter married without
their consent,  and who, as well as
the child, had been the victims of their
hatred,  they might discover that the
supposed ground of the quarrel was al-
together a mistake, and then be wofully
reconciled.

	Two persons, by mutual agreement,
to make their wills in each others fa-
vor, then to wait impatiently for one
anothers death, and both to be inform-
ed of the desired event at the same
time. Both, in most joyous sorrow,
hasten to be present at the funeral,
meet, and find themselves both hoaxed.

	The story of a man, cold and hard-
hearted, and acknowledging no brother-
hood with mankind. At his death they
might try to dig him a grave, but, at a
little space beneath the ground, strike
upon a rock, as if the earth refused to
receive the unnatural son into her bos
om. Then they would put him into
an old sepulchre, where the coffins and
corpses were all turned to dust, and so
he would be alone. Then the body
would petrify; and he having died in
some characteristic act and expression,
he would seem, through endless ages
of death, to repel society as in life, and
no one would be buried in that tomb
forever.

Cannon transformed to church-bells.
S</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00012" SEQ="0012" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="6">Passages from Hawikornes No/c-Books.

	A scold and a blockhead, brimstone
and wood,  a good match.

	To make ones own reflection in a
mirror the subject of a story.

	In a dream to wander to some place
where may be heard the complaints of
all the miserable on earth.

	Some common quality or circum-
stance that should bring together peo-
ple the most unlike in all other respects,
and make a brotherhood and sisterhood
of them,  the rich and the proud find-
ing themselves in the same category
with the mean and the despised.

	A person to consider himself as the
prime mover of certain remarkable
events, but to discover that his actions
have not contributed in the least there-
to. Another person to be the cause,
without suspecting it.

	October 25, 1835.A person orfam-
ily long desires some particular good.
At last it comes in such profusion as
to be the great pest of their lives.

	A man, perhaps with a persuasion
that he shall make his fortune by some
singular means, and with an eager long-
ing so to do, while digging or boring
for water, to strike upon a salt-spring.

	To have one event operate in sev-
eral places, as, for example, if a mans
head were to be cut off in one town,
mens heads to drop off in several
towns.

	Follow out the fantasy of a man
taking his life by instalments, instead
of at one payment,  say ten years of
life alternately with ten years of sus-
pended animation.

	Sentiments in a foreign language,
which merely convey the sentiment,
without retaining to the reader any
graces of style or harmony of sound,
have somewhat of the charm of thoughts
in one s own mind that have not yet
been put into words. No possible
words that we might adapt to them
could realize the unshaped beauty that
they appear to possess. This is the
reason that translations are never sat-
isfactory,  and less so, I should think,
to one who cannot than to one who can
pronounce the language.

	A person to be writing a tale, and
to find that it shapes itself against his
intentions ; that the characters act oth-
erwise than he thought; that unfore-
seen events occur; and a catastrophe
comes which he strives in vain to avert.
It might shadow forth his own fate, 
he having made hii~self one of the per-
sonages.

	It is a singular thing, that at the dis-
tance, say, of five feet, the work of the
greatest dunce looks just as well as
that of the greatest genius,  that lit-
tle space being all the distance between
genius and stupidity.

	Mrs. Sigourney says, after Coleridge,
that poetry has been its own exceed-
ing great reward. For the writing,
perhaps; but would it be so for the
readinx?

	Four precepts: To break off cus-
toms; to shake off spirits ill-disposed;
to meditate on youth; to do nothing
against ones genius.

	Salem, August ~i, 1836.  A walk,
yesterday, down to the shore, near the
hospital. Standing on the old grassy
battery, that forms a semicircle, and
looking seaward. The sun not a great
way above the horizon, yet so far as to
give a very golden brightness, when it
shone out. Clouds in the vicinity of
the sun, and nearly all the rest of the
sky covered with clouds in masses, not
a gray uniformity of cloud. A fresh
breeze blowing from land seaward. If
it had been blowing from the sea, it
would have raised it in heavy billows,
and caused it to dash high against the
rocks. But now its surface was not at
all commoved with billows; there was
only roughness enough to take off the
gleam, and give it the aspect of iron
after cooling. The clouds above added
to the black appearance. A few sea-
birds were flitting over the water, only
visible at moments, when they turned
a
6
[January,</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00013" SEQ="0013" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="7">i866.] Passages from Hawthornes Note-Books.

their white bosoms towards me,  as
if they were then first created. The
sunshine had a singular effect. The
clouds would interpose in such a man-
ner that some objects were shaded from
it, while others were strongly illumi-
nated. Some of the islands lay in the
shade, dark and gloomy, while others
were bright and favored spots. The
white light-house sometimes very cheer-
fully marked. There was a schooner
about a mile from the shore, at anchor,
laden apparently with lumber. The
sea all about her had the black, iron
aspect which I have described; but
the vessel herself was alight. Hull,
masts, and spars were all gilded, and
the rigging ~~as made of g olden threads.
A small, white streak of foam breaking
around the bows, which were towards
the wind. The shadowiness of the
clouds overhead made the effect of the
sunlight strange, where it fell.

	Scjtember.The elm-trees have gold-
en branches intermingled with their
green already, and so they had on the
first of the month.

	To picture the predicament of world-
ly people, if admitted to paradise.

	As the architecture of a country al-
ways follows the earliest structures,
American architecture should be a re-
finement of the log-house. The Egyp-
tian is so of the cavern and mound;
the Chinese, of the tent; the Gothic,
of overarching trees ; the Greek, of a
cabin.

	Though we speak nonsense, God
will pick out the meaning of it,  an
extempore prayer by a New England
divine.

	In old times it must have been
much less customary than now to drink
pure water. Walker emphatically men-
tions, among the sufferings of a clergy-
mans wife and family in the Great Re-
bellion, that they were forced to drink
water with crab - apples stamped in it
to relish it.

	Mr. Kirby, author of a work on the
History, Habits, and Instincts of Ani
mals, questions whether there may not
be an abyss of waters within the globe,
communicating with the ocean, and
whether the huge animals of the Sau-
nan tribe  great reptiles, supposed to
be exclusively antediluvian, and now
extinct  may not be inhabitants of it.
He quotes a passage from Revelation,
where the creatures under the earth are
spoken of as distinct from those of the
sea, and speaks of a Saurian fossil that
has been found deep in the subterra-
nean regions. He thinks, or suggests,
that these may be the dragons of Scrip-
ture.

	The elephant is not particularly sa-
gacious in the wild state, but becomes
so when tamed. The fox directly the
contrary, and likewise the wolf.

	A modern Jewish adage,  Let a
man clothe himself beneath his ability,
his children according to his ability, and
his wife above his ability.

	It is said of the eagle, that, in how-
ever long a flight, he is never seen to
clap his wings to his sides. He seems
to govern his movements by the incli-
nation of his wings and tail to the
wind, as a ship is propelled by the ac-
tion of the wind on her sails.

	In old country- houses in England,
instead of glass for windows, they used
wicker, or fine strips of oak disposed
checkerwise. Horn was also used.
The windows of princes and great no-
blemen of crystal; those of Studley
Castle, Holinshed says, of beryl. There
were seldom chimneys; and they cook-
ed their meats by a fire made against
an iron back in the great hall. Houses,
often of gentry, were built of a heavy
timber frame, filled up with lath and
plaster. People slept on rough mats
or straw pallets, with a round log for
a pillow; seldom better beds than a
mattress, with a sack of chaff for a pil-
low.

	October 25, 1836. A walk yesterday
through Dark Lane, and home through
the village of Danvers. Landscape now
wholly autumnal. Saw an elderly man
7</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00014" SEQ="0014" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="8">Passages from Haw//zoriles No/c-Books.

laden with two dry, yellow, rustling bun-
dles of Indian corn-stalks,a good per-
sonification of Autumn. Another man
hoeing up potatoes. White rows of cab-
bages lay ripening. Fields of dry In-
dian corn. The grass has still consider-
able greenness. Wild rose-bushes de-
void of leaves, with their deep, bright
red seed-vessels. Meeting-house in
Danvers seen at a distance, with the
sun shining through the windows of its
belfry. Barberry - bushes,  the leaves
now of a brown red, still juicy and
healthy; very few berries remaining,
mostly frost - bitten and wilted. All
among the yet green grass, dry stalks
of weeds. The down of thistles occa-
sionally seen flying through the sunny
air.

	In this dismal chamber FAME was
won. (Salem, Union Street.)

	Those who are very difficult in choos-
ing wives seem as if they would take
none of Natures ready-made works, but
want a woman manufactured particular-
ly to their order.

	A council of the passengers in a
street: called by somebody to decide
upon some points important to him.

	All sorts of persons, and every indi-
vidual, has a place to fill in the world,
and is important in some respects,
whether he chooses to be so or not.

	A Thanksgiving dinner. All the mis-
erable on earth are to be invited,  as
the drunkard, the bereaved parent, the
ruined merchant, the broken-hearted
lover, the poor widow, the old man and
woman who have outlived their genera-
tion, the disappointed author, the wound-
ed, sick, and broken soldier, the diseased
person, the infidel, the man with an evil
conscience, little orphan children, or
children of neglectful parents, shall be
admitted to the table, and many oth-
ers. The giver of the feast goes out
to deliver his invitations. Some of the
guests he meets in the streets, some
he knocks for at the doors of their
houses. The description must be rapid.
But who must be the giver of the feast,
and what his claims to preside? A
man who has never found out what he
is fit for, who has unsettled aims or
objects in life, and whose mind gnaws
him, making him the sufferer of many
kinds of misery. He should meet some
pious, old, sorrowful person, with more
outward calamities than any other, and
invite him with a reflection that piety
would make all that miserable company
truly thankful.

	Merry, in merry England, does not
mean mirthful; but is corrupted from
an old Teutonic word signifying famous
or renowned.

	In an old London newspaper, 1678,
there is an advertisement, among other
goods at auction, of a black girl of about
fifteen years old, to be sold.

	We sometimes congratulate ourselves
at the moment of waking from a trou-
bled dream: it may be so the moment
after death.

	The race of mapkind to be swept
away, leaving all their cities and works.
Then another human pair to be placed
in the world, with native intelligence
like Adam and Eve, but knowing noth-
ing of their predecessors or of their own
nature and destiny. They, perhaps, to
be described as working out this knowl-
edge by their sympathy with what they
saw, and by their own feelings.

	Memorials of the family of Haw-
thorne in the church of the village of
Dundry, Somersetshire, England. The
church is ancient and small, and has a
prodigiously high tower of more modern
date, being erected in the time of Ed-
ward IV. It serves as a landmark for
an amazing extent of country.

	A singular fact, that, when man is a
brute, he is the most sensual and loath-
some of all brutes.

	A snake, taken into a mans stomach
and nourished there from fifteen years
to thirty-five, tormenting him most hor-
ribly. A type of envy or some other
evil passion.

	A sketch illustrating the imperfect
8
[January,</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00015" SEQ="0015" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="9">	i866.]	Passages from IIaro/hor;ies Note-Books.	9

compensations which time makes for its
devastations on the person,  giving a
wreath of laurel while it causes bald-
ness, honors for infirmities, wealth for a
broken constitution,  and at last, when
a man has everything that seems desir-
able, death seizes him. To contrast the
man who has thus reached the summit
of ambition with the ambitious youth.

	Walking a long the track of the rail-
road, I observed a place where the
workmen had bored a hole through the
solid rock, in order to blast it; but strik-
ing a spring of water beneath the rock,
it gushed up through the hole. It look-
ed as if the water were contained within
the rock.

	A Fancy Ball, in which the promi-
nent American writers should appear,
dressed in character.

	A lament for lifes wasted sunshine.

	A new classification of society to be
instituted. Instead of rich and poor,
high and low, they are to be classed, 
First, by their sorrows: for instance,
whenever there are any, whether in fair
mansion or hovel, who are mourning the
loss of relations and friends, and who
wear black, whether the cloth be coarse
or superfine, they are to make one class.
Secondly, all who have the same mala
dies, whether they lie under damask
canopies or on straw pallets or in the
wards of hospitals, they are to form one
class. Thirdly, all who are guilty of the
same sins, whether the world knows
them or not; whether they languish in
prison, looking forward to the gallows,
or walk honored among men, they also
form a class. Then proceed to general-
ize and classify the whole world togeth-
er, as none can claim utter exemption
from either sorrow, sin, or disease; and
if they could, yet Death, like a great
parent, comes and sweeps them all
through one darksome portal,  all his
children.

	Fortune to come like a peddler with
his goods,  as wreaths of laurel, dia-
monds, crowns; selling them, but ask-
ing for them the sacrifice of health, of
integrity, perhaps of life in the battle-
field, and of the real pleasures of exist-
ence. Who would buy, if the price were
to be paid down?

	The dying exclamation of the Em-
peror Augustus, Has it not been well
acted? An essay on the misery of be-
ing always under a mask. A veil may
be needful, but never a mask. Instances
of people who wear masks in all classes
of society, and never take them off even
in the most familiar moments, though
sometimes they may chance to slip
aside.

	The various guises under which Ruin
makes his approaches to his victims: to
the merchant, in the guise of a merchant
offering speculations; to the young heir,
a jolly companion; to the maiden, a sigh-
ing, sentimentalist lover.

	What were the contents of the bur-
den of Christian in the Pilgrims Pro-
gress? 1-le must have been taken for a
peddler travelling with his pack.

	To think, as the sun goes down, what
events have happened in the course of
the day,  events of ordinary occur-
rence: as, the clocks have struck, the
dead have been buried.

	Curious to imagine what murmurings
and discontent would be excited, if any
of the great so-called calamities of hu-
man beings were to be abolished,  as,
for instance, death.

	Trifles to one are matters of life and
death to another. As, for instance, a
farmer desires a brisk breeze to winnow
his grain; and mariners, to blow them
out of the reach of pirates.

	A recluse, like myself, or a prisoner,
to measure time by the progress of sun-
shine through his chamber.

	Would it not be wiser for people to
rejoice at all that they now sorrow for,
and vice versd? To put on bridal gar-
ments at funerals, and mourning at wed-
dings? For their friends to condole
with them when they attained riches and
honor, as only so much care added?</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00016" SEQ="0016" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="10">I0	Passages from Haw//zorizes Note-Books.	[January,

	If in a village it were a custom to
hang a funeral garland or other token
of death on a house where some one
had died, and there to let it remain till
a death occurred elsewhere, and then to
hang that same garland over the other
house, it would have, methinks, a strong
effect.

	No fountain so small hut that Heaven
may be imaged in its bosom.

	Fame! Some very humble persons
in a town may be said to possess it, 
as, the penny-post, the town-crier, the
constable,  and they are known to
everybody; while many richer, more
intellectual, worthier persons are un-
known by the majority of their fellow-
citizens. Something analogous in the
world at large.

	The ideas of people in general are
not raised higher than the roofs of the
houses. All their interests extend over
the earths surface in a layer of that
thickness. The meeting-house steeple
reaches out of. their sphere.

	Nobody will use other peoples ex-
perience, nor has any of his own till it
is too late to use it.

	Two lovers to plan the building of
a pleasure-house on a certain spot of
ground, but various seeming accidents
prevent it. Once they find a group of
miserable children there; once it is the
scene where crime is plotted ; at last
the dead body of one of the lovers or
of a dear friend is found there; and in-
stead of a pleasure-house, they build a
marble tomb. The moral,  that there
is no place on earth fit for the site of a
pleasure-house, because there is no spot
that may not have been saddened by
human grief, stained by crime, or hal-
lowed by death. It might be three
friends who plan it, instead of two lov-
ers; and the dearest one dies.

	Comfort for childless people. A mar-
ried couple with ten children have been
the means of bringing about ten funer-
als.

	A blind man, on a dark night, car-
ried a torch, in order that people might
see him and not run against him, and
direct him how to avoid dangers.

	To picture a childs (one of four or
five years old) reminiscences at sunset
of a long summers day,his first awak-
ening, his studies, his sports, his little
fits of passion, perhaps a whipping, etc.

	The blind mans walk.

	To picture a virtuous family, the dif-
ferent members examples of virtuous
dispositions in their way; then intro-
duce a vicious person, and trace out the
relations that arise between him and
them, and the manner in which all are
affected.

	A man to flatter himself with the idea
that he would not be guilty of some cer-
tain wickedness,  as, for instance, to
yield to the personal temptations of the
Devil, yet to find, ultimately, that he
was at that very time committing that
same wickedness.

	What would a man do, if he were
compelled to live always in the sultry
heat of society, and could never bathe
himself in cool solitude?

	A girls lover to be slain and buried
in her flower-garden, and the earth lev-
elled over him. That particular spot,
which she happens to plant with some
peculiar variety of flowers, produces
them of admirable splendor, beauty, and
perfume; and she delights, with an
indescribable impulse, to wear them in
her bosom, and scent her chamber with
them. Thus the classic fantasy would
be realized, of dead people transformed
to flowers.

	Objects seen by a magic-lantern re-
versed. A street, or other location,
might be presented, where there would
be opportunity to bring forward all ob-
jects of worldly interest, and thus much
pleasant satire might be the result.</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00017" SEQ="0017" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="11">	i866.]	Cas/ics in I/ic Air.	II



CASTLES IN THE AIR.

FROM AN UNPUBLISHED POEM.


UT there is yet a region of the clouds
B Unseen from the low earth. Beyond the veil
Of these dark volumes rolling through the sky,
Its mountain summits glisten in the sun, 
The realm of Castles in the Air. The foot
Of man hath never trod those shining streets
But there his spirit, leaving the dull load
Of bodily organs, wanders with delight,
And builds its structures of the impalpable mist,
Glorious beyond the dream of architect,
And populous with forms of nobler mould
Than ever walked the earth. So said my guide,
And led me, wondering, to a headland height
That overlooked a fair broad vale shut in
By the great hills of Cloudland. Now behold
The Castle-builders ! Then I looked ; and, lo!
The vale was filled with shadowy forms, that bore
Each a white wand, with which they touched the banks
Of mist beside them, and at once arose,
Obedient to their wish, the walls and domes
Of stately palaces, Gothic or Greek,
Or such as in the land of Mahomet
Uplift the crescent, or, in forms more strange,
Border the ancient Indus, or behold
Their gilded friezes mirrored in the lakes
Of China,  yet of ampler majesty,
And gorgeously adorned. Tall porticos
Sprang from the ground; the eye pursued afar
Their colonnades, that lessened to a point
In the faint distance. Portals that swung back
On musical hinges showed the eye within
Vast halls with golden floors, and bright alcoves,
And walls of pearl, and sapphire vault besprent
With silver stars. Within the spacious rooms
Were banquets spread; and menials, beautiful
As wood-nymphs or as stripling Mercuries,
Ran to and fro, and laid the chalices,
And brought the brimming wine-jars. Enters now
The happy architect, and wanders on
From room to room, and glories in his work.

Not long his glorying: for a chill north wind
Breathes through the structure, and the massive walls
Are folded up; the proud domes roll away
In mist-wreaths; pinnacle and turret lean
Forward, like birds prepared for flight, and stream,</PB></P>
</DIV1>
<DIV1 TYPE="article" DECLS="/moa/atla/atla0017/" ID="ABK2934-0017-4">
<BIBL>
<AUTHOR>W. C. Bryant</AUTHOR>
<AUTHORIND>Bryant, W. C.</AUTHORIND>
<TITLE TYPE="ART">Castles in the Air</TITLE>
<BIBLSCOPE TYPE="pg">11-13</BIBLSCOPE>
</BIBL>
<P><PB REF="IMG00017" SEQ="0017" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="11">	i866.]	Cas/ics in I/ic Air.	II



CASTLES IN THE AIR.

FROM AN UNPUBLISHED POEM.


UT there is yet a region of the clouds
B Unseen from the low earth. Beyond the veil
Of these dark volumes rolling through the sky,
Its mountain summits glisten in the sun, 
The realm of Castles in the Air. The foot
Of man hath never trod those shining streets
But there his spirit, leaving the dull load
Of bodily organs, wanders with delight,
And builds its structures of the impalpable mist,
Glorious beyond the dream of architect,
And populous with forms of nobler mould
Than ever walked the earth. So said my guide,
And led me, wondering, to a headland height
That overlooked a fair broad vale shut in
By the great hills of Cloudland. Now behold
The Castle-builders ! Then I looked ; and, lo!
The vale was filled with shadowy forms, that bore
Each a white wand, with which they touched the banks
Of mist beside them, and at once arose,
Obedient to their wish, the walls and domes
Of stately palaces, Gothic or Greek,
Or such as in the land of Mahomet
Uplift the crescent, or, in forms more strange,
Border the ancient Indus, or behold
Their gilded friezes mirrored in the lakes
Of China,  yet of ampler majesty,
And gorgeously adorned. Tall porticos
Sprang from the ground; the eye pursued afar
Their colonnades, that lessened to a point
In the faint distance. Portals that swung back
On musical hinges showed the eye within
Vast halls with golden floors, and bright alcoves,
And walls of pearl, and sapphire vault besprent
With silver stars. Within the spacious rooms
Were banquets spread; and menials, beautiful
As wood-nymphs or as stripling Mercuries,
Ran to and fro, and laid the chalices,
And brought the brimming wine-jars. Enters now
The happy architect, and wanders on
From room to room, and glories in his work.

Not long his glorying: for a chill north wind
Breathes through the structure, and the massive walls
Are folded up; the proud domes roll away
In mist-wreaths; pinnacle and turret lean
Forward, like birds prepared for flight, and stream,</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00018" SEQ="0018" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="12">	12	Caszics i;z t/~c Air.	[January,


In trains of vapor, througn the empty air.
Meantime the astonished builder, dispossessed,
Stands mid the drifting rack. A brief despair
Seizes him ; but the wand is in his hand,
And soon he turns him to his task again.
Behold, said the fair being at my side,
Hoxv one has made himself a diadem
Out of the bright skirts of a cloud that lay
Steeped in the golden sunshine, and has bound
The bauble on his forehead! See, again,
How from these vapors he calls up a host
XVith arms and banners! A great multitude
Gather and bow before him with bare heads.
To the four winds his messengers go forth,
And bring him back earths homage. From the ground
Another calls a wing~d image, such
As poets give to Fame, who, to her mouth
Putting a silver trumpet, blows abroad
A loud, harmonious summons to the world,
And all the listening nations shout his name.
Another yet, apart from all the rest,
Casting a fearful glance from side to side,
Touches the ground by stealth. Beneath his wand
A glittering pile grows up, ingots and bars
Of massive gold, and coins on which earths kings
Have stamped their symbols. As these words were said,
The north wind blew again across the vale,
And, lo! the beamy crown flew off in mist;
The host of armi~d men became a scud
Torn by the angry blast; the form of Fame
Tossed its long arms in air, and rode the wind,
A jagged cloud ; the glittering pile of gold
Grew pale and flowed in a gray reek away.
Then there were sobs and tears from those whose work
The wind. had scattered some had flung themselves
Upon the ground in grief; and some stood fixed
In blank bewilderment; and some looked on
Unmoved, as at a pageant of the stage
Suddenly hidden by the curtains fall.

Take thou this wand, my bright companion said.
I took it from her hand, and with it touched
The knolls of snow-white mist, and they grew green
With soft, thick herbage. At another touch,
A brook leaped forth, and dashed and sparkled by;
And shady walks through shrubberies cool and close
Wandered; and where, upon the open grounds,
The peaceful sunshine lay, a vineyard nursed
Its pouting clusters; and from boughs that drooped
Beneath their load an orchard shed its fruit;
And gardens, set with many a pleasant herb
And many a glorious flower, made sweet the air.</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00019" SEQ="0019" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="13">	i866.]	Beauty a;zd the Beast.	3

I looked, and I exulted; yet I longed
For Natures grander aspects, and I plied
The slender rod again; and then arose
Woods tall and wide, of odorous pine and fir,
And every noble tree that casts the leaf
In autumn. Paths that wound between their stems
Led through the solemn shade to twilight glens,
To thundering torrents and white waterfalls,
And edge of lonely lakes, and chasms between
The mountain-cliffs~ Above the trees were seen
Gray pinnacles and walls of splintered rock.

But near the forest margin, in the vale,
Nestled a dwelling half embowered by trees,
Where, through the open window, shelves were seen
Filled with old volumes, and a glimpse was given
Of canvas, here and there along the walls,
On which the hands of mighty men of art
Had flung their fancies. On the portico
Old friends, with smiling faces and frank eyes,
Talked with each otl~er: some had passed from life
Long since, yet dearly were remembered still.
My heart yearned toxvard them, and the quick, warm tears
Stood in my eyes. Forward I sprang to grasp
The hands that once so kindly met my own, 
I sprang, hut met them not: the withering wind
Was there before me. Dwelling, field, and brook,
Dark wood, and flowery garden, and blue lake,
And beetling cliff, and noble human forms,
All, all had melted into that pale sea
Of billowy vapor rolling round my feet.






BEAUTY AND TIlE BEAST.

A STORY OF OLD RUSSIA.

I.

	are about to relate a story of
V~mingled fact and fancy. The
facts are borrowed from the Russian
author, Petjerski; the fancy is our own.
Our task will chiefly he to soften the
outlines of incidents almost too sharp
and rugged for literary use, to supply
them with the necessary coloring and
sentiment, and to give a coherent and
proportioned shape to the irregular frag-.
ments of an old chronicle. We know
something, from other sodrces, of the
customs described~ something of the
character of the people from person-
al observation, and may therefore the
more freely take such liberties as we
choose with the rude, vigorous sketch-
es of the Russian original. One who
happens to have read the \vork of Ville
bois can easily comprehend the exist-
ence of a state of society, on the banks
of the Volga, a hundred years ago,</PB></P>
</DIV1>
<DIV1 TYPE="article" DECLS="/moa/atla/atla0017/" ID="ABK2934-0017-5">
<BIBL>
<AUTHOR>Bayard Taylor</AUTHOR>
<AUTHORIND>Taylor, Bayard</AUTHORIND>
<TITLE TYPE="ART">Beauty and the Beast</TITLE>
<BIBLSCOPE TYPE="pg">13-39</BIBLSCOPE>
</BIBL>
<P><PB REF="IMG00019" SEQ="0019" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="13">	i866.]	Beauty a;zd the Beast.	3

I looked, and I exulted; yet I longed
For Natures grander aspects, and I plied
The slender rod again; and then arose
Woods tall and wide, of odorous pine and fir,
And every noble tree that casts the leaf
In autumn. Paths that wound between their stems
Led through the solemn shade to twilight glens,
To thundering torrents and white waterfalls,
And edge of lonely lakes, and chasms between
The mountain-cliffs~ Above the trees were seen
Gray pinnacles and walls of splintered rock.

But near the forest margin, in the vale,
Nestled a dwelling half embowered by trees,
Where, through the open window, shelves were seen
Filled with old volumes, and a glimpse was given
Of canvas, here and there along the walls,
On which the hands of mighty men of art
Had flung their fancies. On the portico
Old friends, with smiling faces and frank eyes,
Talked with each otl~er: some had passed from life
Long since, yet dearly were remembered still.
My heart yearned toxvard them, and the quick, warm tears
Stood in my eyes. Forward I sprang to grasp
The hands that once so kindly met my own, 
I sprang, hut met them not: the withering wind
Was there before me. Dwelling, field, and brook,
Dark wood, and flowery garden, and blue lake,
And beetling cliff, and noble human forms,
All, all had melted into that pale sea
Of billowy vapor rolling round my feet.






BEAUTY AND TIlE BEAST.

A STORY OF OLD RUSSIA.

I.

	are about to relate a story of
V~mingled fact and fancy. The
facts are borrowed from the Russian
author, Petjerski; the fancy is our own.
Our task will chiefly he to soften the
outlines of incidents almost too sharp
and rugged for literary use, to supply
them with the necessary coloring and
sentiment, and to give a coherent and
proportioned shape to the irregular frag-.
ments of an old chronicle. We know
something, from other sodrces, of the
customs described~ something of the
character of the people from person-
al observation, and may therefore the
more freely take such liberties as we
choose with the rude, vigorous sketch-
es of the Russian original. One who
happens to have read the \vork of Ville
bois can easily comprehend the exist-
ence of a state of society, on the banks
of the Volga, a hundred years ago,</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00020" SEQ="0020" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="14">	4	Beauty and the Beast.	[January,

which is now impossible, and will soon
become incredible. What is strangest
in our narrative has been declared to
be true.


II.

	WE are in Kinesma, a small town
on the Volga, between Kostroma and
Nijni - Novgorod. The time is about
the middle of the last century, and the
month October.
	There was trouble, one day, in the
palace of Prince Alexis, of Kinesma.
This edifice, with its massive white
walls, and its pyramidal roofs of green
copper, stood upon a gentle mound to
the eastward of the town, overlooking
it, a broad stretch of the Volga, and the
opposite shore. On a similar hill, to
the westward, stood the church ,glit-
tering with its dozen bulging, golden
domes. These two establishments di-
vided the sovereignty of Kinesma be-
tween them. Prince Alexis owned the
bodies of the inhabitants, (with the ex-
ception of a few merchants and trades-
men,) and the Archimandrite Sergius
owned their souls. But the shadow of
the former stretched also over other vil-
lages, farb eyond the rin gof the wooded
horizon. The number of his serfs was
ten thousand, and his rule over them
was even less disputed than theirs over
their domestic animals.
	The inhabitants of the place had no-
ticed with dismay that the slumber-flag
had not been hoisted on the castle, al-
though it was half an hour after the
usual time. So rare a circumstance
betokened sudden wrath or disaster,
on the part of Prince Alexis. Long
experience had prepared the people for
anything that might happen, and they
were consequently not astonished at
the singular event which presently tran-
spired.
	The fact is, that, in the first place,
the dinner had been prolonged full ten
minutes beyond its accustomed limit,
owing to a discussion between the
Prince, his wife, the Princess Martha,
and their son, Prince Boris. The last
was to leave for St. Petersburg in a
fortnight, and wished to have his de-
parture preceded by a festival at the
castle. The Princess Martha was al-
ways ready to second the desires of her
only child. Between the two they had
pressed some twenty or thirty thousand
rubles out of the old Prince, for the
winter diversions of the young one.
The festival, to be sure, would have
been a slight expenditure for a noble
of such immense wealth as Prince Alex-
is; but he never liked his wife, and he
took a stubborn pleasure in thwarting
her wishes. It was no satisfaction that
Boris resembled her in character. That
weak successor to the sovereignty of
Kinesma preferred a game of cards to a
bear-hunt, and could never drink more
than a quart of vodki without becoming
dizzy and sick.
	Ugh ! Prince Alexis would cry,
with a shudder of disgust, the whelp
barks after the dam !
	A state dinner he might give; but
a festival, with dances, dramatic repre-
sentations, burning tar-barrels, and can-
non,  no! He knitted his heavy brows
and drank deeply, and his fiery gray
eyes shot such incessant glances from
side to side that Boris and the Princess
Martha could not exchange a single
wink of silent advice. The pet bear,
Mishka, plied with strong wines, which
Prince Alexis poured out for him into a
golden basin, became at last comically
drunk, and in endeavoring to execute a
dance lost his balance and fell at full
length on his back.
	The Prince burst into a yelling,
shrieking fit of laughter. Instantly the
yellow-haired serfs in waiting, the Cal-
mucks at the hall-door, and the half-
witted dwarf who crawled around the
table in his tow shirt, began laughing
in chorus, as violently as they could.
The Princess Martha and Prince Boris
laughed also; and while the old man~s
eyes were dimmed with streaming tears
of mirth, quickly exchanged nods. The
sound extended all over the castle, and
was heard outside of the walls.
	Father!~ said Boris, let us have
,the festival, and Mishka shall perform</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00021" SEQ="0021" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="15">Beauty and the Beast.

again. Prince Paul of Kostroma would
strangle, if he could see him.
	Good, by St. Vladimir! exclaim-
ed Prince Alexis. Thou shalt have
it, my Borka ! * Where s Simon Pe-
trovitch? May the Devil scorch that
vagabond, if he does nt do better than
the last time Sasha I
	A broad-shouldered serf stepped for-
ward and stood with bowed bead.
	Lock up Simon Petrovitch in the
southwestern tower. Send the tailor
and the girls to him, to learn their parts.
Search every one of them before they
go in, and if any one dares to carry
vodki to the beast, twenty-five lashes
on the back!
	Sasha bowed again and departed.
Simon Petrovitch was the court-poet
of Kinesma. He had a mechanical
knack of preparing allegorical diver-
sions which suited the conventional
taste of society at that time ; but he
had also a failing, he was rarely sober
enough to write. Prince Alexis, there-
fore, was in the habit of locking him up
and placing a guard over him, until the
inspiration had done its work. The
most comely young serfs of both sexes
were selected to perform the parts, and
the court-tailor arranged for them the
appropriate dresses. It depended very
much upon accident  that is to say,
the mood of Prince Alexis  whether
Simon Petrovitch was rewarded with
stripes or rubles.
	The matter thus settled, the Prince
rose from the table and walked out up-
on an overhanging balcony, where an
immense reclining arm-chair of stuffed
leather was ready for his siesta. He
preferred this indulgence in the open
air; and although the weather was rap-
idly growing cold, a pelisse of sables
enabled him to slumber sweetly in the
face of the north wind. An attendant
stood with the pelisse outspread ; an-
other held the halyards to which was
attached the great red slumber-flag,
ready to run it up and announce to all
Kinesma that the noises of the town
must cease; a few seconds more, and
all things would have been fixed in their
* Little Boris.
regular daily courses. The Prince, in
fact, was just straightening his shoul-
ders to receive the sables; his eyelids
were dropping, and his eyes, sinking
mechanically with them, fell upon the
river-road, at the foot of the hill. Along
this road walked a man, wearing the
long cloth caftan of a merchant.
	Prince Alexis started, and all slum-
ber vanished out of his eyes. He lean-
ed forward for a moment, with a quick,
eager expression; then a loud roar, like
that of an enraged wild beast, burst from
his mouth. He gave a stamp that shook
the balcony.
	Doo  he cried to the trembling
attendant, my cap! my whip!
	The sables fell upon the floor, the
cap and whip appeared in a twinkling,
and the red slumber-flag was folded up
again for the first time in several years,
as the Prince stormed out of the castle.
The traveller below had heard the cry,
 for it might have been heard half a
mile. He seemed to have a presenti-
ment of evil, for he had already set off
towards the town at full speed.
	To explain the occurrence, we must
mention one of the Princes many pe-
culiar habits. This was, to invite stran-
gers or merchants of the neighborhood
to dine with him, and, after regaling
them bountifully, to take his pay in sub-
jecting them to all sorts of outrageous
tricks, with the help of his hand of
willing domestics. Now this particular
merchant had been invited, and had at-
tended; but, being a very wide-awake,
shrewd person, he saw what was com-
ing, and dexterously slipped away from
the banquet without being perceived.
The Prince vowed vengeance, on dis-
covering the escape, and he was not a
man to forget his word.
	Impelled by such opposite passions,
both parties ran with astonishing speed.
The merchant was the taller, but his
long caftan, hastily ungirdled, swung
behind him and dragged in the air.
The short, booted legs of the Prince
beat quicker time, and he grasped his
short, heavy, leathern whip more tightly
as he saw the space diminishing. They
dashed into the town of Kinesma a hun-
i866.]
5</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00022" SEQ="0022" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="16">Beauty and the Beast.

dred yards apart. The merchant en-
tered the main street, or bazaar, looking
rapidly to right and left, as he ran, in
the hope of espying some place of ref-
uge. The terrible voice behind him
cried,
Stop, scoundrel! I have a crow to
pick with you
	And the tradesmen in their shops
looked on and laughed, as well they
might, being unconcerned spectators of
the fun. The fugitive, therefore, kept
straight on, notwithstanding a pond of
water glittered across the farther end
of the street.
Although Prince Alexis had gained
considerably in the race, such violent
exercise, after a heavy dinner, deprived
him of breath. He again cried, 
Stop !
	But the merchant answered, 
No, Highness! You may come to
me, but I will not go to you.
	Oh, the villain! growled the Prince,
in a hoarse whisper, for he had no more
voice.
	The pond cut off all further pursuit.
Hastily kicking off his loose boots, the
merchant plunged into the water, rather
than encounter the princely whip, which
already began to crack and snap in fierce
anticipation. Prince Alexis kicked off
his boots and followed; the pond grad-
ually deepened, and in a minute the tall
merchant stood up to his chin in the
icy water, and his short pursuer like-
wise, but out of striking distance. The
latter coaxed and entreated, but the
victim kept his ground.
	You lie, Highness! he said, bold-
ly. If you want me, come to me.
	Ah-h-h! roared the Prince, with
chattering teeth, what a stubborn ras-
cal you are ! Come here, and I give
you my word that I will not hurt you.
Nay,  seeing that the man did not
move, you shall dine with me as of-
ten as you please. You shall be my
friend; by St. Vladimir, I like you !
	Make the sign of the cross, and
swear it by all the Saints, said the
merchant, composedly.
	With a grim smile on his face, the
Prince stepped back and shiveringly
obeyed. Both then waded out, sat
down upon the ground and pulled on
their boots; and presently the people
of Kinesma beheld the dripping pair
walking side by side up the street, con-
versing in the most cordial manner.
The merchant dried his clothes from
within, at the castle table; a fresh keg
of old Cognac was opened; and although
the slumber-flag was not unfurled that af-
ternoon, it flew from the staff and hush-
ed the town nearly all the next day.


III.

THE festival granted on behalf of
Prince Boris was one of the grandest
ever given at the castle. In character
it was a singular cross between the old
Muscovite revel and the French enter-
tainments which were then introduced
by the Empress Elizabeth. All the
nobility, for fifty versts around, includ-
ing Prince Paul and the chief families
of Kostroma, were invited. Simon Pe-
trovitch had been so carefully guarded
that his work was actually completed
and the parts distributed; his superin-
tendence of the performance, however,
was still a matter of doubt, as it was
necessary to release him from the tow-
er, and after several days of forced ab-
stinence he always manifested a raging
appetite. Prince Alexis, in spite of this
doubt, had been assured by Boris that
the dramatic part of the entertainment
would not be a failure. When he ques-
tioned Sasha, the poets strong-shoul-
dered guard, the latter winked familiar-
ly and answered with a proverb, 
I sit on the shore and wait for the
wind,  which was as much as to say
that Sasha had little fear of the result.
	The tables were spread in the great
hall, where places for one hundred chos7
en guests were arranged on the floor,
while the three or four hundred of mi-
nor importance were provided for in the
galleries above. By noon the whole
party were assembled. The halls and
passages of the castle were already per-
meated with rich and unctuous smells,
and a delicate nose might have picked
i6
[January,</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00023" SEQ="0023" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="17">	i866.]	Beauty a;zd 1/ic Beast.

out and arranged, by their finer or
coarser vapors, the dishes preparing for
the upper and lower tables. One of the
parasites of Prince Alexis, a dilapidated
nobleman, officiated as Grand Marshal,
 an office which more than compen-
sated for the savage charity he received,
for it was performed in cQntinual fear
and trembling. The Prince had felt the
stick of the Great Peter upon his own
back, and was ready enough to imitate
any custom of the famous monarch.
	An orchestra, composed principally
of horns and brass instruments, occu-
pied a separate gallery at one end of
the dining-hall. The guests were as-
sembled in the adjoining apartments,
according to their rank; and when the
first loud blast of the instruments an-
nounced the beginning of the banquet,
two very differently attired and freight-
ed processions of servants made their
appearance at the same time. Those
intended for the princely table number-
ed two hundred,  two for each guest.
They were the handsomest young men
among the ten thousand serfs, clothed
in loose white trousers and skirts of
pink or lilac silk; their soft golden hair,
parted in the middle, fell upon their
shoulders, and a band of gold-thread
about the brow prevented it from sweep-
ing the dishes they carried. They en-
tered the reception-room, bearing huge
trays of sculptured silver, upon which
were anchovies, the finest Finnish ca-
viar, sliced oranges, cheese, and crystal
flagons of Cognac, rum, and kiimmel.
There were fewer servants for the re-
maining guests, who were gathered in
a separate chamber, and regaled with
the common black caviar, onions, bread,
and vodki. At the second blast of
trumpets, the two companies set them-
selves in motion and entered the din-
ing-hall at opposite ends. Our busi-
ness, however, is only ~vith the princi-
pal personages, so we will allow the
common crowd quietly to mount to the
galleries and satisfy their senses with
the coarser viands, while their imagina-
tion is stimulated by the sight of the
splendor and luxury below.
Prince Alexis entered first, with a
	voL. xvii.  NO. 99.	2
pompous, mincing gait, leading the
Princess Martha by the tips of her fin-
gers. He wore a caftan of green vel-
vet laced with gold; a huge vest of
crimson brocade, and breeches of yel-
low satin. A wig, resembling clouds
boiling in the confluence of opposing
winds, surged from his low, broad fore-
head, and flowed upon his shoulders.
As his small, fiery eyes swept the hall,
every servant trembled: he was as se-
vere at the commencement as he was
reckless at the close of a banquet. The
Princess Martha wore a robe of pink
satin embroidered with flowers made
of small pearls, and a train and head-
dress of crimson velvet. Her emeralds
were the finest outside of Moscow, and
she wore them all. Her pale, weak,
frightened face was quenched in the
dazzle of the green fires which shot
from her forehead, ears, and bosom, as
she moved.
	Prince Paul of Kostroma and the Prin-
cess Nadejda followed; but on reach-
ing the table, the gentlemen took their
seats at the head, while the ladies march-
ed down to the foot. Their seats were
determined by their relative rank, and
woe to him who was so ignorant or so ab-
sent-minded as to make a mistake! The
servants had been carefully trained in
advance by the Grand Marshal; and
whoever took a place above his rank or
importance found, when he caine to sit
down, that his chair had miraculously
disappeared, or, not noticing the fact,
seated himself absurdly and violently
upon the floor. The Prince at the head
of the table, and the Princess at the
foot, with their nearest guests of equal
rank, ate from dishes of massive gold
the others from silver. As soon as the
last of the company had entered the
hall, a crowd of jugglers, tumblers,
dwarfs, and Calmucks followed, crowd-
ing themselves into the corners under
the galleries, where they awaited the
conclusion of the banquet to display
their tricks, and scolded and pummelled
each other in the mean time.
	On one side of Prince Alexis the bear
Mishka took his station. By order of
Prince Boris he had been kept from
7</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00024" SEQ="0024" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="18">	Bccizdy and /kc ilcast.	[January,

wine for several days, and his small
eyes were keener and hungrier than
usual. As he rose now and then, im-
patiently, and sat upon his hind legs,
he formed a curious contrast to the
Princes other supporter, the idiot, who
sat also in his tow shirt, with a large
pewter basin in his hand. It was difli-
cult to say whether the beast was most
man or the man most beast. They eyed
each other and watched the motions of
their lord with equal jealousy; and the
dismal whine of th~ bear found an echo
in the drawling, slaverin g laugh of the
idiot. The Prince glanced from one
to the other; they put him in a capital
humor, which was not lessened as he
perceived an expression of envy pass
over the face of Prince Paul.
	The dinner commenced with a botvi-
via  something between a soup and
a salad  of wonderful composition. It
contained cucumbers, cherries, salt fish,
melons, bread, salt, pepper, and wine.
While it was being served, four hu~re
fishermen, dressed to represent mermen
of the Volga, naked to the waist, with
hair crowned with reeds, legs finned
with silver tissue from the knees down-
ward, and preposterous scaly tails, which
dragged helplessly upon the floor, en-
tered the ball, bearing a broad, shallow
tank of silver. In the tank flapped and
swam four superb sterlets, their ridgy
backs rising out of the water like those
of alligators. Great applause welcomed
this new and classical adaptation of the
old custom of showing the living fish,
before cooking them, to the guests at
the table. The invention was due to
Simon Petrovitch, and was (if the truth
must be .confessed) the result of certain
carefully measured supplies of brandy
which Prince Boris himself had carried
to the imprisoned poet.
	After the sterlets had melted away to
their backbones, and the roasted geese
had shrunk into drumsticks and breast-
plates, and here and there a guests eai~s
began to redden with more rapid blood,
Prince Alexis judged that the time for
diversion had arrived. He first filled up
the idiots basin with fragments of all the
dishc3 within his reach,  fish, stewed
fruits, goose-fat, bread, boiled cabbage,
and beer,  the idiot grinning with de-
light all the while, and singing, Ne
uyesjal, golubchik mol, (Dont go away,
my little pigeon,) between the handfuls
which he crammed into his mouth. The
guests roared with laughter, especially
when a juggler or Calmuck stole out
from under the gallery, and pretended
to have designs upon the basin. Mish-
ka, the bear, had also been well fed, and
greedily drank ripe old Malaga from the
golden dish. But, alas he would not
dance. Sitting up on his hind legs, with
his fore paws hanging before him, he
cast a drunken, languishing eye upon
the company, lolled out his tongue, and
whined with an almost human voice.
The domestics, secretly incited by the
Grand Marshal, exhausted their ingenu-
ity in coaxing him, but in vain. Final-
ly, one of them took a goblet of wine in
one hand, and, embracing Mishka with
the other, began to waltz. The bear
stretched out his paw and clumsily fol-
lowed the movements, whirling round
and round after the enticing goblet. The
orchestra struck up, and the spectacle,
though not exactly what Prince Alexis
wished, was comical enough to divert
the company immensely.
	But the close of the performance was
not upon the programme. The impa-
tient bear, getting no nearer his goblet,
hugged the man violently with the other
paw, striking his claws through the thin
shirt. The dance-measure was lost; the
legs of the two tangled, and they fell to
the floor, the bear undermost. With
a growl of rage and disappointment, he
brought his teeth together through the
mans arm, and it might have fared bad-
ly with the latter, had not the goblet been
refilled by some one and held to the ani-
mals nose. Then, releasing his hold,
he sat up again, drank another bottle,
and staggered @ut of the hall.
	Now the health of Prince Alexis was
drunk,  by the guests on the floor of
the hall in Champagne, by those in the
galleries in kisliscizi and hydromel. The
orchestra played; a choir of serfs sang
an ode by Simon Petrovitch, in which
the departure of Prince Boris was men-
i8</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00025" SEQ="0025" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="19">Beauty and the Beast.

tioned; the tumblers began to posture;
the jugglers came forth and played their
tricks; and the cannon on the ramparts
announced to all Kinesma, and far up
and down the Volga, that the company
were rising from the table.
	Half an hour later, the great red slum-
ber-flag floated over the castle. All
slept, except the serf with the wound-
ed arm, the nervous Grand Marshal,
and Simon Petrovitch with his hand of
dramatists, guarded by the indefatiga-
ble Sasha. All others slept,  and the
curious crowd outside, listening to the
music, stole silently away; down in Ki-
nesma, the mothers ceased to scold their
children, and the merchants whispered
to each other in the bazaar; the cap-
tains of vessels floating on the Volga
directed their men by gestures ; the
mechanics laid aside hammer and axe,
and lighted their pipes. Great silence
fell upon the land, and continued un-
broken so long as Prince Alexis and
his guests slept the sleep of the just
and the tipsy.
	By night, however, they were all
awake and busily preparing for the di-
versions of the evening. The ball-room
was illuminated by thousands of wax-
lights, so connected with inflammable
threads, that the wicks could all be
kindled in a moment. A pyramid of
tar-barrels had been erected on each
side of the castle-gate, and every hill or
mound on the opposite bank of ~he Vol-
ga was similarly crowned. XVhen, to a
stately march,  the musicians blowing
their lo.udest,Prince Alexis and Prin-
cess Martha led the way to the ball-
room, the signal was given: candles
and tar - barrels burst into flame, and
not only within the castle, but over the
landscape for five or six versts around,
everything was bright and clear in the
fiery day. Then the noises of Kinesma
were not only permitted, but encour-
abed. Mead and qvass flowed in the
very streets, and the castle-trumpets
could not be heard for the sound of
troikas and balalaikas.
	After the Polonaise, and a few state-
ly minuets, (copied from the court of
Elizabeth,) the company were ushered
into the theatre. The hour of Simon
Petrovitch had struck: with the inspira-
tion smuggled to him by Prince Boris,
he had arranged a performance which
he felt to be his masterpiece. Anxiety
as to its reception kept him sober. The
overture had ceased, the spectators were
all in their seats, and now the curtain
rose. The background was a growth
of enormous, sickly toad-stools, suppos-
ed to be clouds. On the stage stood
a girl of eighteen, (the handsomest in
Kinesma,) in hoops and satin petticoat,
powdered hair, patches, and high-heeled
shoes. She held a fan in one hand,
and a bunch of marigolds in the other.
After a deep and graceful curtsy to
the company, she came forward and
said, 
I am the goddess Venus. I have
come to Olympus to ask some questions
of Jupiter.
	Thunder was heard, and a car rolled
upon the stage. Jupiter sat therein, in
a blue coat, yellow vest, ruffled shirt,
and three-cornered hat. One hand held
a bunch of thunderbolts, which he occa-
sionally lifted and shook; the other, a
gold-headed cane.
	Here I am, Jupiter, said he; what
does Venus desire ?
	A poetical dialogue then followed, to
the effect that the favorite of the god-
dews, Prince Alexis of Kinesma, was
about sending his son, Prince Boris,
into the gay world, wherein himself had
already displayed all the gifts of all the
divinities of Olympus. He claimed from
her, Venus, like favors for his son: was
it possible to grant them? Jupiter drop-
ped his head and meditated. He could
not answer the question at once: Apol-
lo, the Graces, and the Muses must be
consulted : there were few precedents
where the son had succeeded in rival-
ling the father,  yet the fathers pious
wishes could not be overlooked.
Venus said, 
What I asked for Prince Alex-is was
for Jils sake: what I ask for the son is
for the fathers sake.
	Jupiter shook his thunderbolt and
called, Apollo
	Instantly the stagq was covered with
i866.]
9</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00026" SEQ="0026" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="20">	20	Beauty aiid /1w Beast.	[January,

explosive and coruscating fires,  red,
blue, and golden,  and amid smoke,
and glare, and fizzing noises, and strong
chemical smells, Apollo dropped down
from above. He was accustomed to
heat and smoke, being the cooks as-
sistant, and was sweated down to a
weight capable of being supported by
the invisible wires. He ~vore a yellow
caftan, and wide blue silk trousers. His
yellow hair was twisted around and
glued fast to gilded sticks, which stood
out from his head in a circle, and repre-
sented rays of light. He first bowed to
Prince Alexis, then to the guests, then
to Jupiter, then to Venus. The matter
was explained to him.
	He promised to do what he could to-
wards favoring the world with a second
generation of the beauty, grace, intel-
lect, and nobility of character which had
already won his regard. He thought,
however, that their gifts were unneces-
sary, since the model was already in
existence, and nothing more could be
done than to imitate it.
	(Here there was another meaning bow
towards Prince Alexis,a bow in which
Jupiter and Venus joined. This was
the great point of the evening, in the
opinion of Simon Petrovitch. He peep-
ed through a hole in one of the clouds,
and, seeing the delight of Prince Alexis
and the congratulations of his frier~ds,
immediately took a large glass of Co-
gnac.)
	The Graces were then summoned,
and after them the Muses,all in hoops,
powder, and paint. Their songs had
the same burden,  intense admiration
of the father, and good-will for the son,
underlaid with a delicate doubt. The
close was a chorus of all the deities and
semi-deities in praise of the old Prince,
with the accompaniment of fireworks.
Apollo rose through the air like a frog,
with his blue legs and yellow arms
wide apart; Jupiters chariot rolled off;
Venus bowed herself back against a
mouldy cloud; and the Muses came for-
ward in a bunch, with a wreath of laurel,
which they placed upon the venerated
head.
Sasha was dispatched to bring the
poet, that he might receive his well-
earned praise and reward. But alas
for Simon Petrovitch His legs had
already doubled under him. He was
awarded fifty rubles and a new caftan,
which he was not in a condition to ac-
cept until several days afterward.
	The supper which followed resembled
the dinner, except that there were few-
er dishes and more bottle&#38; . When the
closing course of sweetmeats had either
been consumed or transferred to the
pockets of the guests, the Princess Mar-
tha retired with the ladies. The guests
of lower rank followed; and there re-
mained only some fifteen or twenty, who
were thereupon conducted by Prince
Alexis to a smaller chamber, where he
pulled off his coat, lit his pipe, and call-
ed for brandy. The others followed his
example, and their revelry wore out the
night.
	Such was the festival which preceded
the departure of Prince Boris for St.
Petersburg.


IV.

	BEFORE following the young Prince
and his fortunes in the capital, we must
relate two incidents which somewhat
disturbed the ordered course of life in
the castle of Kinesma, during the first
month or two after his departure.
	It must be stated, as one favorable
trait in the character of Prince Alexis,
that, however brutally he treated his
serfs, he allowed no other maa to op-
press them. All they had and were 
their services, bodies, lives  belonged
to him; hence injustice towards them
was disrespect towards their lord. Un-
der the fear which his barbarity in-
spired lurked a brute-like attachment,
kept alive by the recognition of this
quality.
	One day it was reported to him that
Gregor, a merchant in the bazaar at
Kinesma, had cheated the wife of one
of his serfs in the purchase of a piece
of cloth. Mounting his horse, be rode
at once to Gregors booth, called for the
cloth, and sent the entire piece to the</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00027" SEQ="0027" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="21">	i366.]	Beauty and the Beast.	21

woman, in the merchants name, as a
confessed act of reparation.
	Now, Gregor, my child, said he,
as he turned his horses head, have a
care in future, and play me no more dis-
honest tricks. Do you hear? I shall
come and take your business in hand
myself, if the like happens again.
	Not ten days passed before the like
 or something fully as bad  did hap-
pen. Gregor must have been a new-
comer in Kinesma, or he would not have
tried the experiment. In an hour from
the time it was announced, Prince Alexis
appeared in the bazaar with a short whip
under his arm.
	He dismounted at the booth with an
ironical smile on his face, which chill-
ed the very marrow in the merchants
bones.
	Ah, Gregor, my child, he shouted,
you have already forgotten my com-
inands. Holy St. Nicholas, what a bad
memory the boy has! Why, he cant
be trusted to do business: I must at-
tend to the shop myself. Out of the
way ! march !
	He swung his terrible whip; and Gre-
gor, with his two assistants, darted un-
der the counter, and made their escape.
The Prince then entered the booth, took
up a yard-stick, and cried out in a voice
which could be heard from one end of
the town to the other,  Ladies and
gentlemen, have the kindness to come
and examine our stock of goods! We
have silks and satins, and all kinds of
ladies wear; also velvet, cloth, cotton,
and linen for the gentlemen. Will your
Lordships deign to choose? Here are
stockings and handkerchiefs of the fin-
est. We understand how to measure,
your Lordshi ps, and we sell cheap. We
give no change, and take no small mon-
ey. Whoever has no cash may have
credit. Everything sold below cost, on
account of closing up the establishment.
Ladies and gentlemen, give us a call !
	Everybody in Kinesma flocked to the
booth, and for three hours Prince Alexis
measured and sold, either for scant cash
or long credit, until the last article had
been disposed of and the shelves were
empty. There was great rejoicing in the
community over the bargains made that
day. When all was over, Gregor was
summoned, and the cash received paid
into his hands.
	It wont take you long to count it,
said the Prince; but here is a list of
debts to be collected, which will fur-
nish you with pleasant occupation, and
enable you to exercise your memory.
Would your Worship condescend to take
dinner to-day with your very humble as-
sistant? He would esteem it a favor
to be permitted to wait upon you with
whatever his poor house can supply.
	Gregor gave a glance at the whip un-
der the Princes arm, and begged to be
excused. But the latter would take no
denial, and carried out the comedy to
the end, by giving the merchant the
place of honor at his table, and dismiss-
ing him with the present of a fine pup
of his favorite breed. Perhaps the ani-
mal acted as a mnemonic symbol, for
Gregor was never afterwards accused
of forgetfulness.
	If this trick put the Prince in a good
humor, something presently occurred
which carried him to the opposite ex-
treme. While taking his customary si-
esta one afternoon, a wild young fellow
 one of his noble poor relations, who
sponged~ at the castle happened to
pass along a corridor outside of the very
hall where his Highness was snoring.
Two ladies in waiting looked down from
an upper window. The young fellow
perceived them, and made signs to at-
tract their attention. Having succeed-
ed in this, he attempted, by all sorts
of antics and grimaces, to make them
laugh or speak; but he failed, for the
slumber-flag waved over them, and its
fear was upon them. Then, in a freak
of incredible rashness, he sang, in a loud
voice, the first line of a popular ditty,
and took to his heels.
No one had ever before dared to in-
sult the sacred quiet. The Prince was
on his feet in a moment, and rushed
into the corridor, (dropping his mantle
of sables by the way,) shouting, 
Brino~ me the wretch who sang!
	The domestics scattered before him,
for his face was terrible to look upon.</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00028" SEQ="0028" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="22">	22	Beauty and the Beast.	[January,

Some of them had heard the voice, in-
deed, but not one of them had seen the
culprit, who already lay upon a heap of
hay in one of the stables, and appeared
to be sunk in innocent sleep.
	Who was it? who was it? yelled
the Prince, foaming at the mouth with
rage, as he rushed from chamber to
chamber.
	At last he halted at the top of the
great flight of steps leading into the
court - yard, and repeated his demand
in a voice of thunder. The servants,
trembling, kept at a safe distance, and
some of them ventured to state that
the offender could not be discovered.
The Prince turned and entered one of
the state apartments, whence came the
sound of porcelain smashed on the
floor, and mirrors shivered on the walls.
Whenever they heard that sound, the
inmates of the castle knew that a hurri-
cane was let loose.
	They deliberated hurriedly and anx-
iously. What was to be done? In his
fits of blind animal rage, there was noth-
ing of which the Prince was not capa-
ble, and the fit could be allayed only by
finding a victim. No one, however, was
willing to be a Curtius for the others,
and meanwhile the storm was increas-
ing from minute to minute. Some of
the more active and shrewd of the house-
hold pitched upon the leader of the band,
a simple - minded, good - natured serf;
named XVaska. They entreated him to
take upon himself the crime of having
sung, offering to have his punishment
mitigated in every possible way. He
was proof against their tears, but not
against the money which they finally of-
fered, in order to avert the storm. The
agreement was made, although Waska
both scratched his head and shook it,
as he reflected upon the probable re-
sult.
	The Prince, after his work of destruc-
tion, again appeared upon the steps, and,
with hoarse voice and flashing eyes, be-
gan to announce that every soul in the
castle should receive a hundred lashes,
when a noise was heard in the court,
and amid cries of  Here he is! We
ye got him, Highness !the poor Was-
ka, bound hand and foot, was brought
forward. They placed him at the bot-
tom of the steps. The Prince descend-
ed until the two stood face to face. The
others looked on from court-yard, door,
and window. A pause ensued, during
which no one dared to breathe.
At last Prince Alexis spoke, in a loud
and terrible voice, 
It was you who sang, was it?
Yes, your Highness, it was I,
Waska replied, in a scarcely audible
tone, dropping his head and mechani-
cally drawing his shoulders together, as
if shrinking from the coming blow.
It was full three minutes before the
Prince again spoke. He still held the
whip in his hand, his eyes fixed and
the muscles of his face rigid. All at
once the spell seemed to dissolve: his
hand fell, and he said, in his ordinary
voice, 
You sing remarkably well. Go,
now: you shall have ten rubles and an
embroidered caftan for your singing.
	But any one would have made a great
mistake, who had dared to awaken
Prince Alexis a second time in the
same manner.


V.

	PRINCE BORIS, in St. Petersburg,
adopted the usual habits of his class.
He dressed elegantly; he drove a dash-
ing troika,~ he played, and lost more
frequently than he won ; he took no
special pains to shun any form of fash-
ionable dissipation. His money went
fast, it is true; but twenty-five thousand
rubles was a large sum in those days,
and Boris did not inherit his fathers ex-
pensive constitution. He was present-
ed to the Empress; but his thin face,
and mild,melancholy eyes did not make
much impression upon that ponderous
woman. He frequented the salons of
the nobility, hut saw no face so beauti-
ful as that of Parashka, the serf-maiden
who personated Venus for Simon Petro-
vitch. The fact is, he had a dim, unde-
veloped instinct of culture, and a crude,
half-conscious worship of beauty,  both</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00029" SEQ="0029" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="23">	i866.]	Beauty and the Beast.	23

of which qualities found just enough
nourishment in the life of the capital to
tantalize and never satisfy his nature.
He was excited by his new experience,
but hardly happier.
	Although but three - and - twenty, he
would never know the rich, vital glow
with which youth rushes to clasp all
forms of sensation. He had seen, al-
most daily, in his fathers castle, excess
in its most excessive development. It
had grown to be repulsive, and he knew
not how to fill the void in his life. With
a single spark of genius, and a little
more culture, he might have become a
passable author or artist; but he was
doomed to be one of those deaf-and-
dumb natures that see the movement
of the lips of others, yet have no con-
ception of sound. No wonder his sav-
age old father looked upon him with
contempt, for even his vices were with-
out strength or character.
	The dark winter days passed by, one
by one, and the first week of Lent had
already arrived to subdue the glittering
festivities of the court, when the only
genuine adventure of the season hap-
pened to the young Prince. For adven-
tures, in the conventional sense of the
word, he was not distinguished : what-
ever came to him must come by its own
force or the force of Destiny.
	One raw, gloomy evening, as dusk
was setting in, he saw a female figure
in a droschky, which was about turning
from the Great Morskoi into the Gorok-
hovaya (Pea) Street. He noticed, list-
lessly, that the lady was dressed in
black, closely veiled, and appeared to
be urging the istoosic/zik (driver) to
make better speed. The latter cut his
horse sharply: it sprang forward, just
at the turning, and the d roschky, strik
ing a lamp-post, was instantly overturn-
ed. The lady, hurled with great force
upon the solidly frozen snow, lay mo-
tionless, which the driver observing, he
righted the sled and drove off at full
speed without looking behind him. It
was not inhumanity, but fear of the
knout, that hurried him away.
	Prince Boris looked up and down the
Morskoi, but perceived no one near at
hand. He then knelt upon the snow,
lifted the ladys head to his knee, and
threw back her veil. A face so lovely,
in spite of its deadly pallor, he had
never before seen. Never had he even
imagined so perfect an oval, such a
sweet, fair forehead, such delicately
pencilled brows, so fine and straight a
nose, such wonderful beauty of mouth
and chin. It was fortunate that she was
not very severely stunned, for Prince
Boris was not only ignorant of the usu-
al modes of restoration in such cases,
but he totally forgot their necessity, in
his rapt contemplation of the ladys face.
Presently she opened her eyes, and they
dwelt, expressionless, but bewildering in
their darkness and depth, upon his own,
while her consciousness of things slow-
ly returned.
	She strove to rise, and Boris gently
lifted and supported hcr. She would
have withdrawn from his helping arm,
but was still too weak from the shock.
He, also, was confused and (strange to
say) embarrassed; but he had self-pos-
session enough to shout, Davai I
(Here!) at random. The call was an-
swered from the Admiralty Square; a
sled dashed up the Gorokhovaya and
halted beside him. Taking the single
seat, he lifted her gently upon his lap
and held her very tenderly in his arms.
	Where? asked the istoostchik.
	Boris xvas about to answer Any-
where ! but the lady whispered, in
a voice of silver sweetness, the name
of a remote street, near the Smolnoi
Church.
	As the Prince wrapped the ends of
his sable pelisse about her, he noticed
that her furs were of the common fox-
skin, worn by the middle classes. They,
with her heavy boots and the thread-
bare cloth of her garments, by no means
justified his first suspicion,  that she
was a grande dame, engaged in some
romantic adventure. She was not
more than nineteen or twenty years
of age, and he felt  without knowing
what it was  the atmosphere of sweet,
womanly purity and innocence which
surrounded her. The shyness of a lost
boyhood surprised him.</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00030" SEQ="0030" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="24">4

	By the time they reached the Litdnie,
she had fully recovered her conscious-
ness and a portion of her strength. She
drew away from him as much as the
narrow sled would allow.
	You have been very kind, Sir, and ,J
thank you, she said; but I am now
able to go home without your further
assistance.
	By no means, Lady! said the
Prince. The streets are rough, and
here are no lamps. If a second acci-
dent were to happen, you would be
helpless. Will you not allow me to
protect you ?
	She looked him in the face. In the
dusky light she saw not the peevish,
weary features of the worldling, but
only the imploring softness of his eyes,
the full and perfect honesty of his pies-
ent emotion. She made no further ob-
jection: perhaps she was glad that she
could trust the elegant stranger.
	Boris, never before at a loss for
words, even in the presence of the Em-
press, was astonished to find how awk-
ward were his attempts at conversation.
She was presently the more self-pos-
sessed of the two, and nothing was ever
so sweet to his ears as the few com-
monplace remarks she uttered. In
spite of the darkness and the chilly air,
the sled seemed to fly like lightning.
Before he supposed they had made half
the way, she gave a sign to the istoost-
chik, and they drew up before a plain
house of squared logs.
	The two lower windows were lighted,
and the dark figure of an old man, with
a skull-cap upon his head, was framed
in one of them. It vanished as the sled
stopped; the door was thrown open and
the man came forth hurriedly, followed
by a Russian nurse with a lantern.
	Helena, my child, art thou come at
last? What has befallen thee ?
	He would evidently have said more,
but the sight of Prince Boris caused
him to pause, while a quick shade of
suspicion and alarm passed over his
face. The Prince stepped forward, in-
stantly relieved of his unaccustomed
timidity, and rapidly described the ac-
cident. The old nurse, Katinka, bad
[January,

meanwhile assisted the lovely 1-Jelena
into the house.
	The old man turned to follow, shiver-
ing in the night-air. Suddenly recol-
lecting himseW he begged the Prince to
enter and take some refreshments, but
with the air and tone of a man who
hopes that his invitation will not be ac-
cepted. If sUch was really his hope, he
was disappointed; for Boris instantly
commanded the istoostchik to wait for
him, and entered the humble dwelling.
	The apartment into which he was
ushered was spacious, and plainly, yet
not shabbily furnished. A violoncello
and clavichord, with several portfolios
of music and scattered sheets of ruled
paper, proclaimed the profession or the
taste of the occupant. Having excus-
ed himself a moment, to look after his
daughters condition, the old man, on
his return, found Boris turning over the
leaves of a musical work.
	You see my profession, he said:
 I teach music.
	Do you not compose? asked the
Prince.
	That was once my ambition. I was
a pupil of Sebastian Bach. But  cir-
cumstances  necessity  brought me
here. Other lives changed the direction
of mine. It was right.
	You mean your daughters? the
Prince gently suggested.
	Hers and her mothers. Our story
was well known in St. Petersburg twenty
years ago, but I suppose no one recol-
lects it now. My wife was the daugh-
ter of a Baron von Plauen, and loved
music and myself better than her home
and a titled bridegroom. She escaped,
we united our lives, suffered and were
happy together,  and she died. That
is all.
	Further conversation was interrupted
by the entrance of Helena, with steam-
ing glasses of tea. She was even love-
lier than before. Her close-fitting dress
revealed the symmetry of her form, and
the quiet, unstudied grace of her move-
ments. Although her garments were
of well-worn material, the lace which
covered her bosom was genuine point
dAlen~on, of an old and rare pattern.
Bcau(y a;zd I/ic Beast.</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00031" SEQ="0031" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="25">	i866.]	Beauty and the Beast.	25

Boris felt that her air and manner were
thoroughly noble; he rose and saluted
her with the profoundest respect.
	In spite of the singular delight which
her presence occasioned him, he was
careful not to prolong his visit beyond
the limits of strict etiquette. His name,
Boris Alexeivitch, only revealed to his
guests the name of his father, without
his rank; and when he stated that he
was employed in one of the Depart-
ments, (which was true in a measure, for
he was a staff officer,) they could only
look upon him as being, at best, a mem-
ber of some family whose recent ele-
vation to the nobility did not release
them from the necessity of Government
service. Of course he employed the usu-
al pretext of wishing to study music,
and either by that or some other strata-
gem managed to leave matters in such
a shape that a second visit could not
occasion surprise.
	As the sled glided homewards over
the crackling snow, he was obliged to
confess the existence of a new and pow-
erful excitement. Was it the chance of
an adventure, such as certain of his
comrades were continually seeking
He thought not: no, decidedly not.
Was it  could it be  love? He real-
ly could not tell: he had not the slight-
est idea xvhat love was like.


VI.

	IT was something, at least, that the
plastic and not unvirtuous nature of the
young man was directed towards a defi-
nite object. The elements out of which
he was made, although somewhat dilut-
ed, were active enough to make him
uncomfortable, so long as they remain-
ed in a confused state. He had very
little power of introversion, but he
was sensible that his temperament was
changing, that he grew more cheerful
and contented ~vith life,  that a chasm
somewhere xvas filling up, just in pro-
portion as his acquaintance with the old
music-master and his daughter became
more familiar. His visits were made
so brief, were so adroitly timed and ac
counted for by circumstances, that by
the close of Lent he could feel justified
in making the Easter call of a friend,
and claim its attendant privileges, with-
out fear of being repulsed.
	That Easter call was an era in his
life. At the risk of his wealth and rank
being suspected, he dressed himself in
new and rich garments, and hurried
away towards the Smolnoi. The old
nurse, Katinka, in her scarlet gown,
opened the doof for him, and was the
first to say, Christ is arisen !  VVhat
could he do but give her the usual kiss?
Formerly he had kissed hundreds of
serfs, men and women, on the sacred
anniversary, with a passive good-will, 
but Katinkas kiss seemed bitter, and
he secretly rubbed his mouth after it.
The music - master came next: grisly
though he might be, he was the St.
Peter who stood at the gate of heaven.
Then entered Helena, in white, like an
angel. He took her hand, pronounced
the Easter greeting, and scarcely waited
for the answer, Truly he is arisen!
before his lips found the way to hers.
For a second they warmly trembled and
glowed together; and in another second
some new and sweet and subtile rela-
tion seemed to be established between
their natures.
	That night Prince Boris wrote a long
letter to his ciz?re mainan, in piquant-
ly misspelt French ,giving her the gos-
sip of the court, and such family news
as she usually craved. The purport of
the letter, however, was only disclosed
in the final paragraph, and then in so
negative a way that it is doubtful wheth-
er the Princess Martha fully understood
it.
	Thing de mariqies tour mo~v I he
wrote,  but we will drop the original, 
I dont think of such a thing yet.
Pashkoff dropped a hint the other day,
but I kept my eyes shut. Perhaps you
remember her ?  fat, thick lips, and
crooked teeth. Natalie D said to
me, Have you ever been in love,
Prince? Have I, mama;z? I did not
know what answer to make. What is
love? How does one feel, when one
has it? They laugh at it here, and of</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00032" SEQ="0032" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="26">	26	Beauty and I/ic Beast.	[January,

course I should not wish to do what is
laughable. Give me a hint: forewarned
is forearmed, you know,  etc., etc.
	Perhaps the Princess Martha did
suspect something; perhaps some word
in her sons letter touched a secret spot
far back in her memory, and renewed a
dim, if not very intelligible, pain. She
answered his question at length, in the
style of the popular French romances
of that day. She had much to say of
dew and roses, turtle - doves and the
arrows of Cupid.
	Ask thyself, she wrote, whether
felicity comes with her presence, and
distraction with her absence,  wheth-
er her eyes make the morning brighter
for thee, and her tears fall upon thy
heart like molten lava,whether heav-
en would be black and dismal without
her company, and the flames of hell
turn into roses under her feet.
	It was very evident that the good
Princess Martha had never felt  nay,
did not comprehend  a passion such
as she described.
	Prince Boris, however, whose venera-
tion for his mother was unbounded, took
her words literally, and applied the ques-
tions to himself. Although he found it
difficult, in good faith and sincerity, to
answer all of them affirmatively, (he was
puzzled, for instance, to know the sen-
sation of molten lava falling upon the
heart,) yet the general conclusion was
inevitable : Helena was necessary to his
happiness.
Instead of returning to Kinesma for
the summer, as had been arranged, he
determined to remain in St. Petersburg,
under the pretence of devoting himself
to military studies. This change of
plan occasioned more disappointment
to the Princess Martha than vexation to
Prince Alexis. The latter only growled
at the prospect of being called upon
to advance a further supply of rubles,
slightly comforting himself with the mut-
tered reflection, 
Perhaps the brat will make a man
of himself, after all.
	It was not many weeks, in fact, be-
fore the expected petition came to hand.
The Princess Martha had also foreseen
it, and instructed her son how to attack
his fathers weak side. The latter was
furiously jealous of certain other noble-
men of nearly equal wealth, who were
with him at the court of Peter the Great,
as their sons now were at that of Eliza-
beth. Boris compared the splendor of
these young noblemen with his own
moderate estate, fabled a few adven-
tures and drinking - bouts, and an-
nounced his determination of doing hon-
or to the name which Prince Alexis of
Kinesma had left behind him in the cap-
ital.
	There was cursing at the castle ,when
the letter arrived. Many serfs felt the
sting of the short whip, the slumber-flag
was hoisted live minutes later than usu-
al, and the consumption of Cognac was
alarming; but no mirror was smashed,
and when Prince Alexis read the letter
to his poor relations, he even chuckled
over some portions of it. Boris had
boldly demanded twenty thousand ru-
bles, in the desperate hope of receiving
half that amount,  and he had calcu-
lated correctly.
Before midsummer he was Helenas
accepted lover. Not, however, until
then, when her father had given his con-
sent to their marriage in the autumn,
did he disclose his true rank. The old
mans face lighted up with a glow of
selfish satisfaction; but Helena quietly
took her lovers hand, and said, 
Whatever you are, Boris, I will be
faithful to you.


VII.

	LEAVING Boris to discover the exact
form and substance of the passion of
love, we will return for a time to the
castle of Kinesma.
	Whether the Princess Martha con-
iectured what had transpired in St. Pe-
tersburg, or was partially informed of it
by her son, cannot now be ascertained.
She was sufficiently weak, timid, and
nervous, to be troubled with the knowl-
edge of the stratagem in which she had
assisted in order to procure money, and
that the ever - present consciousness</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00033" SEQ="0033" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="27">	i866.]	Beauty and the Beast.	27

thereof would betray itself to the sharp
eyes of her husband. Certain it is, that
the demeanor of the latter towards her
and his household began to change about
the end of the summer. He seemed to
have a haunting suspicion, that, in some
way, he had been, or was about to be,
overreached. He grew peevish, suspi-
cious, and more violent than ever in his
excesses.
	When Mishka, the dissipated bear
already described, bit off one of the
ears of Basil, a hunter belonging to the
castle, and Basil drew his knife and
plunged it into Mishkas heart, Prince
Alexis punished the hunter by cutting
off his other ear, and sending him away
to a distant estate. A serf; detected in
eating a few of the pickled cherries in-
tended for the Princes botvinia, was
placed in a cask, and pickled cherries
packed around him up to the chin.
There he was kept until almost flayed
by the acid. It was ordered that these
two delinquents should never after-
~vards be called by any other names than
Crop-Ear and Cherry.
	But the Princes severest joke, which,
strange to say, in no wise lessened his
popularity among the serfs, occurred a
month or two later. One of his leading
passions was the chase,  especially the
chase in his own forests, with from one
to two hundred men, and no one to dis-
pute his Lordship. On such occasions,
a huge barrel of wine, mounted upon a
sled, always accompanied the crowd,
and the quantity which the hunters re-
ceived depended upon the satisfaction
of Prince Alexis with the game they
collected.
	Winter had set in early and sudden-
ly, and one day, as the Prince and his
retainers emerged from the forest with
their forenoons spoil, and found them-
selves on the bank of the Volga, the water
was already covered with a thin sheet of
ice. Fires xvere kindled, a score or two
of hares and a brace of deer were skin-
ned, and the flesh placed on sticks to
broil; skins of mead foamed and hissed
into the wooden bowls, and the cask of
unbroached xvine towered in the midst.
Prince Alexis had a good appetite; the
meal was after his heart ; and by the
time he had eaten a hare and half a
flank of venison, followed by several
bowls of fiery wine, he was in. the hu-
mor for sport. He ordered a hole cut
in the upper side of the barrel, as it lay;
then, getting astride of it, like, a grisly
Bacchus, he dipped out the liquor with
a ladle, and plied his thirsty serfs un-
til they became as recklessly savage as
he.
	They were scattered over a slope
gently falling from the dark, dense fir-
forest towards the Volga, where it ter-
minated in a rocky palisade, ten to fif-
t~en feet in height. The fires blazed
and crackled merrily in the frosty air
the yells and songs of the carousers were
echoed back from the opposite shore of
the river. The chill atmosphere, the
lowering sky, and the approaching night
could not touch the blood of that wild
crowd. Their faces glowed and their
eyes sparkled; they were ready for any
deviltry which their lord might sug-
gest.
	Some began to amuse themselves by
flinging the clean-picked bones of deer
and hare along the glassy ice of the
Volga. Prince Alexis, perceiving this
diversion, cried out in ecstasy, 
Oh, by St. Nicholas the Miracle-
Worker, I 11 give you better sport than
that, ye knaves! Here s the very place
for a reisale,  do you hear me, chil-
dren ?a reisali / Could there be better
ice? and then the rocks to jump from
Come, children, come! Waska, Ivan,
Daniel, you dogs, over with you!
	Now the reisak was a gymnastic per-
formance peculiar to old Russia, and
therefore needs to be described. It
could become popular only among a
people of strong physical qualities, and
in a country where swift rivers freeze
rapidly from sudden cold. Hence we
are of the opinion that it will not be in-
troduced into our own winter diversions.
A spot is selected where the water is
deep and the current tolerably strong
the ice must be about half an inch in
thickness. The performer leaps head
foremost from a rock or platform, bursts
through the ice, is carried under by the</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00034" SEQ="0034" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="28">	23	Beauty and the Beast.	[January,

current, comes up some distance be-
low, and bursts through again. Both
skill and strength are required to do
the feat successfully.
	XVaska, Ivan, Daniel, and a number
of others, sprang to the brink of the
rocks and looked over. The wall was
not quite perpendicular, some large frag-
ments having fallen from above and
lodged along the base. It would there-
fore require a bold leap to clear the
rocks and strike the smooth ice. They
hesitated,  and no wonder.
	Prince Alexis howled with rage and
disappointment.
	The Devil take you, for a pack of
whimpering bounds! he cried. Ho-
ly Saints! they are afraid to make a rez-
sale I
	Ivan crossed himselg and sprang.
He cleared the rocks, but, instead of
bursting through the ice with his head,
fell at full length upon his back.
	0 knave! yelled the Prince,
not to know where his head is
Thinks it s his back! Give him fif-
teen stripes.
	Which was instantly done.
	The second attempt was partially suc-
cessful. One of the hunters broke
through the ice, head foremost, going
down, but he failed to come up again;
so the feat was only half performed.
	The Prince became more furiously
excited.
	This is the way I m treated! he
cried. He forgets all about finishing
the reisak, and goes to chasing ster-
let! May the carps eat him u~ for an
ungrateful vagabond! Here, you beg-
gars ! (addressing the poor relations,)
take your turn, and let me see wheth-
er you are men.
	Only one of the frightened parasites
had the courage to obey. On reaching
the brink, he shut his eyes in mortal
fear, and made a leap at random. The
next moment he lay on the edge of the
ice with one leg broken against a frag-
ment of rock.
	This capped the climax of the Princes
wrath. He fell into a state bordering
on despair, tore his hair, gnashed his
teeth, and wept bitterly.
	They will be the death of me! was
his lament. Not a man among them!
It was nt so in the old times. Such
beautiful reisaks as I have seen! But
the people are becoming women,hares,
 chickens,  skunks ! Villains, will
you force me to kill you? You have
dishonored and disgraced me; I am
ashamed to look my neighbors in the
face. Was ever a man so treated?
	The serfs hung down their heads,
feeling somehow responsible for their
masters misery. Some of them wept,
out of a stupid sympathy with his tears.
All at once he sprang down from
the cask, crying in a gay, triumphant
tone, 
I have it! Bring me Crop-Ear.
He s the fellow for a reisak,  he can
make three, one after another.
	One of the boldest ventured to sug-
gest that Crop-Ear had been sent away
in disgrace to another of the Princes
estates.
	Brincr him here, I say ! Take
horses, and dont draw rein going or
coming. I will not stir from this spot
until Crop-Ear comes.
	With these words, he mounted the
barrel, and recommenced ladling out
the wine. Huge fires were made, for
the night was falling, and the cold had
become intense. Fresh game was skew-
ered and set to broil, and the tragic in-
terlude of the revel was soon forgot-
ten.
Towards midnight the sound of hoofs
was heard, and the messengers arrived
with Crop-Ear. But, although the lat-
ter had lost his ears, he was not inclin-
ed to split his head. The ice, mean-
while, had become so strong that a
cannon-ball would have made no im-
pression upon it. Crop - Ear simply
threw down a stone heavier than him-
self, and, as it bounced and slid along
the solid floor, said to Prince Alex-
is, 
Am I to go hack, Highness, or stay
here?
	Here, my son. Thou rt a man.
Come hither to me.
	Taking the serfs head in his hands,
he kissed him on both cheeks. Then</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00035" SEQ="0035" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="29">Beauty and the Beast.

he rode homeward through the dark,
iron woods, seated astride on the bar-
rel, and steadying himself with his
arms around Crop-Ears and Waskas
necks.


VIII.

	Tua health of the Princess Martha,
always delicate, now began to fail rap-
idly. She was less and less able to en-
dure her husbands savage humors, and
lived almost exclusively in her own
apartments. She never mentioned the
name of Boris in his presence, for it
~vas sure to throw him into a paroxysm
of fury. Floating rumors in regard to
the young Prince had reached him from
the capital, and nothing would convince
him that his wife was not cognizant of
her son~s doings. The poor Princess
clung to her boy as to all that was left
her of life, and tried to prop her failing
strength with the hope of his speedy
return. She was now too helpless to
thwart his wishes in any way; but she
dreaded, more than death, the terrible
some/king which would surely take place
between father and son, if her conjec-
tures should prove to be true.
	One day, in the early part of Novem-
ber, she received a letter from Boris,
announcing his marriage. She had
barely strength and presence of mind
enough to conceal the paper in her
bosom before sinking in a swoon. By
some means or other the young Prince
had succeeded in overcoming all the
obstacles to such a step: probably the
favor of the Empress was courted, in
order to obtain her consent. The mon-
ey he had received; he wrote, would be
sufficient to maintain them for a few
months, though not in a style befitting
their rank. He was proud and happy;
the Princess Helena would be the reign-
ing beauty of the court, when he should
present her, but he desired the sanction
of his parents to the marriage, before
taking his place in society. He would
write immediately to his father, and
hoped, that, if the news brought a
storm, Mishka might be on hand to
divert its force, as on a former occa-
sion.
	Under the weight of this imminent
secret, the Princess Martha could nei-
ther eat nor sleep. Her body wasted
to a shadow; at every noise in the cas-
tle, she started and listened in terror,
fearing that the news had arrived.
	Prince Boris, no doubt, found his
courage fail him, when he set about
writing the promised letter; for a fort-
night elapsed before it made its appear-
ance. Prince Alexis received it on his
return from the chase. He read it
hastily through, uttered a prolonged
roar like that of a wounded bull, and
rushed into the castle. The sound of
breaking furniture, of crashing porce-
lain and shivered glass, came from the
state apartments ; the domestics fell on
their knees and prayed ; the Princess,
who heard the noise and knew what
it portended, became almost insensible
from fright.
One of the upper servants entered a
chamber as the Prince was in the act
of demolishing a splendid malachite ta-
ble, which had escaped all his previous
attacks. He was immediately greeted
with a cry of,
Send the Princess to me!
	Her Highness is not able to leave
her chamber, the man replied.
	How it happened he could never af-
terwards describe, but he found him-
self lying in a corner of the room.
When he arose, there seemed to be a
singular cavity in his mouth: his upper
frdnt teeth were wantinb.
	We will not narrate what took place
in the chamber of the Princess. The
nerves of the unfortunate woman had
been so wrought upon by her fears, that
her husbands brutal rage, familiar to
her from long experience, now possess-
ed a new and alarming significance.
His threats were terrible to hear ; she
fell into convulsions, and before morn-
ing her tormented life was at an end.
	There was now something else to
think of, and the smashing of porcelain
and cracking of whips came to an end.
The Archimandrite was summoned, and
preparations, both religious and secular,
i866.]
29</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00036" SEQ="0036" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="30">	30	Beauty and the Beast.	[January,

were made for a funeral worthy the rank
of the deceased. Thousands flocked to
Kinesma; and when the immense pro-
cession moved away from the castle,
although very few of the persons had
ever known or cared in the least for
the Princess Martha, all, without ex-
ception, shed l~rofuse tears. Yes, there
was one exception, one bare, dry rock,
rising alone out of the universal deluge,
 Prince Alexis himseW who walked
behind the coffin, his eyes fixed and
his features rigid as stone. They re-
marked that his face was haggard, and
that the fiery tinge on his cheeks and
nose had faded into livid purple. The
only sign of emotion which he gave was
a convulsive shudder, which from time
to time passed over his whole body.
	Three archimandrites (abbots) and
one hundred priests headed the solemn
funeral procession from the castle to
the church on the opposite hill. There
the mass for the dead was chanted, the
responses being sung by a choir of sil-
very boyish voices. All the appoint-
ments were of the costliest character.
Not only all those within the church,
but the thousands outside, spared not
their tears, but wept until the fountains
were exhausted. Notice was given, at
the close of the services, that baked
meats would be furnished to the mul-
titude, and that all beggars who came
to Kinesma would be charitably fed for
the space of six weeks. Thus, by her
death, the amiable Princess Martha was
enabled to dispense more charity than
had been permitted to her life.
	At the funeral banquet which follow-
ed, Prince Alexis placed the Abbot Ser-
gius at his right hand, and conversed
with him in the most edifying manner
upon the necessity of leading a pure
and godly life. His remarks upon the.
duty of a Christian, upon brotherly love,
humility, and self-sacrifice, brought tears
into the eyes of the listening priests.
He expressed his conviction that the
departed Princess, by the piety of her
life, had attained unto salvation,  and
added, that his own life had now no fur-
ther value, unless he should devote it to
religious exercises.
	Can you not give me a place in your
monastery? he asked, turning to the
Abbot. I will endow it with a gift of
forty thousand rubles, for the privilege
of occupying a monks cell.
	Pray, do not decide too hastily,
Highness, the Abbot replied. You
have yet a son.
	What 1 yelled Prince Alexis, with
flashing eyes, every trace of humility
and renunciation vanishing like smoke,
what! Borka? The infamous wretch
who has ruined me, killed his mother,
and brought disgrace upon our name?
Do you know that he has married a
wench of no family and without a far-
thing,  who would be honored, if I
should allow her to feed my hogs? Live
for hi;;z ~ live for him ? Ah-z-z-z
This outbreak terminated in a sound
between a snarl and a bellow. The
priests tuyned pale, but the Abbot de-
voutly remarked, 
Encompassed by sorrows, Prince,
you should humbly submit to the will
of the Lord.
	Submit to Borka? the Prince
scornfully laughed. I know what I 11
do. There s time enough yet for a
wife and another child,  ay, a dozen
children ! I can have my pick in the
province; and if I could nt, I d soon-
er take Masha, the goose - girl, than
leave Borka the hope of stepping into
my shoes. Beggars they shall be, 
beggars!
	What further he might have said was
interrupted by the priests rising to chant
the Bhzjenuon uspennie, (Blessed be the
dead,)  after which, the trisna, a drink
cohiposed of mead, wine, and rum, was
emptied to the health of the departed
soul. Every one stood during this cer-
emony, except Prince Alexis, who fell
suddenly prostrate before the conse-
crated pictures, and sobbed so passion-
ately that the tears of the guests flowed
for the third time. There he lay until
night; for whenever any one dared to
touch him, he struck out furiously with
fists and feet. Finally he fell asleep on
the floor, and the servants then bore
him to his sleeping apartment.
	For several days afterward his grief</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00037" SEQ="0037" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="31">	~866.~	Beazity and /1w Beast.

continued to be so violent that the occu-
pants of the castle were obliged to keep
out of his way. The whip was never out
of his hand, and he used it very reckless-
ly, not always selecting the right person.
The parasitic poor relations found their
situation so uncomfortable, that they de-
cided, one and all, to detach themselves
from the tree upon which they fed and
fattened, even at the risk of withering
on a barren soil. Night and morning
the serfs prayed upon their knees, with
many tears and groans, that the Saints
might send consolation, in any form, to
their desperate lord.
	The Saints graciously heard and an-
swered the prayer. Word came that
a huge hear had been seen in the for-
est stretching towards Juriewetz. The
sorrowing Prince pricked up his ears,
threw down his whip, and ordered a
chase. Sasha, the broad - shouldered,
the cunning, the ready, the untiring
companion of his master, secretly or-
dered a cask of vodki to follow the
crowd of hunters and serfs. There was
a steel-bright sky, a low, yellow sun,
and a brisk easterly wind from the
heights of the Ural. As the crisp snow
began to crunch under the Princes sled,
his followers saw the old expression
come back to his face. With song and
halloo and blast of horns, they swept
away into the forest.
	Saint John the Hunter must have
been on guard over Russia that day.
The great bear was tracked, and, after
a long and exciting chase, fell by the
hand of Prince Alexis himself. Halt
was made in an open space in the forest,
logs were piled together and kindled on
the snow, and just at the right moment
(which no one knew better than Sasha)
the cask of vodki rolled into its place.
When the serfs saw the Prince mount
astride of it, with his ladle in his hand,
they burst into shouts of extravagant
joy. Slava Bogit I, (Glory be to
God!) came fervently from the beard-
ed lips of those hard, rough, obedient
children. They tumbled headlong over
each other, in their efforts to drink first
from the ladle, to clasp the knees or
kiss the hands of the restored Prince.
And the dawn was glimmering against
the eastern stars, as they took the way
to the castle, making the ghostly fir-
woods ring with shout and choric song.
	Nevertheless, Prince Alexis was no
longer the same man: his giant strength
and furious appetite were broken. He
was ever ready, as formerly, for the
chase and the drinking-bout; but his
jovial mood no longer grew into a cri-
sis which only utter physical exhaustion
or the stupidity of drunkenness could
overcome. Frequently, while astride
the cask, his shouts of laughter would
suddenly cease, the ladle would drop
from his hand, and he would sit mo-
tionless, staring into vacancy for five
minutes at a time. Then the serfs, too,
became silent, and stood still, awaiting
a change. The gloomy mood passed
away as suddenly. He would start,
look about him, and say, in a melan-
choly voice, 
Have I frightened you, my chil-
dren ? It seems to me that I am get-
ting old. Ah, yes, we must all die, one
day. But we need not think about it,
until the time comes. The Devil take
me for putting it into my head! Why,
how now ? cant you sing, children ?
	Then he would strike up some ditty
which they all knew: a hundred voices
joined in the strain, and the hills once
more rang with revelry.
	Since the day when the Princess Mar-
tha was buried, the Prince had not again
spoken of marriage. No one, of course,
dared to mention the name of Boris in
his presence.


Ix.

	Tun young Prince had, in reality,
become the happy husband of Helena.
His love for her had grown to be a
shaping and organizing influence, with-
out which his nature would have fallen
into its former confusion. If a thought
of a less honorable relation had ever
entered his mind, it was presently ban-
ished by the respect which a nearer in-
timacy inspired; and thus Helena, mag-
netically drawing to the surface only
3</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00038" SEQ="0038" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="32">	32	Beauty and /7w Beast.	[January,

his best qualities, loved, unconsciously
to herself, her own work in him. Ere-
long she saw that she might balance
the advantages he had conferred upon
her in their marriage by the support
and encouragement which she was able
to impart to him; and this knowledge,
removing all painful sense of obligation,
made her both happy and secure in her
new position..
	The Princess Martha, under some
presentiment of her approaching death,
had intrusted one of the ladies in attend-
ance upon her with the secret of her
son s marriage, in addition to a tender
maternal message, and such presents
of money and jewelry as she was able
to procure without her husbands knowl-
edge. These presents reached Boris
very opportunely; for, although Helena
developed a wonderful skill in regulat-
ing his expenses, the spring was ap-
proaching, and even the limited circle
of society in which they had moved
during the gay season had made heavy
demands upon his purse. He became
restless and abstracted, until his wife,
who by this time clearly comprehended
the nature of his trouhle, had secretly
decided how it must be met.
	The slender hoard of the old music-
master, with a few thousand rubles
from Prince Boris, sufficed for his mod-
est maintenance. Being now free from
the charge of his daughter, he deter
mined to visit Germany, and, if cir-
cumstances were propitious, to secure
a refuge for his old age in his favorite
Leipsic. Summer was at hand, and the
court had already removed to Oranien-
baum. In a few weeks the capital
would be deserted.
	Shall we go to Germany with your
father? asked Boris, as he sat at a
window with Helena, enjoying the long
twilight.
	Jo, my Boris, she answered; we
will go to Kinesma.
	But  Helena, golubc1~ik,  mo~
ange,are you in earnest?
	Yes, my Boris. The last letter from
your  our cousin Nadejda convinces
me that the step must be taken. Prince
Alexis has grown much older since your
mothers death; he is lonely and un-
happy. He may not welcome us, but
he will surely suffer us to come to him;
and we must then begin, the work of
reconciliation. Reflect, my Boris, that
you have keenly wounded him in the
tenderest part,  his pride,  and you
must therefore cast away your own
pride, and humbly and respectfully, as
becomes a son, solicit his pardon.
	Yes, said he, hesitatingly, you
are right. But I know his violence and
recklessness, as you do not. For my-
self, alone, I am willing to meet him
yet I fear for your sake. Would you not
tremble to encounter a maddened and
brutal mujik ?  then how much more
to meet Alexis Pavlovitch of Kinesma!
	I do not and shall not tremble, she
replied. It is not your marriage that
has estranged your father, but your
marriage with me. Having been, un-
consciously, the cause of the trouble, I
shall deliberately, and as a sacred duty,
attempt to~ remove it. Let us go to
Kinesma, ~s humble, penitent children,
and cast ourselves upon your fathers
mercy. At the worst, he can but reject
us ; and you will have given me the
consolation of knowing that I have
tried, as your wife, to annul the sacri-
fice you have made for my sake.
	Be it so, then! cried Boris, with a
mingled feeling of relief and anxiety.
	He was not unwilling that the attempt
should he made, especially since it was
his wifes desire ; but he knew his father
too well to anticipate immediate success.
All threatening tossibilities suggested
themselves to his mind ; all forms of
insult and outrage which he had seen
perpetrated at Kinesma filled his mem-
ory. The suspense became at last worse
than any probable reality. He wrote to
his father, announcing a speedy visit
from himself and his wife; and two
days afterwards the pair left St. Peters-
burg in a large travelling kibitka.


x.
	\Vi-iEN Prince Alexis received his
sons letter, an expression of fierce,</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00039" SEQ="0039" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="33">	i866.]	Beauty aud /1w Beast.
cruel delight crept over his face, and
there remained, horribly illuminating
its haggard features. The orders given
for swimming horses in the Volga 
one of his summer diversions  were
immediately countermanded; he paced
around the parapet of the castle-wall
until near midnight, followed by Sasha
with a stone jug of vodki. Jhe latter
had the useful habit, notwithstanding
his stupid face, of pickin,~ up the frag-
ments of soliloquy which the Prince
dropped, and answering them as if talk-
ing to himself. Thus he improved up-
on and perfected many a hint of cru-
elty, and was too discreet ever to dis-
pute his masters claim to the inven-
tion.
	Sasha, we may be sure, was busy
with his devils work that night. The
next morning the stewards and agents
of Prince Alexis, in castle, village, and
field, were summoned to his presence.
Hark ye! said he; Borka and
his trumpery wife send me word that
they xvill be here to - morrow. See to
it that every man, woman, and child,
for ten versts out on the Moskovskoi
road, knows of their coming. Let it be
known that whoever uncovers his head
before them shall uncover his back for
a hundred lashes. XVhomsoever they
greet may bark like a dog, mee-ouw
like a cat, or bray like ar~ ass, as much
as be chooses; but if he speaks a de-
cent word, his tongue shall be silenced
with stripes. Whoever shall insult
them has my pardon in advance. Oh,
let them come !  ay, let them come
Come they may: but how they go away
again 
The Prince Alexis suddenly stopped,
sbobk his head, and walked up and
down the hall, muttering to himself.
His eyes were bloodshot, and sparkled
with a strange light. What the stew-
arcls bad heard was plain enough; but
that something more terrible than in-
sult was yet held in reserve they did
not doubt. It was safe, therefore, not
only to fulfil, but to exceed, the letter
of their instructions. Before night the
whole population were acquainted with
their duties; and an unusual mood of
	VOL. XVII.  NO. 99.	3
33
expectancy, not unmixed with brutish
glee, fell upon Kinesma.
	By the middle of the next forenoon,
Boris and his wife, seated in the open
kibitka, drawn by post-horses, reached
the boundaries of the estate, a few
versts from the village. They were
both silent and slightly pale at first,
but now began to exchange mechanical
remarks, to divert each others thoughts
from the coming reception.
	Here are the fields of Kinesma at
last! exclaimed Prince Boris. We
shall see the church and castle from the
top of that bill in the distance. And
there is Peter, my playmate, herding
the cattle! Peter! Good day, broth-
erkin !
	Peter looked, saw the carriage close
upon him, and, after a moment of hesi-
tation, let his arms drop stiffly by his
sides, and began howling like a mas-
tiff by moonlight. Helena laughed heart-
ily at this singular response to the greet-
ing; but Boris, after the first astonish-
ment was over, looked terrified.
	That was done by order, said he,
with a bitter smile. The old bear
stretches his claws out. Dare you try
his hug?
	I do not fear, she answered; her
face was calm.
	Every serf they passed obeyed the
order of Prince Alexis according to his
own idea of disrespect. One turned
his back; another made contemptuous
grimaces and noises; another sang a
vulgar song; another spat upon the
ground or held his nostrils. Nowhere
was a cap raised, or the stealthy wel-
come of a friendly glance given.
	The Princess Helena met these in-
sults with a calm, proud indifference.
Boris felt them more keenly; for the
fields and hills were prospectively his
property, and so also were the brutish
peasants. It was a form of chastise-
ment which he had never before expe-
rienced, and knew not how to resist.
The affront of an entire community was
an offence against which he felt himself
to be helpless.
	As they approached the town, the
demonstrations of insolence were re</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00040" SEQ="0040" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="34">	Beauty and the Beast.	[January,
34
doubled. About two hundred boys,
between the ages of ten and fourteen,
awaited them on the hill below the
church, forming themselves into files
on either side of the road. These imps
had been instructed to stick out their
tongues in derision, and howl, as the
carriage passed between them. At the
entran9e of the long main street of Ki-
nesma, they were obliged to pass under
a mock trimfmphal arch, hung with dead
dogs and drowned cats; and from this
point the reception assumed an out-
rageous character. Hoxvls, hootings,
and hisses were heard on all sides
bouquets of nettles and vile weeds were
flung to them; even wreaths of spoiled
fish dropped from the windows. The
women were the most eager an~ up-
roarious in this carnival of insult: they
beat their saucepans, threw pails of dir-
ty water upon the horses, pelted the
coachman with rotten cabbages, and
filled the air with screeching and foul
words.
	It was impossible to pass through
this ordeal with indifference. Boris,
finding that his kindly greetings were
thrown away,  that even his old ac-
quaintances in the, bazaar howled like
the rest,  sat with head bowed and
despair in his heart. The beautiful eyes
of Helena were heavy with tears; but
she no longer trembled, for she knew
the crisis was yet to come.
	As the kibitka slowly climbed the
hill on its way to the castle-gate, Prince
Alexis, who had heard and enjoyed the
noises in the village from a balcony
on the western tower, made hjs appear-
ance at the head of the steps which led
from the court-yard to the state apart-
ments. The dreaded whip was in his
hand his eyes seemed about to start
from their sockets, in their wild, eager,
huflgry gaze; the veins stood out like
cords on his forehead; and his lips,
twitching involuntarily, revealed the
glare of his set teeth. A frightened
hush filled the castle. Some of the do-
mestics were on their knees; others
watching, pale and breathless, from the
windows: for all felt that a greater
storm than they had ever experienced
was about to burst. Sasha and the
castle-steward had taken the wise pre-
caution to summon a physician and a
priest, provided with the utensils for
extreme unction. Both of these per-
sons had been smuggled in through a
rear entrance, and were kept conceal-
ed until their services should be re-
quired. -
	The noise of wheels was heard out-
side the gate, which stood invitingly
open. Prince Alexis clutched his whip
with iron fingers, ahd unconsciously
took the attitude of a wild beast about
to spring from its ambush. Now the
hard clatter of hoofs and the rumbling
of wheels echoed from the archway, and
the kibitka rolled into the court-yard.
It stopped near the foot of the grand
staircase. Boris, who sat upon the far-
ther side, rose to alight, in order to
hand his wife down; but no sooner
had he made a movement than Prince
Alexis, with lifted whip and face flash-
ing fire, rushed down the steps. Hele-
na rose, threw back her veil, let her
mantle (which Boris had grasped, in
his anxiety to restrain her action) fall
behind her, and stepped upon the pave-
ment.
	Prince Alexis had already reached
the last step, and but a few feet sepa-
rated them. He stopped as if struck
by lightning,  his body still retaining,
in every limb, the impress of motion.
The whip was in his uplifted fist ; one
foot was on the pavement of the court,
and the other upon the edge of the last
step ; his head was bent forward, his
mouth open, and his eyes fastened up-
on the Princess Helenas face.
	She, too, stood motionless, a form
of simple and perfect grace, and met
his gaze with soft, imploring, yet coura-
geous and trustful eyes. The women
who watched the scene from the gal-
leries above always declared that an
invisible saint stood beside her in that
moment, and surrounded her with a
dazzling glory. The few moments dur-
ing which the suspense of a hundred
hearts hung upon those encountering
eyes seemed an eternity.
	Prince Alexis did not move, but he</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00041" SEQ="0041" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="35">Beauty a;zd //ic Beast.
35
began to tremble from head to foot.
His fingers relaxed, and the whip fell
ringing upon the pavement. The wild
fire of his eyes changed from wrath into
an ecstasy as intense, and a piercing
cry of mingled xvonder, admiration, and
delight burst from his throat. At that
cry Boris rushed forward and knelt at
his feet. Helena, clasping her fairest
bands, sank beside her husband, with
upturned face, as if seeking to hold the
old mans eyes, and perfect the miracle
she had wrought.
	The sight of that sweet face, so near
his own, tamed the last lurking ferocity
of the beast. His tears burst forth in
a shower; he lifted and embraced the
Princess, kissing her brow, her cheeks,
her chin, and her hands, calling her his
darling daughter, his little white dove,
his lambkin.
	And, father, my Boris too! said
she.
	The pure, liquid voice sent thrills
of exquisite delight through his whole
frame. He embraced and blessed Bo-
ris, and then, throwing an arm around
each, held them to his breast, and wept
passionately upon their heads. By this
time the whole castle overflowed with
weeping. Tears fell from every window
and gallery; they hissed upon the hot
saucepans of the cooks; they moistened
the oats in the manger; they took the
starch out of the ladies ruffles, and
weakened the wine in the goblets of the
guests. Insult was changed into ten-
derness in a moment. Those who had
barked or stuck out their tongues at
Boris rushed up to kiss his boots ; a
thousand terms of endearment were
showered upon him.
Still clasping his children to his
breast, Prince Alexis mounted the steps
with them. At the top he turned, clear-
ed his throat, husky from sobbing, and
shouted, 
A feast! a feast for all Kinesma!
Let there be rivers of vodki, wine, and
hydromel! Proclaim it everywhere that
my dear son Boris and my dear daugh-
ter Helena have arrived, and whoever
fails to welcome them to Kinesma shall
be punished with a hundred stripes!
Off, ye scoundrels, ye vagabonds, and
spread the news!
	It was not an hour before the whole
sweep of the circling hills resounded
with the clang of bells, the blare of
horns, and the songs and shouts of
the rejoicing multitude. The triumphal
arch of unsavory animals was whirled
into the Volga ; all signs of the recent
reception vanished like magic; festive
fir-boughs adorned the houses, and the
gardens and window-pots were stripped
of their choicest flowers to make wreaths
of welcome. The two hundred boys,
not old enough to comprehend this sud-
den bouleversement of sentiment, did not
immediately desist from stickin~r out
their tongues whereupon they were
dismissed with a box on the ear. By
the middle of the afternoon all Kinesma
was eating, drinking, and singing; and
every song was sung, and every glass
emptied, in honor of the dear, good
Prince Boris, and the dear, beautiful
Princess Helena. By night all Kinesma
was drunk.


XI.

	IN the castle a superb banquet was
improvised. Music, guests, and rare
dishes were brought together with won-
derful speec, and the choicest wines of
the cellar ~ere drawn upon. Prince
Boris, bewildered by this sudden and
incredible caange in his fortunes, sat at
his fathers right hand, while the Prin-
cess filled, but with much more beauty
and dignity, the ancient place of the
Princess Martha. The golden dishes
were set before her, and the famous firm-
ily emeralds  in accordance with the
command of Prince Alexis  gleamed
among her dark hair and flashed arouid
her milk-white throat. Her beauty was
of a kind so rare in Russia that it si-
lenced all question and bore down all
rivalry. Every one acknowledged that
so lovely a creature had never before
been seen. Faith, the boy has eyes!
the old Prince constantly repeated, as
he turned away from a new stare of
admiration, down the table.
i866j</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00042" SEQ="0042" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="36">	Beauty and the Beast.	[January,

	The guests noticed a change in the
character of the entertainment. The
idiot, in his tow shirt, had been cram-
med to repletion in the kitchen, and was
now asleep in the stable. Razboi, the
new bear,the successor of the slaugh-
tered Mishka, was chained up out of
hearing. The jugglers, tumblers, and
Calmucks still occupied their old place
under the gallery, but their performances
were of a highly decorous character. At
the least sign of a relapse into certain
old tricks, more grotesque than refined,
the brows of Prince Alexis would grow
dark, and a sharp glance at Sasha was
sufficient to correct the indiscretion.
Every one found this natural enough;
for they were equally impressed with the
elegance and purity of the young wife.
After the healths had been drunk and
the slumber- flag was raised over the
castle, Boris led her into the splendid
apartments of his mother,  now her
own,  and knelt at her feet.
	Have I done my part, my Boris?
she asked.
	You are an angel! he cried. It
was a miracle! My life was not worth
a copek, and I feared for yours. If it
will only last !  if it will only last!
	It will, said she. You have
taken me from poverty, and given me
rank, wealth, and a proud place in the
world: let it be my work to keep the
peace which God has permitted me to
establish between you a~A your fa-
ther
	The change in the old Prince, in fact,
was more radical than any one who
knew his former ways of life would
have considered possible. He stormed
and swore occasionally, flourished his
whip to some purpose, and rode home
from the chase, not outside of a brandy-
cask, as once, but with too much of its
contents inside of him: but these mild
excesses were comparative virtues. His
accesses of blind rage seemed to be
at an end. A powerful, unaccustomed
feeling of content subdued his strong
nature, and left its impress on his voice
and features. He joked and sang with
his children, but not with the wild
recklessness of the days of reisaks and
indiscriminate floggings. Both his ex-
actions and his favors diminished in
quantity. Week after week passed by,
and there was no sign of any return to
his savage courses.
	Nothing annoyed him so much as a
reference to his former way of life, in
the presence of the Princess Helena.
If her gentle, questioning eyes happen-
ed to rest on him at such times, some-
thing very like a blush rose into his
face, and the babbler was silenced with
a terribly significant look. It was enough
for her to say, when he threatened an
act of cruelty or injustice, Father, is
that right? He confusedly retracted
his orders, rather than bear the sorrow
of her face.
	The promise of another event added
to his happiness: Helena would soon
become a mother. As the time drew
near, he stationed guards at the distance
of a verst around the castle, that no
clattering vehicles should pass, no dogs
bark loudly, nor any other disturbance
occur which might agitate the Princess.
The choicest sweetmeats and wines,
flowers from Moscow and fruits from
Astrakhan, were procured for her; and
it was a wonder that the midwife per-
formed her duty, for she had the fear
of death before her eyes. When the
important day at last arrived, the slum-
ber-flag was instantly hoisted, and no
mouse dared to squeak in Kinesma un-
til the cannon announced the advent of
a new soul.
	That night Prince Alexis lay down in
the corridor, outside of Helenas door:
he glared fiercely at the nurse as she
entered with the birth - posset for the
young mother. No one else was allow-
ed to pass, that night, nor the next.
Four days afterwards, Sasha, having a
message to the Princess, and supposing
the old man to be asleep, attempted to
step noiselessly over his body. In a
twinkle the Princes teeth fastened them-
selves in the serfs leg, and held him
with the tenacity of a bull-dog. Sasha
did not dare to cry out: he stood, writh-
ingwi th pain, until the strong jaws grew
weary of their hold, and then crawled
away to dr~ss the bleeding wound. After
36</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00043" SEQ="0043" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="37">i866.]

that, no one tried to break the Princes
guard.
	The christening was on a magnificent
scale. Prince Paul of Kostroma was
godfather, and gave the babe the name
of Alexis. As the Prince had paid his
respects to Helena just before the cere-
mony, it may be presumed that the name
was not of his own inspiration. The
father and mother were not allowed
to be present, but they learned that
the grandfather had comported himself
throughout with great dignity and pro-
priety. The Archimandrite Sergius ob-
tained from the Metropolitan at Mos-
cow a very minute fragment of the true
cross, which was encased in a hollow
bead of crystal, and hung around the
infants neck by a fine gold chain, as a
precious amulet.
	Prince Alexis was never tired of gaz-
ing at his grandson and namesake.
	He has more of his mother than of
Boris, he would say. So much the
better! Strong dark eyes, like the Great
Peter, and what a goodly leg for a
babe! Ha! he makes a tight little fist
already,  fit to handle a whip,  or
(seeing the expression of Helenas face)
 or a sword. He 11 be a proper
Prince of Kinesma, my daughter, and
we owe it to you.
	Helena smiled, and gave him a grate-
ful glance in return. She had had her
secret fears as to the complete conver-
sion of Prince Alexis; but now she saw
in this babe a new spell whereby he
mi~ht be bound. Slight as was her
knowledge of men, she yet guessed the
tyranny of long-continued habits; and
only her faith, powerful in proportion
as it was i~norant, gave her confidence
in the result of the difficult work she
had undertaken.


xl.

	ALAS! the proud predictions of Prince
Alexis, and the protection of the sacred
amulet, were alike unavailing. The babe
sickened, wasted away, and died in less
than two months after its birth. There
was great and genuine sorrow among
37
the serfs of Kinesma. Each had re-
ceived a shining ruble of silver at the
christening; and, moreover, they were
now beginning to appreciate the mild-
er re~girne of their lord, which this blow
might suddenly terminate. Sorrow, in
such natures as his, exasperates in-
stead of chastening: they knew him well
enou~ h to recognize the danger.
	At first the old mans grief appeared
to be of a stubborn, harmless nature.
As soon as the funeral ceremonies were
over, he betook himself to his bed, and
there lay for two days and nights, with-
out eating a morsel of food. The poor
Princess Helena, almost prostrated by
the blow, mourned alone, or with Boris,
in her own apartments. Her influence,
no longer kept alive by her constant
presence, as formerly, began. to decline.
When the old Prince aroused some-
what from his stupor, it was not meat
that he demanded, but drink; and he
drank to an~ry excess. Day after day
the habit resumed its ancient sway, and
the whip and the wild-beast yell return-
	The serfs, even beoan to
ed with it.
tremble as they never had done, so long
as his vices were simply those of a strong
man; for now a fiendish element seem-
ed to be slowly creeping in. He became
horribly profane: they shuddered, when
he cursed the venerable Metropolitan
of Moscow, declaring that the old sin-
ner had deliberately killed his grandson,
by sending to him, instead of the true
cross of the Saviour, a piece of the tree
to which the impenitent thief was nailed.
	Boris would have spared his wife the
knowledge of this miserable relapse, in
her present sorrow, but the information
soon reached her in other ways. She
saw the necessity of regaining, by a
powerful effort, what she had lost. She
therefore took her accustomed place at
the table, and resumed her inspection
of household matters. Prince Alexis,
as if determined to cast off the yoke
which her beauty and gentleness had
laid upon him, avoided looking at her
face or speaking to her, as much as pos-.
sible: when he did so, his manner was
cold and unfriendly. During her few
days of sad retirement, he had brought.
Beauty and the Beast.</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00044" SEQ="0044" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="38">Beauty and the Beast.	[January,
38

back the bear Razboi and the idiot to
his table, and vodki was habitually pour-
ed out to him and his favorite serfs in
such measure that the nights became
hideous with drunken tumult.
	The Princess Helena felt that her
beauty no longer possessed the potency
of its first surprise. It must now be a
contest of nature with nature, spiritual
with animal power. The struggle w~uld
be perilous, she foresaw, but she did not
shrink; she rather sought the earliest
occasion to provoke it.
	That occasion came. Some slight dis-
appointment brought on one of the old
paroxysms of rage, and the ox-like bel-
low of Prince Alexis rang through the
castle. Boris was absent, but Helena
delayed not a moment to venture into
his fathers presence. She found him
in a hall overlooking the court - yard,
with his terrible whip in his hand, giv-
ing orders for the brutal punishment of
some scores of serfs. The sight of her,
coming thus unexpectedly upon him, did
not seem to produce the least effect.
	Father! she cried, in an earnest,
piteous tone, what is it you do?
	Away, witch! he yelled. I am the
master in Kinesma, not thou! Away,
or
The fierceness with which he swung
and cracked the whip was more threat-
ening than any words. Perhaps she
o~rew a shade paler, perhaps her hands
were tightly clasped in order that they
might not tremble ; but she did nOt
flinch from the encounter. She moved
a step nearer, fixed her gaze upon his
flashing eyes, and said, in a low, firm
voice, 
It is true, father, you are master
here. It is easy to rule over those poor,
submissive slaves. But you are not mas-
ter over yourself; you are lashed and
trampled upon by evil passions, and as
much a slave as any of these. Be not
weak, my father, but strong!
	An expression of bewilderment came
into his face. No such words had ever
before been addressed to him, and he
knew not how to reply to them. The
Princess Helena followed up the effect
~sbe was not sure that it was an ad-
vantage  by an appeal to the simple,
childish nature which she believed to
exist under his ferocious exterior. For
a minute it seemed as if she were about
to redstablish her ascendency: then the
stubborn resistance of the beast re-
turned.
	Among the portraits in the ball was
one of the deceased Princess Martha.
Pointing to this, Helena cried, 
See, my father! here are the features
of your sainted wife! Think that she
looks down from her place among the
blessed, sees you, listens to your words,
prays that your hard heart may be soft-
ened! Remember her last farewell to
you on earth, her hope of meeting
you
	A cry of savage wrath checked her.
Stretching one huge, bony hand, as if
to close her lips, trembling with rage
and pain, livid and convulsed in every
feature of his face, Prince Alexis re-
versed the whip in his right hand, and
weighed its thick, heavy butt for one
crashing, fatal blow. Life and death
were evenly balanced. For an instant
the Princess became deadly pale, and a
sickening fear shot through her heart.
She could not understand the effect of
her words: her mind was paralyzed, and
what followed came without her con-
scious volition.
	Not retreating a step, not removing
her eyes from the terrible picture before
her, she suddenly opened her lips and
sang. Her voice, of exquisite purity,
power, and sweetness, filled the old ball
and overflowed it, throbbing in scarcely
weakened vibrations through court-yard
and castle. The melody was a prayer,
the cry of a tortured heart for par-
don and repose; and she sang it with
almost supernatural expression. Ev- -
ery sound in the castle was hushed: the
serfs outside knelt and uncovered their
heads.
	The Princess could never afterwards
describe, or more than dimly recall, the
exaltation of that moment. She sang
in an inspired trance: from the utter-
ance of the first note the horror of the
imminent fate sank out of sight. Her
eyes were fixed upon the convulsed face,</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00045" SEQ="0045" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="39">1866.1

but she beheld it not: all the concen-
trated forces of her life flowed into the
music. She remembered, however, that
Prince Alexis looked alternately from
her face to the portrait of his wife; that
he at last shuddered and grew pale; and
that, when with the closing note her own
strength suddenly dissolved, he groaned
and fell upon the floor.
	She sat down beside him, and took
his head upon her lap. For a long time
he was silent, only shivering as if in
fever.
	Father! she finally whispered, let
me take you away!
	He sat up on the floor and looked
around; but as his eyes encountered the
portrait, he gave a loud howl and cover-
ed his face with his hands.
	She turns her head! he cried.
Take her axvay,  she follows me with
her eyes ! Paint her head black, and
cover it up!
	With some difficulty he was borne to
his bed, but he would not rest until as-
sured that his orders had been obey-
ed, and the painting covered for the
time with a coat of lamp-black. A low,
prolonged attack of fever followed, dur-
ing which the presence of Helena was
indispensable to his comfort. She ven-
tured to leave the room only while he
slept. He was like a child in her hands;
and when she commended his patience
or his good resolutions, his face beamed
with joy and gratitude. He determined
(in good faith, this time) to enter a mon
39

astery and devote the rest of his life to
pious works.
	But, even after his recovery, he was
still too weak and dependent on his
childrens attentions to carry out this
resolution. He banished from the cas-
tle all those of his poor relations who
were unable to drink vodki in modera-
tion; he kept careful watch over his
serfs, and those who became intoxicated
(unless they concealed the. fact in the
stables and outhouses) were severely
punished: all excess disappeared, and a
reign of peace and gentleness descend-
ed upon Kinesma.
	In another year another Alexis was
horn, and lived, and soon grew strong
enough to give his grandfather the great-
est satisfaction he had ever known in
his life, by tugging at his gray locks,
and digging the small fingers into his
tamed and merry eyes. Many years
after Prince Alexis was dead, tbe serfs
used to relate how they had seen him,
in the bright summer afternoons, asleep
in his atm-chair on the balcony, with
the rosy babe asleep on his bosom, and
the slumber-flag waving over both.
	Legends of the Princes hunts, reisaks,
and brutal revels are still current along
the Volga; but they are now linked to
fairer and more gracious storieS ; and the
free Russian farmers (no longer serfs)
are never tired of relating incidents of
the beauty, the courage, the benevo-
lence, and the saintly piety of the Good
Lady of Kinesma.




THE WILDERNESS.
	N conversation with a young Rebel
I on the field of Fredericksburg, I
learned that a certain Elijah of his ac-
quaintance sometimes conveyed travel-
lers over the more distant battle-fields.
Him, therefore, I sent to engage, with
his horse and buggy, for the following
day.
	Breakfast was scarcely over the next
morning, when, as I chanced to look
from my hotel window, I saw a thin-
faced countryman drive up to the door in
an old one-horse wagon with two seats
and a box half filled with corn-stalks.
I was admiring the anatomy of the
horse, every prominent bone of which
could be counted through his skin,
when I heard the man inquiring for
me. It was Elijah, with his horse and
buggy.
TIu~ Wilderizess.</PB></P>
</DIV1>
<DIV1 TYPE="article" DECLS="/moa/atla/atla0017/" ID="ABK2934-0017-6">
<BIBL>
<AUTHOR>J. T. Trowbridge</AUTHOR>
<AUTHORIND>Trowbridge, J. T.</AUTHORIND>
<TITLE TYPE="ART">The Wilderness</TITLE>
<BIBLSCOPE TYPE="pg">39-47</BIBLSCOPE>
</BIBL>
<P><PB REF="IMG00045" SEQ="0045" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="39">1866.1

but she beheld it not: all the concen-
trated forces of her life flowed into the
music. She remembered, however, that
Prince Alexis looked alternately from
her face to the portrait of his wife; that
he at last shuddered and grew pale; and
that, when with the closing note her own
strength suddenly dissolved, he groaned
and fell upon the floor.
	She sat down beside him, and took
his head upon her lap. For a long time
he was silent, only shivering as if in
fever.
	Father! she finally whispered, let
me take you away!
	He sat up on the floor and looked
around; but as his eyes encountered the
portrait, he gave a loud howl and cover-
ed his face with his hands.
	She turns her head! he cried.
Take her axvay,  she follows me with
her eyes ! Paint her head black, and
cover it up!
	With some difficulty he was borne to
his bed, but he would not rest until as-
sured that his orders had been obey-
ed, and the painting covered for the
time with a coat of lamp-black. A low,
prolonged attack of fever followed, dur-
ing which the presence of Helena was
indispensable to his comfort. She ven-
tured to leave the room only while he
slept. He was like a child in her hands;
and when she commended his patience
or his good resolutions, his face beamed
with joy and gratitude. He determined
(in good faith, this time) to enter a mon
39

astery and devote the rest of his life to
pious works.
	But, even after his recovery, he was
still too weak and dependent on his
childrens attentions to carry out this
resolution. He banished from the cas-
tle all those of his poor relations who
were unable to drink vodki in modera-
tion; he kept careful watch over his
serfs, and those who became intoxicated
(unless they concealed the. fact in the
stables and outhouses) were severely
punished: all excess disappeared, and a
reign of peace and gentleness descend-
ed upon Kinesma.
	In another year another Alexis was
horn, and lived, and soon grew strong
enough to give his grandfather the great-
est satisfaction he had ever known in
his life, by tugging at his gray locks,
and digging the small fingers into his
tamed and merry eyes. Many years
after Prince Alexis was dead, tbe serfs
used to relate how they had seen him,
in the bright summer afternoons, asleep
in his atm-chair on the balcony, with
the rosy babe asleep on his bosom, and
the slumber-flag waving over both.
	Legends of the Princes hunts, reisaks,
and brutal revels are still current along
the Volga; but they are now linked to
fairer and more gracious storieS ; and the
free Russian farmers (no longer serfs)
are never tired of relating incidents of
the beauty, the courage, the benevo-
lence, and the saintly piety of the Good
Lady of Kinesma.




THE WILDERNESS.
	N conversation with a young Rebel
I on the field of Fredericksburg, I
learned that a certain Elijah of his ac-
quaintance sometimes conveyed travel-
lers over the more distant battle-fields.
Him, therefore, I sent to engage, with
his horse and buggy, for the following
day.
	Breakfast was scarcely over the next
morning, when, as I chanced to look
from my hotel window, I saw a thin-
faced countryman drive up to the door in
an old one-horse wagon with two seats
and a box half filled with corn-stalks.
I was admiring the anatomy of the
horse, every prominent bone of which
could be counted through his skin,
when I heard the man inquiring for
me. It was Elijah, with his horse and
buggy.
TIu~ Wilderizess.</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00046" SEQ="0046" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="40">	40	Tue frVzYdcrness.	[January,

	I was inclined to criticize the estab-
lishment, which was not altogether what
I had been led to expect.
	I allow he ant a fust-class boss,
said Elijah. Only give three dollars
for him. Feed is skurce and high.
But let him rest this winter, and git
some meal in him, and he 11 make a
plough crack next spring.
	What are you going to do with those
corn-stalks ?
	Fodder for the hoss. They re all
the fodder he 11 git till night; for we
re gon into a country whar thar s
nothn mo for an animal to eat than
thar is on the palm of my hand.
	I took a seat beside him, and made
use of the stalks by placing a couple of
bundles between my back and the sharp
board which travellers were expected to
lean against. Elijah cracked his whip,
the horse frisked his tail, and struck
into a cow-trot which pleased him.
	You see, he 11 snake us over the
ground right peart!
	He proceeded to tantalize me by tell-
ing what a mule he had, and what a lit-
tle mare he had, at home.
	She certainly goes over the ground!
I believe she can run ekal to anything
in this country for about a mile. But
she s got a set of legs under her jest
like a sheeps legs.
	He could not say enough in praise of
the mule.
	Paid eight hundred dollars for him
in Confederate money. He earned a
living for the whole family last winter.
I used to go reglar up to Chancellors-
yule and the Wilderness, buy up a box
of clothing, and go down in Essex and
trade it off for corn.
	What sort of clothing?
	Soldiers clothes, from the battle-
fields. Some was flung away, and some,
I suppose, was stripped off the dead.
Any number of families jest lived on
what they got from the Union armies
in that way. They d pick up what gar-
ments they could lay hands on, wash em
up, and sell em. I d take a blanket, and
git half a bushel of meal for it down in
Essex. Then I d bring the meal back,
and git may-be two blankets, or a blan
ket and a coat, for it. All with that little
mule. He 11 haul a load for ye! He
11 stick to the ground gon up hill jest
like a dry-land tarrapin! But I take the
mare when I m in a hurry; she makes
them feet rattle agin the ground!
	We took the plank road to Chancel-
lorsviile, passing through a waste coun-
try of weeds or undergrowth, like every
other part of Virginia which I had yet
seen.
	All this region through yer, said
Elijah, used to be growd up to corn
and as beautiful clover as ever you see.
But since the wa, it s all turned out
to bushes and briers and hog-weeds.
It s gittin a start agin now. I 11 show
em how to do it. Ifwe git in a crap o
wheat this fall, which I dont knoxv if
we shant, we kin start three big teams,
and whirl up twenty acres of land di-
rectly. That mule, etc.
	Elijah praised the small farmers.
	People in ordinary sarcumstances
along yer are a mighty industrious peo-
ple. It s the rich that keep this coun-
try down. The way it generally is, a few
own too much and the rest own nothn.
I know hundreds of thousands of acres
of land put to no uset, which, if it was
cut up into little farms, would make the
country look thrifty. This is mighty
good land; clay bottom; holds manure
jest like a chany bowl does water. But
the rich ones jest scratched over a little
on t with their slave labor, and let the
rest go. They would nt sell: let a
young man go to em to buy, and they
d say they did nt want no poo whites
around em; they would nt have one,
if they could keep shet of em. And
what was the result? Young men would
go off to the West, if they was enter-
prisn, and leave them that want en-
terprisn hyer to home. Then as the
old heads died off, the farms would run
down. The young women would mar-
ry the lazy young men, and raise up
families of lazy children.~7
	The country all about Fredericksburg
was very unhealthy. Elijah, on mak-
ing inquiries, could hear of scarcely a
family on the road exempt from sick-
ness.</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00047" SEQ="0047" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="41">The Wilderness.

	It was never so till since the wa.
Now we have chills and fever, jest like
they do in a new country. It s owin
to the land all comm up to weeds; the
dew settles in em, and they rot, and
that fills the air with the agur. I ye
had the agur myself till about a fort-
night ago; then, soon as I got shet of
that, the colic took me. Eat too much
on a big appetite, I suppose. I like to
live well; like to se~ plenty of every-
thing on the table, and then I like to see
every man eat a heap.
	I commended Elijahs practical sense;
upon which he replied, 
The old man is, right ignorant;
cant read the fust letter; never ~vent
to school a day; but the old ~an is
right sharp !
	He was fond of speaking of himself
in this way. He thought education a
good thing, but allowed that all the ed-
ucation in the world could not give a
man sense. He was fifty years old,
and had got along thus far in life very
well.
	I reckon thar s gon to be a better
chance for the poo man after this. The
Union hem held together was the great-
est thing that could have happened for
us.
	And yet you fought against it.
	I was in the Confederate army two
year and a half. I was opposed to Se-
cession ; but I got my head a little
turned after the State xvent out, and I
enlisted. Then, when I had time to
reconsider it all over, I diskivered we
was wrong. I told the boys so.
	Boys, says I, when my time s up,
I m gon out of the army, and you
wont see me in agin.
	You cant help that, old man, says
they; fo by that time the conscript
law 11 be changed 50 s to go over the
heads of older men than you.
	Then, says I, the fust chance
presents itself, I fling down my musket
and go spang Noth.
	They had me put under arrest for
that, and kep me in the guard-house
seven months. I liked that well enough.
I was saved a deal of hard marchn
and layn out in the cold, that winter.
	Why dont ye come in, boys, says
I, and have a warm?
	I knowed what I was about! The
old man was right ignorant, but the old
man was right sharp!
	We passed the line of Sedgwicks re-
treat a few miles from Fredericksburg.
	Shedricks men was, in line acrost
the road hyer, extendin into the woods
on both sides; they had jest butchered
their meat, and was ishyin rations and
beginnin to cook their suppers, when
Magruder struck em on the left flank.
(Elijah was wrong; it was not Magru-
der, but McLaws. These local guides
make many such mistakes, and it is
necessary to be on ones guard against
them.) They jest got right up and
skedaddled! The whole line jest faced
to the right, and put for Bankss Ford.
Thar s the road they went. They left
it piled so full of wagons, Magruder
could nt follab; but his artillery jest
run around by another road I 11 show
ye, hard as ever they could lay their
feet to the ground, wheeled their guns
in position on the bluffs by the time
Shedrick got cleverly to crossin, and
played away. The way they heaped
up Shedricks men was awful
	Every mile or two we came to a small
farm-house, commonly of logs, near
which there was usually a small crop
of corn growing.
	Every man after he got home, after
the fall of Richmond, put in to raise a
little somethin to eat. Some o the
corn looks pooly, but it beats no corn
at all, all to pieces.
	We came to one field which Elijah
pronounced a  monstrous fine crap.~~
But he added, 
I ye got thirty acres to home not
a hit sorrier n that. Ye see, that mule
of mine, etc.
	I noticed  what I never saw in the
latitude of New England  that the fod-
der had been pulled below the ears and
tied in little bundles on the stalks to
cure. Ingenious shifts for fences had
been resorted to by the farmers. In
some places the planks of the worn-out
plank road had been staked and lashed
together to form a temporary inclosure.
i866.]
4</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00048" SEQ="0048" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="42">	42	Tue Wi/der~ess.	[January,

But the most common fence was what
Elijah called bresh wattlin. Stakes
were first driven into the ground, then
pine or cedar brush bent in between
them and beaten down with a maul.
	Ye kin build a wattlin fence that
way so tight a rabbit cant git through.
	On making inquiries, I found that
farms of fine land could be had all
through this region for ten dollars an
acre.
	Elijah hoped that men from the
North would come in and settle.
	But, said he, t would be dan-
gerous for any one to take possession
of a confiscated farm. He would nt
live a month.
	The larger land-owners are now more
willing to sell.
	Right smart o their property was
in niggers; they re pore now, and have
to raise money.
	The emancipation of slavery, add-
ed Elijah, is wokin right for the
country moe ways an one. The ant
two men in twenty, in middlin sarcum-
stances, but that s beginnin to see it.
I m no friend to the niggers, though.
They ought all to be druv out of the
country. They wont wok as long as
they can steal. I have my little crap
o corn, and wheat, and pok; when
night comes, I must sleep; then the
niggers come and steal all I ye got.
	I pressed him to give an instance of
the negroes stealing his property. He
could not say that they had taken any-
thing from him lately, but they used
to rob his corn-fields and hen-roosts,
and they would again. Had he ever
caught them at it? No, he could not
say that he ever, had. Then how did
he know that the thieves were negroes?
He knew it, because niggers would
steal.
	XVont white folks steal, too, some-
times ?
	Yes, said Elijah, some o the
p00 whites are a durned sight wuss n
the niggers !
	Then why not drive them out of
the country, too? You see, said I,
your charges against the negroes are
vague, and amount to nothing.
	I own, he replied, thar s now
and then one that s ekal to any white
man. Thar s one a-comm thar.
	A load of wood was approaching,
drawn by two horses abreast and a mule
for leader. A white-haired old negro
was riding the mule.
	He s the greatest man! said Eli-
jah, after we had passed. He s been
the support of his masters family for
twenty year and o~er. He kin manage
a heap better n his master kin. The
ant a farmer in the country kin beat
him. He keeps right on jest the same
now he s free; though I suppose he
gits wages.
	You acknowledge, then, that some
of the ~egroes are superior men?
	Yes, thar s about ten in a hundred
honest and smart as anybody.
	That, said I, is a good many.
Do you suppose you could say more of
the-white race, if it had just come out
of slavery?
	I dont believe, said Elijah, that
ye could say as much!
	We passed the remains of the house
whar Harrow was shot. It had been
burned to the ground.
	You ye heerd about Harrow; he
was Confederate commissary; he stole
moe bosses fom -the people, and poed
the money down his own throat, than
would have paid fo foty men like him,
if he was black.
	A mile or two farther on, we came to
another house.
	Hyer s whar the man lives that kill-
ed Harrow. He was in the army, and
because he objected to some of Har-
rows doins, Harrow had him arrested,
and treated him very much amiss. That
ground into his conscience and feelins,
and he deserted fo no other puppose
than to shoot him. He s a mighty
smart fellab ! He 11 strike a man side
the head, and soon s his fist leaves it,
his foot s thar. He shot Harrow in
that house you see burnt to the ground,
and then xvent spang to Washington.
Oh, he was sharp!
	On our return we met the slayer of
Harrow riding home from Fredericks-
burg on a mule,  a fine-looking young</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00049" SEQ="0049" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="43">Tue Wilderizess.

fellow, of blonde complexion, a pleasant
countenance, finely chiselled nose and
lips, and an eye full of sunshine. Jest
the best-hearted, nicest young fellah in
the wold, till ye git him mad ; then
look out ! I think it is often the most
attractive persons, of fine temperaments,
who are capable of the most terrible
wrath when roused.
	The plank road was in such a ruined
condition that nobody thought of driv-
ing on it; although the dirt road beside
it was in places scarcely better. The
back of the seat was cruel, notwithstand-
ing the corn-stalks. But by means of
much persuasion, enforced by a good
whip, Elijah kept the old horse jogging
on.	Oak - trees, loaded with acorns,
grew beside the road. Black walnuts,
already beginning to lose their leaves,
hung their delicate balls in the clear
light over our heads. Poke-weeds dark
with ripening berries, wild grapes fes-
tooning bush and tree, sumachs thrust-
ing up through the foliage their san-
guinary spears, persimmon-trees, gum-
trees, red cedars with their bluish-green
clusters, chestnut - oaks, and chinca-
pins, adorned the wild wayside.
	So we approached Chancellorsville,
twelve miles from Fredericksburg. Eli-
jah was raised in that region, and knew
everybody.
	Many a frolic have I had runnin
the deer through these woods! Soon
as the dogs started one, he d put fo
the river, cross, take a turn on t other
side, and it would nt be an hour foe
he d be back agin. Man I lived with
used to have a mare that was trained
to hunt; if she was in the field and~
heard the dogs, she d whirl her tail
up on her back, lope the fences, and go
spang to the United States Ford, git
thar foe the dogs would, and hunt as
well without a rider as with one.
	But since then a far different kind of
hunting, a richer blood than the deers,
and other soifnds than the exciting yelp
of the dogs, had rendered that region
famous.
	Hyer we come to the Chancellors-
ville farm. Many a poo soldiers knap-
sack was emptied of his clothes, after
the battle, along this road! said Eli-
jah, remembering last winters business
with his mule.
	The road runs through a large open
field bounded by woods. The marks of
hard fighting were visible from afar off.
A growth of saplings edging the woods
on the south had been killed by volleys
of musketry: it looked like thickets of
bean-poles. The ground everywhere, in
the field and in the woods, was strewed
with mementoes of the battle,  rot-
ting knapsacks and haversacks, batter-
ed canteens and tin cups, and fragments
of clothing which Elijahs customers
had not deemed it worth the while to
pick up. On each side of the road
were breastworks and rifle-pits extend-
ing into the woods. The clearing, once
a well-fenced farm of grain-fields and
clover-lots, was now a dreary and de-
serted common. Of the Chancellors-
ville House, formerly a large brick tav-
ern, only the half-fallen walls and chim-
ney-stacks remained. Here General
Hooker had his head-quarters until the
wave of battle on Sunday morning roll-
ed so hot and so near that he was com-
pelled to withdraw. The house was
soon after fired by a Rebel shell, when
full of wounded men, and burned.
	Every place ye see these big bunch-
es of weeds, that s whar the was boss-
es or men buried, said Elijah. These
holes are whar the bones have been
dug up for the bone-factory at Freder-
icksburg.
	It was easy for the bone-seekers to
determine where to dig. The common
was comparatively barren, except where
grew those gigantic clumps of weeds.
I asked Elijah if he thought many hu-
man bones went to the factory.
	Not unless by mistake. But peo-
ple ant always very particlar about
mistakes thar s money to be made
by.
	Seeing a small inclosure midway be-
tween the road and the woods on the
south, we walked to it, and found it a
burying - ground ridged with unknown
graves. Not a head-board, not an in-
scription, indicated who were the ten-
ants of that little lonely field. And
i866.]
43</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00050" SEQ="0050" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="44">44
Elijah knew nothing of its history; it
had been set apart, and the scattered
dead had been gathered together and
buried there, since he passed that way.
	We found breastworks thrown up all
along by the plank road west of the
farm,  the old worn planks having
been put to good service in their con-
struction. The tree-trunks pierced by
balls, the boughs lopped off by shells,
the strips of timber cut to pieces by
artillery and musketry fire, showed how
desperate the struggle on that side
had been. The endeavors of the Con-
federates to follow up with an over-
whelming victory Jacksons swift and
telling blows on our right, and the
equally determined efforts of our men
to retrieve that disaster, rendered this
the scene of a furious encounter.
	Elijah thought, that, if Jackson had
not been killed by his own men after
delivering that thunderstroke, Hooker
would have been annihilated. Stone-
wall was undoubtedly the enemys
best fighting general. His death was
to them equal to the loss of many bri-
gades. With regard to the manner of
his death there can be no longer any
doubt. I have conversed with Confed-
erate officers who were in the battle,
all of whom agree as to the main fact.
General Jackson, after shattering our
right wing, posted his pickets at night
with directions to fire upon any man or
body of men that might approach. He
afterwards rode forward to reconnoi-
tre, returned inadvertently by the same
road, and was shot by his own or-
ders.
	The Battle of Bull Run in i86i, Popes
campaign, and Burnsides defeat at Fred-
ericksburg in 1862, and, lastly, Hookers
unsuccessful attempt at Chancellors-
ville in the spring of 1863, had shown
how hard a road to Richmond this was
to travel. Repeatedly, as we tried it
and failed, the hopes of the Confederacy
rose exultant; the heart of the North
sank as often, heavy with despair. Mc-
Clellans Peninsular route had resulted
still more fatally. We all remember
the anguish and anxiety of those days.
But the heart of the North shook off
The Wilderness.	[January,

	its despair, listened to no timid coun-
sels ; it was growing fierce and obdu-
rate. We no longer received the news
of defeat with cries of dismay, but
with teeth close-set, a smile upon the
quivering lips, and a burning fire with
in. Had the Rebels triumphed again?
Then so much the worse for them
Had we been once more repulsed with
slaughter from their strong line of de-
fences? Was the precious blood pour-
ed out before them all in vain? At last
it should not be in vain! Though it
should cost a new thirty years war
and a generation of lives, the red work
we bad begun must be completed; ul-
timate failure was impossible, ultimate
triumph certain.
	This inflexible spirit found its em-
bodiment in the leader of the final cam-
paigns against the Rebel capital. It
was the deep spirit of humanity itself,
ready to make the richest sacrifices,
calm, determined, inexorable, moving
steadily towards the great object to be
achieved. It has been said that Gen-
eral Grant did not consider the lives of
his men. Then the people did not con-
sider them. But the truth lies here
precious as were those lives, something
lay beyond far more precious, and they
were the needful price paid for it. We
had learned the dread price, we had
duly weighed the worth of the object to
be purchased: what, then, was the use
of hesitating and higglin~?
	We were approaching the scene of
Grants first great blow aimed at the
gates of the Rebel capital. On the
field of Chancellorsville you already
tread the borders of the field of the XVil-
derness,  if that can he called a field
which is a mere interminable forest,
slashed here and there with roads.
	Passing straight along the plank road,
we came to a large farm-house, which
had been gutted by soldiers, and but
recently reoccupied. It was still in a
scarcely habitable condition. However,
we managed to obtain, what we stood
greatly in need of, a cup of cold water.
I observed that it tasted strongly of
Iron.
	The reason of that is, we took twelve</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00051" SEQ="0051" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="45">	i866.]	Tue Wilderness.

camp-kettles out of the well, said the
man of the house, and nobody knows
how many more there are down there.
	The place is known as Locust Grove.
In the edge of the forest, but a little far-
ther on, is the Wilderness Church,  a
square framed building, which showed
marks of such usage as every uninhab-
ited house receives at the hands of a
wild soldiery. Red Mars has little re-
spect for the temples of the Prince of
Peace.
	Many a time have I been to meetn
in that shell, and sot on hard benches,
and heard long sermons! said Elijah.
But I reckon it 11 be a long while be-
foe them doos are darkened by a con-
gregation agin. Thar ant the popula-
tion through hyer thar used to be. Oncet
we d have met a hundred wagons on
this road gon to market; but I count
we hant met moe n a dozen to-day.
	Not far beyond the church we ap-
proached two tall guide-posts erected
where the road forks. The one on the
right pointed the way to the Wilder-
ness National Cemetery, No. 1,4 miles,
by the Orange Court-House turnpike.
The other indicated the Wilderness
National Cemetery, No. 2, by the plank
road.
	All this has been done since I was
this way, said Elijah.
	We kept the plank road,  or rather
the clay road beside it, which stretched
before us dim in the hollows, and red as
brick on the hillsides. We passed some
old fields, and entered the great Wilder-
ness,  a high and dry country, thickly
overgrown with dwarfish timber, chiefly
scrub oaks, pines, and cedars. Poles
lashed to trees for tent-supports indi-
cated where our regiments had encamp-
ed; and soon we came upon abundant
evidences of a great battle. Heavy
breastworks thrown up on Brocks cross-
road, planks from the plank road piled
up and lashed against trees in the
~voods, to form a shelter for our pickets,
knapsacks, haversacks, pieces of cloth-
ing, fragments of harness, tin plates,
canteens, some pierced with balls, frag-
ments of shells, with here and there
a round - shot, or a shell unexploded,
45

straps, buckles, cartridge-boxes, socks,
old shoes, rotting letters, desolate tracts
of perforated and broken trees,  all
these signs, and others sadder still, re-
mained to tell their silent story of the
great fight of the Wilderness.
	A cloud passed over the sun: all the
scene became sombre, and hushed with
a strange brooding stillness, broken on-
ly by the noise of twigs crackling under
my feet, and distant growls of thunder.
A shadow fell upon my heart also, as
from the wing of the Death-Angel, as I
wandered through the woods, meditating
upon what I saw. Where were the feet
that wore those empty shoes? Where
was he whose proud waist was buckled
in that belt? Some soldiers heart was
made happy by that poor, soiled, tat-
tered, illegible letter, which rain and
mildew have not spared; some moth-
ers, sisters, wifes, or sweethearts hand,
doubtless, penned it; it is the broken
end of a thread which unwinds a whole
life-history, could we but follow it right
ly. XVhere is that soldier now? Did
he fall in the fight, and does his home
know him no more? Has the poor wife
or stricken mother waited long for the
answer to that letter, which never came,
and will never come? And this cap,
cut in tWo by a shot, and stiff with a
strange incrustation,  a small cap, a
mere boys, it seems,  where now the
fair head and wavy hair that wore it?
O mother and sisters at home, do you
still mourn for your drummer - boy?
Has the story reached you,  how he
~vent into the fl~ht to carry off his wound-
ed comrades, and so lost his life for their
sakes ? for so I imagine the tale which
will never be told.
	And what more appalling spectacle is
this? In the cover of thick woods, the
unburied remains of two soldiers,  two
skeletons side by side, two skulls almost
touching each other, like the cheeks of
sleepers! I came upon them unawares
as I picked my way among the scrub
oaks. I knew that scores of such sights
could be seen here a few weeks before;
but the United States Government had
sent to have its unburied dead collected
together in the two national cemeteries</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00052" SEQ="0052" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="46">46

of the Wildernesz ; and I had hoped
the work was faithfully done.
	They was Noth-Carolinians; that s
why they did nt bury em, said Elijah,
after a careful examination of the but-
tons fallen from the rotted clothing.
	The ground where they lay had been
fought over repeatedly, and the dead of
both sides had fallen there. The buttons
may, therefore, have told a true story:
North-Carolinians they may have been:
yet I could not believe that the true rea-
son why they had not been decently
interred. It must have been that these
bodies, and others we found afterwards,
were overlooked by the party sent to
construct the cemeteries. It was shame-
ful negligence, to say the least.
	The cemetery was near by,  a little
clearing in the woods by the roadside,
thirty yards square, surrounded by a
picket-fence, and comprising seventy
trenches, each containing the remains
of I know not how many dead. Each
trench was marked with a headboard,
inscribed with the invariable words, 
Unknown United States soldiers,
killed May, 1864.
	Elijah, to whom I read the inscrip-
tion, said, pertinently, that the words,
U;z i/ed Slates soldiers indicated l)lainly
that it had not been the intention to
bury Rebels there. No doubt: but
these might at least have been buried
in the woods where they fell.
	As a grim sarcasm on this neglect,
somebody had flung three human skulls,
picked up in the xvoods, over the paling,
into the cemetery, where they lay blanch-
ing among the graves.
	Close by the southeast corner of the
fence were three or four Rebel graves,
with old headboards. Elijah called my
attention to them, and wish~d me to
read what the headboards said. The
main fact indicated was, that those
buried there were North - Carolinians.
Elijah considered this somehow corrob-
orative of his theory derived from the
buttons. The crraves were shallow, and
the settling of the earth over the bodies
had left the feet of one of the poor fel-
lows sticking out.
	The shadows which darkened the
[January,

woods, and the ominous thunder-growls,
culminated in a shower. Elijah crawl-
ed under his wagon; I sought the shel-
ter of a tree: the horse champed his
fodder, and we ate our luncheon. How
quietly upon the leaves, how softly upon
the graves of the cemetery, fell the per-
pendicular rain! The clouds parted,
and a burst of sunlight smote the Wil-
derness; the rain still poured, but every
drop was illumined, and I seemed stand-
ing in a shower of silver meteors.
	The rain over and luncheon finished,
I looked about for some solace to my
palate after the dry sandwiches, mois-
tened only by the drippings from the
tree,  seekinb a dessert in the Wilder-
ness. Summer grapes hung their just
ripened clusters from the vine - laden
saplings, and the chincapin bushes were
starred with opening burrs. I followed
a woodland path, embowered with the
glistening boughs, and plucked, and ate,
and mused. The ground was level, and
singularly free from the accumulations
of twigs, branches, and old leaves, with
which forests usually abound. I noticed,
however, many charred sticks and half-
burnt roots and logs. Then the terrible
recollection overtook me : these were
the woods that were on fire during the
battle. I called Elijah.
	Yes, all this was a flame of fire while
the fight was gon on. It was full of
dead and wounded men. Cook and Ste-
vens, farmers over hyer, men I know,
heard the screams of the poor fellahs
burnin up, and come and dragged many
a one out of the fire, and laid em in the
road.
	The woods were full of Rebel graves,
with here and there a heap of half-cov-
ered bones, where several of the dead
had been hurriedly buried together.
	I had seen enough. We returned to
the cemetery. Elijah hitched up his
horse, and we drove back along the
plank road, cheered by a rainbow which
spanned the Wilderness and moved its
bright arch onward over Chancellorsville
towards Fredericksburg, brightening
and fading, and brightening still a gain,
like the hope which gladdened the na-
tions eye after Grants victory.
71w WilderHess.</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00053" SEQ="0053" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="47">i866.] Tue Bc/Is of Lynn.  The Hzgk Tide of J9eccnzber.



THE BELLS OF LYNN, HEARD AT NAHANT.


	O	CURFEW of the setting sun! 0 Bells of Lynn!
O requiem of the dying day! 0 Bells of Lynn!

From the dark belfries of yon cloud-cathedral wafted,
Your sounds ai~rial seem to float, 0 Bells of Lynn!

Borne on the evening wind across the crimson twilight,
Oer land and sea they rise and fall, 0 Bells of Lynn!

The fisherman in his boat, far out beyond the headland,
Listens, and leisurely rows ashore, 0 Bells of Lynn!

Over the shining sands the wandering cattle homeward
Follow each other at your call, 0 Bells of Lynn!

The distant lighthouse hears, and with his flaming signal
Answers you, passing the watchword on, 0 Bells of Lynn!

And down the darkening coast run the tumultuous surges,
And clap their hands, and shout to you, 0 Bells of Lynn!

Till from the shuddering sea, with your wild incantations,
Ye summon up the spectral moon, 0 Bells of Lynn!

And startled at the sight, like the weird woman of Endor,
Ye cry aloud, and then are still, 0 Bells of Lynn






THE HIGH TIDE OF DECEMBER.

BREAKFAST was ready. Captain
Lufflin, who, like most retired old
salts, had a healthy stomach, and humor-
ed it, crossed and uncrossed his stumpy
little legs, and pulled his gray mous-
tache complacently, when he caught the
first sniff of the hot coffee and broiling
beefsteak.
	He had been down on the foggybeach,
(for the high winter tides were worth
watching on that lonely coast,) and was
now quietlf drying his feet before the
crackling wood-fire in the dining-room
grate but even Ann, (the clam - dig-
gers daughter, promoted to cook,) as
she bustled in and out, had seen the
Captain was out of temper, as he wait-
ed, frowning portentously, and wagging
his bald head now and then as if a wasp
stung it.
	Lufflin, who aboard ship would have
risked a thousand lives on his own cool
judgment, had been uneasy and irritable
for two months back, ever since Mrs.
Jacobus had written to him about buy-
ing this house for her.
	It was to be a Christmas gift from
her to her husband, she wrote. She
47</PB></P>
</DIV1>
<DIV1 TYPE="article" DECLS="/moa/atla/atla0017/" ID="ABK2934-0017-7">
<BIBL>
<AUTHOR>The author of 'Life in the Iron-Mills'</AUTHOR>
<AUTHORIND>The author of 'Life in the Iron-Mills'</AUTHORIND>
<TITLE TYPE="ART">The High Tide of December</TITLE>
<BIBLSCOPE TYPE="pg">47</BIBLSCOPE>
</BIBL>
<P><PB REF="IMG00053" SEQ="0053" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="47">i866.] Tue Bc/Is of Lynn.  The Hzgk Tide of J9eccnzber.



THE BELLS OF LYNN, HEARD AT NAHANT.


	O	CURFEW of the setting sun! 0 Bells of Lynn!
O requiem of the dying day! 0 Bells of Lynn!

From the dark belfries of yon cloud-cathedral wafted,
Your sounds ai~rial seem to float, 0 Bells of Lynn!

Borne on the evening wind across the crimson twilight,
Oer land and sea they rise and fall, 0 Bells of Lynn!

The fisherman in his boat, far out beyond the headland,
Listens, and leisurely rows ashore, 0 Bells of Lynn!

Over the shining sands the wandering cattle homeward
Follow each other at your call, 0 Bells of Lynn!

The distant lighthouse hears, and with his flaming signal
Answers you, passing the watchword on, 0 Bells of Lynn!

And down the darkening coast run the tumultuous surges,
And clap their hands, and shout to you, 0 Bells of Lynn!

Till from the shuddering sea, with your wild incantations,
Ye summon up the spectral moon, 0 Bells of Lynn!

And startled at the sight, like the weird woman of Endor,
Ye cry aloud, and then are still, 0 Bells of Lynn






THE HIGH TIDE OF DECEMBER.

BREAKFAST was ready. Captain
Lufflin, who, like most retired old
salts, had a healthy stomach, and humor-
ed it, crossed and uncrossed his stumpy
little legs, and pulled his gray mous-
tache complacently, when he caught the
first sniff of the hot coffee and broiling
beefsteak.
	He had been down on the foggybeach,
(for the high winter tides were worth
watching on that lonely coast,) and was
now quietlf drying his feet before the
crackling wood-fire in the dining-room
grate but even Ann, (the clam - dig-
gers daughter, promoted to cook,) as
she bustled in and out, had seen the
Captain was out of temper, as he wait-
ed, frowning portentously, and wagging
his bald head now and then as if a wasp
stung it.
	Lufflin, who aboard ship would have
risked a thousand lives on his own cool
judgment, had been uneasy and irritable
for two months back, ever since Mrs.
Jacobus had written to him about buy-
ing this house for her.
	It was to be a Christmas gift from
her to her husband, she wrote. She
47</PB></P>
</DIV1>
<DIV1 TYPE="article" DECLS="/moa/atla/atla0017/" ID="ABK2934-0017-8">
<BIBL>
<AUTHOR>H. W. Longfellow</AUTHOR>
<AUTHORIND>Longfellow, H. W.</AUTHORIND>
<TITLE TYPE="ART">The Bells of Lynn</TITLE>
<BIBLSCOPE TYPE="pg">47-64</BIBLSCOPE>
</BIBL>
<P><PB REF="IMG00053" SEQ="0053" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="47">i866.] Tue Bc/Is of Lynn.  The Hzgk Tide of J9eccnzber.



THE BELLS OF LYNN, HEARD AT NAHANT.


	O	CURFEW of the setting sun! 0 Bells of Lynn!
O requiem of the dying day! 0 Bells of Lynn!

From the dark belfries of yon cloud-cathedral wafted,
Your sounds ai~rial seem to float, 0 Bells of Lynn!

Borne on the evening wind across the crimson twilight,
Oer land and sea they rise and fall, 0 Bells of Lynn!

The fisherman in his boat, far out beyond the headland,
Listens, and leisurely rows ashore, 0 Bells of Lynn!

Over the shining sands the wandering cattle homeward
Follow each other at your call, 0 Bells of Lynn!

The distant lighthouse hears, and with his flaming signal
Answers you, passing the watchword on, 0 Bells of Lynn!

And down the darkening coast run the tumultuous surges,
And clap their hands, and shout to you, 0 Bells of Lynn!

Till from the shuddering sea, with your wild incantations,
Ye summon up the spectral moon, 0 Bells of Lynn!

And startled at the sight, like the weird woman of Endor,
Ye cry aloud, and then are still, 0 Bells of Lynn






THE HIGH TIDE OF DECEMBER.

BREAKFAST was ready. Captain
Lufflin, who, like most retired old
salts, had a healthy stomach, and humor-
ed it, crossed and uncrossed his stumpy
little legs, and pulled his gray mous-
tache complacently, when he caught the
first sniff of the hot coffee and broiling
beefsteak.
	He had been down on the foggybeach,
(for the high winter tides were worth
watching on that lonely coast,) and was
now quietlf drying his feet before the
crackling wood-fire in the dining-room
grate but even Ann, (the clam - dig-
gers daughter, promoted to cook,) as
she bustled in and out, had seen the
Captain was out of temper, as he wait-
ed, frowning portentously, and wagging
his bald head now and then as if a wasp
stung it.
	Lufflin, who aboard ship would have
risked a thousand lives on his own cool
judgment, had been uneasy and irritable
for two months back, ever since Mrs.
Jacobus had written to him about buy-
ing this house for her.
	It was to be a Christmas gift from
her to her husband, she wrote. She
47</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00054" SEQ="0054" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="48">The Hz~rh Tide of L)eccrnber.

wanted it, therefore, kept a secret from
him~ Any quiet corner along the coast
which they could make into a home.
Adding something about M. Jacobus
being fagged out with work, and need-
ing rest, at which Lufflin shook his
head. The Captain knew, that, book-
worm and picture - maniac though he
might be, Jacobus had managed to
squander, in some unaccountable way,
his own and his wifes fortune. So
much of their history had got back to
the fishing - town where she had lived
when a child. People even hinted that
they had been almost starving latterly
in New York. However that might be,
Old Lufflin knew that the sum she re-
mitted to him was the last they had left;
and beyond this, he had a shrewd sus-
picion that in the shipwreck the Jaco-
buses had made of life, something of
more worth than money had been lost,
and that this home she talked of was
most probably a last effort to bury some
shameful secret.
	The Captain, in his disgust at the
unknown hookworm, fretted under the
whole affair. It s not in my line, he
would growl. It s a cursed bore.
Poor Charlotte she used to swim like
a frog in the inlet there, when she was
only eleven. She s little heart for
swimming now, it s likely ! And
would begin his search with redoubled
vigor.
	This house, a gray stone cottage of
five or six rooms, in the most solitary
part of the lee-coast, had, been vacant
for some time, and was to be sold cheap.
Lufflin bought and furnis1~ed it in his
own name; and then, as she directed,
asked the Professor and his wife down
to spend the Christmas holidays with
him. He was anxious and awkward as
a school - boy when they arrived the
night before.
	It was too tough a job for you to
set me, Charlotte, he grumbled. How
was I to choose a home for a man that
lives, they say, by the sight of his eyes
and the hearing of his ears? Water s
water to me, and rocks rocks,trotting
after her as she went thro~igh the house
in silence, ending the survey with two
or three sharp, decisive nods, and a
quick, pleased little laugh.
	Satisfied? Yes, I am. Yes, I am.
We ye had a good many houses, Jerome
and I; but this is home.
	The Captain understood her.
	In the morning, however, he felt all
his doubts return. Mrs. Jacobuss quick,
firm step sounded above, below him;
presently she came in with a jug of yel-
low cream, and set it on the table, ad-
justing the dishes, putting a glass of
holly in the middle, opening the win-
dow-curtains to let the cold, gray, win-
try light fall on the white cloth and pret-
ty blue china service.
	Those oysters now? said the Cap-
tain, anxiously. Ann s a poor cook.
	She s clean as a Shaker, though.
But I broiled them myself,  laughing
to herself to see his relieved face.
	They re all right, then, Charlotte?
	Yes.
	She ~vould give her mind to the oys-
ters, he knew. It had been her way to
put a little of her brains and blood into
all her jobs in life, finishing each with a
self-satisfied little nod. No wonder that
she was worn, now that she was a mid-
dle-aged woman.
	She s lost something, Lotty has,
since I knew her, he thought, watch-
ing the light figure in its dark blue
dress moving about; but she s the
right stuff for home use,  with some
vague idea in his old salt - water brain
of delicate, incomplete faces suiting best
with moonlight and country strolls, and
of the sparkle of dinner-lights and bril-
liant eyes agreeing together, but that a
face like Charlottes was the one for
the breakfast-table. The shrewd, kind-
ly eyes, the color on her face, and the
laugh came on you as fresh as a childs,
if her hair was a bit gray.
	She had gone to the bay-window that
overlooked the stretch of coast on which
the heavy winter tide was coming in,
and grown silent watching it. Th eCap-
tam called to her; he wanted nothing
to put the breakfast back this morn-
ing. And he fancied that to a woman
who had been a leader in the world of
culture and refinement yonder this sky
48
[January,</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00055" SEQ="0055" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="49">i866.]	The High Tide of Dccc iber.
and loud foreboding surf might have
some meaning of which he knew noth-
ing.
	Natures voices, eli? coming to
her side.
	Some expression that had held her
face suddenly escaped it.
	I am watching for Jerome. Yonder
he comes with your fisherman, by the
inlet,pointing to two dark figures in
the mist crossing the sands below.
	The house stood on a ledge, facing
the sea: ramparts of rock, gray and
threatening in this light, running down
on either side, and shutting out all out-
look but that of the dull, obstinate stretch
of sand on which the sea had beaten and
fallen back for centuries, with the same
baffled, melancholy cry. Behind the
house were clumps of pines and cedars.
Nature had done all she could in wring-
ing out whatever green and lusty life
was left in rocks and sand to make the
place home-like and cheerful. Beside
the trees, there was a patch of kitchen-
garden back of the house, a grape-vine
or two on the walls, trailing moss hang-
ing to its eaves,  the delicate web-like
moss that grows along this coast out of
dead wood; even the beach rocks glow-
ed into colors,  dark browns, purples,
and reds.
	But for all these it needed summer
and sunshine. On this, the day before
Christmas, the house and the land about
it were smothered in a cold mist: only
the shivering sea beyond had voice or
motion.
	It s a dull, uncanny place, Mrs. Ja-
cobus, said Lufflin, anxiously. It
looks like a prison to me to-day. What
if we ye made a mistake?
	We have made no mistake, calmly.
Indoors, he persisted, the house
is cheerful enough. But it s a rough
coast, and the oyster - dredgers and
wrackers hint that the house be nt
above highest water-mark. They re a
wild pack, them wrackers. I doubt it s
a gloomy home Ive picked for M. Jaco-
bus, after all his
	Something in her face silenced him.
	You did right, Uncle George, she
answered, cheerfully.
	VOL. xvii.  NO. 99.	4
49

	But the pleasant eyes he had liked
so much last night he noticed were
turned to the sea now with a hard look,
new to him, begotten both of great pain
and obstinate endurance.
	Of course you know, Charlotte, 
of course. God knows I want to do
what s for the best.
	He hesitated, then went on briskly,
taking courage.
	See now, Lotty, I m an old fellow.
I ye walked you to sleep many s the
night, being your fathers chum, and
living in his house till the day of his
death. I d like you to know I in a
true friend. If so be as you re in troll-
ble, you must tell me. If this house is
a sort of hiding, as I ye thought once
or twic~, speak the word, and there s
nobody shall get below Barnegat, to dis-
turb it, or
	Mrs. Jacobus faced him suddenly, 
the nerves in her body seeming to stif-
fen, her half-shut eyes fixed on his. The
Captains quailed.
	You mean Jerome ?in a low voice.
He did not answer. She waited a
moment, and then turned again to the
window,  holding forcibly down what-
ever resistance his touch had roused in
her.
	You mean well, she said, quietly,
after a pause. But you do not know
my husband. I was a fool to expect
that ; yet I did expect it,  remem-
bering bitterly how, when she brought
her husband here, she had counted sure-
ly on a real justice for him from the sin-
gle-minded old Captain, which shrewd,
sensible men had not given.
	How could I know him? You talk
like a woman, Lotty, stammered the
Captain. I never saw M. Jacobus till
last night. It was a vague whisper, or
rather an old mans whim, that there
might be something gone which both
you and he wished forgotten.
	She had her face pressed a~ainst the
pane, but Lufflin fancied that it lost
color, and that the delicate jaws closed
with the firmness of a steel spring.
	There was no crime, she said, in a
moment or two.
	The old man came close to her after</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00056" SEQ="0056" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="50">	The High Tide bj Decelliber.	[January,
50
a while, and put his hand gently on
her hair; streaked with gray as it was,
she seemed nothing but a child to him
still.
	You re growing like your mother,
Lotty, he said.
	After a long while she spoke again,
hut under her breath, as if half talking
to herself.
	We had a child once, Jerome and I,
she said.
	I know, the Captain rejoined, quick-
ly turning his eyes from her face, and,
after waiting for her to go on, added,
Never but the one,I know.
	It was a boy,  little Tom.
	There was a sudden choking gulp in
the mothers throat; she had overrat-
ed her strength a little. The old man
looked steadily out to sea, and took no
notice.
	They never were apart, Jerome and
the boy, she xvent on at last, firmly;
and when I would see them at work
with their play - tools, or romping to-
gether, I used to wonder which of the
two had the most simple, affectio~~ate
nature, or knew less of the ways of the
world.
	Lufflin said nothing to this defence.
He was annoyed at himself for having
vexed her,  conscious and remorseful
for any wrong he had done M. Jacobus,
but with a stronger suspicion than be-
fore that he had galled some old wound
in her memory. Whatever the secret
might be,it had made her feeling for her
husband, he saw, as tender and keen
with pain as that for the little child she
had lost, and whose place none had ever
come to fill.
	I ye often thought, too, that when
the time comes
	She stopped abruptly.
	Yes, Charlotte,  to hide her effort
to control herself.
	He s gone, Tom is, you know,elev-
en years ago, now. But when the time
comes for Jerome to see his boy again,
I ye often thought lie would have no
reason to dread the childs eyes. It s
different with me. But they may say
of my husband what they will, my baby
need not be afraid to lay his head upon
his fathers breast. He need nt be
afraid.
	The, Captain took up the cold hand
that was nervously thrumming on the
window-sill, and held it quiet, averting
his eyes from her face, distorted with
dry, silent weeping.
	It s different with me, she cried.
Sometimes I think, linde George, it
would be better if I d never see my boy
again. I m sharper and coarser than
other women. I ye had to rub with
the world.
	Lufflin was a queer old fellow. He
did not tell her these were but the mor-
bid fancies of an hysterical woman, or
blame himself for rousing them. He
muttered something about low tide and
George Cathcart, and bustled off down
the stairs. She had a stronger mind
than he, he suspected; silence and her
own will would bring her to herself
quicker than any comfort of his could
do.
	He proved to be right. She did not
notice his going; stood at first looking
into the dark bank of sea-horizon, as if
she would have forced out of that vague
Beyond where her child had gone the
truth of all that had hurt her in her life.
The dull thud of the retreating tide kept
time to her thoughts,finally came in-
to them: it was so natural for her mind
to swing back into whatever was real
and at hand.
	Not that she forgot the little fellow
whose restless feet and hands were qui-
et at last in the graveyard ~t Salem:
she never forgot him; since they laid
him there, the thought of him had sound-
ed in every day of her busy life like a
faint hymn sung by lips far away, holy
and calm,  a story of God in it.
	But she held it down ; watched the
tide go out, measuring each sullen
sweep with calculating eyes: the old
swimming and fishing education in the
inlet had not worn out its effect ~n her.
	The wreckers talk folly, she said;
no tide could touch the house, lean-
ing farther out to see the two approach-
ing figures go into the doorway beneath.
	One man looked -up, waving his hat
as he passed, and she drew in her head</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00057" SEQ="0057" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="51">The High Tide of December.

with a sudden blush and a dewy light
in her eyes, her breath.
	I have made no mistake, she
thought, vehemently.  Look in his
face! It is the right home for Jerome.
	As she listened to the footsteps com-
ing up the stairway, she moved uneasi-
ly about the, room, touching almost ev-
ery article in it with the eager fondness
of a child: she knew what it had cost
her; for the house had been paid for
by money she had earned; it seemed
as if she could remember now every
seam she had stitched, every page she
had copied,the days of heat and sick-
ness and weariness, when she had al-
most given up in despair.
	That was all over now; she could put
her hand on the result in actual stone
and mortar; and as she thanked God
for it, she went about, woman - like,
touching and looking for the hundredth
time to enjoy it more utterly. Nothing
was too trivial to give her pleasure:
she measured the depth of the window-
frames with her arm, tested the grain
of the doors, felt the texture of the cur-
tains; how warm and clear a crimson
they were remembering how becom-
ing they would be, and touching her
worn cheeks with a quick smile.
	She peered through the open door
from the dining-room into the room be-
yond: she meant that for the library;
planning rapidly where on the gray
walls their one or two pictures could
hang,  how Jeromes old desk would
fit into one corner, and her work-table
in the other: the book-shelves were
below, and the books and what other
home treasures she had been able to
smuggle with her; she would arrange
them all to-night, after he was in bed.
	In New York they lived in a crowd-
ed tenement-house, out of which Old
J acobus, as the boys called him, went to
give his daily lessons. How he had ar-
gued and prosed for weeks as to wheth-
er they could afford these few days! al-
though it was vacation, and Lufihin had
sent free passes for the road. To-mor-
row he would know that the holiday
would last always, and that the book
could be finished which was to bring
them bread. Madame Jacobus knitted
her brows, counting for the twentieth
time how many months the money she
had would last: long enough for the
book to be done, provisions were so
cheap here.
	So would they start afresh, thank
God I There would be nothing here to
tempt him to  The old look of
defiance flashed over her face.
	It was no crime, she said,~half
aloud; and just then the door - knob
turned.
	Captain Lufflin, who had left her with
conscience and grief both at work with
her a few minutes before, opened the
door with a half-scared look, pushing
J acobus before him, whose sleeve she
caught eagerly, bidding him good-morn-
ing with a laugh.
	God bless us all ! said Lufflin.
The ways of women!
	M. Jacobus had a fishermans cordu-
roy trousers and red shirt hung on him,
as one might say. He made a formal
apology to Madame for sitting down to
breakfast in them.
	 But I like to clothe myself accord-
ing to my occupation, he said to Luff-
ha, gravely. I have begun at dawn
to make my holiday, the time is so
short: I feel myself quite of the sea al-
ready.
	The clothes being too small for him,
his gaunt legs and bony neck protrud-
ed above and below, capped by a brown,
honest, homely face, over which thin,
iron-gray hairs straggled.
	A younger man than I expected to
seep thought the Captain; but that s
one of the faces that never grow old.
	M. Jacobus munched his breakfast
in silence, and then, clearing a space
on the table, dragged out of his pocket
one or two crabs, a sea-horse finger-
length, and a general mess of slimy
less and tails.
	Ga;zccr ~agurus! Girrz~5edes I tri-
umphantly spreading them on the table-
cloth. The fruits of my mornings la--
bor, except Hzj5~5ocarnj5zes 1revirosIri~,
vulgarly called Sea-Horse, which stood
to me in the sum of forty cents: it shall
be saved in other modes of expondi
i866.]
SI</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00058" SEQ="0058" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="52">	52	Tue Hi~h Tide of December.	[January,

ture,  say shoes, with a deprecating
glance at his wife.
	Yes, Jerome, her eyes fixed, hun-
grily, on the childish delight in his
face.
	Lufflin began to perceive now for
what she had worked; he chafed his
whiskers, and entered into the spirit of
the thing with zest.
	You d call me a happy man, now,
Mounchere, to he the owner of this bit
of ground, eh?
	I can conceive, said the Professor,
gravely, catching his squirming prey,
and tying them up in a handkerchief, 
I can conceive no better abode than
this for a man of esj5ri/,  of what you
call stamina in mind. His wants are
little ; he rests, he works, he studies
books, Nature. She is greatly good to
him in this place ; she opens her most
delicate secrets; she gives to him gran-
deur, beauty, from full hands.
	She fills his stomach, too, said the
Captain, hastily. No better fishing
on the coast, not to mention clams and
oysters. Yes, Mounchere, after a
pause, as they rose from table, Na-
ture s grand here, as you say,  or God,
which is the same thing. If a man
dont come nearer to Him by a days
outlook on yon sea than by years of
town-life, it s because his eyes are nt
worth the havincr
	M. Jacobus stretched his long neck
to look out at the dull, creeping, moan-
ing waste without, his warm Gallic
blood shivering with a vague idea that
the relentless, inexorable Thing was
no bad symbol of the Puritans God.
	Ab, le box Diex / he muttered.
All that is best in mens nature has
been given to make up that image, 
and all that is most cruel.
	Eh? yes, said the Captain, not
understanding, but wagging his bald
head wisely.
	I will go now and preserve my spe-
cimens, said the Professor, and then
join our friend George below,  with
your permission, Madame? He is but
a fisher for the oyster, but I find in him
a man of many facts.
	When he had mounted to his chain-
her and secured his prey in a jar, how-
ever, he did not return to George Cath-
cart, but stood h-resolute, his hands
clasped behind his back, the shiny
boatmans hat he wore pulled over his
eyes.
	Twelve years ago the poor French-
man and his son had planned this com-
ing to the sea: the boy used to get into
his fathers bed by dawn to talk it over
snugly. It came to be their grand
scheme and hope for the future ; for
neither the father nor little Tom had in-
tellects of a high achieving order. Ja-
cobus had never, I suppose, considered
whether his son had genius or not, or
what he was to do in the world: to get
the boy out of the poisonous city, to see
his first look at the ocean, to watch the
sturdy little rogue fight the breakers,
fish, swim, net for crabs, was about
the highest pleasure which the simple
old man had ever pictured for them.
Now the holiday had come for him
and Tom
	He walked about the room, glancing
unsteadily from side to side, as if in
search of something lost. The sick, in-
tolerable loneliness of those first days
after Tom died came back to him.
	Mon fl/s / mon fl/s I he muttered
once, holding his hand to his side.
	It gave him actual pain to breathe
just then; but his eyes were dry. He
never had cried for Tom as his moth-
er did,  never named him to her; she
thought he had forgotten. The fancy
seized him, that, now that he was here,
if Tom cared for him, and for coming
there, as he. did once, he was not far off
at that moment. His sallow jaws col-
ored at the boyish notion, and then he
laughed at it,  in a strange saturnine
fashion. It was as if another man than
the simple Professor suddenly looked
out through his eyes,  a man older,
more untrustworthy, weak through a
life-long doubt,not his natural self, in
a word, but the man which years of life
in dirty ways, and the creed which his
father gave him, had made of him. He
looked out of the window, his fingers
knitted behind him.
	There is the sea, and I am here,</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00059" SEQ="0059" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="53">Tit e High Tide of December.

but Tom is not here; he s dust and
ashes, yonder in Salem graveyard,  a
heap of yellow dust, nothing more,
 a laugh, which the foulest of French
skeptics would have envied, crossing
his grim face at this fancy of the childs
being yet alive and near to him.
	But the creed having asserted itself
thus, the simple face grew suddenly
blank, and the gray eyes looked out of
their dark hollows as if the world were
empty and he alone lived to tell the
tale.
	M.	Jacobus had a watchful keeper;
she was never far off; she put her hand
on his shoulder now with, 
What do you look for at sea, Je-
rome ?  speaking cheer fully, and in
his own tongue.
	He did not turn his head until he
thought he had put all his trouble out
of sight.
	 I pursue your Captains fancy,
then he said. I find in the sea but
muddy water, with power to bring rage
and destruction for no cause. I find
great treasures lying useless below,
starving men sailing above,  great
pain, death every day,  the baby wash-
ed from its mothers arms, the husband
from the wife. The good Captain sees
a loving God behind all these: my
eyes are not so clear.
	She pushed the lattice farther open.
	It is a strong sea for December,
was all she said. The tides run high-
er later, usually.
	Every man makes his own God and
heaven, maundered on the Professor,
in a set, monotonous voice, out of his
individual animal or mental needs. The
Southern European surrounds Him with
virgins, paradise, and music; and the
cold Scotchman gives us a magnified
shadow of his own grim face, gracious
and merciful only to his own petty
clan.
	Mrs. Jacobus did not reply. It was
an old tale to her ears, perhaps ; she
remembered it croaked by his father
with a venomous zest; but Jefome re-
peated it with a stolid apathy, like one
who asked for bread in life, and they
gave him but this stone.
	Come down on the beach, she
said. There are curious bits of wreck
washed ashore to-day, they tell me:
broken sea-weeds from far-off coasts,
unknown here; and small shell - fish
coming into shoal water for safety, that
never ventured so far inland in the
memory of any of the wreckers. Come
look at this sky, Jerome: how rapidly it
has changed!
	M. Jacobus thrust out his head with
an assumption of sagacity.
	It was there that Captain Lufflin
warned me the danger lay, said his
wife, pointing to a mere fleck of quiet
and black in the northeast, which re-
mained immovably solid while the whole
heaven around was broken into drifting
frightened masses. Beneath, (yet not
far beneath, for ocean and sky to-day
seemed like gray, fast - approaching
planes,) the angry roar of the waves and
the tossing of yellow frothy caps had
been suddenly quelled into the vast si-
lence which rose and fell in slowly dark-
ening, awful pulsations. Jacobus and
his wife looked on anxiously.
	These are peculiar features of a
storm, he said, if they forebode a
storm. The tide should be at its low-
est ebb now. I will go and consult
our friend George. Come down! come
down!
	As he hurried out of the door, how-
ever, he stopped, and put his hand on
her shoulder with a deprecating smile.
	I ought not to let those old thoughts
strike the life out of the day for me,
ought I
	No, Jerome, no! She caught his
hand and kissed it as a mother might a
childs.
	I had almost ceased to make holi-
day, he added, gravely, putting his foot
up, retying the leather strings of his
heavy shoes, and looking down on his
fishermans rig with secret complacency.
	Shall we go down? There are fore-
boding signs in the sea, that I would
wish to study.

	Late in the afternoon of that day,
Captain Lufflin, coming up the rocks
from the beach, (for he had spent the
I866.1
53</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00060" SEQ="0060" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="54">Tue Hzgk Tide of Decern~e~	[January,
54

day measuring the advancing tide,) saw
a queer-shaped cart or van drive up to
the side door, and a woman with divers
bundles alight and go in. About an
hour after, Madame Jacobus came out to
him, a woollen shawl over her head, and
stood beside the garden-fence with him,
pulling the heads off the dead hollyhock-
stalks as she talked.
	I ye a story to tell you, she said,
her voice thick at first, and her face
hot.
	Eh? About yourself, Charlotte?
The Captains small eyes kindled with
curiosity, and he pushed a log for her to
sit down. Go on, my dear.
	About ourselves,  M. Jacobus and
me,with another pause.
	I perceived, said her fathers friend,
preparing for the confession of some im-
prudence, that your married life has
been peculiar: modelled after the ideas
of young people, I suppose.
	I do not know, she said, absently.
She balanced herself more comfortably
against the fence, and went on with her
story with a quiet unconsciousness that
balked Lufflins intention of censure.
	We have been poor in the two or
three years just past, she said, want-
ed enough to satisfy even his favorite
Saint-Simons theory. My husband is
no 
Financier? gently suggested the
Captain.
	No. He could beard the world in
defence of an idea; but for bread and
butter, ah-h ! I m rougher! I ought
to have been the man for that! About
a year ago he was offered a chance to
go with a geological party to Brazil.
I was glad of that. The air and sights
of our close court were killing him. I
wanted to finish some work I had to do,
and then
	She stopped ; a scarlet flush broke
over her neck and face.
	Yes, child?
	God was very good to us,  in an
almost whisper. Six months after my
husband left home, He gave us another
child.
	You never told me this, cried Luff-
un, aghast.
	I never told Jerome, quietly. I
put my baby out to nurse, where it
could breathe air, and not poison,  not
far from here. I have left it there since.
May-be it was wrong, said poor Char-
lotte, hidinb her face in her hands, with
a happy laugh. It was a whim, I know.
I may have wronged him, but I had a
fancy to give him his home and his
child both upon this Christmas day.
	The Captain gasped, took a fresh bit
of tobacco, but said nothing.
	There is no more to say,  but you
want to see the baby? suddenly.
	Certainly, Charlotte, certainly,see
the baby! And the old Captain fol-
lowed her, glancing about him in a mild
imbecility of astonishment.
	God bless my soul! he broke out
at last. The idea of springing a house
and a baby on a man in one day! It
assuredly is, child, the most unprece-
dented whim
	Yes, yes, dodging suddenly into
a room, and bringing out a bundle of
white linen and wool. She stood in the
passage by a window, the red evening
light falling about her.
	It s a boy, she whispered, lifting
off the covering. He is very like little
Tom,  an inexpressible awe on her
face.
	Yes, said the Captain. He had
meant to say a few sensible words to
bring her to reason about this matter;
but, instead, he took up the little white
foot thrust out of the blanket and kiss-
ed it sheepishly, looking askance at the
womans figure and face bent over the
child, beaming with a rare and tender
beauty.
	They said little after that. The moth-
er stood playing with her baby, touch-
ing its cheeks and chin until it laughed.
She forgot Lufflin was there, I suppose.
Her soul seemed to be in her fingers,
her pure passion to envelop the mite of
flesh as the weak sunshine did herself,
and to hold it in life. There was some-
thing in this wife~and~mother-lOve which
poor Lufflin did not understand.
	Well, well, he said, I 11 go now.
God bless you, Lotty! You 11 let me
have a share in this young fellow here,</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00061" SEQ="0061" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="55">	i866.]	The Hz~h Tide of December.

eh ? and trotted down the back stairs,
leaving her in the narrow hail. Old
Mounchere Jacobus must have been a
good fellow, he thought, to have de-
served all this. God deals so different-
ly with different men!
	She had nothing more to say about
lt, Madame Jacobus had told him; yet,
standing there in the quiet cold light,
within a few steps of the closed door be-
hind which was her husband, her feet on
the floor of the house she had worked
hard to buy him, the child in her arms
she would give him to-morrow, she
thought she had touched in this hour
the very depth and height of life.
	It is worth all the pain that s gone,
 it s worth it all, she said again and
again, pressing the boy so closely that
he cried. When she turned to the win-
dow, the cold and gathering night some-
how made her home more real, the fu-
ture alive with great and good possibili-
ties.
	Yet it was a foreboding, revengeful
night. Outside the little panes of the
passage-window she could see the gray
walls of the house and the bare trunks
of the trees darken and draw apart in
the dull light. There was no mellow-
ness in the outlines of rocks or beach:
they loomed up harsh and threatening.
From the low, dingy horizon came at
intervals subdued soughs of wind that
broke on the projecting headlands with
a muffled cry. The floor grew chilly to
her feet; the strip of carpet shook in
the gusts; and the passage was dark, but
for a cheerful glimmer of light under
the Professors door. Charlotte went
shivering with her baby into the nurses
room; and when she had watched it safe
into its cradle, came out, going again
through the hall to the library. As she
touched the door-handle, she checked
herself in humming some song, growing
colorless as she thought what it was,
an old ditty with which she used to lull
little Tom tO sleep, but never had sung
since then. But in a moment a curious
smile came on her tips. That is all
right, she said, opening the door.
From that moment her little boy and
poor Tom, dead in the city grave-yard
yonder, were as one to the mother: she
nursed them in her heart together.
	One word as to the plan of the house,
for the better understanding of what fol-
lowed. It was niched, as we said, into
a cove of rocks, open only to the sea.
In spite of all the croaking of the wreck-
ers, the highest tide had never yet ap-
proached nearer than to ten feet sheer
descent from the foundation-stones. On
the ground-floor was a room appropriat-
ed by the Captain, filled with his bunk,
fishing-nets, guns, and other trumpery,
and the kitchen and offices; above were
the library and dining-room; and on
the third floor three bed-chambers.
	M. Jacobus sat now by the fire in the
dining-room, his feet on the fender, some
books scattered around him, rapidly get-
ting out with them into a world where
northeasters, nor high tides, nor his wife
either, ever came. She saw that in the
half-frown with which he looked at her
over his spectacles.
	M. Jacobus! she said.
	Plait-il; Madame I and afterwards
laid down his book, thinking the figure
before him could hardly be that of his
matter - of- fact wife : which was true
enough,  for her heart was brimful of
her little project and the child, and the
face, with its low forehead and resolute
jaws, beamed curiously young and qager.
Her husband seated her, and stood lean-
ing on the mantel-shelf while she talk-
ed: he had all the courtesy of an old-
fashioned Frenchman towards women;
and besides, M. Jacobus had a keen
eye for beauty in this the only woman
he had ever loved.
	Go down, Jerome; the tide turns,
she said. Captain Lufflin is watching
it. Besides, I want this room to make
ready for to-morrow.
	M. Jacobus began, obedient as usual,
to button his coat, muttering, To-mor-
row? however, with a puzzled face.
	It is Christmas,  with the repress-
ed excitement now in her voice as in
her eyes. I want that we shall keep
the day this year; I have some little
plans 
The skeptics face altered; he linger-
ed over the last button of the coat.
55</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00062" SEQ="0062" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="56">	Tue High Tide of December.	[January,

	It is worth more to you than other
days ?  dryly.
	We never observed it before. God
has been so good to us, Jerome,  and
it is His day of the whole year,  the
day, her voice sinking with an inex-
pressible tenderness, when Love came
into the world as a little child,  as a
little child.
	He looked at her wistfully for a mo-
ment, then took up his stick and an
hygrometer, saying, as he opened the
door, 
But hear to the cry of the sea! it
grows more muffled and dull each hour.
If Death itself could speak, that is his
voice, I think. He spoke vaguely,
with an anxious, absent look, then went
groping down thedark stairway. Pres-
ently she heard him come back hur-
riedly.
	Will it cost you much to give up
this day, child? he demanded, coming
close and putting his hand on her head.
I ask it of you. I must be with you
in your little plans, and
	Your mother kept it, interrupted
she, sharply.
	I know,  with dull, pained looks
at the fire, at the night without, every-
thing but her face. Her faith is not
mine
	No, Jerome, gently, for she was
tender with him always, when he seem-
ed weaker than herself. But if it could
he, my husband ?  her voice growing
unsteady. Humor me this one time:
I have looked forward to it so long!
Perhaps it was to remember my own
childhood; perhaps I had some little
gifts to offer you. But let me keep it.
If it be childish, let me be a child.
	Something in the broken voice re-
minded him of little Toms. She put
her hands on his arms, too, and in the
thin face turned up to his there was a
look left by all the years of patient love
and work she had borne for him; it
struck him back somehow, as by a touch,
to those first days when they were lovers
together in Canada. It was curious, that,
in after years, when M. Jacobus remem-
bered his wife, it was always as she look-
ed at that last moment.
	Dont think me harsh, Sharley, he
faltered.
	She caught at her advantage. We
will keep it together,  eagerly.
	He thrust her hands from his arms,
and went about the room with long, un-
steady strides.
	I cannot lie to God! I cannot lie!
he said.
	His wife, seeing his face, when he
turned, cried hurriedly, 
It is a trifle; let it go, Jerome. I
can give you my little gifts all the same;
it is a trifle.
	Down below his credulous simplicity
and the weight of borrowed ideas with
which books had loaded his brain, (bor-
rowed infidelity with the rest,) M. Ja-
cobus was a sturdy, honest man, with a
keen sense of honor: it was no trifle
to him. She saw that some rough touch
of hers had reached a secret depth of
his soul never bared to her before.
	What is it, Jerome?  coming up
to catch him again with her trembling
hand. It is to me a matter of so lit-
tle import!
	He stopped.
	It is this to me. She did keep it,
 my mother. It is my first remem-
brance of our home,  when she was
dead. We children made yet a feast
upon that day, that she might look back
and see. Now that I am no longer a
child, and know that she can never look
back, that what was my mother is but
a heap of bones and dust, I  I cannot
keep the day.
	She stood in his way.
	Dead is dead! he cried, fiercely.
When I know that she and the child
I loved cannot speak or look at me
more than this stone at my feet, I can-
not believe in the day on which you say
He came to bring eternal life.
	There is nothing more alive to me
than my little Tom. I m sorry you do
not feel it so, Jerome, said matter-of-
fact Charlotte. I was nbt what you
call a religious woman before he died;
and when better thoughts come to me
now, I am sure he brings them from
the good Lord.
	Do you remember, he said, sud</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00063" SEQ="0063" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="57">	i866.]	The High Tide of December.

denly, a habit the boy had of sitting
on the sunny door-step, quite silent, by
the hour ?
	I remember,  turning her head
away.
	It used to remind me of the days
when I was a boy, on the shore of Lake
Erie. My father was a squatter there.
There was nothing I did not dare nor
hope in those long dreams of what my
life was to be. I would hunt, wrestle,
fight, as no man had done before. I
would be the first leader in the world,
 a soldier, a priest,  God! what was
there I would not be ! What came of
it all?  his voice rising into a weak,
wiry cry. There was a tiny cancer,
a little taint in ny blood,  a trifle, 
bah! a nothing! My grandfather died
a drunkard; my father ate opium. I
Sharley, it s an old story to you.
	She did not shame him by a look at
him: her own face had the old pallor
and defiant clench of the jaws which
Lufflin had seen. She drew his hand
under her arm, and kissed it passion-
ately.
	It was ~o crime, she cried,  the
old burden for many years.
	A fine, sad smile crossed his face.
	Poor Sharley! he said. No, 
no crime; for with the temptation was
given me a weak will. So they re gone
now, hopes and chances in life,  mind
and body eaten away by that one ani-
mal thirst,gone! Who was to blame?
	You told me, she said, eagerly,
that the stimulant in this air would
be all that you would require,  that it
would effect a cure.
	Yes ; but was it rioht that the fate
of a mans soul should thus depend on
outward chances? Was I to blame for
this hereditary plague in my blood?
Half of the lost millions who crowd the
cities can plead against the crime that
dragged them down some inherited vice;
theft, drunkenness, butchery, were born
with them, sucked in with their moth-
ers milk. This world, that God called
good, is but a gigantic mass of corrup-
tion, foul with disease and pain, which
man did not first create, and never will
conquer.~~
	Why do you talk of this to-night?
said Charlotte, shunning the storm, as
usual.
	Because I thank God, that, if He
has made this failure, He will blot it
out. I liked to fancy once that my
mother would waken out of her long
sleep into all her old loves and hates
and fancies. I thank God now that she
knows nothing,  that for her, and for
all of us, after death, lies but an eternal
blank.
	In the pause, the dulled throb of the
sea rose for an instant into a fierce
warning cry, and then was gloomily
still.
	It is as if the dead yonder would
drive us back from their rest and si-
lence,  his speculative eye wander-
ing dreamily out into the night.
	But death and all that lay beyond
were real to the practical woman beside
him; there was no speculation in her
eyes; it was an actual life he was drag-
ging from before her; her child was in
it; some day her own feet in flesh and
blood would tread there. She put her
hand on his shoulder and leaned out
beyond him, peering down over the
shore, just as if in the night and cold
beyond lay in truth the land of the
dead.
	I am not afraid of their rest and
silence, she cried,  I m not afraid,
Jerome!
	The fair, clear-cut face came warm
and living between him and the dark-
ness ; her voice called into the vague
distance cheerful and strong.
	She turned back to him glowing with
color.
	Our boy is there, she said; and
there are others dead that I loved. I
always knew they d keep a watch for
us, Jerome !
	He listened with a sad smile.
	And I ye 9W fear, she ~vent on,
energetically, I never had any fear,
that He would give them back to us
just misty, holy angels, who could nei-
ther cry nor laugh with us, when our
very hearts were sick to catch their
hands and kiss their lips again.  I
know, after a pause, my boy will
57</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00064" SEQ="0064" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="58">come first to me, with his old trick of
hiding and calling for Mother, mother!
 he 11 not forget I liked that name the
best; and he 11 have the same laugh in
his eyes, just the same,  he d find no
better look in heaven than that was. I
knew, when I closed his eyes that night,
it was but for a little while. Yet she
stopped suddenly, putting her hand to
her throat to choke back a cry of pain.
A little while, she repeated, firmly.
	Her husband listened, the smile grow-
ing more bitter: she had never seemed
more silly or more dear to him than
then.
	I am not a child, she said, quickly.
It is not fancy. The dead are in
Christs kingdom; and He is alive, not
dea4, yonder. It was a real man, Je-
rome, that ascended from the mountain,
loving his friend, censuring Peter, tak-
ing care of his mother. Mary found no
spirit there, when she died, but the son
whose baby-head rested on her breast;
and I shall find my boy.
	He soothed her, for she had grown
nervous and trembling; let her cling
to his neck and cry away her trouble,
after the fashion of women who have
brought their hearts out to argue for
them.
	Let us forget that far-away country,
he said, after a while, and go to rest,
Lotty. The moans of this storm will
wear your strength out,  leading her
to the foot of the chamber-stairway.
	She went up, pausing at the top to
look back, a smile on her flushed cheeks
and swollen eyes.
	It will be a quiet morning, she
said, waving a good-night.
	There was some meaning in her words
which he could not penetrate, but it
touched and startled him.
	A quiet morning?
	The words haunted the simple old
man, sitting alone to watch the night
wear away. He had never been more
utterly alone. The new home was
strange; the very wood-fire had burn-
ed out on the hearth; unfamiliar, cold
lines met his eye, wherever be turned;
the heavy mist crept in from the sea
through every cranny, like vapors from
[January,

a charnel-house. He had a dull, super-
stitious dread of what lay beyond that
sullen beach of mist,  the undefined
There, whence these low rumblings,
and sharp, inarticulate cries reached
him : he stood up, looking into it,
shiverin A bat swooped past the
open window, and struck its clammy
wing against his face; the moon bad
gone down, and the mist that saturat-
ed his clothes, so present and close at
hand was it, stretched up and possessed
the very sky as well as the shore,yel-
lowed, thickened the air he breathed,
hid the line where the breakers struck
the coast, driven in with a subdued, per-
sistent fury he had never known before.
The shore-mist had it~ bounds: it did
not touch that clear darkness beyond,
into which Jacobus looked, drawing
down his grizzled brows, trying to jeer
his cowardice away.
	By daylight, he said, it is but a
bulk of water, full enough of danger and
death; but now it might be hell itself
yonder, that has made the clouds its
garment, and darkness its swaddling-
band.
	He was not sure how long a portion
of the night crept by. Sometime in it,
however, he saw flashes of light moving
through the fog among the rocks: Luff-
lin and the fishermen keeping watch, 
uneasy ghosts that could not pass
over into Hades, be laughed, with the
same miserable attempt at a joke; but
the laugh died away feebly in the empty
room, and it was with a grave face the
Professor made his way down the dark
staircase, and, finding the Captains
dread-nought coat, put it on before he
ventured out into the storm. To please
Lotty, he muttered. His heart was
strangely tender to - night to the only
friend he had known for years.
	There was a dead quiet in the fog as
he came out and waited on the flagging
before the house. Lufflin and George
Cathcart came by, presently, carrying
lanterns and ropes, their faces look-
ing ghastly in the greenish li6ht; their
voices, too, were thin and far off as in a
dream, though th~ Captain tried to be
hearty and gruff as usual.
The High Tide of December.</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00065" SEQ="0065" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="59">i866.]

	Best within, Mounchere Jacobus;
it s an uncertain night; best within.
	You apprehend the rain?
	No; it s a dry storm; unpleasant
on this coast. Go in; there s no tell-
ing what frenzy may seize the wind, and
Charlotte is alone.
	But M. Jacobus did not go in. lie had
observed a curious motion on the part
of both men, as they talked: bending
their ears at intervals to listen intently,
and keeping a keen scrutiny fixed on
the small patch of ground at their feet,
made visible by their lanterns. He saw,
too, that Cathcart stooped, as he turned
from them, and, picking up a crisp, yel-
low flake, showed it to his companion;
and he fancied, too, that the grim face
of the old Captain lost its color when
he saw it. He would not go in: he had
a right to see what danger threatened
her,  to watch for it,  to know what
were these messengers of coming death
sent in from the silence yonder. And
at that fancy, the old wonder and dread
of the far darkness seized him, and he
went slowly on through the mist, for-
getting alike danger and warning.
	With a mbcking smile on his face, as
he pursued his fantastic theory. What
if the dead were not dead? What if, un-
forgetting and cruel, they could stretch
out shadowy hands from that mysterious
distance which they peopled, and sum-
mon the living to join them? What if
Death itself served them to-night, and
crept upon Charlotte and him unawares
in some horror of this coming storm?
J acobus, like all skeptics, was supersti-
tious; but he had courage and zest
enough to fight down the terror that
seized him, to pamper and play with it.
He threw his lank length upon the wet
beach, and clasped his hands under his
head; where he disturbed the sand,
gleamed sudden flashes of phosphoric
light; he brought them out of the dark-
ness with his finger: Fit writing for
the dead gone over to leave upon the
shore for those who should follow! he
thought.
	Lying on his back, and staring straight
up into the fog-covered sky, the thun-
der of the sea, that before had filled
The Hzgk Tide of December	59

the whole night, seemed to his startled
senses to drive its direct tide beneath
him,  to articulate, at last, with a new
and unexpected meaning. Heshut his
eyes; the terror had taken shape; he
lay drenched and shivering, his brain
on fire with fancies. What was vision
to Dante was real to him. He lay upon
the edge of the fathomless gulf, warm
and living, with the cry from Hades
made audible to him; as it ebbed and
flowed, it wailed like the wind through
leafless forests ; it shook the earth to
its centre, then died into the solitary cry
of one in nameless pain. Some broad,
dark figure stood afterwards beside him
in the fog, and a voice repeated the old
word of the prophet, 
Hell from beneath is moved to meet
thee at thy coming; it stirreth up the
dead for thee 
There is no hell, he cried, get-
ting up and staggering forward,  then
smiled at his own folly.
	It might have been Lufflin who had
spoken, after all; he was well read in
the Bible. But he could see no sign
of their torches, in the stretch of damp,
darkening fog; he was left alone to keep
guard.
	Jacobus tried to shake off his sickly
fancies, and measure coolly whatever
danger waited in this strange night; but
it rose hefore him iii a form so ghastly
and new that his strength was but as a
womans. He was hut a landsman, 
dull and ignorant besides, outside his
library. What was he to do, when the
very ground trembled beneath his feet,
when the sky was blotted out,when
there was lack of a single known sta-
tionary object to guide eye or ear? This
side of that gray horizon of darkness
which absorbed all his fears, the north-
ern lights streamed up, a pale orange
glare, and showed him a heavy, impen-
etrable bulwark of shadow, that rose
closer and closer with each throb of the
breakers, walling out the sea. His feet
sank curiously in the yielding sand, as
if he stood at the verge of a rnaelstr~im.
Some rough hand griping his shoulder
roused him from his daze.
	Cathcart! be said; then pointing</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00066" SEQ="0066" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="60">The H~rh Tide of December.

out, what lies yonder, George? It
might be Deaths world, I think
	The fishermans arm shQok, he fan-
cied; but he answered steadily, in his
usual piping, weak tones, 
It dont matter whether it s Gods
world or the Devils world, as I see, so
long as it kin send ashore a grip on us
like that,  glancing down at his feet,
where Jacobus saw the yellow, flaky
foam curling up from under the sand.
He stooped leisurely to examine it.
	What does this portend? he asked.
God! it be the tide, man, shrieked
out Cathcart, with an oath. Cant
you see that it s broken over the top-
most boundaries? You be standing now
above the level of your own house.
	One swift, sharp glance was enough
to waken him into real life out of his
vague dreams. The man, nervous and
fierce, that had been smothered in the
unable bookworm so long, sprang up to
cope with the sudden death that faced
him.
	You be too late!~ he heard Cath-
carts shrill cry, as he fought his way
through the surging surf; and at the
same moment there was a heavy crash,
 where, he could not see.
	The fog blinded him; the sand, driven
by the resistless wind, cut his skin, pen-
etrated his eyes and nostrils; while high-
er and higher, as he waded on, the mud-
dy water crept up his body, slimy and
cold, and tangling his feet in its under-
tow of kelp. There was a weight on
his chest which strangled him when he
tried to cry aloud.  No matter; the
next headland passed and the house
would be gained.

	She was there, standing on a heap
of fallen stone, her white night-dress
torn and muddied by the rocks and
branches which the water swept by her.
J acobus wondered if that were the house
whose ruins curdled the dull sweep of
water beneath her; then the thought of
his wife blotted out all besides. Around
her was a creeping, seething stream,
widening each moment; he did not see
how deep it was, nor that the unsteady
pile of stones on which she had climbed
was crumbling into it. He threw off
Lufflins coat and his shoes, calling out
almost joyously to her, so fierce was the
new strength in his muscles, and the
passion in his heart.
	Sois tranquilie I he shouted. Lot-
ty! Itis I who comes! I go to swim!
	She never heard the words, it is prob-
able, for only a faint cry reached him,
of which he distinguished nothing; but
he saw her hand waving him back, and
laughed.
	Poor child! she thinks to die, and
stupid old Jerome so near! Foolish
Sharley !
	But the water weighed him down al-
ready, as he struggled ignorantly in it,
his gaunt limbs floundering, the tender
smile yet on his hony face; it cramped
his arms, closed over his head: with a
groping wrench he recovered his foot-
ing, and breast-high in the rising tide
looked at her.
	It is I who comes, Sharley! he
shouted, fiercely. Wife! wife ! The
old English word meant so much to him
at that moment!
	Whether hours or minutes passed in
that struggle he never knew; but at its
close he lay washed, like a poor wisp
of weed, upon the shore. The stream
between them, which he never should
pass, deepened, deepened: it licked her
feet now, her knees. She stretched out
her hands to him, whether for help, or
to say good-bye, he never knew.
	He made no sign in reply. Her face
was turned to him, not heeding the
death at her feet,  the thin face set in
its iron-gray hair, with the beauty of
all those years of love upon it, the
same wistful smile on it with which it
looked at him across the fire on winter
evenings ;  and he was to sit there,
unmanned, impotent, helpless, to watch
the slow death creep up to her lips, her
eyes?
	He lifted one hand feebly to his chest,
with a dull hope of crushing out the
faint life beatinb uselessly there; then,
with a desperate clutch on the sand,
struggled towards the water.
	I go to swim! Sharley! Sharley!
he cried, and that was all.
6o
[January,~</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00067" SEQ="0067" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="61">Tue High Tide of December.

	The morning dawned, bleak and blue;
the thin light came into the cracks of a
wreckers hut, colder than even on the
sea. Jacobus had made a heap of ropes
and driftwood on which to lay his dead.
He sat holding her head on his breast,
having twisted up her wet hair in a vain
effort to adjust it as she liked it best.
There was no wild vagueness in his
eyes, such as dimmed them some-
times over his books; it was a grave,
simple, reasonable face that bent over
this cold and unanswering one. It seem-
ed as if this one great blow, which God
had given, had struck out from his life
all its vain vagaries and dreams.
	Lufflin and one or two fishermen
stood by, looking on; and outside he
heard women~ s voices, in shrill whis-
pers, and a sob now and then.
	I want to carry her in the shore
farther, he said, looking up impatient-
ly. I will not have her vexed by these
sounds of trouble.
	Yes, yes, said Lufflin, soothingly.
But you forget, dear Sir, she s beyond
all reach of pain now. Sorrow and tears
cannot come near her again.
	I dont know, said Jacobus,  she
has a quick ear for any cry of trouble,
 holding the thin, blue-veined hand in
his, and looking at it with a face which
made old Lufflin turn away.
	She be at rest now, yer woman,
piped George Cathcart, in true class-
meeting twang. Not all yer cries, nor
the cries of the sea, neyther, ud wake
her. Glory be to God!
	J acobus looked from one to the other,
his sickly frame in a heat of inarticulate
rage. That these boors, that death it-
self, should come between him and his
wife and say she could not hear his
lightest word!
	XVhy, it s Lotty!  in a whisper,
hugging the stiff body closer, looking
up to Lufflin. Dead or alive, it s my
wife. It s Lotty. Do not you under-
stand?
	 Yes, Mounchere, yes, I under-
stand,  sopping his face and bald
head with his handkerchief. My good
men, had you not better go out a mo-
ment? We need air here. He only
meant, gently, when they were gone,
that she is at rest; our pain cannot
pain her now.~~
	When I do suffer, she will suffer
with me, muttered Jacobus. You
dont know, after a pause, how to-
gether we have been, or that you could
not say. Is it that I should go back to
that den in New York alone? That I
live there for days,  for years? That I
hunger and work as before, and size not
heed nor care,  my wife? Ah! you
do not know Lotty! touching the clos-
ed white lids with an inexpressibly ten-
der smile. I call her Sharley, when
we are alone together,  going on in
his simple, monotonous fashion; and
when she sleeps the heaviest, she have
never forgot to hear that name. She
never w114  looking up quietly.
	But your wife is dead now, said
Lufflin, almost impatiently; and you
yourself thank God that she gill never
waken to her old loves and hates and
fancies.
	I ? gasped Jacobus.
	There was a long silence; as his old
creed came back to him, the blood rush-
ed thick and cold about his heart.
	Gods world, and all His creatures,
persisted Lufflin, are foul with sin.
You blessed Him that for them and it
death was an eternal sleep.
	I did not remember her love for me,
pleaded Jacobus, humbly. It could
not sleep. Why! you man, Luffiin,~
starting to his feet, and drawing up his
full height, if that could be, would I
stand to look at her here? Could I
live, if she were truly gone ?  she, that
has been strength and hope and hands
for me these many years? I m not a
strong man, like like you, Captain,
with a sudden weak giving way. God
gave me Sharley. Death cannot take
her away.
	Lufflin took up her hand.
	So soft it used to be !  he said. Its
been hard-worked since then. It would
be well for Lotty, if death were a long
sleep she needs it.
	J acobus made no reply. He sat down
and held his dead in his arms; she was
his own; so were those years of hard
i866.]</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00068" SEQ="0068" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="62">	62	Tue Hzg/z Tide of December.	[January,

work which had worn her hands rough,
and left these sharp lines in her face.
He only knew what they had been: in
the long silence that followed, while the
daylight broadened bluer and colder
about him, he lived them over again;
and he knew then, by every day of grip-
ing poverty, which it wrung the clammy
drops out of his face to remember,
by all her patient tenderness,  by the
happiness they had hoped for, but which
never came, by the true love they had
borne to each other, and to little Tom,
which knew so little comfort, he knew
that the recompense would come, that
the end was not yet. She had shaken
off the hunger and the pain, and had
gone into the world where only the love
endured and found its comfort and its
late reward. There was such a world
somewhere. He put back the grayed
hair from the forehead; little Tom had
such a brow,broad, quiet, melancholy.
	I will go to them,  he said, but
they will not return to me!

	Was it he that had been dead, and
waked again? A strong hand lifting his
head; a warm face and breath at his
cheek; a voice calling him as sweet and
cheerful as when first he heard it on the
banks of the  little creek in Canada?
Then out of the reeling and groping of
shadows and real objects came a square
bay-window opening on a sea-horizon
of drifting olive-gray clouds, the crackle
and glow of a great wood-fire, a cheerful
breakfast-room, and some busy chatter
about a night spent sleeping in drenched
clothes and night-fogs.
	Lufflins round, red face was the first
real grip his senses took of it all. The
Captain was in his holiday suit of blue
and brass, and pulled down his jacket
with a complacent twinkle in his eyes.
	Faith, ye 11 suffer a sea-change in
short order, Mounchere, if you spend a
few more nights dreaming by that win-
dow! Your very eyes look rheumy and
glazed already.
	Jacobus got up, stunned and dull be-
yond his wont,  his eyes fixed, not on
the joking Captain, but on the anxious,
wondering face upturned to his. He
touched the cheek, a little worn and
haggard, may-be, but with good, healthy
blood reddening it,  felt the nervous
hands,  then stooped and solemnly
kissed her lips.
	They trembled a little; then she
laughed.
	Did the sea send you dreams of
me ?  trying to jest, but with some
of last nights trouble in her eyes.
	Not the sea,  putting his hand
to his head ;  I think God sent them,
Lotty.
	Lufflin, whose instincts were quick as
a womans, glanced at the two, and then
said something about its not being long
enough after dawn to begin the day,
and that he would turn into his bunk
for. an hour or two, and made his way
down stairs. He turned into the kitch-
en instead, to give Ann and the break-
fast a warning look, and, for aught we
know, put his own shoulder to the
wheel, so far as broiling the chops was
concerned. He had been up half the
night, helping the child get ready her
holiday, steadying shelves, hanging
pictures, dusting books in the library;
and now meant to stand aside until the
great joy of the day was over: only
they two could share it together.
	Yet he stepped to the kitchen-door
and listened keenly, when, after a long
silence, he heard the door above open,
and Charlotte lead her husband into
the library.
	Mounchere knows what his wife s
done for him at last, he muttered ; 
and there goes in the baby, as a faint
cry and a rush of skirts followed,  with
an amused laugh, and his eyes dim.
	But when he heard Lotty coming
presently for him, he hurried in, to
stretch himself on his bunk, and began
to snore.
	It s kind in them to think of an
old fellow like me ; but they re best
alone. They have had a rough pull of
it together, and I think this is their first
glimpse of land.
	He could not wait long, however,
but soon went bustling up, with the
eager glow of all his childish Christ~
mases in his simple old face and mind.</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00069" SEQ="0069" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="63">i866j

They made ready for the day inland, he
supposed; but they could do nothing
like this,  glancing in, as he trotted
up stairs, at the big fires he had built,
and the bits of holly stuck around, and
then out at the sweep of barren lee-
coast and the desolate sea.
	And Lottys surprise of the house,
and that blessed baby! She s a dev-
ilish clever woman to contrive such a
day for Mounchere, that s a fact!
	The library, when he reached it,
seemed the very heart and core of all
Christmas brightness. The very cold,
and the hungry solitude of the restless
sea on which the window opened wide-
ly, deepened the warmth within. The
room slept in a still comfort: no fire
was ever so clear, no air so calm, no
baby so content to be alive as this xvhich
lay on its mothers breast while she
walked to and fro. Her face was paler
and humbler than he had ever seen it;
her husband followed her unceasingly
with his eyes,  a strange sense of al-
most loss in them Lufflin fancied, idly.
	Jacobus was very silent and still; he
did not seem so nervous with happiness
as the Captain had fancied this opening
of a new life would make him; but there
was about him a rested and hushed
look,  a depth of content which he did
not believe any gain of the house or
child could give. Lufflin was awed, he
knew not why.
	It is as if they had found something
which Death itself could not take away,
he thought, after a space of wonder, as if
they had talked to God Himself to-day.
	The Professor wished him a happy
Christmas, in his simple, hearty fashion,
and then the two men sat talking of
how they kept the day long ago: Luff-
lin telling of frolics on ship-board, but
M. Jacobus going back constantly to
the time when he was a boy with his
mother.
	I have neglected it for lono he
said. I shall never again. I think
she will like us to keep it. She and
our boy.
	He laid his hand on the babys head,
but his eyes wandered dreamily away
out beyond the sea.
63

	The day was fuller of cheerfulness
and pleasure than even the lonely old
sailor had hoped; the two people in
whom he was beginnin~ to confine his
whole interest were happy in a way he
could not fathom; he could not under-
stand why Jacobus should look and lis-
ten to his wife so hungrily.
	It was the child that the day gave
to him, not Sharley, as he calls her,
thought Lufflin.
	So he took the baby in his arms, feel-
ing as if it were in some sort neglect-
ed.
	I like to think, he said, after look-
in~ in its face awhile, and speaking with
an effort, as he always did, about re-
ligion,   I like to think of Christ as
a helpless baby; that s the reason I
like Christmas for.
	To think, said Charlotte, softly,
that to-day Eternal Love came into
the world !  and Life  glancing at
her husband.
	But Jacobus did not speak; he had
his face covered with his hand, and
when he looked up was paler than be-
fore. Lufflin fancied there was a change
in the simple-hearted old bookworms
manner all day, a quiet composure, the
dignity of a man who knew his place
both with God and his brother man.
	He went down again presently, leav-
ing them alone for a little while. M.
J acobus was standing by the window,
watching the awful stillness with which
a new day lifts itself over the sea; he
had the child in his arms, and beckon-
e~ Lotty to his side. She came and
leaned her head on his shoulder.
	You will never leave me now, Shar-
ley,  never, he said, his face kind-
ling with a new, strange triumph.
	The waves lapped the shore in gentle
rifts of spray ; the beach itself shone in
the rising light like fretted silver. Be-
yond the foamy earth - colored break-
ers lay the illimitable sea, a dark violet
glow, fading into the dim horizon whence
came the dawn. The mans eye was
fixed on the far line which his sight
could never pass ; his wifes quick
glance followed his. It was from that
dread Beyond, she knew, that he had
The Hz~k Tide of December.</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00070" SEQ="0070" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="64">	64	Lucys Lct/ers.	[January,

fancied last night the dead beckoned
to him.
	She touched him again.
	It is a quiet morning yonder, she
said, calmly.
	Yes, Lotty.
	God sent your dream. I hardly
hoped, Jerome, her eyes filling with
tears, that we should keep Christmas
together,  you, the baby, and I.
	He smiled and pressed her hand,
touched the little cheek, and then look-
ed wistfully out again.
	He held the baby God had given to
comfort his old age proudly and ten-
derly; but his heart would turn to
the other childs face that was watch-
ing for him yonder behind the dawn,
and listen for the weak little voice which
he knew on that Christmas morning
was somewhere calling,  Fat her! fa-
ther !




LUCYS LETTERS.

ON a cold January night I returned
home after a holiday visit to town.
Snow was just beginning to fall, and a
desolate sort of feeling came over me
as the omnibus drove up to my resi-
dence. A bright, cheerful light shone
out of the library-windows, and Ernes-
tina, a maid who had lived with me
half a score of years before her mar-
riage, was at the gate to receive me.
	It is owing to her kind, capable
hands that the house looks so comfort-
able, I said to myself, with a little
sigh; but what am I to do when she
returns to her own home ?
	Then, with a true spinster selfishness,
I wished her good husband and beauti-
ful boy better off in Abrahams bos-
om, and wondered what could make
women so foolish as to get married.
The cause of all this discomfort was
consciousness of having a new serving-
maid. My last experience in that ne-
cessary domestic article had not been
an agreeable one. The woman, though
not as old as Sibyl, was
as curst and shrewd
As Socrates Xantippe, or a worse.

She was a dusky Melpomene, who
openly insulted the furniture, assaulted
violently the china, and waged univer-
sal war against all in animate objects.
Being a trifle deaf; she used this defect
as an excuse for not hearing any re-
quest or command; when spoken to,
she glared grimly, turned her back, and
strode off with a tragic lozty5, reminding
one of a Forest in petticoats. I never
knew I was an amiable woman, until
her advent into my peaceable establish-
ment.
	Now I return to a new experience,
may-be no better than the former, I
thought.
	Upon entering the house, I saw
through the open kitchen - door  out
of which streamed a savory smell of
broiled chicken, buns, and tea  an en-
couraging picture for a housekeeper:
there was a bright fire, and a tidy room,
with a nice - looking colored girl who
wore a headkerchief and a check apron
over her chintz gown. She rose up
from her seat, and gave me a slight
curtsy, which civility I acknowledged
half shyly, half coldly.
	This is Lucy, said Ernestina, the
new maid I have engaged for you,
Maam. Then, addressing the girl,
she added,  Lucy, you may dish up
supper now.
	I wonder how I shall like her, was
my remark to Ernestina, as we went in-
to the library. Do you think she will
bully me much?
	Ernestina laughed.
	No, indeed, Maam! She is gentle
and civil. I think she will suit you. I
have found her both capable and agree-
able while we have been putting the
house in order.
Oh I can dispense with capability,</PB></P>
</DIV1>
<DIV1 TYPE="article" DECLS="/moa/atla/atla0017/" ID="ABK2934-0017-9">
<BIBL>
<AUTHOR>Anne M. Brewster</AUTHOR>
<AUTHORIND>Brewster, Anne M.</AUTHORIND>
<TITLE TYPE="ART">Lucy's Letters</TITLE>
<BIBLSCOPE TYPE="pg">64-69</BIBLSCOPE>
</BIBL>
<P><PB REF="IMG00070" SEQ="0070" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="64">	64	Lucys Lct/ers.	[January,

fancied last night the dead beckoned
to him.
	She touched him again.
	It is a quiet morning yonder, she
said, calmly.
	Yes, Lotty.
	God sent your dream. I hardly
hoped, Jerome, her eyes filling with
tears, that we should keep Christmas
together,  you, the baby, and I.
	He smiled and pressed her hand,
touched the little cheek, and then look-
ed wistfully out again.
	He held the baby God had given to
comfort his old age proudly and ten-
derly; but his heart would turn to
the other childs face that was watch-
ing for him yonder behind the dawn,
and listen for the weak little voice which
he knew on that Christmas morning
was somewhere calling,  Fat her! fa-
ther !




LUCYS LETTERS.

ON a cold January night I returned
home after a holiday visit to town.
Snow was just beginning to fall, and a
desolate sort of feeling came over me
as the omnibus drove up to my resi-
dence. A bright, cheerful light shone
out of the library-windows, and Ernes-
tina, a maid who had lived with me
half a score of years before her mar-
riage, was at the gate to receive me.
	It is owing to her kind, capable
hands that the house looks so comfort-
able, I said to myself, with a little
sigh; but what am I to do when she
returns to her own home ?
	Then, with a true spinster selfishness,
I wished her good husband and beauti-
ful boy better off in Abrahams bos-
om, and wondered what could make
women so foolish as to get married.
The cause of all this discomfort was
consciousness of having a new serving-
maid. My last experience in that ne-
cessary domestic article had not been
an agreeable one. The woman, though
not as old as Sibyl, was
as curst and shrewd
As Socrates Xantippe, or a worse.

She was a dusky Melpomene, who
openly insulted the furniture, assaulted
violently the china, and waged univer-
sal war against all in animate objects.
Being a trifle deaf; she used this defect
as an excuse for not hearing any re-
quest or command; when spoken to,
she glared grimly, turned her back, and
strode off with a tragic lozty5, reminding
one of a Forest in petticoats. I never
knew I was an amiable woman, until
her advent into my peaceable establish-
ment.
	Now I return to a new experience,
may-be no better than the former, I
thought.
	Upon entering the house, I saw
through the open kitchen - door  out
of which streamed a savory smell of
broiled chicken, buns, and tea  an en-
couraging picture for a housekeeper:
there was a bright fire, and a tidy room,
with a nice - looking colored girl who
wore a headkerchief and a check apron
over her chintz gown. She rose up
from her seat, and gave me a slight
curtsy, which civility I acknowledged
half shyly, half coldly.
	This is Lucy, said Ernestina, the
new maid I have engaged for you,
Maam. Then, addressing the girl,
she added,  Lucy, you may dish up
supper now.
	I wonder how I shall like her, was
my remark to Ernestina, as we went in-
to the library. Do you think she will
bully me much?
	Ernestina laughed.
	No, indeed, Maam! She is gentle
and civil. I think she will suit you. I
have found her both capable and agree-
able while we have been putting the
house in order.
Oh I can dispense with capability,</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00071" SEQ="0071" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="65">	i866.]	Lucys Letters.	65

 a little of it, at least,  if she will
only not frighten me out of my wits
with a vixen temper!
	No fear of that, I assure you, said
Ernestina, encouragingly.
	Nor was there any cause for fear.
During the five months the girl lived
with me, I found her uniformly civil and
amiable. I do not intend inflicting on
my readers any more of my personal
experience with Lucy; it is her own
little history I wish t.o relate.
	A few days after my return home, I
noticed, that, when Lucy was left to her-
self, she seemed sad. I often observed
her suppressing tears; and every little
while she gave a heavy, long sigh, as if
apprehensive of some trouble.
	I am as unwilling to meddle with the
affairs of inferiors as with those of equals;
so I contented myself with speaking very
gently, granting little unexpected indul-
gences, and smiling cheerfully at her. I
knew she was married to a man who was
many years her senior, and it was said
they were much attached to each other.
This husband had gone into the army,
and Ernestina told me that Lucy and he
were looking anxiously forward to the
period of his return,  more than two
years oWwhen they hoped to take
his bounty-money and savings, and buy
therewith a little house and small gar-
den-patch for a settled home.
	One day I asked her if she could read
or write.
	Neither. was the reply.
	How, then, do you write to your
husband?
	This question brought out the whole
story of her anxiety. Hitherto her
friends had written in her name, but
her husband had received only three
of the many letters she had sent him
during the six months he had been
gone. In his last letter he had com-
plained bitterly of her silence.
	Oh, if he could only hear straight
from me! she exclaimed. For he
thinks, Maam, I dont write because I
gets no money. T is nt the money I
care for. I d sooner.never have a cent
from him than have him keep a-thinkin
I dont send no letters.
	VOL. XVII.  NO. 99.	5
	When she said this, big round tears
fell down like pebbles on her cheeks
and hands and apron. Of course I of-
fered to write for her, saying that I
would do so once a week, if she wished.
She then gave me his last letter to read, ~
which I will copy without correction;
for he wrote it himself, being a schol-
ar, as she said, with some little pride.
	And she endowed him with another
possession, or gift, which seemed to
give her almost as much satisfaction
as his scholarly attainments.
	He kin see sperits, Maam, as plain
as me and you sees folks ; and so
kin his little boy, his fust wifes child.
Once when I was a-walkin in the road
with em, one moonlighty night, when
we was a-goin home to Spring-Town,
them two stepped quick-like away from
the path.
	Lucy, says my husband, says he,
amost in a whisper, quick! step fur-
der over on t other side.
	After we got along a piece, them
both told me there wor a band of s~er-
its a-comm along; an dif we gets out
of the way of em, them dont do us no
hurt, you know.
	I did not like to suggest to the credu-
lous wife that probably her sharp hus-
band had been seeing at the tavern,
before starting on the homeward walk
with her,
Black spirits and white,
Blue spirits and gray.

I fancy the cunning fellow, with a true
masculine, marital love of power, had
wished to inspire this young wife of his
with a becoming awe and reverence for
him. But we will return to his let-
ter.

Januwerry 1-teen 1864. Muoreses Island
5
Mv DEARE WIEF

	i take this opertunity to informe you
that i am not well at preasante. and
hope you are injoyin goode helthe pro-
vidin that they ever doe linde you and
ef you are enny whares that you can be
found
	Enny whares in the State of N Jar-
sey.</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00072" SEQ="0072" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="66">	66	Lucys Le/ters.	[January,

	And i hey been in the servise 6
monthes. And i hey writen sume 15-
teen or i6teen leturs and hey not re-
seved but 3 leturs from you yet sences
have been in the servise
	And i wante you to write to me in
answer to this letur and let me know
what you meane to doe and ef you
donte intend writin why jess say so.
	i suppose because you didente get
no munny you wonte write but ef that
has insulted you i will stope to. i hope
that you may understand this.
	And i know what i say. you hey
never writen to me. you havente let me
known whether you got that munny I
sent you by Edwurd Towns or no. you
heve never sent me enny word whether
you got the munny or no. it is pay day
nowe but they donte wante to pay us
but 7 dollurs pur munthe and thats what
didente inlist fore. and i wonte take it.
shall wait til congres ses what we are
to hey. thats the reason i havente got
no munny to send you.
	i donte intend to stope a writin un-
til i give you a fare chance and then ef
donte get enny more leturs than i hey
shall stope writin before long for ef
you are mad i am tired. i shall write so
as to heare from my childrun i know
that you think i might send you some
munny but ef we donte get it we cante
send it. i hope that you may doe well
and that I may see you againe.
	my deare bruther Samul Stores
will you please giv this to my deare
wief and reade it to hur and write to me
ef you please. give my luv to everry
boddy. and ef you see my muther please
to giv luv to hur and tell hur that i am
not well at preasante. i am verry weake
at preasante. and i donte kepe well long
at a time. and i donte know how i shall
apeare in your preasance. giv my luv
to everry hoddy. and tell them to pray
fore mee.
	i wante to know how my childrun
is. what is anny doin. aske anny ef she
cante sende mee a letur and has the ab-
sentcs of hur farthur hurt hur. but i shall
remember hur to God. it donte rendur
meeany satisfaction to see othurs get
leturs and i cante gete none myself
sum of our boys has gote as bye as 2oty
leturs and sum more and i donte get
none. remember me your
afect tunate husband
JAMES wILLIAMS.

	james harris is agoin to send a letur
to the church at spring town in the care
of mister saffron to be rede in the con-
gration. no more at preasante fur i am
verry weake
your luvin husband
J. WILLIAMS.

	After I finished reading this poor
fellows letter, I felt like laughing and
crying. The ignorance it displays is
droll enough; but the keen yearning
for home, the longing after domestic af-
fection and remembrance, the dread of
being forgotten, are all very touching.
	We replied to it immediately, and
after that seldom allowed a week to
pass without writing. On Saturday af-
ternoons Lucy would come into the li-
brary with a little piece of sewing in her
hands, and, sitting on a stool by the
dogs baskets, repeat her proposed let-
ter faster than I could write it.
	She related all the news of the two
colored villages situated on either side
of this town; the meetings they were
holding,  the jubilees and quarterlies,
 which last seemed to come every
Sunday; the payment of the church
debts ; the births of children; the
deaths of old people; the marriages
and engagements of young ones; and
even the hatching of chickens and kill-
ing of pigs. The letters were a droll
medley; and when I could not help
smiling sometimes at the odd bits of
information given, she would say, with
innocent earnestness, 
I know he 11 like to bear all this,
Maam. It 11 make him and the other
boys from Spring Town and Gould
Town feel like bein among us again.~
	She dictated very rapidly; and her
expressions were right pretty, being so
natural and affectionate. Once I re-
marked to her that she did it so nicely
that it sounded sometimes as if read
from a book.</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00073" SEQ="0073" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="67">	1866.]	Lucys Letters.	67

	Oh, it s because I keep a-studyiu
about what to say to him, she replied.
I talks it all over to myself when I m
alone. That s what makes me so for-
getful, and gives me this everlastin
misery in my head. I m forever and
ever a-studyin so much about him.
These weekly letters seemed to make
Lucy feel as if she were having a stated
talk with her absent husband. She grad-
ually grew more cheerful under their in-
fluence. XVhile at her work, she would
burst out into perfect gusts of wild chant-
ing: scraps of Methodist hymns suit-
ed her best. There was one verse she
would peal out to a shrill, weird minor
melody that was anything but cheerful
or gay in its effect; and yet she repeat-
ed it over and over, morning, noon, and
night, with unparalleled constancy:
I know there s room in heaven for me,
So I m a-gum, I m a-gum;
And dont you hope there s room for you?
Let s hoth he goin, let s hoth he goin;
I should nt wonder if room s for them,
So sve 11 all he goin, we 11 all he gum,
Some day soon.

About two months after she came to
live with me, there was a battle some-
where South, in which several colored
men from our two villages were killed
and wounded. By some mistake, Wil-
liamss name was included in the list;
and the publication of it set his poor
wife nearly beside herself with grief.
The following day, however, some of
his old companions received a letter
from him, written after the date of the
battle, in which he spoke of the others
being killed, adding, 
Tell Lucy, my deare wief im not
dede yet. i havente seene a fite sence
hey bene in the servise but i hope
shall soon. My dere bruther Samul
Stores can you linde oute why Lucy my
wief donte write to me.
	We immediately sent off a letter to
him by mail; and I advised Lucy to
inclose one with that of the friend who
had just heard from him, and who in-
tended writing the next day. She nev-
er tired of dictating to me; and after
this last report from him, we prepared
letters and dispatched them with re-
doubled energy.
	One morning she came into the li-
brary, and asked me if I could spare
time to write a letter.
	I m so full, Maam, of all I want to
say, it kind o bewilders me at my work.
I think I shall be more quieter, if I have
it written off to him.
	This letter was a remarkably pretty
and touching one, and had in it the
burden of all : 
If I could only get 4 letter from
you, and you could get one from me, I
should not fret so much. I have not
had one since January, and have only
had four since you left. For three
months me and my lady have written
to you nigh about every week. All the
other women go to the office, and take
out two, three, and four letters at a time,
some with money in; but if I could only
get one from you, I should be happier
than they are with all their money. I
dont want no money. I can make
enough to take care of me and Nervy
(their little daughter, glorying in the
name of Minerva). But, my dear hus-
band, do, do write to me.
	This letter was sent off about mid-
day; then Lucy went singing about
her work, as if she had just seen her
husband. Her favorite assurance of
there being room in heaven for her and
all her friends rang out so shrill and
clear that my little Skye terrier grew
testy and nervous at the reiteration. At
last, when its slumber was broken for
the dozenth time, it could bear it no
longer, and, leaping out of the basket,
crouched on the ground, and, raising its
tiny black muzzle in the air, gave one
prolonged howl, as if protesting against
the information.
	I could not blame the dog, for the
chant was not pleasant to my ears. It
made me feel very melancholy; but I
had not the hard heart to check the
girl, she seemed to take so much com-
fort in the hymn. My daily papers came
in; I read them; and the news of the
Fort Pillow tragedy, which reached us
that day, draped around with the crim-
son and black of a first report, deepened
my sadness.
	After luncheon I went out with the</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00074" SEQ="0074" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="68">68

dogs for a walk, and spent two or three
hours roaming through the woods ,grop-
ing among the fallen leaves and mosses
for the spicy-smelling, pinkish sprays of
the trailihg-arbutus, or Pilgrims May-
flower, listening to the song of the rob-
ins, and the fretful, querulous note of
Aprils bird
Blue-coated, flying before from tree to tree,

and lulling my heart-pain in the fine,
rushing sound made by the pond-waters
falling through the open gates of the
dam.
	I took a seat in a boat which was ly-
ing at anchor near the pebbled shore
of the pond, and looked up into the
branches of a glowing swamp - maple,
whose starry blossoms were all aflame
in the afternoon sunlight. A congress
of robins had assembled on the tree,
and were in high discussion,  probably
on the rights of the blackbirds to the
occupancy of certain upper chambers
of the air; presently they spread their
little wings, and as they floated off over
my head, their flashing red-breasts look-
ed like winged scarlet tulip-petals.
	Gods world is very beautiful ! I
murmured, but human sorrows weigh
the heart down.
	I sat in the boat on the pond-strand
without heeding the lapse of time, just
mOoflillg, in that vague, listless way we
women have, over
Troubles too great to be my own, 

the sore griefs and trials of a mighty
nation.
	The washing of the beautiful pond-
waters on the shore gradually sooth-
ed me had they been ocean breakers,
their solemn rhythm would have in-
creased my melancholy; but these in-
iand streams have a cheerful, every-day
note. I watched the sparkling, leaping
light on the surface of the pond, and the
long shimmers of rosy gleams that play-
ed over the dancing waters, until my
heart grew as bright as the millions of
water-diamonds. The joyful little rip-
ple against the pebbled bank helped me
amazingly, and so my heart slipping off
insensibly from the weary, useless fret-
ting, I found myself at sunset feeling as
Lucys Letters.	[January,

	free from care as a child, and my home-
ward step was as springy as the gam-
bols of my young dogs.
	I walked out into the high-road; the
slightly undulating country had lost its
monotonous expression under the in-
fluence of the ruddy twilight; the dis-
tant fields and woods were bathed in a
soft violet atmosphere, and a fire-glow
lay spread over the young wheat.
	To the left, the smoke of the factory
rolled against the purple and gold of the
sky; the dense black brought out fine-
ly the beautiful unfolding forms of the
white vapor, as the soft evening wind
swept in among it; these snowy shapes,
as they mounted high and floated off,
looked like ascending spirits of the
blest in a Judgment scene ; at last they
were all blended with the ashen gray of
the descending night.
	As I struck my front - door - bell, I
heard Lucy still screaming out her as-
surance of a heavenly home; but the
chanting had lost its irritating sound,
and I listened to it, if not with pleasure,
at least with patience: even the Skye,
Ton -Ton, was so improved in temper
by the walk as to coil up its little silky
gray body in the basket with perfect in-
difference to the domestic music. While
I was dining, the watchful ears of my
dogs detected the steps of strangers
on the terrace - steps of the entrance,
which news they announced in shrill
barks.
	Some Spring - Town visitors to
Lucy, I thought, as I heard the steps
pass under the side window, which sup-
position was confirmed by the ceasing
of the hopeful hymn.
	There was a profound silence for a lit-
tle while in the back part of the house;
and the dogs resumed their slumbers,
dreaming pleasantly of their nice walk
and good meal. I pushed the little din-
ner-table away, lighted the spirit-lamp
under the tea, which was on a small tray
on the library - table, and leaned back
in the easy-chair to read a comforting
page or two in De Quinceys Ciesars. I
would not disturb Lucy and her guests
for a little while at least, I thought. I
had just reached, </PB>
<PB REF="IMG00075" SEQ="0075" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="69">	i866.]	Doctor 7ohns.	69

Peace, then, rhetoricians false thren-
odists of false liberty! hollow chanters
over the ashes of a hollow republic!
XVithout Caesar we affirm a thousand
times that there would have been no
perfect Rome; and but for Rome there
could have been no such man as
sar
when I heard Lucy crossing the ante-
room. The library-door opened, aiid in
the poor girl tottered, sobbing bitterly
as if her heart would surely burst. She
crouched down on the floor, and moan-
ed so like a poor wounded animal, that
the dogs, who are very fond of her, ran
up and commenced whining and licking
her. To my repeated inquiries as to
the cause of her weeping, she could on-
ly sob out, 
Oh! I cant tell, Maam, I cant tell
you
	At last she summoned enough cour-
age to say, 
He s dead now real! No mistake
this time,  real, real dead ! He died
in the ospital three weeks ago,  and
never, never got none of them ere let-
ters
	Yes, the poor fellow was, as his wife
said, dead real; and I found, on in-
quiry, that, at the very time the false ru-
mor of his death reached us, he was then
actually dying of a fever at a hospital in
Florida!
	She was rib ht, too, a bout the ill-luck
of the letters. He had not received one
of them! Not knowing of his change
of place, we had addressed the letters
to the regiment station, where I suppose
they went, while he was far off in a dis-
tant hospital, tossing on a sick-bed; and
when he died, he had added to his phys-
ical sufferings the anguish of thinking
himself forgotten by the wife and friends
he loved so tenderly.
	This narrative is a simple report of
one of the thousands of sad romances
which were daily and hourly happening
to American women during the late civil
struggle.

Too common I Never morning wore
To evening but some heart did break.





DOCTOR JOHNS.

XLIII.

	HE foreign letters rarely came sin-
Igly; and Addle had already ac-
complished the reading of her own mis-
sive, in which Maverick had spoken of
his having taken occasion to address,
by the same mail, a line to the Doctor
on matters of business, in regard to
which, (he had said,) dont, my dear
Addle, be too inquisitive, even if you
observe that it is cause of some per-
plexity to the good Doctor. Indeed, in
such case, I hope you will contribute
to his cheer, as I am sure you have of-
ten done. We owe him a large debt
of gratitude, my child, and I rely upon
you to add your thankfulness to mine,
and speak for both.
	You look troubled, New Papa,
said Addle. Can I help you? Eh,
Doctor?
	And she came toward him in her
playful manner, and patted the old gen-
tleman on the shoulder, while he sat
with his face buried in his hands.
	I dont think papa writes very cheer-
fully, do you? Eb,  Doctor  I3enja-
mmJohns ? (tapping him with more
spirit.)  Why, New Papa, what does
this mean ?
	For the Doctor had raised his head
now, and regarded her with a look of
mingled yearning and distrust that was
wholly new to her.
	Pray, New Papa, what is it?
	The old gentleman  so utterly guile-
less  was puzzled for an answer; but</PB></P>
</DIV1>
<DIV1 TYPE="article" DECLS="/moa/atla/atla0017/" ID="ABK2934-0017-10">
<BIBL>
<AUTHOR>Donald G. Mitchell</AUTHOR>
<AUTHORIND>Mitchell, Donald G.</AUTHORIND>
<TITLE TYPE="ART">Doctor Johns.  XII</TITLE>
<BIBLSCOPE TYPE="pg">69-80</BIBLSCOPE>
</BIBL>
<P><PB REF="IMG00075" SEQ="0075" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="69">	i866.]	Doctor 7ohns.	69

Peace, then, rhetoricians false thren-
odists of false liberty! hollow chanters
over the ashes of a hollow republic!
XVithout Caesar we affirm a thousand
times that there would have been no
perfect Rome; and but for Rome there
could have been no such man as
sar
when I heard Lucy crossing the ante-
room. The library-door opened, aiid in
the poor girl tottered, sobbing bitterly
as if her heart would surely burst. She
crouched down on the floor, and moan-
ed so like a poor wounded animal, that
the dogs, who are very fond of her, ran
up and commenced whining and licking
her. To my repeated inquiries as to
the cause of her weeping, she could on-
ly sob out, 
Oh! I cant tell, Maam, I cant tell
you
	At last she summoned enough cour-
age to say, 
He s dead now real! No mistake
this time,  real, real dead ! He died
in the ospital three weeks ago,  and
never, never got none of them ere let-
ters
	Yes, the poor fellow was, as his wife
said, dead real; and I found, on in-
quiry, that, at the very time the false ru-
mor of his death reached us, he was then
actually dying of a fever at a hospital in
Florida!
	She was rib ht, too, a bout the ill-luck
of the letters. He had not received one
of them! Not knowing of his change
of place, we had addressed the letters
to the regiment station, where I suppose
they went, while he was far off in a dis-
tant hospital, tossing on a sick-bed; and
when he died, he had added to his phys-
ical sufferings the anguish of thinking
himself forgotten by the wife and friends
he loved so tenderly.
	This narrative is a simple report of
one of the thousands of sad romances
which were daily and hourly happening
to American women during the late civil
struggle.

Too common I Never morning wore
To evening but some heart did break.





DOCTOR JOHNS.

XLIII.

	HE foreign letters rarely came sin-
Igly; and Addle had already ac-
complished the reading of her own mis-
sive, in which Maverick had spoken of
his having taken occasion to address,
by the same mail, a line to the Doctor
on matters of business, in regard to
which, (he had said,) dont, my dear
Addle, be too inquisitive, even if you
observe that it is cause of some per-
plexity to the good Doctor. Indeed, in
such case, I hope you will contribute
to his cheer, as I am sure you have of-
ten done. We owe him a large debt
of gratitude, my child, and I rely upon
you to add your thankfulness to mine,
and speak for both.
	You look troubled, New Papa,
said Addle. Can I help you? Eh,
Doctor?
	And she came toward him in her
playful manner, and patted the old gen-
tleman on the shoulder, while he sat
with his face buried in his hands.
	I dont think papa writes very cheer-
fully, do you? Eb,  Doctor  I3enja-
mmJohns ? (tapping him with more
spirit.)  Why, New Papa, what does
this mean ?
	For the Doctor had raised his head
now, and regarded her with a look of
mingled yearning and distrust that was
wholly new to her.
	Pray, New Papa, what is it?
	The old gentleman  so utterly guile-
less  was puzzled for an answer; but</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00076" SEQ="0076" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="70">	Doctor Y-ohns.	[January,
70
his ingenuity came to his relief at
length.
	No, Adaly, your father does not
write cheerfully,  certainly not; he
speaks of the probable loss of his for-
tune.
	Now Addle, with her parsonage train-
ing, had really very little idea of fortune.
	That means I wont be rich, New
Papa, I suppose. But I dont believe it;
he will have money enough, I m sure.
It dont disturb me, New Papa,  not
one whit.
	The Doctor was so poor a hand at
duplicity that he hardly knew what to
say, but meantime was keeping his eye
with the same dazed look upon the
charming AdMe.
	You look so oddly, New Papa, 
indeed you do! You have some ser-
mon in your head, now have nt you,
that I have broken in upon ?  some
sermon about  about  let us see.
	And she moved toward his desk,
where the letter of Maverick still lay
unfolded.
	The Doctor, lost in thought, did not
observe her movement until she had
the letter fairly in her hand; then he
seized it with a suddenness of gesture
that instantly caught the attention of
Ad~le.
	A swift, deep color ran over her face.
It is for my eye only, Adaly, said
the Doctor, excitedly, folding it and
placing it in his pocket.
	Addle, with her curiosity strangely
piqued, said, 
I remember now, papa told me as
much.
	What did he tell you, my child?
	Not to be too curious about some
business affairs of which he had written
you.
	Ah! said the Doctor, with a sigh
of relief.
	But why should nt I be? Tell
me, New Papa, (toying now with the
silvered hair upon the forehead of the
old gentle man,) is he really in trou-
ble ?
	No new trouble, my child,  no
new trouble.
	For a moment Addles thought flashed
upon that mystery of the mother she had
never seen, and an uncontrollable sad-
ness came over her.
	Yet if there be bad news, why
should nt I know it? said she. I
inust know it some day.
	Sufficient unto the day is the evil
thereof, said the Doctor, gravely.
And if bad news should ever come to
you, my dear Adaly,  though I have
none to tell you now,  may you have
strength to bear it like a Christian!
	I will! I can !  said she, with a
great glow upon her face.
	Never more than in that moment
had the heart of the old gentleman
warmed toward Addle. Not by any
possibility could he make himself the
willing instrument of punishing the sin
of the father through this trustful and
confiding girl. Nay, he felt, as he look-
ed upon her, that he could gladly make
of himself a shelter for her against such
contempt or neglect as the world might
have in store.
	When Reuben came presently to sum-
mon AdNe to their evening enga~ement
at the Elderkins, the Doctor followed
their retreating figures, as they strolled
out of the parsonage-gate, with a new
and strange interest. Most inscrutable
and perplexing was the fact, that this
outcast child, whom scarce one in his
parish would have been willing to ad-
mit to the familiarities of home,  this
daughter of infidel France, about whose
mind the traditions of the Babylonish
harlot had so long lingered,  who had
never known motherly counsel or a fa-
thers reproot  that she, with the stain
of heathenism upon her skirts, should
have grown into the possession of such
a holy, placid, and joyous trust. And
there was his poor son beside her, the
child of so many hopes, reared, as it
were, under the very droppings of the
altar, still wandering befogged in the
mazes of error, if, indeed, he were not
in his secret heart a scoffer. Now that
such a result was wholly impracticable
and impossible, it did occur to him that
perhaps no helpmeet for Reuben could
so surely guide him in the way of truth.
But of any perplexity of judgment on</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00077" SEQ="0077" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="71">Doctor .Johns.

this score he was now wholly relieved.
If his own worldly pride had not stood
in the way, (and he was dimly conscious
of a weakness of this kind,) the Wish of
Maverick was authoritative and final.
The good man had not the slightest
conception of how matters might really
stand between the two young parties;
he had discovered the anxieties of Miss
Eliza in regard to them, and had often
queried with himself if too large a taint
of worldliness were not coloring the ma-
nccuvres of his good sister. For himself
he chose rather to leave the formation
of all such ties in the hands of Provi-
dence, and entertained singularly old-
fashioned notions in regard to the sa-
credness of the marriage-bond and the
mystery of its establishment.
	In view, however, of possible eventu-
alities, it was necessary that he should
come to a full understanding with the
spinster in regard to the state of affairs
between Addle and Reuben, and that
he should make disclosure to her of the
confessions of Maverick. For the sec-
ond time in his life the Doctor dreaded
the necessity of taking his sister into
full confidence. The first was on that
remarkable occasion  so long past by
 when he had declared his youthful
love for Rachel, and feared the opposi-
tion which would grow out of the spin-
sters family pride. Now, as then, he a~-
prehended some violent outbreak. He
knew all her positiveness and inflexi-
bility,  an inflexibility with which, for-
tunately, his convictions of duty rarely,
if ever, came in conflict. He therefore
respected it very greatly. In all world-
ly affairs, especially in all that regarded
social proprieties, he was accustomed
to look upon the opinions of his sister
as eminently sound, and to give them
full indorsement. Unwittingly the old
gentleman had subordinated the whole
arrangement of his ceremonious visit-
ings and of his wardrobe to the active
and lively suggestions of Miss Eliza.
Over and over, when in an absent mo-
ment he had slipped from his study for
a stroll down the street, the keen eye
of the maiden sister had detected him
before yet he had passed through the
parsonage-gate, and her keen voice came
after him, 
Really, Benjamin, that coat is hard-
ly respectable at this hour on the street.
You 11 find your new one hanging in
the press.
	And the Doctor, casting a wary look
over his person, as if to protest in favor
of an old friend, would go back submis-
sively to comply with the exactions of
the precise spinster. A wife could not
have been more irritatingly observant
of such shortcomings; and it is doubt-
ful if even so godly a man would have
yielded to a wifes suggestions with
fewer protests.
	After due reflection on the letter of
Maverick, the Doctor stepped softly to
the stairs, and said, 
Eliza, may I speak with you for a
few moments in the study?
	There was something in the parsons
tone that promised an important com-
munication; and Miss Johns presently
appeared and seated herself, work in
hand, over against the parson, at the
study-table. Older than when we took
occasion to describe her appearance in
the earlier portion of this narrative, and
 if it could be  more prim and state
ly. A pair of delicately bowed gold
spectacles were now called into requisi-
tion by her, for the nicer needle-work
on which she specially prided herself.
Yet her eye had lost none of its appar-
ent keenness, and, inclining her head
slightly, she threw an inquiring glance
over her spectacles at the Doctor, who
was now as composed as if the startling
news of the day had been wholly un-
heard.
	Eliza, said he, you have some-
times spoken of the possibility of an at-
tachment between Adaly and our poor
Reuben.
	Yes, I have, Benjamin, said the
spinster, with an air of confidence that
seemed to imply full knowledge of the
circumstances.
	Do you see any strong indications
of such attachment, Eliza?
	Well, really, Benjamin, said she,
 holding her needle to the light, and
bringing her spectacles to bear upon the
i866.~
7</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00078" SEQ="0078" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="72">	72	Doctor 7o/bzs.	[January,

somewhat difficult operation (at her age)
of threading it,  really, I think you
may leave that matter to my manage-
ment.
	The letter which I have received
to-day from Mr. Maverick alludes to a
rumor of such intimacy.
	Really  and the lady eyes the
Doctor with a look of keen expectation.
	Mr. Maverick, continued the Doc-
tor, in referring to the matter, speaks
of the probable loss of his fortune.
	Is it possible, brother? Loss of his
fortune ! And the spinster gives over
attention to her work, while she taps
with her thimble, reflectively, upon the
elbow of her chair.  I dont think,
Benjamin, said she, that Reuben has
committed himself in any way.
	That is well, perhaps, Eliza; it is
quite as I had supposed.
	And so the poor mans fortune is
gone! continued the spinster, plain-
tively.
	Not gone absolutely, Eliza. Maver-
icks language is, that his estate is in
great peril, returned the Doctor.
	Ah ! The spinster is thoughtful
and silent for a while, during which the
thimble-finger is also quiet. Does
your friend Maverick speak approving-
ly of such an attachment, brother?
	By no means, Eliza; he condemns
it in the strongest terms.
	Miss Johns is amazed at this revela-
tion; and having taken off her golden-
bowed spectacles, she passes them, in
a nervous way, from e~nd to end, upon
the Doctors table.
	Benjamin, says she presently, with
a shrewd look and her sharpest tone,
I dont think his fortune is in any peril
whatever. I think Reuben Johns is a
good match for Miss AdUe Maverick,
any day.
	Tut, ~ut, Eliza! we must not glori-
fy ourselves vainly. If Maverick dis-
approves, and Reuben shows no incli-
nation, our course is both plain and
easy.~~
	But I am not so sure about the in-
clination, Benjamin, said the spinster,
sharply; and she replaced her specta-
cles.
	If that is the case, I am very sorry,
said the parson.
	The good man had hoped that by
only a partial revelation of the con-
tents of the letter he might divert his
sister effectually from any matrimonial
schemes she might have in hand, and
so spare himself the pain of a full dis-
closure. It was quite evident to him,
however, that his plan had miscarried.
It was plain that the opposition of Mav-
erick, if unexplained, would only stimu-
late the spinster to a new zeal in the
furtherance of her pet project. There
was nothing for it but to lay before her
the whole disagreeable truth.
	When the Doctor commenced the
reading of the letter, Miss Johns re-
sumed her needle-work with a resolute
composure that seemed to imply, The
Johns view of the case has been stated;
let us now listen to what Mr. Maverick
may have to say.
	For a while her fingers plied nimbly;
hut there came a pause,  an excla-
mation of amazement, and her work (it
was a bit of embroidery for poor Adie)
was dashed upon the floor.
	Benjamin, this is monstrous! The
French hussy! Reuben, indeed!
	The Doctor returned composedly to
his reading.
	No, brother, I want to bear no more.
What a wretch this Maverick must be!
	A sinner, doubtless, Eliza; yet not
a sinner before all others.
	The spinster was now striding up and
down the room in a state of extraordi-
nary excitement. With a strange in-
consequence, she seized the letter from
the Doctors bands, andread it through
to the end.
	I am bewildered, Benjamin. To
think that the Johns name should be
associated with such shame and guilt!
	Whosoever exalteth himself shall be
abased, murmured the Doctor.
	But the spinster was in no mood for
listening to Scriptural applications.
	And that he should dare to ask us
to cloak for him this great scandal !
continued she, wrathfully.
	For the childs sake, Eliza,  for
poor Adaly.</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00079" SEQ="0079" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="73">i866.]

	While I am mistress of your house-
hold, brother, I shall try to maintain its
dignity and respectability. Do you con-
sider, Benjamin, how much these are
necessary to your influence?
	Without doubt, Eliza; yet I cannot
perceive how these would suffer by deal-
ing gently with this unfortunate child.
A very tender affection for her has grown
upon me, Eliza; it would sadden me
grievously, if she were to go out from
among us bearing unkind thoughts.
	And is your affection strong enough,
Benjamin, to make you forget all social
proprieties, and the honorable name of
our family, and to wish her stay here as
the wife of Reuben?
	The Doctor may have winced a little
at this; and possibly a touch of world-
ly pride entered into his reply.
	In this matter, Eliza, I think the
wish of Maverick is to be respected.
	Pah! For my part, I respect much
more the Johns name.~~
	As the spinster retired to her room,
after being overheated in the discussion,
in which the calmness of the Doctor,
and the news he had communicated,
contributed almost equally to her fren-
zy, she cast a look, in passing, upon the
bed-chamber of Addle. There were all
the delicate fixtures, in which she had
taken such a motherly pride,the spot-
less curtains, the cherished vases, and
certain toilette adornments,  her gifts,
by each one of which she had hoped
to win a point ~in the accomplishment
of her ambitious project. In the flush
of her disappointment she could almost
have torn down the neatly adjusted dra-
pery, and put to confusion this triumph
of her housewifely skill. But cooler
thoughts succeeded; and, passing on
into her own chamber, she threw herself
into her familiar rocking-chair and enter-
ed upon a long train of reflections, whose
result will very likely have their bearing
upon the development of our story.


XLIV.

	ABOUT this time, Phil Elderkin had
come back from his trip to the West
Doctor 7okns.	73

	Indies,  not a little bronzed by the
fierce suns he had met there, but stal-
wart as ever, with his old free, frank
manner, to which he had superadded a
little of that easy confidence and self-
poise which come of wide intercourse
with the world. All the village greeted
him kindly; for there was not a man
or a woman in it who bore Phil El-
derkin a grudge,  unless it may have
been the schoolmaster, who, knowing
what a dullard Phil had been at his
books, had to bear some measure of
the reproach which belonged to his slow
progress. But there are some young
gentlemen (not, however, so many as
dull fellows are apt to think) who ri-
pen best by a reading of the world, in-
stead of books; and Phil Elderkin was
eminently one of them. The old Squire
took a pride he had never anticipated
in walking down the street arm in arm
with his stalwart son, (whose support,
indeed, the old gentleman wasbeginning
to need,) and in watching the admiring
glances of the passers-by, and of such
old cronies as stopped to shake hands
and pass a word or two with the Squires
youngest boy. There is this pleasant
feature about such quiet, out-of-the-way
New England towns, (or was twenty-
five years since,) that the old people
never forget to feel a pride in the young
men, who, having gone out from their
borders to try their fortunes, win any
measure of success. Of course they
are apt to attribute it, with a pleasant
vanity, to their own good advice or ex-
ample; but this by no means detracts
from the cordiality of their praises.
Phil won all this,  since it was hint-
ed, on the best possible authority, that
he had tried certain business chances
on his own account in the West Indies,
which promised the grandest success.
	Even the Doctor had said, You have
reason to be proud of your boy, Squire.
I trust that in time he may join piety to
prudence.
	Hope he may, hope he may, Doctor,
said the Squire. Fine stout lad, is nt
he, Doctor?
	Of course Phil had met early with
Reuben, and with the fresh spirit of</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00080" SEQ="0080" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="74">Doctor 7olzns.
74
their old school-days. Phil had very
likely been advised of the experiences
which had brought Reuben again to
Ashfield, and of the questionable re-
sult,  for even this had become subject
of village gossip; but of such matters
there was very coy mention on the part
of young Elderkin. Phils world-knowl-
ectge had given him wise hints on this
score. And as for Reuben, the encoun-
ter with such frank, outspoken hearti-
ness and manliness as belonged to his
old school-friend was, after his weary
mental struggle of the last few months,
immensely refreshing.
	Phil, my good fellow, your coming
is a great godsend to me. I ye been
worrying at the theologies here; but
it s blind work. I think I shall get
back to business again.
	But you have nt made it blind for
Addle, Reuben.  so they tell me.
	And it is true. Faith, Phil, if I
could win her beautiful trusts I would
give my right arm,  indeed, I would.
	But she s not blue, said Phil;
she s as cheery and mirthful as I ever
saw her.
	There s the beauty of it, said
Reuben. Many women carry their
faith with a face as long and as dull as
a sermon. But, by Jove, her face bub-
bles over with laughter as easily as it
ever did.
	Sister Rose had, of course, met Phit
on his return most gushingly. There
is something very beautiful in that warm
sisterly affection which at a certain age
can put no bounds to its admiring pride.
There is a fading away of it as the years
progress, and as the sisters drop into
little private clamorous circles of their
own, and look out upon other people
through the spectacles of their hus-
bands eyes,  as they are pretty apt to
do; but for a long period following up-
on the school age it is very tender and
beautiful. If Phil had been coarse, or
selfish, or awkward, or ten times the
sinner in any way that he was, Rose
would most surely have found some
charming little excuse for each and ev-
ery sin, and delighted in reflecting up-
on him the glow of her own purity.
	Of course she insists coyly upon his
making the village rounds with her.
Those intellectual ladies, the Misses
Hapgood, must have an opportunity of
admiring his grand air, and the easy
manner he has brought back with him
of entering a parlor, or of passing the
compliments of the day: and, indeed,
those respectable old ladies do pay him
the honor of keeping him in waiting,
until they can arrange their best front-
lets, and present themselves in their
black silks and in kerchiefs wet with
lavender. Now little Rose maintains
an admiring and eager silence while
that rare brother astonishes these good
Ashfield ladies with the great splendors
of his walk and conversation.
	Then with what a bewildering success
the traveller, under convoy of the de-
lighted Rose, comes down upon the
family of the Tourtelots! What an
elaborate toilette Almira matures for his
reception! and how the Dame nervous-
ly dusts and redusts her bombazine at
sight of his grand manner, as she peeps
through the half-opened blinds!
	The Deacon is not, indeed, so much
taken off the hooks by Phil, but en-
tertains bin in the old way.
	Pooty well on t for beef cattle in
Cuby, Philip ?
	And Roses eyes glisten, as Broth-
er Philip goes on to set forth some of
the wonders of the crops, and the cul-
ture.
	Wahl, they re smart farmers, I ye
heerd, says the Deacon; but we re
makin improvements here in Ashfield.
Dohnt know as you ye seen Square
Wilkinsons new string o wall he s
been a-buildin all the way between his
home pastur and the west medders?
	Phil has not.
	Wa~il, it s wuth seem. I do~nt
know what they pretend to have in
Cuby; but in my opinion, there ant
such another string o stone fence, not
in the whole caounty !
	And Phil has had his little private
talks with Rose,  about Addle, among
other people.
	 She is more charming than ever,~~
Rose had said.
[January,</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00081" SEQ="0081" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="75">	1866.]	Doctor J~o1uzs.
75
	I suppose ~
	And there had been a pause here.
	I suppose Reuben is as tender upon
her as ever, Phil had said at last, in
his off-hand way.
	He has been very devoted; but I m
not sure that it means anything, Phil,
dear.
	I should think it meant a great
deal, said Phil.
I mean, continued Rose, reflect-
ingly, and with some embarrassment of
speech, I dont think Addle speaks of
Reuben as if  as I should  think 
As you would, Rose,  is that it?
For shame, Phil!
	And Phil begged pardon with a kiss.
Do you think, Phil, said Rose, con-
cealing a little fluttering of the heart un-
der very smoothly spoken words, do
you think that Reuben really loves
AdMe?
	Think so? To be sure, Rose. How
can he help it? It s enough for me to
see her as I do, odd whiles in our par-
lor, or walking up and down the garden
with you, Rose ; if I were to meet her
every night and morning, as Reuben
must, I should go mad.
	Aha! said Rose, laughingly; that
s not the way lovers talk,  at least,
not in books. I think you are safe,
Phil. And yet (with a soberer air)
I did think, Phil, one while, that you
thought very, very often, and a great
deal, of Adele; and I was not sor-
ry.
	Did you, Rose? said Phil, ea-
gerly;  did you truly? Then Ill tell
you a secret, Rose,  mind, Rose, a
great secret, never to be lisped, not
to mother even. I did love Addle as
far back as I can remember. You know
the strange little French hat she used
to wear? Well, I used to draw it on
my slate at school, Rose ; it was all I
could draw that belonged to her. Ma-
ny s the time, when, if a boy came near,
I would dash in some little flourishes
about it, and call it a basket or a coal-
scoop; but all the while, for me, her
little dark eyes were shining under it.
But there was Reuben,  I told him I
thought Suke Boody the prettiest girl
in Ashfield, but it was nt true,  and
he beat me in reading and writing, and
everything, I think, but fisticuffs.
	Did he? said Rose, with the pret-
tily arched brow which mostly accom-
panied only her mischievous sallies
and it seemed to Phil afterward that
she would, have resented the statement,
if he had made it concerning any other
young fellow in Ashfield.
	Yes, indeed, continued he. I
knew he must beat me out and out with
Addle. Do you remember, Rose, how
you told me once that he had sent a
gift of furs to her? Well, Rose, I had
my own little gift hidden away for her
for that same New-Years day, and I
burned it. Those furs kept me awake
an awful time. And when I went away,
Rose, I prayed that I might learn to
forget her; but there was never a letter
of yours that came with her name in it,
(and most of them had it, you know,)
but I saw he~ as plainly as ever, with
her arm laced in yours, as I used to
see you many a time from my window,
strolling down the garden. And now
that I have come back, Rose, it s the
same confounded thing. By Jove, I feel
as if I could pitch into Reuben, as I
used to do at school. But then he s a
good fellow, and a good friend of mine,
I m sure.
	I m sure he is, said Rose. But,
Phil, continued she, meditatively, it
seems to me, if I were a man, and
loved a woman as you love Ad~le, I
should find some way of letting her
know it.
	Would you, Rosy? Do you think
there s a ghost of a chance?
	I dont know, Phil: Ad~le is not
one who talks of such things.
	Nor you, I think, Rose.
	Of course not, Phil. And after a
little hesitation, Of whom should I
talk, pray?
	Now it happened that this private con-
versation took place upon the same day
on which had transpired the interview
we have already chronicled between the
Doctor and Miss Johns. Reuben and
AdUe were to pass the evening at the
Elderkins. Addle was not of a temper</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00082" SEQ="0082" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="76">	76	Doctor f~fohns.	[January,

to be greatly disturbed by the rumor at
which the Doctor had hinted of a lost
fortune. (We write, it must be remem-
bered, of a time nearly thirty years gone
by.) Indeed, as she tripped along beside
Reuben, it seemed to him that she had
never been in a more jocular and viva-
cious humor. A reason for this (and it
is what, possibly, many of our readers
may count a very unnatural one) lay in
the letter which she had that day receiv-
ed from her father, in which Maverick,
in alluding to a possible affaire die cwier
in connection with Reuben, had coun-
selled her, with great earnestness, to
hold her affections in reserve, and, above
all, to control most rigidly any fancy
which she might entertain for the son
of their friend the Doctor.
	It amused Addle; for Reuben had
been so totally undemonstrative in mat-
ters of sentiment, (possibly keeping his
deeper feelings in reserve,) that Addle
had felt over and over a girls mischiev-
ous propensity to provoke it. Not that
she was in any sense heartless ; not
that she did not esteem him, and feel a
keen sense of gratitude; but his kind-
est and largest favors ~vere always at-
tended with such demureness and reti-
cence of manner as piqued her womanly
vanity. For these reasons there was
something exhilarating to her in the in-
timation conveyed by Mavericks let-
ters, that she was the party, after all,
upon whose decision must rest the
peace of mind of the two, and that she
must cultivate the virtue of treating him
with coolness.
	Possibly it would have been an easy
virtue to cultivate, even though Reu-
bens attentions had shown the warmth
which the blood of nineteen feminine
years craves in a lover; but as the mat-
ter stood, there was something amusing
to her in Mavericks injunction. As if
there were any danger! As if there
could be! Should it grow serious some
day, it would be time enou~ h then to
consider her good papas injunction;
very possibly she would pay the utmost
heed to it, since a respect for Mr. Mav-
ericks opinions and advice was almost
a part of Addles religion.
XLV.

	WE left Miss Eliza Johns in her
chamber, swaying back and forth in her
rocking-chair, and resolutely confront-
ing the dire news which the Doctor had
communicated. What was to be done?
Never had so serious a problem been
presented to her for solution. There
were both worldly and religious mo-
tives, as the spinster reckoned them,
for plucking out of her heart all the
growing tenderness which she had be-
gun to feel toward Addle; and the sud-
den discomfiture of that engaging, am-
bitious sche!~e which she had fondled so
lon6 prompted a feeling of resentment
which was even worse than worldly.
	How would you have treated the mat-
ter, Madam? Would your Christian
charities have shrunk from the ordeal?
But whatever might have been the oth-
er sins of the spinster, there was in her
no disposition to shrink from the con-
clusions to which her logic of proprie-
ty and respectability might lead. AdUe
was to be discarded, but not suddenly.
All her art must be employed to dis-
abuse Reuben of any lingering tender-
ness. The Doctors old prejudice against
French blood must be worked to its ut-
most. But there must be no violent
clamor,  above all, no disclosure of the
humiliating truth. Maverick (the false
man!) must be instructed that it would
be agreeable to the Johns familynay,
that their sense of dignity demanded 
that he should reclaim his child at an
early day. On this last score, it might be
necessary, indeed, to practise very adroit
management with the Doctor; but for
the rest, she had the amplest confidence
in her own activity and discretion.
	She was not the woman to sleep upon
her plans, when once they were decided
on; and she had no sooner forecast her
programme than she took advantage of
the lingering twilight to arrange her toi-
lette for a call upon the Elderkins. Of
course she led off the Doctor in her trail.
The spinsters marching orders, as
he jocularly termed them, the good man
was as incapable of resisting as if he had
been twenty years a husband.</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00083" SEQ="0083" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="77">	i866.]	Doctor ~o/bzs.

	In a few swift words she unfolded
her design.
	And now, Benjamin, dont, pray, let
your sentiment get the better of you, in
regard to this French girl. Think of
the proprieties in the case, Benjamin,
the proprieties,  which she enforced
by a little shake of her forefinger.
	Whenever it came to a question of
the proprieties, the Doctor was con-
scious of his weakness. What, indeed,
could the poor man know about the
proprieties, as set forth by Miss Johns,
that he should presume to argue against
them? What, indeed, can any man do,
when a woman bases herself on the
proprieties 
	It was summer weather, and the win-
dows of the hospitable Elderkin man-
sion were wide open. As the Doctor
and spinster drew near, little gusts of
cheery music came out to greet their
ears. For, at this time, Miss Almira
had her rival pianos about the village;
and the pretty Rose had been taught a
deft way of touching the  first-class in-
strument, which the kind-hearted Squire
had bestowed upon her. And, if it must
be told, little sparkling waltzes had
from time to time waked the parlor sol-
itude, and the kind Mistress Elderkin
had winked at little furtive parlor-dan-
ces on the part of Rose and Addle, 
they had so charmed the old Squire, and
set all his blood (as he said, n~ith a gal-
lant kiss upon the brow of Mrs. Elder-
kin) flowing in the old school-boy cur-
rents. Now it happened upon this very
evening, that the Squire, though past
seventy now, was in the humor to see a
good old-fashioned frolic, and, Rose rat-
tling off some crazy waltz, Phil, at a
hint from the old gentleman, had taken
possession of Addle, and was showing
off with a good deal of grace, and more
spirit, the dancing-steps of which he
had had experience with the Spanish
sefioritas.
	Dame Tourtelot, who chanced to he
present, wore a long face, which (it is
conceivable) the hearty old Squire en-
joyed as much as the dancing. But Mrs.
Elderkin must have looked with a warm
maternal pride upon the fine athletic
77
figure of her boy, as he went twirling
down the floor, with that graceful figure
of Addle.
	Upon the very midst of it; however,
the Doctor and Miss Johns came like a
cloud. The fingers of Rose rested idly
on the keys. AdMe, who was gay be-
yond her wont, alone of all the company
could not give over her light-hearted-
ness on the instant: so she makes away
to greet the Doctor,Miss Johns stand-
ing horrified.
	New Papa, you have surprised us.
Phil was showing me some new steps.
Do you think it very, very wrong?
	Adaly! Adaly!
	Ah, you dear old man, it is nt wrong;
 say it is nt wrong.
	By this time the Squire has come for-
ward.
	Ah, Doctor, young folks will be
young folks; but I think you wont
have a quarrel with Mrs. Elderkin yon-
der. My dear, (addressing Mrs. Elder-
kin,) you must set this matter right
with the Doctor. We must keep our
young people in his good books.
	The good books are not kept by me,
Squire, said the parson.
	Reuben, who had been loitering about
Rose, and who, to do him justice, had
seen Phils gallant attention to Addle
without one spark of jealousy, was spe-
cially interested in this interruption of
the festivities. In his present state of
mind, he was most eager to know how
far the evenings hilarity would be im-
puted as a sin to the new convert, and
how far religious seventies (if she met
any) would control the ardor of AdUe.
The Doctors face softened, even while
he talked with the charming errant,
Reuben observed that; hut with Aunt
Eliza the case was different. Never had
he seen such a threatening darkness in
her face.
	We have interrupted a ball, I fear,
she said to the hostess, in a tone which
was as virulent as a masculine oath.
	Oh! no! no! said Mrs. Elderkin.
Indeed, now, you must not scold Addle
too much; t was only a bit of the
Squires foolery.
	Oh, certainly not; she is quite her</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00084" SEQ="0084" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="78">	Doctor 3~o1ins.	[January,

own mistress. I should be very sorry
to consider myself responsible for all
her tastes.
	Reuben, hearing this, felt his heart
leap toward Ad&#38; le in a way which the
spinsters praises had never provoked.
	Dame Tourtelot here says, in her
most aggravating manner,
I think she dances beautiful, Miss
Johns. She dooz yer credit, upon my
word she dooz.
	And thereupon there followed a some-
what lively altercation between those
two sedate ladies,  in the course of
which a good deal of stinging mockery
was covered with unctuous compliment.
But the spinster did not lose sight of
her chief aim, to wit, the refusal of all
responsibility as attaching to the con-
duct of Addle, and a most decided inti-
rnation that the rumors which associated
her name with Reuben were unfounded,
and were likely to prove altogether false.
	This last hint was a revelation to the
gossipping Dame; there had been trou-
ble, then, at the parsonage; things were
clearly not upon their old footing. Was
it Ad&#38; le? V/as it Reuben? Yet never
had either shown greater cheer than on
this very night. But the Dame none
the less eagerly had communicated her
story, before the evening closed, to Mrs.
Elderkin,  who received it doubtingly,
 to Rose, who heard it with wonder
and a pretty confusion,  and to the old
Squire, who said only, Pooh! pooh!
it s a lovers quarrel; we shall be all
straight to-morrow.
	Addle, by her own choice, was con-
voyed home, when the evening was over,
by the good Doctor, and had not only
teased him into pardon of her wild
mirth, before they had reached the par-
sonage-gate, but had kindled in him a
glow of tenderness that made him ut-
terly forgetful of the terrible news of
the day. Reuben and the spinster, as
they followed, talked of Rose; never had
Aunt Eliza spoken so warmly of her
charms; but before him was tripping
along, in the moonlight, the graceful
figure of Addle, clinging to the old gen-
tlemans arm, and it is doubtful if his
eye did not feast more upon that vision
than his ear upon the new praises of
the spinster.
	Yet, for all that, Rose was really
charming. The young gentleman, it
would seem, hardly knew his own heart;
and he had a wondrous dream that
night. There was a church, (such as
he had seen in the city,) and a delicate-
ly gloved hand, which lay nestling in
his; and Mr. Maverick, oddly enough,
appeared to give away a bride, and all
waited only for the ceremony, which the
Doctor (with his old white hat and cane)
refused to perform; whereat Phils voice
was heard bursting out in a great laugh;
and the face of Rose, too, appeared; but
it was only as a saint upon a painted
window. And yet the face of the saint
upon the window was more distinct than
anything in his dream.
The next morning found Miss Eliza
harsh and cold. Even the constrained
smile with which she had been used to
qualify her good morning for Addle
was wanting; and when the family
prayers were said, in which the good
Doctor had pleaded, with unction, that
the Christian grace of charity might
reign in all hearts, the poor girl had
sidled up to Mfss Eliza, and put her
hand in the spinsters, 
You think our little frolic last night
to be very wrong, I dare say?
	Oh, no, said the spinster. I dare
say Mr. Maverick and your French rela-
tives would approve.
	it was not so much the language as
the tone which smote on poor Adele, and
brought the tears welling into her eyes.
	Reuben, seeing it all, and forgetful of
the good parsons plea, gnawed his lip to
keep back certain very harsh utterances.
	Dont think of it, Ady, said he,
watching his chance a little later; the
old lady is in one of her blue moods to-
day.
	Do you think I did wrong, Reu-
ben? said Addle, earnestly.
	I? Wrong, Addle? Pray, what
should I have to say about the right or
wrong? and I think the old ladies are
beginning to think I have no clear idea
of the difference between them.
	You have, Reuben! you have!
78</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00085" SEQ="0085" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="79">	1866.]	Doctor J?fohns.	79

And, Reuben, (more tenderly,)  I
have promised solemnly to live as you
thought a little while ago that you would
live. And if I were to break my prom-
ise, Reuben, I know that you would
never renew yours.
	I believe you are speaking Gods
truth, Addle, said he.
	The summer months passed by, and
for Addle the little table at the parson-
age had become as bleak and cheerless
as the autumn. Miss Johns maintained
the rigid severity of manner, with which
she had undertaken to treat the outcast
child, with a constancy that would have
clone credit to a worthier intent. Even
the good Doctor was unconsciously op-
pressed by it, and by the spinsters in-
sistence upon the due proprieties was
weaned away from his old tenderness
of speech; but every morning and ev-
ery evening his voice trembled with
emotion as he prayed for Gods grace
and mercy to descend upon all sinners
and outcasts.
	He had written to Maverick, advising
him of the great grief which his confes-
sion had caused him, and imploring him
to make what reparation he yet might
do, by uniting in the holy bonds of mat-
rimony with the erring mother of his
child. He had further advised him that
his apprehensions with regard to Reu-
hen were, so far as was known ,ground-
less. He further wrote,  Upon con-
sultation with Miss Johns, who is still
at the head of our little household, I am
constrained to ask that you take as ear-
ly a time as may be convenient to re-
lieve her of the further care of your
daughter. Age is beginning to tell
somewhat upon my sister; and the em-
barrassment of her position with respect
to Addle is a source, I believe, of great
mental distress.
	All which the good Doctor honest-
ly believed,  upon Miss Elizas aver-
ment,  and in his own honest way he
assured his friend, that, though his sins
were as scarlet, he should still implore
Heaven in his favor, and should part
from AdNe  whenever the parting
might come  with real grief, and with
an outpouring of his heart.
	As for Reuben, a wanton levity had
come over him in those latter days of
summer that galled the poor Doctor to
the quick, and that strangely perplexed
the observant spinster. It was not the
mischievous spirit of his boyhood re-
vived again, but a cold, passionless, de-
termined levity, such as men wear who
have secret griefs to conceal. He talk-
ed in a free and easy way about the
Doctors Sunday discourses, that fairly
shocked the old people of the parish;
rumor said that he had passed some
unhallowed jokes with the stolid Deacon
Tourtelot about his official duties; and
it was further reported that he had talk-
ed open infidelity with a young physi-
cian who had recently established him-
self in Ashfield, and who plumed himself
until his tardy practice taught him bet-
ter  upon certain arrogant physiologi-
cal notions with regard to death and dis-
ease that were quite unbiblical. Long
ago the Doctor had given over open
expostulation; every such talk seemed
to evoke a new and more airy and more
adventurous demon in the backslidden
Reuben. The good man half feared to
cast his eye over the hooks he might be
reading. If it were Voltaire, if it were
Hume, he feared lest his rebuke and
anathema should give a more appetiz-
ing zest.
	But he prayed  ah, how he prayed!
with the dead Rachel in his thought 
as if (and this surely cannot be Popish-
ly wicked)  as if she, too, in some
sphere far remote, might with angel
voice add tender entreaty to the prayer,
whose burden, morning after morning
and night after night, was the name and
the hope of her boy.
	And Ad~le? Well, Reuben pitied
Addle,  pitied her subjection to the
iron frowns of Miss Eliza; and almost
the only earnest words he spoke in
those days were little quiet words of
good cheer for the French girl. And
when Miss Eliza whispered him, as
she did, that the poor childs fortune
was gone, and her future insecure, Reu-
ben, with a brave sort of antagonism,
made his words of cheer and good-feel-
ing even more frequent than ever. But</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00086" SEQ="0086" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="80">Wind /lzc Clock.

about his passing and kindly attentions
to Addle there was that air of gay mock-
ery which overlaid his whole life, and
which neither invited nor admitted of
any profound acknowledgment. His
kindest words  and some of them, so
far as mere language went, were exu-
berantly tender  were met always by a
half-saddened air of thankfulness and a
little restrained pressure of the hand, as
if Ad~Ae had said, Not in earnest yet,
Reuben! Earnest in nothing!




WIND THE CLOCK.

WARDEN, wind the clock again;
Mighty years are going on,
Through the shadow and the dream,
And the happy-hearted dawn.
	Wind again, wind again,
Fifty hundred years are gone.

Through the harvest and the need,
Wealthy June and dewy May,
Grew the new year from the old,
Grows to-morrow from to-day.
Wind again, wind again,
Who can keep the years at hay?

Four-and-twenty conjurers
Lie in wait on land and sea,
Plucking down the startled ship,
Bud-embroidering the tree.
Wind again, wind again, 
We have neither ship nor tree.

Four-and-twenty kings to come
Up the never-vacant stair, 
Four-and-twenty dead go down;
Follow, sacred song and prayer.
Wind again, wind again, 
Warden, why delaying there?

To his interrupted dream
Comes the long-entreated day.
What are lesser words to him?
Sweet pursuing voices say, 
Warden, wind, wind again,
Up the ever-golden way.

Other hands will wind the clock
While the frequent years go on,
Never noting need or name
Nor the rapture of the dawn.
Wind again, wind again,
Ere the given year be gone.
8o
[January,</PB></P>
</DIV1>
<DIV1 TYPE="article" DECLS="/moa/atla/atla0017/" ID="ABK2934-0017-11">
<BIBL>
<AUTHOR>Hiram Rich</AUTHOR>
<AUTHORIND>Rich, Hiram</AUTHORIND>
<TITLE TYPE="ART">Wind the Clock</TITLE>
<BIBLSCOPE TYPE="pg">80-81</BIBLSCOPE>
</BIBL>
<P><PB REF="IMG00086" SEQ="0086" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="80">Wind /lzc Clock.

about his passing and kindly attentions
to Addle there was that air of gay mock-
ery which overlaid his whole life, and
which neither invited nor admitted of
any profound acknowledgment. His
kindest words  and some of them, so
far as mere language went, were exu-
berantly tender  were met always by a
half-saddened air of thankfulness and a
little restrained pressure of the hand, as
if Ad~Ae had said, Not in earnest yet,
Reuben! Earnest in nothing!




WIND THE CLOCK.

WARDEN, wind the clock again;
Mighty years are going on,
Through the shadow and the dream,
And the happy-hearted dawn.
	Wind again, wind again,
Fifty hundred years are gone.

Through the harvest and the need,
Wealthy June and dewy May,
Grew the new year from the old,
Grows to-morrow from to-day.
Wind again, wind again,
Who can keep the years at hay?

Four-and-twenty conjurers
Lie in wait on land and sea,
Plucking down the startled ship,
Bud-embroidering the tree.
Wind again, wind again, 
We have neither ship nor tree.

Four-and-twenty kings to come
Up the never-vacant stair, 
Four-and-twenty dead go down;
Follow, sacred song and prayer.
Wind again, wind again, 
Warden, why delaying there?

To his interrupted dream
Comes the long-entreated day.
What are lesser words to him?
Sweet pursuing voices say, 
Warden, wind, wind again,
Up the ever-golden way.

Other hands will wind the clock
While the frequent years go on,
Never noting need or name
Nor the rapture of the dawn.
Wind again, wind again,
Ere the given year be gone.
8o
[January,</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00087" SEQ="0087" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="81">Tue Kingdom (oming.


THE KINGDOM COMING.

IF one looks to the individual for proof
of the power of Christianity, he will
generally look in vain. Creeds differ;
but of persons from the same rank in life,
one is, on the whole, apparently about
as good as another. If we are virtuous
where we are not tempted, liberal in
matters concerning which we are indif-
ferent, reticent when we have nothing
to say,  in one word, pleasant when
we are pleased,  it is all that our best
friends have any reason to expect of us.
What religion does for a man may be
great, and even radical, from his near
point of view; but from the worlds po-
sition it is scarcely visible, and is often
wholly lost in the more palpable influ-
ences of temperament and circumstance.
But when we look at society, we can see
that some silent agency is at work, slow-
ly, but surely, attuning our life to finer
issues than the Golden Ages knew. The
hidden leaven of Christianity is work-
ing its noiseless way through the whole
lump. Christendom is on a higher plane
than Pagando m, and is still ascending.
In the stress of daily life, we are some-
times tempted to lose heart, and cry,
Who shall show us any good for all
this toil and watch and struggle ? 
hut in calmer moments, looking back
over the Difficult Hills, we cannot fail
to see that we have gained ground.
The sacredness of humanity is grad-
ually overtopping the prerogatives of
class. More and more clearly man as-
serts himself; the end of every good,
the standard by which every change is
to be judged. With many an ebb, the
tide of all healthful and helpful force is
flooding our associated life; and the
brotherhood of the race attests itself by
many infallible signs.
	But they are not always nor only
found where they are sought. Work-
manship does not show to the best ad-
vantage in xv orkshops. The din and
whirl of machinery confuse us. We
need to see the wonderful engine in
actual operation, the beautiful orna
	VOL. XVII.  NO. 99.	6
ment fitly placed, before we can decide
finally upon its character. The church-
es have been the workshops of Chris-
tianity. There it has been received,
fused, hammered, polished, fashioned
for all human needs; but nothing less
than the whole world is the true thea-
tre of its activity. Not what it has done
f~r the Church, but what it has done, is
doing, and purposes to do for human-
ity, is the measure of its merit. Not
upon the mitre of the priest, but upon
the bells of the horses, is the millennial
day to see inscribed Holiness unto
the Lord !
	Since, then, the kingdom of God com-
eth not with observation, we need not
look for fearful sights and great signs
in the heavens. They are but false
prophets who cry, Lo, here! or Lo,
there !  when the still, small voice is
whispering all the while, The king-
dom of God is within you. Yes, with-
in this framework of society, in the
midst of this busy, trivial, daily life,
which seems so full of small cares
and selfish seeking, the Divine Spirit
lives and works, and will yet raise it to
the heights of heavenly fellowship. It
breathes in the thousand methods de-
vised by ingenuity to lighten the bur-
dens of labor, by benevolence to soothe
away the bitterness of sorrow, by taste
to beautify the homes of poverty. The
little photograph leaves that flutter
down into every household in the land
are a great cloud of witnesses showing
us that science is but the handmaid of
God, whose service is to bear to all the
blessings once reserved for a class. In
the old time it was only the few who
could fix for future years the beloved
features of a friend. Now eveyy fond
mother may transcribe from birthday
to birthday the face of her darling, to
note its beautiful changes, and every
lowliest bride preserve for her chil-
drens children the bloom of her bud-
ding youth.
	The religious world has hardly learned
i866.~
8i</PB></P>
</DIV1>
<DIV1 TYPE="article" DECLS="/moa/atla/atla0017/" ID="ABK2934-0017-12">
<BIBL>
<AUTHOR>Gail Hamilton</AUTHOR>
<AUTHORIND>Hamilton, Gail</AUTHORIND>
<TITLE TYPE="ART">The Kingdom Coming</TITLE>
<BIBLSCOPE TYPE="pg">81-88</BIBLSCOPE>
</BIBL>
<P><PB REF="IMG00087" SEQ="0087" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="81">Tue Kingdom (oming.


THE KINGDOM COMING.

IF one looks to the individual for proof
of the power of Christianity, he will
generally look in vain. Creeds differ;
but of persons from the same rank in life,
one is, on the whole, apparently about
as good as another. If we are virtuous
where we are not tempted, liberal in
matters concerning which we are indif-
ferent, reticent when we have nothing
to say,  in one word, pleasant when
we are pleased,  it is all that our best
friends have any reason to expect of us.
What religion does for a man may be
great, and even radical, from his near
point of view; but from the worlds po-
sition it is scarcely visible, and is often
wholly lost in the more palpable influ-
ences of temperament and circumstance.
But when we look at society, we can see
that some silent agency is at work, slow-
ly, but surely, attuning our life to finer
issues than the Golden Ages knew. The
hidden leaven of Christianity is work-
ing its noiseless way through the whole
lump. Christendom is on a higher plane
than Pagando m, and is still ascending.
In the stress of daily life, we are some-
times tempted to lose heart, and cry,
Who shall show us any good for all
this toil and watch and struggle ? 
hut in calmer moments, looking back
over the Difficult Hills, we cannot fail
to see that we have gained ground.
The sacredness of humanity is grad-
ually overtopping the prerogatives of
class. More and more clearly man as-
serts himself; the end of every good,
the standard by which every change is
to be judged. With many an ebb, the
tide of all healthful and helpful force is
flooding our associated life; and the
brotherhood of the race attests itself by
many infallible signs.
	But they are not always nor only
found where they are sought. Work-
manship does not show to the best ad-
vantage in xv orkshops. The din and
whirl of machinery confuse us. We
need to see the wonderful engine in
actual operation, the beautiful orna
	VOL. XVII.  NO. 99.	6
ment fitly placed, before we can decide
finally upon its character. The church-
es have been the workshops of Chris-
tianity. There it has been received,
fused, hammered, polished, fashioned
for all human needs; but nothing less
than the whole world is the true thea-
tre of its activity. Not what it has done
f~r the Church, but what it has done, is
doing, and purposes to do for human-
ity, is the measure of its merit. Not
upon the mitre of the priest, but upon
the bells of the horses, is the millennial
day to see inscribed Holiness unto
the Lord !
	Since, then, the kingdom of God com-
eth not with observation, we need not
look for fearful sights and great signs
in the heavens. They are but false
prophets who cry, Lo, here! or Lo,
there !  when the still, small voice is
whispering all the while, The king-
dom of God is within you. Yes, with-
in this framework of society, in the
midst of this busy, trivial, daily life,
which seems so full of small cares
and selfish seeking, the Divine Spirit
lives and works, and will yet raise it to
the heights of heavenly fellowship. It
breathes in the thousand methods de-
vised by ingenuity to lighten the bur-
dens of labor, by benevolence to soothe
away the bitterness of sorrow, by taste
to beautify the homes of poverty. The
little photograph leaves that flutter
down into every household in the land
are a great cloud of witnesses showing
us that science is but the handmaid of
God, whose service is to bear to all the
blessings once reserved for a class. In
the old time it was only the few who
could fix for future years the beloved
features of a friend. Now eveyy fond
mother may transcribe from birthday
to birthday the face of her darling, to
note its beautiful changes, and every
lowliest bride preserve for her chil-
drens children the bloom of her bud-
ding youth.
	The religious world has hardly learned
i866.~
8i</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00088" SEQ="0088" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="82">	82	The Kingdom coming.	[January,

to look for its millennium in the horse-
cars. Nevertheless, its signs are there,
not to be mistaken. The poor sew-
ing-woman feels their presence, if she
does not trace them to their source.
The humble invalid knows them, the
domestic drudge, the ailing, puny child,
the swart and stalwart workman, who
ride their one or ten miles as swiftly
and smoothly as a millionnaire, and are
set down at shop or home, or among
the freshness and fragrance and song
of the beautiful country. The horse-
car is the poor mans private carriage,
as carefully fashioned for his conven-
ience, as tidy and comfortable and come-
ly, as if it cost him hundreds of dollars,
instead of the daily sixpence. With a
lifted finger he commands his coachman,
who waits promptly on his wish. With-
out care, he is cared for. Without cap-
ital, he controls capital. Free society
does more for him than the richest des-
pot does for the enslaved people whom
the instinct of self-preservation forces
him to cajole, and does it, too, without
any infringement upon his manhood.
XVe call it energy, enterprise, modern
conveniences. It is the millennium.
	But these matters are under full
headway. Science and self-interest have
taken them in hand, and there is no
danger that they will not be carried out
to their farthest beneficial limits. There
is another measure just struggling into
uncertain life,  a measure which may
be helped by attention, and hindered by
neglect,  a measure that appeals less
directly to self-advantage, but which is
yet so fraught with good or evil, accord-
ing as it is carefully studied, clearly un-
derstood, and wisely managed, or suf-
fered to fail through inattention, or to
lead an irregular, riotous life for a few
years and then to be abated as a nui-
sance, that we cannot safely pass it by.
I refer. to the movement making itself
felt in various ways, but aiming always
to give more leisure to the working
classes. In one phase, it is seeking to
reduce the hours of daily la~bor; in an-
other, it is trying to close the shops on
Saturday afternoons. In both, it is a
step so radically in the right direction,
that we can but give thanks for the op-
portunity, while we tremble lest it may
not be firmly and wisely laid hold of.
In planning for human weal, one is met
on every side by the want of leisure.
Every day and every hour comes so
burdened with its material necessities,
that the wants of heart and mind and
spirit can find no adequate gratification.
The work goes on satisfactorily; wealth
accumulates; farms are well tilled;
mechanism beeomes more and more
exquisite; but drunkenness, profligacy,
stupidity, insanity, and crime under-
mine the man, for whom all these things
are and were created, and to whom
they ought to bring wisdom and power
and peace. Thus our boasted improve-
ments become our folly. All labor-
saving machinery that does not save
labor in the sense of giving leisure, that
merely increases the quantity or im-
proves the quality of that which is pro-
duced, but does not redound to the im-
provement of the producer, rather con-
tributes to his degradation, has some-
where a fatal flaw. Mind may legiti-
mately fashion matter into a machine
but when it would reduce mind also to
the same level, it steps beyond its prov-
ince. When it fails to continue through
the sphere of mind the impulse it com-
municates to matter,  when its benefit
stops with fabric, falling short of the
man who stands over it,  it lags be-
hind its mission, and is so far unsuc-
cessful.
	The movement for diminishing the
number of laboring hours has already
been brought before the notice of the
Massachusetts Legislature,  has been
made the subject of careful and exten-
sive inquiry by a special committee,
who have returned a report so able, el-
oquent, and convincing as to leave little
to be said in that direction, and is
now, for closer and more exhaustive
investigation, in the hands of a com-
mittee whose names are a guaranty that
nothing will be left undone to secure a
just and righteous decision, for which
let all Christian people devoutly pray.
In the intelligence and virtue of its work-
ingmen lies the hope of the Republic.</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00089" SEQ="0089" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="83">The Kingdom Corning.

If the proposed change shall tend to
promote that intelligence and virtue, it
will be the part of true patriotism to
effect it. Whether this particular means
be or be not the wisest for the end in
view, the path of the higher life unques-
tionably lies in this direction. The ac-
complishment of the greatest results
with the least outlay of time and toil is
the problem in physical science. With
the leisure and strength thus redeemed
from lower needs, to build up a royal
manhood is the problem of moral sci-
ence.
	The Saturday half-holiday is less an
affair of law and legislature, depends
more upon private men.and women, but
is of scarcely less importance. It is
not to be disguised that there are diffi-
culties and dangers attending the plan.
It is as yet probably regarded only as
an experiment, though certain classes
of mercantile men have been trying it
for years, with what satisfaction their
persistence in it indicates. Undoubt-
edly there are many young men who
misspend their holiday, and many more
who do not know what to do with it,
and who will finally fall into mischief
through sheer idleness. The hours drag
so heavily, that they half conclude they
would about as soon be at work as at
liberty with nothing to do. Possibly
there are more who abuse their holiday
than use it advantageously. But just
as far as this trouble extends, so far it
shows, not the harm of leisure, but the
sore straits we have been brought to for
lack of it. There is no sadder result
of the disuse of a faculty than the de-
cadence of that faculty. Time is the es-
sential gift of God to man  essential
not merely to providing for his physical
wants, but to forming his character, to
developing his powers, to cultivating
his taste, to elevating his life. Is it,
then, that he has devoted so dispropor-
tionate a share of that time to one of its
uses, and that not the noblest, that he
has lost the desire and the ability to
devote any of it to its higher uses?
Have young men given themselves to
buying and selling till they have no in-
terest in books, in Nature, in Art, in
manly sport and exercise? Then sure-
ly it behooves us at once to change all
this. No man can have a well-balanced
mind, a good judgment, who is inter-
ested in nothing but his business. If,
when released from that for a half-day
each week, he is listless, aimless, dis-
contented, it is a sure sign that undue
devotion to it has corroded his powers,
and is making havoc of his finer organ-
ization.
	It is to be feared that many of our
young men do not know what recrea-
tion means. They confound it with
riot. Fierce driving, hard drinking, vio-
lence, and vice they understand; but with
quiet, refining, soothing, and strengthen-
ing divers ions they have small acquaint-
ance. This is very largely the fault of
the community in which they live. Do
Christian families in our large cities feel
the obligations which they are under
towards the young men who come
among them? I believe that a very
large part of the immorality, the irrelig-
ion, the skepticism and crime into which
young men fall is due to their being so
coidly and cruelly let alone by Christian
families. A boy comes up from the
country, where every one knows him
and greets him, into the solitude of the
great city. He has left home behind.
him, and finds no new home to receive
him. When he is released from his.
work in shop or counting-room, nothing
more inviting awaits him than the silent
room in the dreary boarding-house. He
misses suddenly, and at a most sensitive
age, the graces and unthinking kind-
nesses of home, the thousand little teas-
ings and pettings, the common interests
and tendernesses, that he never thought
of till he lost them. He is surrounded,
by men and boys all bent on their
several ways. He must have amuse-
ment. It is as necessary to him as
daily food. XVhat wonder, then, if he
accepts the first that offers ? And if
Satan, as usual, is beforehand with his
invitations, what shall hir~der him from
following Satan? The saloon, warmed
and lighted, and enlivened with music
or merry talk, is more attractive than
the dingy, solitary room; and if his
1866.]
83</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00090" SEQ="0090" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="84">The Kingdom (~wning.	[January,
84

feet do slip now and then, who is the
worse for it? He will never write it
home, and there is nobody in the city
who will discover it; provided he is
prompt at his business, no one will
meddle with his leisure hours. And if
full-grown men are found to need the
restraining influences of wife and child
and neighbor, and to plunge into bru-
tality whenever they form a community
by themselves, what can prevent boys,
when cast adrift, from drifting into sin?
Genius is supreme, but genius is the
heritage of but few; while passion and
appetite, love of society and amusement,
need of watchfulness and susceptibility
to temptation, belong to all. I dont
like ~vine, said a young man,  I hate
the taste of it; but what am I to do?
A lot of fellows carousing is nt the best
thing in the world; but I cant stay mop-
ing in my room alone all the time.
There s my violin. Well, I took it
cut once or twice, but it was no go.
When I could go into the parlor after
sdpper, and mother round, and Bess to
sing, it ~vas worth while ; but there is
no fun in fiddling to yourself by whole-
sale. Besides, I suppose it bores the
rest to have a fellow sawing a~ay.
And this was a fine, handsome, healthy
young man, all ready to be made a
warm friend, a patriotic citizen, a pure
and happy man, and just as ready to
become a reckless, dissipated, sorrow-
bringing failure. And, alas! where were
the hands that should have helped him?
Alas! alas ! what are the hands that
will ito! be backward to lay hold on
him?
	If any holiday is to be made useful,
if young men are to be saved from ruin,
saved to their mothers and sisters and
wives, saved to themselves, to their
country, and to God, Christian people
must bestir themselves. Young Mens
Christian Associations may be ever so
efficient, but they cannot do everything.
The work that is to he done cannot be
wrought by associations alone, nor by
young men, nor by any men. It needs
fathers and mothers and sons and
daughtei-s and firesides. The only way
to keep boys from the haunts of vice is
to open to them the haunts of virtue.
Give them access to loving families, to
happy homes. Nothing can supply this
want. No attendance at any church is
to be for a moment compared to attend-
ance at the sacred shrine of an affection-
ate family. But when, a little while ago,
a young man; who had been for years a
clerk in Boston, was asked in how many
families he was acquainted, he replied
quickly, Not one. Yet he was a
member of an Orthodox Congregation-
al Church, which, I take it, is to be as
good as anybody can be in this world,
and a regular attend ant upon religious
services in one of the most influential
Orthodox churches in Boston. Sunday
after Sunday he occupied his seat, yet
neither pastor nor people  not one of
all that great congregation  ever took
him by the hand and constrained him
to sit by their hearthstones, ever wel-
comed him to the warmth and gladness
and gentle endearments of their homes.
What is the communion of saints? If
that young man had brought a letter of
introduction from some distinguished
person, would they have thus let him
go in and out among them unnoticed
and uncared for? But to church-mem-
bers, surely, a certificate of church-
membership ought to be as weighty as
a letter of introduction. A Christian
church should be so managed that it
should be impossible for any attendant
upon its services to escape observation;
and it should be so trained to its so-
cial duties that every person who takes
shelter in its sanctuary should at least
U

have the opportunity to find shelter in
its homes. I think it would be well,
even, that those who are present at a
single church service should be cour-
teously noticed and encouraged to re-
peat the visit. If the church is indeed
Gods house, let the servants of the Mas-
ter dispense His hospitalities in such
a manner as befits His djyine charac-
ter, remembering that the world judges
of Him through them. Let fathers and
mothers be on the watch to speak kind-
ly words to such homeless wanderers
as may roam within the circle of their
influence. If a stranger is introduced</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00091" SEQ="0091" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="85">	i866.]	The Kingdom coming.
85
into the family pew, let him be no longer
a stranger, but a guest. Let him not
remain during the service and pass out
at its close without some brotherly or
fatherly recognition, without some as-
surance by word or look or little atten-
tion that his presence there gave pleas-
ure. This is a beginning of home feel-
ing..
	It would be a fit thing, if every coun
try pastor should give to every boy who
leaves his parish a letter of introduction
to some clergyman in the city whither
he is going, so that there should be no
interregnum,  no time when the boy
should be utterly unfriended, loosed
from restraint, and a prey to unclean
and hateful things. But this is not
done, and we should not wait for it.
The Prince of Evil never stands upon
etiquette. He is instant in season and
out of season; and those who would
circumvent him must be equally prqmpt
and vigilant. The Church should weave
its meshes of watchful care and love and
friendship so close that nobody can slip
through unseen.
	A duty rests upon all merchants and
tradesmen, upon all, indeed, who employ
clerks or apprentices, which is not dis-
charged when their quarterly payments
are made. A man is in some sense
the father of the young men whom he
employs, and he should do them father-
ly service. It is not possible to enter
into relations with any human being
without at the same time incurring re-
sponsibility concerning him. How much
might be done for young men, if mer-
chants would feel a domestic as well as
a mercantile interest in them! It may
not be advisable to renew the old cus-
tom of making clerks and apprentices
members of the family; but surely the
pleasantly lighted parlor, with its pic-
tures, its piano, its little sheltered win-
dow-nooks, its agreeable daughters, its
matronly add dignified m other, may he
made a Mecca for the homesick young
pilgrim, without any sacrifice that shall
seem too great to the followers of Him
~vho laid down the glory which He had
with the Father before the world was,
for nothing but that He might save sin-
ners. Is it a dangerous thing to intro-
duce strangers into a young family?
But is the character that is not good
enough for the drawing-room quite safe
and harmless in the counting-room? If
merchants, master mechanics, and em-
ployers generally, would set a premium
upon integrity and good manners, those
qualities would not long be found want-
ing. Incalculable is the influence which
these civilizing surroundings would have
upon a susceptihie boy. Only let them
come in early. Do not wait till sin has
thrown out its more brilliant and showy
lures, and then attempt to tear him away
from them already half polluted; but
while his soul is yet unstained, while,
lonely, inexperienced, self- distrustful,
he is ready to be moulded by the first
skilful touch, let it come from the wise
hands of honorable and responsible
men whose position gives weight to
their opinions, from the gentle hands
of motherly women, and merry, guile-
less girls. Provide,  even if it be at
the cost of a little pains, a little sacri-
fice of the quiet and seclusion of home,
 provide for his youth its fitting and
innocent delights, that sinful pleasures
may not seize him and hold him in their
destructive clutch. The good which
the merchant does to his clerks will re-
dound to the good of his own children.
There is probably as much intelligence
and virtue and youthful promise among
his clerks as among his sons and daugh-
ters ; and what the former receive of
home the latter receive in variety and
relish. The influence of man upon
woman, also, is just as healthful as
that of woman upon man; for both are
in the order of Nature. The brothers
and sisters will dance to their mothers
playing all the more gleefully for a
stranger or two in the set; and Mary
will enter with fresher zest into the
game of cards, because Mr. Gordon is
her partner instead of that provoking
Harry. And it is not whist nor dancing
that harms young people. It is out-
lawry. Whist does not lead to gain-
bling. Dancing does not lead to dis-
sipation. It is playing cards on the
sly that leads to gambling. It is hay-</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00092" SEQ="0092" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="86">Tue Kingdom coming.

ing to get out of the way of ministers,
and church-members, and all religious
people, when dancing is to be done, that
leads to dissipation. It is loneliness,
want of interest and amusement, any
unjust and unnatural restriction, that
leads to all manner of wild and bois-
terous and vicious amusements, which
prey upon the soul. If to a young man,
on his first coming to the city, there
open only so many as two or three
houses, where he can now and then find
welcome admittance,  where are two
or three excellent women who exercise
a gentle jurisdiction over him, who will
notice if his eye be heavy or his cheek
pale, who will administer, upon occa-
sion, a little sweet motherly chiding,
mend a rent in his gloves, advise in
the choice of a neck-tie, and call upon
him occasionally for trifling service or
attendance,  where he can find a few
hot-headed, perhaps; but well-fathered
and well-mothered boys, who have the
same headstrong will, the same fierce
likes and dislikes, the same temptations
and weaknesses as himself, but who are
saved from disaster by gentle, hut firm
authority, and constant, yet scarcely per-
ceptible influence,  a. few bright girls,
who will sing and dance and talk with
him, and pique and tease and tantalize
him,  how infinitely are the chances
multiplied against his ever turning aside
into the debasing saloon He natu-
rally likes purity better than impurity.
The breath of innocence is sweeter than
the fumes of poisoned wine. The in-
terests of a man at whose table he sits,
whose children are his companions,
whose wife is his friend and confidant,
will be far nearer to him than those
of one whom he rarely sees and little
knows. Something of the atmosphere
of home will cling to office-walls, and
soften the sharp outlines and sweeten
the unfiagrant air of perpetual traffic
and self- seeking. The society of pure
and sprightly girls will be a constant
inducement to keep himself sprightly
and pure. Reading, studying, riding,
singing, driving, boating, with well-
bred and high - hearted young friends,
will give plentiful outlet to his animal
spirits, plentiful gratification to his so-
cial wants, plentiful food for his mental
hunger; and while he is thus enjoying
the pleasures which are but the lawful
dues of his spring-time, he will be all
the while becoming more and more wor-
thy of love and respect, more and more
fitted to bear, in his turn, the burdens
of Church and State. And if; in spite
of it all, his feet are still swift to do evil,
it will be a satisfaction to those who have
thus striven for his welfare to know that
his blood is not on them nor on their
children.
	There are other things to he taken
into account. The leisure of Saturday
afternoon must, it would seem, conduce
greatly to quiet Sundays. When young
men are confined six long days behind
the counter, it is but natural that on the
seventh they should give themselves to
merry-makin~. For, let it be remember-
ed, sport is as natural, yes, and as ne-
cessary, to youth as worship; and in
the order of human development, it
comes first. It is very hard to say to
a boy, You have been writing, and
weighing, and measuring all the week.
Now the sun is shining, the birds are
singing, the flowers blooming, the river
sparkling, and hoat and horse await your
hand, but you must turn away from them
all and go to church. You have been
boxed up for six days, and now you must
be boxed up again. There are no fresh
airs, no summer sounds for you; but
only noise and dust and pavements all
the days of your life. It happens, at
any rate, that there is no use in saying
this; for young blood overleaps it all,
and city suburbs resound on Sunday
with the clatter of hoofs and the rattle
of wheels; and no one need be surpris-
ed, who has any acquaintance with hu-
man nature on the one side, or any con-
ception of the irksomeness of continued
confinement on the other. It would, in-
deed, be a very strange, anti, I think, a
very sad thing, if young people were
willing to let suns rise, and stars set,
and all the beautiful changes of Nature
go on, without an irresistible, instinctive
prompting to fly from the grave mono-
tone of the city, and live and breathe in
86
[January,</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00093" SEQ="0093" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="87">i866.]	The Kingdom Coming.
her freshness and her song. If a young
man must choose between play of mus-
cle, swiftness of motion, the free air of
the hills, and sitting in church to hear
a sermon, he will often choose the for-
mer; and if he cannot enjoy these things
without going in opposition to the best
sense of the community, if they cannot
be compassed without a certain con-
sciousness of wrong - doing, they will
lead to recklessness and.lawlessness;
for be compassed, they will.
	But let the young men have Saturday
afternoon for their boating and bowling
and various pastimes, and they will be
far more disposed to heir what the min-
ister has to say on Sunday,  far more
disposed, let us hope, to join in prayer
and praise. One very obvious and prac-
tical consideration is, that many of
them, probably the larger part, can
spend on a single holiday all the holi-
day money they have to spend. So
there will be nothing for it but to stay
at home on Sunday by force of the res
angustce doini. But, also, is it too much
to believe, that, the half-day having given
them that physical exercise, amusement,
and change which they need, Sunday
will find them the more ready to absorb
and appropriate spiritual nourishment?
that bodily and mental recreation will
prepare them for religious recreation?
I have said that sport is as natural and
necessary as worship. But, on the other
hand, worship is as natural as sport.
Very few, I think, are the persons,
young or old, in all of whose thoughts
it may be said God is not. And if this
natural, spontaneous turning to God
were not interfered with by our perni-
cious modes of training and manage-
ment, we should not become so fearful-
ly alienated from Him. Play and work
and worship would be animated by one
spirit. Many surely there are who xvould
be more likely to devote a part of their
Sunday to the direct worship of God,
and to a more intimate knowledge of
His works and words, who would be
more likely to come under the influence
of the Bible and the pulpit, from having
had opportunity first to free their lungs
87
from the foul air, and their limbs from
the lifelessness, which a long confine-
ment to business had caused. At least
let us not tempt any to make Sunday a
day of fun and frolic, by giving them no
other day for their fun and frolic. Pro-
vide things honest in the sight of all men.
	Women can do much towards bring-
ing about this holiday, and towards
keeping it intact when it is once se-
cured. Let every woman make a point
of doing no shopping on Saturday af-
ternoons. A very little forethought
will prevent any inconvenience from
the deprivation. If a tradesman choos-
es to keep his shop open on Saturdays,
when others of the same kind are shut,
let every woman take care not only not
to enter it on that day, but on any day.
And in order that the holiday may begin
as promptly as the working-day, women
should not put off their purchases till
the last minute before closing. If the
shops are to be shut at two oclock, let
no one enter them after one, except in
case of emergency. If the clerks have
to take down goods from their shelves,
overhaul box and drawer, and unroll
and unfold and derange till the time for
closing arrives, an hour or an hour and
a half of their holiday must be con-
sumed in the work of putting the store
in order. Let this last hour of the
working-week be spent in arrangement,
not in derangement. Be ashamed to
ask a clerk to disturb a shelf which he
has jnst set in Sunday order. Let the
young men be ready, so that, when the
clock strikes the hour of release, release
may come.
	Many of the shops are advertised
to be closed on Saturday afternoons
through the summer. But there are
just as many hours to the day and just
as many days to the week in winter as
in summer; and the ice and snow and
sleigh-bells of January are just as fas-
cinating and as exhilarating and invig-
orating as the rivers and roses of June.
Therefore it is to be hoped the half-
holiday will not migrate with the birds,
but remain and become a permanent
national institution.</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00094" SEQ="0094" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="88">	The Chimney-Center for 1866.	[January,



THE CHIMNEY-CORNER FOR i866.

BEING A FAMILY-TALK ON RECONSTRUCTION.

OUR Chimney-Corner, of which we
have spoken somewhat, has, be-
sides the wonted domestic circle, its
liabztues who have a frequent seat there.
Among these, none is more welcome
than Theophilus Thoro.
	Friend Theophilus was born on the
shady side of Nature, and endowed by
his patron saint with every grace and
gift which can make a human creature
worthy and available, except the gift of
seeing the bright side of things. His
head-roll of Christian virtues includes all
the graces of the spirit except hope; and
so, if one wants to know exactly the
flaw, the defect, the doubtful side, and to
take into account all the untoward pos-
sibilities of any person, place, or thing,
be had best apply to friend Theophi-
lus. He can tell you just where and bow
the best-laid scheme is likely to fail, just
the screw that will fall loose in the
smoothest-working machinery, just the
flaw in the most perfect character, just
the defect in the best-written book, just
the variety of thorn that must accom-
pany each particular species of rose.
	Yet Theophilus is without guile or
malice. His want df faith in human
nature is not bitter and censorious, but
melting and pitiful. We are all poor
trash, miserable dogs together, be
seems to say, as he looks out on the
world and its ways. There is not much
to be expected of or for any of us; but
let us love one another, and be patient.
	Accordingly, Theophilus is one of the
most incessant workers for human good,
and perseveringly busy in every scheme
of benevolent enterprise, in all which
be labors with melancholy steadiness
without hope. In religion he has the
soul of a martyr,  nothing would suit
him better than to be burned alive for
his faith ; but his belief in the suc-
cess of Christianity is about on a par
with that of the melancholy disciple
of old, who, when Christ would go to
J ud~ea, could only say, Let us also
go, that we may die with him. The-
ophilus is always ready to die for the
truth and the right, for which he never
sees anything but defeat and destruc-
tion ahead.
	During the late war, Theophilus has
been a despairing patriot, dying daily,
and giving all up for lost in every re-
verse from Bull Run to Fredericks-
burg. The surrender of Richmond and
the capitulation of Lee shortened his
visage somewhat.; but the murder of
the President soon brought it back to
its old length. It is true, that, while Lin-
coln lived, he was in a perpetual state
of dissent from all his measures. He
had broken his heart for years over the
miseries of the slaves, but he shudder-
ed at the Emancipation Proclamation;
a whirlwind of anarchy was about to
sweep over the country, in which the
black and the white would dash against
each other and be shivered like potters
vessels. He was in despair at the ac-
cession of Johnson, believing the worst
of the unfavorable reports that clouded
his reputation. Nevertheless he was
among the first of loyal citizens to rally
to the support of the new administra-
tion, because, though he had nd hope
in that, he could see nothing better.
	You must not infer from all this that
friend Theophilus is a social wet blan-
ket, a goblin shadow at the domestic
hearth. By no means. Nature has gift-
ed him with that vein of humor and that
impulse to friendly joviality which are
frequent developments in sad - natured
men, and often deceive superficial ob-
servers as to their real character. He
who laughs well and makes you laugh
is often called a man of cheerful dispo-
sition; yet in many cases nothing can
be farther from it than precisely this
kind of person.
	Theophilus frequents our chimney-
corner, perhaps because Mrs. Crow-
88</PB></P>
</DIV1>
<DIV1 TYPE="article" DECLS="/moa/atla/atla0017/" ID="ABK2934-0017-13">
<BIBL>
<AUTHOR>Mrs. H. B. Stowe</AUTHOR>
<AUTHORIND>Stowe, H. B., Mrs.</AUTHORIND>
<TITLE TYPE="ART">The Chimney-Corner for 1866.  I</TITLE>
<BIBLSCOPE TYPE="pg">88-100</BIBLSCOPE>
</BIBL>
<P><PB REF="IMG00094" SEQ="0094" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="88">	The Chimney-Center for 1866.	[January,



THE CHIMNEY-CORNER FOR i866.

BEING A FAMILY-TALK ON RECONSTRUCTION.

OUR Chimney-Corner, of which we
have spoken somewhat, has, be-
sides the wonted domestic circle, its
liabztues who have a frequent seat there.
Among these, none is more welcome
than Theophilus Thoro.
	Friend Theophilus was born on the
shady side of Nature, and endowed by
his patron saint with every grace and
gift which can make a human creature
worthy and available, except the gift of
seeing the bright side of things. His
head-roll of Christian virtues includes all
the graces of the spirit except hope; and
so, if one wants to know exactly the
flaw, the defect, the doubtful side, and to
take into account all the untoward pos-
sibilities of any person, place, or thing,
be had best apply to friend Theophi-
lus. He can tell you just where and bow
the best-laid scheme is likely to fail, just
the screw that will fall loose in the
smoothest-working machinery, just the
flaw in the most perfect character, just
the defect in the best-written book, just
the variety of thorn that must accom-
pany each particular species of rose.
	Yet Theophilus is without guile or
malice. His want df faith in human
nature is not bitter and censorious, but
melting and pitiful. We are all poor
trash, miserable dogs together, be
seems to say, as he looks out on the
world and its ways. There is not much
to be expected of or for any of us; but
let us love one another, and be patient.
	Accordingly, Theophilus is one of the
most incessant workers for human good,
and perseveringly busy in every scheme
of benevolent enterprise, in all which
be labors with melancholy steadiness
without hope. In religion he has the
soul of a martyr,  nothing would suit
him better than to be burned alive for
his faith ; but his belief in the suc-
cess of Christianity is about on a par
with that of the melancholy disciple
of old, who, when Christ would go to
J ud~ea, could only say, Let us also
go, that we may die with him. The-
ophilus is always ready to die for the
truth and the right, for which he never
sees anything but defeat and destruc-
tion ahead.
	During the late war, Theophilus has
been a despairing patriot, dying daily,
and giving all up for lost in every re-
verse from Bull Run to Fredericks-
burg. The surrender of Richmond and
the capitulation of Lee shortened his
visage somewhat.; but the murder of
the President soon brought it back to
its old length. It is true, that, while Lin-
coln lived, he was in a perpetual state
of dissent from all his measures. He
had broken his heart for years over the
miseries of the slaves, but he shudder-
ed at the Emancipation Proclamation;
a whirlwind of anarchy was about to
sweep over the country, in which the
black and the white would dash against
each other and be shivered like potters
vessels. He was in despair at the ac-
cession of Johnson, believing the worst
of the unfavorable reports that clouded
his reputation. Nevertheless he was
among the first of loyal citizens to rally
to the support of the new administra-
tion, because, though he had nd hope
in that, he could see nothing better.
	You must not infer from all this that
friend Theophilus is a social wet blan-
ket, a goblin shadow at the domestic
hearth. By no means. Nature has gift-
ed him with that vein of humor and that
impulse to friendly joviality which are
frequent developments in sad - natured
men, and often deceive superficial ob-
servers as to their real character. He
who laughs well and makes you laugh
is often called a man of cheerful dispo-
sition; yet in many cases nothing can
be farther from it than precisely this
kind of person.
	Theophilus frequents our chimney-
corner, perhaps because Mrs. Crow-
88</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00095" SEQ="0095" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="89">Tue C/iimncy-(~orner for i866.

field and myself are, so to speak, chil-
dren of the light and the day. My wife
has precisely the opposite talent to that
of our friend. She can discover the
good point, the sound spot, where oth-
ers see only defect and corruption. I
myself am somewhat sanguine, and
prone rather to expect good than evil,
and with a vast stock of faith in the
excellent things that may turn up in
the future. The Millennium is one of
the prime articles of my creed; and all
the ups and downs of society I regard
only as so many jolts on a very rough
road that is taking the world on, through
many upsets and disasters, to that final
consummation.
	Theophilus holds the same belief, the-
oretically; hut it is apt to sink so far
out of sight in the mire of present dis-
aster as to be of very little comfort to
him.
	Yes, he said, we are going to
ruin, in my view, about as fast as we
can go. Miss Jennie, I will trouble you
for another small lump of sugar in my
tea.
	You have been saying that, about
our going to ruin, every time you have
taken tea here for four years past, said
Jennie; but I always noticed that your
fears never spoiled your relish either
for tea or muffins. People talk about
being on the brink of a volcano, and
the country going to destruction, and
all that, just as they put pepper on their
potatoes it is an agreeable stimulant
in conversation,  that s all.
	For my part, said my wife, I can
speak in another vein. When had we
ever in all our history so brz~/zt pros-
pects, so much to be thankful for? Sla-
very is abolished ; the last stain of dis-
grace is wiped from our national honor.
We stand now before the world self-con-
sistent with our principles. We have
come out of one of the severest strug-
gles that ever tried a nation, purer
and stronger in morals and religion, as
well as more prosperous in material
things.
	My dear Madam, excuse me, said
Theophilus; but I cannot help being
reminded of what an English reviewer
once said,  that a ladys facts have as
much poetry in them as Tom Moores
lyrics. Of course poetry is always agree-
able, even though of no statistical val-
ue.
	I see no poetry in my facts, said
Mrs. Crowfield. Is not slavery for-
ever abolished, by the confession of its
best friends,  even of those who de-
clare its abolition a misfortune, and
themselves ruined in consequence ?
	I confess, my dear Madam, that we
have succeeded as we human creatures
commonly do, in supposing that we have
destroyed an evil, when we have only
changed its name. We have contrived
to withdraw from the slave just that fic-
tion of property relation which made it
for the interest of some one to care for
him a little, however imperfectly; and
having destroyed that, we turn him out
defenceless to shift for himself in a com-
munity every member of which is em-
bittered against him. The whole South
resounds with the outcries of slaves suf-
fering the vindictive wrath of former
masters; laws are being passed hunting
them out of this State and out of that;
the animosity of race  at all times the
most bitter and irnreasonable of ani-
mosities  is being aroused all over
the land. And the Free States take
the lead in injustice to them. Witness
the late vote of Connecticut on the suf-
frage question. The efforts of Govern-
ment to protect the rights of these poor
defenceless creatures are about as ener-
getic as such efforts always have been
and always will be while human nature
remains what it is. For a while the
obvious rights of the weaker party will
be confessed, with some show of con-
sideration, in public speeches; they will
be paraded by philanthropic sentimen-
talists, to give point to their eloquence;
they will be here and there sustained in
Governmental measures, when there is
no strong temptation to the contrary,
and nothing better to be done; but the
moment that political combinations be-
gin to be formed, all the rights and in-.
terests of this helpless people will be
bandied about, as so many make-weights
in the political scale. Any troublesome
1866.1
89</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00096" SEQ="0096" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="90">	The Chimney-Corner for i866.	[January,
90
lion will have a negro thrown to him to
keep him quiet. All their hopes will be
dashed to the ground by the imperious
Southern white, no longer feeling for
them even the interest of a master, and
regarding them with a mixture of hatred
and loathing as the cause of all his re-
verses. Then, if; driven to despair, they
seek to defend themselves by force, they
will he crushed by the power of the Gov-
ernment, and ground to powder, as the
weak have always been under the heel
of the strong.
	So much for our abolition of slavery.
As to our material prosperity, it consists
of an inflated paper currency, an im-
mense debt, a giddy, fool-hardy spirit of
speculation and stock-gambling, and a
perfect furor of extravagance, which is
driving everybody to live beyond his
means, and casting contempt on the re-
publican virtues of simplicity and econ-
omy.
	As to advancement in morals, there
never was so much intemperance in
our people hefore, and the papers are
full of accounts of frauds, defalcations,
forgeries, robberies, assassinations, and
arsons. Against this tide of corruption
the various organized denominations
of religion do nothing effectual. They
are an army shut up within their own
intrenchments, holding their own with
difficulty, and in no situation to turn
hack the furious assaults of the ene-
my.
	In short, said Jennie, according
to your showing, the whole country is
going to destruction. Now, if things
really are so bad, if you really believe
all you have heen saying, you ought
not to be sitting drinking your tea as
you are now, or to have spent the after-
noon playing croquet with us girls; you
ought to gird yourself with sackcloth,
and go up and down the land, raising
the alarm, and saying, Yet forty days
and Nineveh shall be overthrown.
	Well, said Theophilus, while a
covert smile played about his lips, you
know the saying, Let us eat and drink,
for to-morrow, etc. Things are not yet
gone to destruction, only going,  and
why not have a good time on deck
before the ship goes to pieces? Your
chimney-corner is a tranquil island in
the ocean of trouble, and your muffins
are absolutely perfect. I 11 take anoth-
er, if you 11 please to pass them.
	I ye a great mind not to pass
them, said Jennie. Are you in ear-
nest in what you are saying? or are
you only saying it for sensation? How
can people believe such things and he
comfortable? I could not. If I be-
lieved all you have been saying, I could
not sleep nights,  I should be perfect-
ly miserable; and you cannot really be-
lieve all this, or you would be.
	My dear child, said Mrs. Crowfield,
our friends picture is the truth paint-
ed with all its shadow and none of its
lights. All the dangers he speaks of
are real and great, but he omits the
counterbalancing good. Let me speak
now. There never has been a time in
our history when so many honest and
just men held power in our land as now,
 never a government before in which
the public councils recognized with more
respect the just and the right. There
never was an instance of a powerful
government showing more tenderness
in the protection of a weak and defence-
less race than ours has shown in the
care of the freedmen hitherto. There
never was a case in which the people
of a country were more willing to give
money and time and disinterested labor
to raise and educate those who have
thus been thrown on their care. Con-
sidering that we have had a great, har-
assing, and expensive war on our hands,
I think the amount done by Govern-
ment and individuals for the freedmen
unequalled in the history of nations;
and I do not know why it should be
predicted from this past fact, that, in
the future, both Government and peo-
ple are about to throw them to the lions,
as Mr. Theophilus supposes. Let us
wait, at least, and see. So long as Gov-
ernment maintains a freedmens bureau,
administered by men of such high moral
character, we must think, at all events,
that there are strong indications in the
right direction. Just think of the im-
mense advance of public opinion within</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00097" SEQ="0097" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="91">	i866.]

four years, and of the grand successive
steps of this advance,  Emancipation
in the District of Columbia, the Repeal
of the Fugitive-Slave Law, the General
Emancipation Act, the Amendment of
the Constitution. All these do not look
as if the black were about to he ground
to powder beneath the heel of the white.
If the negroes are oppressed in the
South, they can emigrate; no laws hold
them; active, industrious laborers will
soon find openings in any part of the
Union.~~
	No, said Theophilus, there will
he black laws like those of Illinois and
Tennessee, there will be turbulent up-
risings of the Irish, excited by politi-
cal demagogues, that will bar them out
of Northern States. Besides, as a class,
they wil/ be idle and worthless. It will
not be their fault, but it wiTh be the re-
sult of their slave education. All their
past observation of their masters has
taught them that liberty means licens-
ed laziness, that work means degrada-
tion,  and therefore they will loathe
work, and cherish laziness as the sign
of liberty. Am not I free ? Have I
not as good a right to do nothing as
you.? will be the cry.
	Already the lazy whites, who never
lifted a hand in any useful employment,
begin to raise the cry that niggers
wont work; and I suspect the cry may
not be without reason. Industrious cit-
izens can never be made in a commu-
nity where the higher class think useful
labor a disgrace. The whites will op-
pose the negro in every effort to rise;
they will debar him of every civil and
social right; they will set him the worst
possible example, as they have been do-
ing for hundreds of years; and then
they will hound and hiss at him for be-
ing what they made him. This is the
old track of the world,the good, broad,
reputable road on which all aristocra-
cies and privileged classes have been
always travelling; and it s not likely
that we shall have much of a secession
from it. The Millennium is nt so near
us as that, by a great deal.
	It s all very well arguing from hu-
man selfishness and human sin in that
9

way, said I ; but you cant take up a
newspaper that does nt contain abun-
dant facts to the contrary. Here, now,
 and I turned to the Tribune, is
one item that fell under my eye acci-
dentally, as you were speaking: 
The Superintendent of Freedmens
Affairs in Louisiana, in making up his
last Annual Report, says he has i,952
blacks settled temporarily on 9,650 acres
of land, who last year raised crops to
the value of $ i75,ooo, and that he had
but few worthless blacks under his care,
and that, as a class, the blacks have few-
er vagrants than can be found among any
other class of persons.
	Such testimonies gem the newspa-
pers like stars.
	Newspapers of your way of think-
ing, very likely, said Theophilus; but
if it comes to statistics, I can bring coun-
ter statements, numerous and dire, from
scores of Southern papers, of vagrancy,
laziness, improvidence, and wretched-
ness.
	Probably both are true, said I,
according to the greater or less care
which has been taken of the blacks in
different regions. Left to themselves,
they tend downward, pressed down by
the whole weight of semi - barbarous
white society; but when the free North
protects and guides, the results are as
you see.~~
	And do you think the free North
has salt enough in it to save this whole
Southern mass from corruption? I
wish I could think so; but all I can
see in the free North at present is a rag-
ing, tearing, headlong chase after money.
Now money is of significance only as
it gives people the power of expressing
their ideal of life. And what does this
ideal prove to be among us? Is it not
to ape all the splendors and vices of old
aristocratic society? Is it not to be
able to live in idleness, without useful
employment, a life of glitter and flutter
and show? What do our New York
dames of fashion seek after? To avoid
family care, to find servants at any price
who will relieve them of home responsi-
bilities, and take charge of their houses
and children while they shine at ball and
Tue Ckimney-Corner for 1866.</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00098" SEQ="0098" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="92">	92	Tue Chimney-Corner for 1866.	[January,

opera, and drive in the park. And the
servants who learn of these mistresses,
 what do they seek after? They seek
also to get rid of care, to live as nearly
as possible without work, to dress and
shine in their secdndary sphere, as the
mistresses do in the primary one. High
wages with little work and plenty of
company express Biddys ideal of life,
which is a little more respectable than
that of her mistress, who wants high
wages with no work. The house and
the children are not hers; and why
should she care more for their well-be-
ing than the mistress and the mother
	Hence come wranglings and moan-
ings. Biddy uses a chest of tea in three
months, and the amount of the butch-
ers bill is fabulous; Jane gives the
baby laudanum to quiet it, while she
slips out to her parties; and the up-
per classes are shocked at the demoral-
ized state of the Irish, their utter want
of faithfulness and moral principle
How dreadful that there are no people
who enjoy the self-denials and the cares
which they dislike, that there are no
people who rejoice in carrying that bur-
den of duties which they do not wish
to touch with one of their fingers! The
outcry about the badness of servants
means just this: that everybody is tired
of self- helpfulness,  the servants as
thoroughly as the masters and mistress-
es. All want the cream of life, with-
out even the trouble of skimming; and
the great fight now is, who shall drink
the skim - milk, which nobody wants.
Work,  honorable toil,  manly, wom-
anly endeavor,  is just what nobody
likes; and this is as much a fact in the
free North as in the slave South.
	What are all the young girls looking
for in marriage? Some man with money
enough to save them from taking any
care or having any trouble in domestic
life, enabling them, like the lilies of the
field, to rival Solomon in all his glory,
while they toil not neither do they spin;
and when they find that even money
cannot purchase freedom from care in
family life, because their servants are
exactly of the same mind with them-
selves, and hate to do their duties as
cordially as they themselves do, then
are they in anguish of spirit, and wish
for slavery, or aristocracy, or anything
that would give them power over the
lower classes.
	But surely, Mr. Theophilus, said
Jennie, there is no sin in disliking trou-
ble, and wanting to live easily and have
a good time in ones life,  it s 50 very
natural.
	No sin, my dear, I admit; but there
is a certain amount of work and trouble
that somebody must take, to carry on
the family and the world; and the mis-
chief is, that all are agreed in wanting
to get rid of it. Human nature is, above
all things, lazy. I am lazy myself. Ev-
erybody is. The whole struggle of so-
ciety is as to who shall eat the hard
bread-and-cheese of labor, which must
be eaten by somebody. Nobody wants
it,neither you in the parlor, hor Bid-
dy in the kitchen.
	The mass ought to labor, and we
lie on sofas, is a sentence that would
unite more subscribers than any confes-
sion of faith that ever was presented,
whether religious or political; and its
subscribers would be as numerous and
sincere in the Free States as in the Slave
States, or I am much mistaken in my
judgment. The negroes are men and
women, like any of the rest of us, and
particularly apt in the imitation of the
ways and ideas current in good socie-
ty; and consequently to learn to play
on the piano, and to have nothing in par-
ticular to do, will be the goal of aspira-
tion among colored girls and women,
and to do house-work will seem to them
intolerable drudgery, simply because it
is so among the fair models to whom
they look up in humble admiration.
You see, my dear, what it is to live in
a democracy. It deprives us of the
vantage-ground on which we cultivated
people can stand and say to our neigh-
bor,  The cream is for me, and the
skim - milk for you ; the white bread
for me, and the brown for you. I am
born to amuse myself and have a good
time, and you are born to do every-
thing that is tiresome and disagreeable
to me. The My Lady Ludlows of</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00099" SEQ="0099" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="93">i866.]	Tue Ckim;zcy-Coruer for 1866.
England can stand on their platform
and lecture the lower classes from the
Church Catechism, to order themselves
lowly and reverently to all their betters;
and they can base their exhortations on
the old established law of society, by
which some are born to inherit the
earth, and live a life of ease and pleas-
ure, and others to toil, without pleasure
or amusement, for their support and
aggrandizement. An aristocracy, as I
take it, is a combination of human be-
ings to divide life into two parts, one of
which shall comprise all social and moral
advantages, refinement, elegance, leisure,
ease, pleasure, and amusement, and the
other, incessant toil, with the absence of
every privilege and blessing of human
existence. Life thus divided, we aris-
tocrats keep the good for ourselves and
our children, and distribute the evil as
the lot of the general mass of mankind.
The desire to monopolize and to domi-
nate is the most rooted form of human
selfishness ; it is the hydra with many
heads, and, cut off in one place, it puts
out in another.
	Nominally, the great aristocratic
arrangement of American society has
just been destroyed; but really, I take
it, the essential a;iimus of the slave sys-
tem still exists, and pervades the com-
munity, North as well as South. Every-
body is wanting to get the work done by
somebody else, and to take the money
himself; the grinding between employ-
ers and employed is going on all the time,
and the field of controversy has only been
made wider by bringing in~ a whole new
class of laborers. The Irish have now
the opportunity to sustain their aristoc-
racy over the negro. Shall they not have
somebody to look down upon?.
	All through free society, employers
and employed are at incessant feud;
and the more free and enlightened the
society, the more bitter the feud. The
standing complaint of life in America
is the badness of servants; and Eng-
land, which always follows at a certain
rate behind us in our social movements,
is beginning to raise very loudly the
same complaint. The condition of ser-
vice has been thought worthy of pub-
93
lic attention in some of the leading Brit-
ish prints; and Ruskin, in a summing-
up article, speaks of it as a deep ulcer
in society,  a thing hopeless of rem-
edy.
	My dear Mr. Theophilus, said my
wife, I cannot imagine whither you
are rambling, or to what purpose you
are getting up these horrible shadows.
You talk of the world as if there were
no God in it, overruling the selfishness
of men, and educating it up to order
and justice. I do not deny that there
is a vast deal of truth in what you say.
Nobody doubts, that, in general, hu-
man nature is selfish, callous, unfeel-
mb, willino to engross all good to itself;
b
and to trample on the rights of others.
Nevertheless, thanks to Gods teaching
and fatherly care, the world has worked
along to the point of a great nation found-
ed on the principles of strict equality,
forbidding all monopolies, aristocracies,
privileged classes, by its very constitu-
tion; and now, by Gods wonderful prov-
idence, this nation has been brought,
and forced, as it were, to overturn and
abolish the only aristdcratic institution
that interfered with its free development.
Does not this look as if a Mightier
Power than ours were working in and
for us, supplementing our weakness and
infirmity? and if we believe that man
is always ready to drop everything and
let it run back to evil, shall we not have
faith that God will izot drop the noble
work He has so evidently taken in hand
in this nation ?
	And I want to know, said Jennie,
why your illustrations of selfishness
are all drawn from the female sex.
Why do you speak of girls that marry
for money, any more than men? of mis-
tresses of families that want to be free
from household duties and responsibil-
ities, rather than of masters ?
	My charming young lady, said The-
ophilus, it is a fact that in America, ex-
cept the slaveholders, women have hith-
erto been the only aristocracy. Wom-
en have l~en the privileged class, 
the only one to which our rough democ-
racy has always and everywhere given
the precedence,  and consequently the</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00100" SEQ="0100" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="94">The C/zirn7zey-Corner for i866.	[January,
94
vices of aristocrats are more developed
in them as a class than among men.
The leading principle of aristocracy,
which is to take pay without work, to
live on the toils and earnings of oth-
ers, is one which obtains more generally
among women than among men in this
country. The men of our country, as
a general thing, even in our uppermost
classes, always propose to themselves
some work or business by which they
may acquire a fortune, or enlarge that
already made for them by their fathers.
The women of the same class propose
to themselves nothing but to live at
their ease on the money made for them
by the labors of fathers and husbands.
As a consequence, they become ener-
vated and indolent,  averse to any
bracing, wholesome effort, either men-
tal or physical. The unavoidable re-
sponsibilities and cares of a family, in-
stead of being viewed by them in the
light of a noble life-work, in which they
do their part in the general labors of
the world, seem to them so many in-
juries and wrongs ; they seek to turn
them upon servants, and find servants
unwilling to take them; and so selfish
are they, that I have heard more than
one lady declare that she did nt care if
it was unjust, she should like to have
slaves rather than be plagued with ser-
vants who had so much liberty. All
the novels, poetry, and light literature
of the world, which form the general
staple of female reading, are based up-
on aristocratic institutions, and impreg-
nated with aristocratic ideas; and wom-
en among us are constantly aspiring to
foreign and aristocratic modes of life
rather than to those of native, republi-
can simplicity. How many women are
there, think you, that would not go in
for aristocracy and aristocratic prerog-
atives, if they were only sure that they
themselves should be of the privileged
class? To be My Lady Duchess, and
to, have a right by that simple title to
the prostrate deference of all the lower
orders! How many would have firm-
ness to vote against such an establish-
ment merely because it was bad for so-
ciety? Tell the fair Mrs. Feathercap,
In order that you may be a duchess,
and have everything a paradise of el-
egance and luxury around you and your
children, a hundred poor families must
have no chance for anything better than
black bread and muddy water all their
lives, a hundred poor men must work
all their lives on such wages that a fort-
nights sickness will send their families
to the almshouse, and that no amount
of honesty and forethought can lay up
any provision for old age
	Come now, Sir, said Jennie, dont
tell me that there are any girls or wom-
en so mean and selfish as to want aris-
tocracy or rank so purchased! You
are too bad, Mr. Theophilus!
	Perhaps they might not, were it
stated in just these terms; yet I think,
if the question of the establishment of
an order of aristocracy among us were
put to vote, we should find more women
than men who would go for it; and they
would flout at the consequences to so-
ciety with the lively wit and the musical
laugh which make feminine selfishness
so genteel and agreeable.
	No! It is a fact, that, in America,
the women, in the wealthy classes, are
like the noblemen of aristocracies, and
the men are the workers. And in all
this outcry that has been raised about
womens wages being inferior to those
of men there is one thing over looked,
 and that is, that womens work is
generally inferior to that of men, be-
cause in every rank they are the pets of
society, and are excused from the labo-
rious drill and training by which men
are fitted for their callings. Our fair
friends come in generally by some royal
road to knowledge, which saves them
the dire necessity of real work,a sort
of feminine hop-skip-and-jump into sci-
ence or mechanical skill,nothing like
the uncompromising hard labor to which
the boy is put who would be a mechanic
or farmer, a lawyer or physician.
	I admit freely that we men are to
blame for most of the faults of our fair
nobility. There is plenty of heroism,
abundance of energy, and love of noble
endeavor lying dormant in these shel-
tered and petted daughters of the better</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00101" SEQ="0101" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="95">	i866.]	The C~himney-Gorner for i866.	95

classes ; but we keep it down and smoth-
er it. Fathers and brothers think it
discreditable to themselves not to give
their daughters and sisters the means
of living in idleness; and any adven-
turous fair one, who seeks to end the
ennui of utter aimlessness by applying
herself to some occupation whereby
she may earn her own living, infallibly
draws down on her the comments of
her whole circle  Keeping school,
is she? Is nt her father rich enough
to support her? What could possess
her?
	I am glad, my dear Sir Oracle, that
you are beginning to recollect yourself
and temper your seventies on our sex,
said my wife. As usual, there is much
truth lying about loosely in the vicinity
of your assertions; but they are as far
from being in themselves the truth as
would be their exact opposites.
	The class of American women who
travel, live abroad, and represent our
country to the foreign eye, have acquir-
ed the reputation of being Sybarites in
luxury and extravagance, and there is
much in the modes of life that are creep-
ing into our richer circles to justify this.
	Miss iViurray, ex-maid-of-honor to
the Queen of England, among other
impressions which she received from
an extended tour through our country,
states it as her conviction that young
American girls of the better classes are
less helpful in nursing the sick and in
the general duties of family life than the
daughters of the aristocracy of Eng-
land; and I am inclined to believe it,
because even the Queen has taken spe-
cial pains to cultivate habits of energy
and self- helpfulness in her children.
One of the toys of the Princess Royal
was said to be a cottage of her own,
furnished with every accommodation for
cooking and housekeeping, where she
from time to time enacted the part of
housekeeper, making bread and biscuit,
boiling potatoes which she herself bad
gathered from her own garden - patch,
and inviting her royal parents to meals
of her own preparing; and report says,
that the dignitaries of the German court
have been horrified at the energetic de
termination of the young royal house-
keeper to overlook her own linen-clos-
ets and attend to her own affairs. But,
as an offset to what I have been say-
ing, it must be admitted that America
is a country where a young woman can
be self-supporting without forfeiting her
place in society. All our New England
and Western towns show us female
teachers who are as well received and
as much caressed in society, and as of-
ten contract advantageous marriages, as
any women whatever; and the produc-
tive labor of American women, in vari-
ous arts, trades, and callings, would be
found, I think, not inferior to that of
any women in the world.
	Furthermore, the history of the late
war has shown them capable of every
form of heroic endeavor. We have had
hundreds of Florence Nightingales, and
an amount of real hard work has been
done by female hands not inferior to
that performed by men in the camp and
field, and enough to make sure that
American womanhood is not yet so en-
ervated as seriously to interfere with
the prospects of free republican soci-
ety.
	I wonder, said Jennie, what it is
in our country that spoils the working-
classes that come into it. They say
that the emibrants, as they land here,
are often simple - hearted people, will-
ing to work, accustomed to early hours
and plain living, decorous and respect-
ful in their manners. It would seem
as if aristocratic drilling had done them
good. In a few months they become
brawling, impertinent, grasping, want
high wages, and are very unwilling to
work. I went to several intelligence-
offices the other day to look for a girl
for Marianne, and I thought, by the
way the candidates catechized the la-
dies, and the airs they took upon them,
that they considered themselves the fu-
ture mistresses interrogating their sub-
ordinates.
	Does ye expect me to do the wash-
in with the cookin?
	Yes.
	Thin I 11 niver go to that place!
	And does ye expect me to get the</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00102" SEQ="0102" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="96">	96	The Chimney-Corner for 1866.	[January,

early breakfast for yer husband to be
off in the train every mornin?
Yes.
	 I niver does that,  that ought to
be a second girls work.
	How many servants does ye keep,
Maam?
Two.
	I niver lives with people that keeps
but two servants.
	How many has ye in yer family?
	Seven.
	Thats too large a family. Has
ye much company?
	Yes, we have company occasion-
ally.
	Thin I cant come to ye; it 11 be
too harrd a place.
	In fact, the thing they were all in
quest of seemed to he a very small fam-
ily, with very high wages, and many
perquisites and privileges.
This is the kind of work-people our
manners and institutions make of peo-
ple that come over here. I remember
one day seeing a coachman touch his
cap to his mistress when she spoke to
him, as is the way in Europe, and hear-
ing one or two others saying among
themselves, 
That chap s a greenie; he 11 get
over that soon.~ 
	All these things show, said I, that
the staff of power has passed from the
hands of gentility into those of labor.
XVe may think the working - classes
somewhat unseemly in their assertion
of self- importance ; but, after all, are
they, considering their inferior advan-
tages of hreeding, any more overbearing
and impertinent than the upper classes
have always been to them in all ages
and countries?
	XVhen Biddy looks bug, hedges in
her work with many conditions, and is
careful to get the most she can for the
least labor, is she, after all, doing any
more than you or I or all the rest of
the world? I myself will not write ar-
ticles for five dollars a page, when there
are those who will give me fifteen. I
would not do double duty as an editor
on a salary of seven thousand, when I
could get ten thousand for less work.
	Biddy and her mistress are two hu-
man beings, with the same human wants.
Both want to escape trouble, to make
their life comfortable and easy, with the
least outlay of expense. Biddys capital
is her muscles and sinews; and she
wants to get as many greenbacks in ex-
change for them as her wit and shrewd-
ness will enable her to do. You feel,
when you bargain with her, that she is
nothing to you, except so far as her
strength and knowledge may save you
care and trouble; and she feels that you
are nothing to her, except so far as she
can get your money for her work. The
free-and-easy airs of those seeking em-
ployment show one thing,  that the
country in general is prosperous, and
that openings for profitable employment
are so numerous that it is not thought
necessary to try to conciliate favor. If
the community were at starvation-point,
and the loss of a situation brought fear
of the almshouse, the laboring - class
would be more subservient. As it is,
there is a little spice of the bitterness
of a past age of servitude in their pres-
ent attitude,  a bristling, self- defen-
sive impertinence, which will gradually
smooth away as society learns to ac-
commodate itself to the new order of
things.
	Well, but, papa, said Jennie, dont
you think all this a very severe test, if
applied to us women particularly, more
than to the men ? Mr. Theophilus
seems to think women are aristocrats,
and go for enslaving the lower classes
out of mere selfishness; but I say that
we are a great deal more strongly tempt-
ed than men, because all these annoyan-
ces and trials of domestic life come upon
us. It is very insidious, the aristocrat-
ic argument, as it appeals to us ; there
seems much to be said in its favor. It
does appear to me that it is better to
have servants and work - people tidy,
industrious, respectful, and decorous,
as they are in Europe, than domineer-
ing, impertinent, and negligent, as they
are here,  and it seems that there is
something in our institutions that pro-
duces these disagreeable traits and I
presume that the negroes will eventu</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00103" SEQ="0103" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="97">i866.]

ally be travelling the same road as the
Irish, and from the same influences,
	When people see all these things,
and feel all the inconveniences of them,
I dont wonder that they are tempted
not to like democracy, and to feel as if
aristocratic institutions made a more
agreeable state of society. It is not
such a blank, bald, downright piece of
brutal selfishness as Mr. Theophilus
there seems to suppose, for us to wish
there were some quiet, submissive, la-
borious lower class, who would be con-
tent to work for kind treatment and
moderate wages.
	But, my little dear, said I, the
matter is not left to our choice. Wish
it or not wish it, it s what we evidently
cant have. The day for that thing is
past. The power is passing out of the
hands of the cultivated few into those
of the strong, laborious many~ ./Vum-
bers is the king of our era; and he will
reign over us, whether we will hear or
whether we will forbear. The sighers
for an obedient lower class and the
mourners for slavery may get ready
their crape, and have their pocket-hand-
kerchiefs bordered with black; for they
have much weeping to do, and for many
years to come. The good old feudal
times, when two thirds of the popula-
tion thought themselves born only for
the honor, glory, and profit of the other
third, are gone, with all their beautiful
devotions, all their trappings of song
and story. In the land where such
institutions were most deeply rooted
and most firmly established, they are
assailed every day by hard hands and
stout hearts; and their position resem-
bles that of some of the picturesque ru-
ins of Italy, which are constantly being
torn away to build prosaic modern shops
and houses.
	This great democrati~ movement is
coming down into modern society with
a march as irresistible as the glacier
moves down from the mountains. Its
front is in America,  and beyond are
England, France, Italy, Prussia, and the
Mohammedan countries. In all, the
rights of the laboring masses are a
living force, bearing slowly and inevita
	VOL. XVII.  NO. 99.	7
97
bly all before it. Our war has been a
marshalling of its armies, commanded
by a hard-handed, inspired man of the
working - class. An intelligent Amer-
ican, recently resident in Egypt, says
it was affecting to notice the interest
with which the working- classes there
were looking upon our late struggle in
America, and the earnestness of their
wishes for the triumph of the Union.
It is our cause, it is for us, they said,
as said the cotton-spinners of England
and the silk - weavers of Lyons. The
forces of this mighty movement are still
directed by a man from the lower or-
ders, the sworn foe of exclusive privi-
leges and landed aristocracies. If An-
dy Johnson is consistent with himself,
with the principles which raised him
from a tailors bench to th~ head of
a mighty nation, he will see to it that
the work that Lincoln began is so thor-
oughly done, that every man and every
woman in America, of whatever race
or complexion, shall have exactly equal
rights before the law, and be free to rise
or fall according to their individual in-
telli gence, industry, and moral worth.
So long as everything is not strictly in
accordance with our principles of democ-
racy, so long as there is in any part of
the country an aristocratic upper class
who despise labor, and a laboring lower
class that is denied equal political rights,
so long this grinding and discord be-
tween the two will never cease in Amer-
ica. It will make trouble not only in the
South, but in the North,  trouble be-
tween all employers and employed, 
trouble in every branch and depart-
ment of labor,trouble in every parlor
and every kitchen.
	What is it that has driven every
American woman out of domestic ser-
vice, when domestic service is full as
well paid, is easier, healthier, and in
many cases far more agreeable, than
shop and factory work? It is, i~ore than
anything else, the influence of slavery
in the South,its insensible influence
on the minds of mistresses, giving them
false ideas of what ought to be the po-
sition and treatment of a female citizen
in domestic service, and its very marked
The C/zim;iey-corner for 1866.</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00104" SEQ="0104" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="98">The CIzim;zey-Corller for 1866.

influence on the minds of freedom - lov-
ing Americans, causing them to choose
any position rather than one which is
regarded as assimilating them to slaves.
It is difficult to say what are the very
worst results of a system so altogether
bad as that of slavery; hut one of the
worst is certainly the utter contempt it
hrings on useful labor, and the conse-
quent utter physical and moral degrada-
tion of a large body of the whites; and
this contempt of useful labor has been
constantly spreading like an infection
from the Southern to the Northern
States, particularly among women, who,
as our friend here has truly said, are
by our worship and exaltation of them
made peculiarly liable to take the ma-
laria of aristocratic society. Let any-
body observe the conversation in good
society for an hour or two, and hear
the tone in which servant-girls, seam-
stresses, mechanics, and all who work
for their living, are sometimes mention-
ed, and he will see, that, while every
one of the speakers professes to regard
useful labor as respectable, she is yet
deeply imbued with the leaven of aris-
tocratic ideas.
	In the South the contempt for labor
bred of slavery has so permeated soci-
ety, that we see great, coarse, vulgar
laz~aroni lying about in rags and ver-
min, and dependent on government ra-
tions, maintaining, as their only source
of self-respect, that they never have
done and never will do a stroke of
useful work, in all their lives. In the
North there are, I believe, no men who
would make such a boast; but I think
there are many women  beautiful, fas-
cinating lazzaroni of the parlor and
boudoir  who make their boast of el-
egant helplessness and utter incompe-
tence for any of womans duties with
equal na~vetJ. The Spartans made
their slaves drunk, to teach their chil-
dren the ~vi1s of intoxication; and it
seems tQ be the policy of a large class
in the South now to keep down and
degrade the only working - class they
have, for the sake of teaching their chil-
dren to despi~e work.
	We of the North, who know the
dignity of labor, who know the value
of free and equal institutions, who have
enjoyed advantages for seeing their op-
eration, ought, in true brotherliness, to
exercise the power given us by the pres-
ent position of the people of the Southern
States, and put things thoroughly right
for them, well knowing, that, though
they may not like it at the moment,
they will like it in the end, and that it
will bring them peace, plenty, and set-
tled prosperity, such as they have long
envied here in the North. It is no
kindness to an invalid brother, half re-
covered from delirium, to leave him a
knife to cut his throat with, should he
be so disposed. We should rather ap-
peal from Philip drunk to Philip sober,
and do real kindness, trusting to the
future for our meed of gratitude.
	Giving equal political rights to all
the inhabitants of the Southern States
will be their shortest way to quiet and
to wealth. It will avert what is else
almost certain,  a war of races; since
all experience shows that the ballot in-
troduces the very politest relations be-
tween the higher and lower classes. If
the right be restricted, let it be by re-
quirements of property and education,
applying to all the population equally.
	Meanwhile, we citizens and citizen-
esses of the North should remember
that Reconstruction means something
more than setting things right in the
Southern States. We have saved our
government and institutions, but we
have paid a fearful price for their sal-
vation; and we ought to prove now
that they are worth the price.
	The empty chair, never to be filled,
the light gone out on its candlestick,
never on earth to be rekindled,  gal-
lant souls that have exhaled to heaven
in slow torture and starvation,  the
precious blood that has drenched a
hundred battle - fields,  all call to us
with warninb voices, and tell us not to
let such sacrifices be in vain. Thcy
call on us by our clear understanding
of the great principles of democratic
equality, for which our martyred breth-
ren suffered and died, to show to all
the world that their death was no mean
98
[January,</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00105" SEQ="0105" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="99">i866.]

and useless waste, but a glorious in-
vestment for the future of mankind.
	This war, these sufferings, these
sacrifices, ought to make every Ameri-
can man and woman look on himself and
herself as belonging to a royal priest-
hood, a peculiar people. The blood of
our slain ought to be a gulf, wide and
deep as the Atlantic, dividing us from
the opinions and the practices of coun-
tries whose government and society
are founded on other and antagonistic
ideas. Democratic republicanism has
never yet been perfectly worked out
either in this or any other country. It
is a splendid edifice, half built, deform-
ed by rude scaffolding, noisy with the
clink of trowels, blinding the eyes with
the dust of lime, and endangering our
heads with falling brick. We make our
way over heaps of shavings and lumber
to view the stately apartments,  we
endanger our necks in climbing ladders
sta~nding in the place of future stair-
cases; but let us not for all this cry out
that the old rat-holed mansions of for-
mer ages, with their mould, and moss,
and cockroaches, are better than this
new palace. There is no lime-dust, no
clink of trowels, no rough scaffolding
there, to be sure, and life goes on very
quietly; but there is the foul air of
slow and sure decay.
	Republican institutions in America
are in a transition state; they have not
yet separated themselves from foreign
and antagonistic ideas and traditions,
derived from old countries; and the la-
bors necessary for the uphuilding of so-
ciety are not yet so adjusted that there
is mutual pleasure and comfort in the
relations of employer and employed.
We still incline to class-distinctions and
aristocracies. We incline to the scheme
of dividing the worlds work into two
orders: first, physical labor, which is
held to be rude and vulgar, and the
province of a lower class; and second,
brain labor, held to be refined and aris-
tocratic, and the province of a higher
class. Meanwhile, the Creator, who is
the greatest of levellers, has given to
every human being 1w/li a physical sys-
tem, needing to be kept in order by
99

physical labor, and an intellectual or
brain power, needing to be kept in or-
der by brain labor. Work, use, employ-
ment, is the condition of health in both;
and he who works either to the neglect
of the other lives but a half-life, and is
an imperfect human being.
	The aristocracies of the Old World
claim that their only labor should be
that of the brain; and they keep their
physical system in order by violent ex-
ercise, which is made genteel from the
fact only that it is not useful or produc-
tive. It would be losing caste to re-
fresh the muscles by handling the plough
or the axe; and so foxes and hares must
be kept to be hunted, and whole coun-
ties turned into preserves, in order that
the nobility and gentry may have phys-
ical exercise in a way befitting their sta-
tion,  that is to say, in a way that pro-
duces nothing, and does good only to
themselves.
	The model republican uses his brain
for the highest purposes of brain work,
and his muscles in productive physical
labor; and useful labor he respects
above that which is merely agreeable.
	When this equal respect for physi-
cal and mental labor shall have taken
possession of every American citizen,
there will be no so-called laboring class:
there will no more be a class all mus-
cle without brain power to guide it,
and a class all brain without muscular
power to execute. The labors of society
will be lighter, because each individual
will take his part in them ; they will he
performed better, because no one will
be overburdened.
	In those days, Miss Jennie, it will
be an easier matter to keep house, be-
cause, house-work being no longer re-
garded as degrading drud~ery, you will
find a superior class of women ready to
engage in it.
	Every young girl and woman, who
in her sphere and by her example shows
that she is not ashamed of domestic la-
bor, and that she considers the neces-
sary work and duties of family life as
dignified and important, is helping to
bring on this good day. Louis Philippe
once jestingly remarked,  I have this
Tue Chimney-Corner for i866.</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00106" SEQ="0106" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="100">TOO

qualification for being a king in these
days, that I have blacked my own hoots,
and could black them again.
	Every American ought to cultivate,
as his pride and birthright, the habit
of self- helpfulness. Our command of
the labors of good em~loyes in any
department is liable to such interrup-
tions, that he who has blacked his own
boots, and can do it again, is, on the
whole, likely to secure the most com-
fort in life.
	As to that which Mr. Ruskin pro-
nounces to be a deep, irremediable ulcer
in society, namely, domestic service, we
hold that the last workings of pure de-
mocracy will cleanse and heal it. When
right ideas are sufficiently spread,when
everybody is self-helpful and capable of
being self-supporting,  when there is
a fair start for every human being in
[January,

the race of life, and all its prizes are,
without respect of persons, to be ob-
tained by the best runner,  when ev-
ery kind of useful labor is thoroughly
respected,  then there will be a clear,
just, wholesome basis of intercourse
on which employers and employed can
move without wrangling or discord.
	Renouncing all claims to superior-
ity on the one hand, and all thought of
servility on the other, service can be
rendered by fair contracts and agree-
ments, with that mutual respect and
benevolence which every human being
owes to every other.
	But for this transition period, which
is wearing out the life of so many wom-
en, and making so many households
uncomfortable, I have some alleviating
suggestions, which I shall give inmy
next paper.






GRIFFITH GAUNT; OR, JEALOUSY.

CHAPTER IV.  Continued.

HE uttered a little shout, of joy and
amazement; his mare reared and
plunged, and then was quiet. And thus
Kate Peyton and he met, at right an-
gles,  and so close that it looked as if
she had meant to ride him down.
	How he stared at her! How more
than mortal fair she shone, returning to
those bereaved eyes of his, as if she
had really dropped from heaven!
	His clasped hands, his haggard face
channelled by tears, showed the keen
girl she was strong where she had
thought herself weak, and she comport-
ed herself accordingly, and in one mo-
ment took a much higher tone than she
had intended as she came along.
	I am afraid, said she, very coldly,
you will have to postpone your jour-
ney a day or two. I am grieved to tell
you that poor Mr. Charlton is dead.
	Griffith uttered an exclamation.
	He asked for you; and messengers
are out after you on every side. You
must go to Bolton at once.
	Well-a-day! said Griffith, has he
left me, too? Good, kind old man, on
any other day I had found tears for
thee! But now, methinks, happy are
the dead. Alas! sweet mistress, I hop-
ed you came to tell me you had  I
might  what signifies what I hoped ? 
when I saw you had deigned to ride af-
ter me. Why should I go to Bolton,
after all ?
	Because you will be an ungrateful
wretch else. What! leave others to car-
ry your kinsman and your benefactor
to his grave, while you turn your back
on him, and inherit his estate? For
shame, Sir! for shame!
	Griffith expostulated, humbly.
	How hardly you judge mJ What
are Bolton Hall and Park to me now?
They were to have been yours, you
know. And yours they shall be. I</PB></P>
</DIV1>
<DIV1 TYPE="article" DECLS="/moa/atla/atla0017/" ID="ABK2934-0017-14">
<BIBL>
<AUTHOR>Charles Reade</AUTHOR>
<AUTHORIND>Reade, Charles</AUTHORIND>
<TITLE TYPE="ART">Griffith Gaunt: or, Jealousy.  II</TITLE>
<BIBLSCOPE TYPE="pg">100-119</BIBLSCOPE>
</BIBL>
<P><PB REF="IMG00106" SEQ="0106" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="100">TOO

qualification for being a king in these
days, that I have blacked my own hoots,
and could black them again.
	Every American ought to cultivate,
as his pride and birthright, the habit
of self- helpfulness. Our command of
the labors of good em~loyes in any
department is liable to such interrup-
tions, that he who has blacked his own
boots, and can do it again, is, on the
whole, likely to secure the most com-
fort in life.
	As to that which Mr. Ruskin pro-
nounces to be a deep, irremediable ulcer
in society, namely, domestic service, we
hold that the last workings of pure de-
mocracy will cleanse and heal it. When
right ideas are sufficiently spread,when
everybody is self-helpful and capable of
being self-supporting,  when there is
a fair start for every human being in
[January,

the race of life, and all its prizes are,
without respect of persons, to be ob-
tained by the best runner,  when ev-
ery kind of useful labor is thoroughly
respected,  then there will be a clear,
just, wholesome basis of intercourse
on which employers and employed can
move without wrangling or discord.
	Renouncing all claims to superior-
ity on the one hand, and all thought of
servility on the other, service can be
rendered by fair contracts and agree-
ments, with that mutual respect and
benevolence which every human being
owes to every other.
	But for this transition period, which
is wearing out the life of so many wom-
en, and making so many households
uncomfortable, I have some alleviating
suggestions, which I shall give inmy
next paper.






GRIFFITH GAUNT; OR, JEALOUSY.

CHAPTER IV.  Continued.

HE uttered a little shout, of joy and
amazement; his mare reared and
plunged, and then was quiet. And thus
Kate Peyton and he met, at right an-
gles,  and so close that it looked as if
she had meant to ride him down.
	How he stared at her! How more
than mortal fair she shone, returning to
those bereaved eyes of his, as if she
had really dropped from heaven!
	His clasped hands, his haggard face
channelled by tears, showed the keen
girl she was strong where she had
thought herself weak, and she comport-
ed herself accordingly, and in one mo-
ment took a much higher tone than she
had intended as she came along.
	I am afraid, said she, very coldly,
you will have to postpone your jour-
ney a day or two. I am grieved to tell
you that poor Mr. Charlton is dead.
	Griffith uttered an exclamation.
	He asked for you; and messengers
are out after you on every side. You
must go to Bolton at once.
	Well-a-day! said Griffith, has he
left me, too? Good, kind old man, on
any other day I had found tears for
thee! But now, methinks, happy are
the dead. Alas! sweet mistress, I hop-
ed you came to tell me you had  I
might  what signifies what I hoped ? 
when I saw you had deigned to ride af-
ter me. Why should I go to Bolton,
after all ?
	Because you will be an ungrateful
wretch else. What! leave others to car-
ry your kinsman and your benefactor
to his grave, while you turn your back
on him, and inherit his estate? For
shame, Sir! for shame!
	Griffith expostulated, humbly.
	How hardly you judge mJ What
are Bolton Hall and Park to me now?
They were to have been yours, you
know. And yours they shall be. I</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00107" SEQ="0107" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="101">	i866.]	Gr~t/i Gaunt; or, ~ca/ousy.	I0I

came between and robbed you. To be
sure, the old man knew my mind. He
said to himseli~ Griffith or Kate, what
matters it who bas tbe land? They
will live togetber on it. But all that is
changed now; you will never share it
with me; and so I do feel I bave no
right to the place. Kate, my own Kate,
I have beard them sneer at you for be-
ing poor, and it made my heart ache.
I 11 stop that, any way. Go you in
my place to the funeral; he that is dead
will forgive me; his spirit knows now
what I endure; and I 11 send you a
writing, all sealed and signed, shall
make Bolton Hall and Park yours;
and when you are happy with some
one you ca;z love, as well as I love you,
think sometimes of poor jealous Grif-
fith, that loved you dear and grudged
you nothing; but, grin ding his teeth
and turning white,  I caizi live in Gum
berland, and see you in another mans
arhis.
	Then Catharine trembled, and could
not speak awhile ; but at last she fal-
tered out, 
You will make me hate you.
God forbid ! said simple Griffith.
Well, then, dont thwart me, and
provoke me so, but just turn your horses
head and go quietly home to Bolton
Hall. and do your duty to the dead ann
the living. You cant go liz/s way, for
me and my horse. Then, seeing him
waver, this virago faltered out, And I
have been so tried to-day, first by one,
then by another, surely you might have
some pity on me. Oh! oh oh oh !
	Nay, nay, cried Griffith, all in a
flutter,  I 11 go without more words
as I am a gentleman, I will sleep at
Bolton this night, and will do my duty
to the dead and the living. Dont you
cry, sweetest ; I give in. I find I have
no will but yours.
	The next moment they were canter-
ing side by side, and never drew rein
till they reached the cross-roads.
	Now tell me one thing, stammered
Griffith, with a most ghastly attempt at
cheerful indifference. How  do you
 happen to be  on George Nevilles
horse U
	Kate had been expecting this ques-
tion for some time ; yet she colored
high when it did come. However, she
had her answer pat. The horse was
in the stable-yard, and fresh; her own
was tired.
	What was I to do, Griffith? And
now, added she, hastily, the sun will
soon set, and the roads are bad; be
careful. I wish I could ask you to
sleep at our house; but  there are
reasons
	She hesitated; she could not well
tell him George Neville was to dine
and sleep there.
	Griffith assured her there was no
danger; his mare knew every foot of
the way.
	They parted: Griffith rode to Bolton,
and Kate rode home.
	It was past dinner-time. She ran
up stairs, and hurried on her best gown
and her diamond comb. For she be-
gan to quake now at the prank she had
played with her guests horse ; and Na-
ture taught her that the best way to soft-
en censure is  to be beautiful.

On pardonne tout aux belles.

And certainly she was passing fair, and
queenly with her diamond comb.
	She came down stairs and was re-
ceived by her father. He grumbled at
being kept waiting for dinner.
	Kate easily appeased the good-natur-
ed Squire, and then asked what had
become of Mr. Neville.
	Oh, he is gone long ago! Remem-
bered, all of a sudden, he had promised
to dine with a neighbor.
	Kate shook her head skeptically. but
said nothing. But a good minute after,
she inquired, 
How did he go? on foot?
The Squire did not know.
After dinner old Joe sought an inter-
view, and was admitted into the dining-
room.
	Be it all right about the gray horse,
Master? 
	What of him? asked Kate.
He be gone to N eville Court, Mis-
tress. But I suppose (with a horrid
leer) it is all right. Muster Neville</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00108" SEQ="0108" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="102">[January,
	102	Gr~tJi Gaunt; o~ !7ealousy.

told me all about it. He said, says
he, 
Some do break a kine or the likes
on tbese here jyful occasions; other
some do exchange goold rings. Ydur
young mistress and me, we exchange
nags. She takes my pieball, I take her
gray, says he. Saddle him for me,
Joe, says he, and wish me jy.
	So I clapped Muster Nevilles sad-
dle on the gray, and a gave me a goold-
en guinea, a did; and I was so struck
of a heap I let un go without wishing
on him jy; but I hollered it arter un,
as hard as I could. How you looks!
It be all right, baint it U
	Squire Peyton laughed heartily, and
said he concluded it was all right.
	The piebald, said he, is rising five,
and I ye had the gray ten years. We
have got the sunny side of that bargain,
Joe.
	He gave Joe a glass of wine and sent
him oft; inflated with having done a good
stroke in horseflesh.
	As for Kate, she was red as fire, and
kept her lips close as wax; not a word
could he got out of her. The less she
said, the more she thought. She was
thoroughly vexed, and sore perplexed
how to get her gray horse back from
such a man as George Neville; and
yet she could not help laughin~ at the
trick, and secretly admiring this cheva-
lier, who had kept his mortification to
himself, and parried an affront so gal-
lantly.
	The good-humored wretch ! said
she to herself. If Griffith ever goes
away again, he will have me, whether I
like or no. No lady could resist the
monster long without some other man
close at hand to help her.


CHAPTER V.

	As, when a camel drops in the des-
ert, vultures, hitherto unseen, come fly-
ing from the horizon, so Mr. CharPon
had no sooner succumbed than the air
darkened with undertakers flockir.g to
Bolton for a lugubrious job. They rode
up on black steed:, they crunched the
gravel in grave gigs, and sent in black-
edged cards to Griffith, and lowered
their voices, and bridled their brisk-
ness, and tried hard, poor souls! to be
sad; and were horribly complacent be-
neath that thin japan of venal sympa-
thy.
	Griffith selected his Raven, and then
sat down to issue numerous invitations.
	The idea of eschewing funereal pomp
had not yet arisen. A gentleman of that
day liked his very remains to make a
stir, and did not see the fun of stealing
into his grave like a rabbit slipping
aground. Mr. Charlton had even left
behind him a sealed letter containing a
list of the persons he wished to follow
him to the grave and attend the read-
ing of his will. These were thirty-four,
and amongst them three known to fame:
namely, George Neville, Esq., Edward
Peyton, Esq., and Miss Catharine Pey-
ton.
	To all and each of the thirty - four
young Gaunt wrote a formal letter, in-
viting them to pay respect to their de-
ceased friend, and to honor himseW by
coming to Bolton Hall at nigh noon on
Saturday next. These letters, in com-
pliance with another custom of the time
and place, were all sent by mounted
messengers, and the answers came on
horseback, too ; so there was much
clattering of hoofs coming and going,
and much roasting, baking, drinking of
ale, and bustling, all along of him who
lay so still in an upper chamber.
	And every man and woman came to
Mr. Gaunt to ask his will and advice,
however simple the matter; and the
servants turned very obsequious, and
laid themselves out to please the new
master, and retain their old places.
	And, what with the sense of authori-
ty, and the occupation, and growing
ambition, love-sick Griffith grew anoth-
er man, and began to forget that two
days ago he was leaving the country
and gcing to give up the whole game.
	lie found time to send Kate a loving
letter, but no talk of marriage in it. He
remembered she had asked him to give
her time. Well, he would take her ad-
yice.</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00109" SEQ="0109" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="103">	i866.]	Grzftuik Gau;zt; or, 7ealousy.	103

	It wanted just three days to the funer-
al, when Mr. Charitons own carriage,
long unused, was found to he out of
repair. Griffith had it sent to the near-
est town, and followed it on that and
other business. Now it happened to
be what the country folk called jus-
ticing day; and who should ride into
the yard of the Roebuck but the new
magistrate, Mr. Neville? He alighted
off a great bony gray horse before Grif-
fiths very nose, and sauntered into a
private room.
	Griffith looked, and looked, and,
scarcely able to believe his senses, fol-
lowed Nevilles horse to the stable, and
examined him all round.
	Griffith was sore perplexed, and stood
at the stable-door glaring at the horse;
and sick misgivings troubled him. He
forgot the business he came about, and
went and hung about the bar, and tried
to pick up a clew to this mystery. The
poor wretch put on a miserable assump-
tion of indifference, and asked one or
two of the magistrates if that was not
Mr. Peytons gray horse young Neville
had ridden in upon.
	Now amongst these gentlemen was a
young squire Miss Peyton had refused,
and galled him. He had long owed
Gaunt a grudge for seeming to succeed
where he had notably failed, and now,
hearing him talk so much about the
gray, he smelt a rat. He stepped into
the parlor and told Neville Gaunt was
fuming about the gray horse, and ques-
tioning everybody. Neville, though he
put so bold a face on his recent adven-
ture at Peyton Hall, was secretly smart-
ing, and quite disposed to sting Gaunt
in return. He saw a tool in this treach-
erous young squire,  his name was
Galton,  and used him accordingly.
	Galton, thoroughly primed by Nev-
ille, slipped hack, and, choosing his op-
portunity, poisoned Griffith Gaunt.
	And this is how he poisoned him.
	Oh, said he, Neville has bought
the gray nag; and cost him dear, it
did.
	Griffith gave a sigh of relief; for he
at once concluded old Peyton had sold
his daughters very horse. He resolved
to buy her a better one next week with
Mr. Charltons money.
	But Galton, who was only playing
with him, went on to explain that Nev-
ille had paid a double price for the nag:
he had given Miss Peyton his piebald
horse in exchange, and his troth into
the bargain. In short, he lent the mat-
ter so adroit a turn, that the exchange
of horses seemed to he Kates act as
much as Nevilles, and the inference in-
evitable.
It is a falsehood! gasped Griffith.
	Nay, said Galton, I had it on the
best authority: but you shall not quar-
rel with me about it; the lady is nought
to me, and I but tell the tale as t was
told to me.
	Then who told it you? said Gaunt,
sternly.
	Why, it is all over the country, for
that matter.
	No subterfuges, Sir! I am the ladys
servant, and you know it: this report,
it slanders her, and insults me: give
me the author, or I 11 lay my hunting-
whip on your hones.
	Two can play at that game, said
Galton ; but he turned pale at the pros-
pect of the pastime.
	Griffith strode towards him, black
with ire.
	Then Galton stammered out, 
It was Neville himself told me.
 Ah  said Griffith ; I thought so.
He is a liar, and a coward.
	I would not advise you to tell him
so, said the other, maliciously. He
has killed his man in France: spitted
him like a lark.
	Griffith replied by a smile of con-
tempt.
	XVhere is the man? said he, after
a pause.
	How should I know? asked Gal-
ton, innocently.
	Where did you leave him five min-
utes ago?
	Galton was dumbfoundered at this
stroke, and could find nothing to say.
	And now, as often happens, the mat-
ter took a turn not in th~ least antici-
pated by the conspirators.
	You must come with me, Sir, if you</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00110" SEQ="0110" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="104">	104	Grzjftz7h Gau;zt, or, 7ca lousy.	[January,

please, said Griffith, quietly: and he
took Galtons arm.
	Oh, with all my heart, said the
other. But, IVIr. Gaunt, do not you
take these idle reports to heart: / never
do. What the Devil, where are you car-
rying me to ? For Heavens sake, let
this foolish business go no farther.
	For he found Griffith was taking him
to the very room where Neville was.
	Griffith deigned no reply; he just
opened the door of the room in ques-
tion, and walked the tale-bearer into
the presence of the tale-maker. George
Neville rose and confronted the pair
with a vast appearance of civility; but
under it a sneer was just discernible.
	The rivals measured each other from
head to foot, and then Neville inquired
to what be owed the honor of this visit.
	Griffith replied, 
He tells me you told him Miss Pey-
ton has exchanged horses with you.
	Oh, you indiscreet person! said
George, shaking his finger playfully at
Galton.
	And, by the same token, has plight-
ed her troth to you.
	Worse and worse, said George.
Galton, I 11 never trust you with any
secrets again. Besides, you exagger-
ate.
	Come, Sir, said Griffith, sternly,
this Ned Galton was but your tool,
and your mouth-piece; and therefore I
bring him in here to witness my reply
to you. Mr. George Neville, you are a
liar and a scoundrel.
	George Neville bounded to his feet
like a tiger.
	I 11. have your life for those two
words, he cried.
	Then he suddenly governed himself
by a great effort.
	It is not for me to bandy foul terms
with a Cumberland savage, said he.
Name your time and place.
	I will. Ncd Galton, you may go.
I wish to say a few words in private to
Mr. Neville.
	Galton hesitated.
	No violence, Gentlemen: consider.
	Nonsense! said Neville. Mr.
Gaunt and I are going to fight: we are
not going to brawl. Be so good as to
leave us.
	Ay, said Griffith ; and if you re-
peat a word of all this, woe be to your
skin!
	As soon as he was gone, Griffith
Gaunt turned very grave and calm, and
said to George Neville, 
The Cumberland savage has been
better taught than to expose the lady he
loves to gossiping tongues.~~
	Neville colored up to the eyes at this
thrust.
	Griffith continued, 
The least you can do is to avoid
fresh scandal.
	I shall be happy to co6perate with
you so far, said Neville, stiffly. I
undertake to keep Galton silent; and
for the rest, we have only to name an
early hour for meeting, and confide it
to but one discreet friend apiece who
will attend us to the field. Then there
will be no gossip, and no bumpkins nor
constables breaking in: such things
have happened in this country, I hear.
	It was Wednesday. They settled to
meet on Friday at noon on a hillside
between Bolton and Nevilles Court.
The spot was exposed, but so wild and
unfrequented that no interruption was
to be feared. Mr. Ncville being a prac-
tised swordsman, Gaunt chose pistols,
 a weapon at which the combatants
were supposed to be pretty equal. To
this Neville very handsomely consented.
	By this time a stiff and elaborate ci-
vility had taken the place of their heat,
and at parting they bowed both long and
low to each other.
	Griffith left the inn and went into the
street; and as soon as he got there,
he began to realize what he had done,
and that in a day or two he might very
probably be a dead man. The first
thing he did was to go with sorrowful
face and heavy step to Mr. Houseman s
office.
	Mr. Houseman was a highly respect-
able solicitor. His late father and he
had long enjoyed the confidence of the
gentry, and this enabled him to avoid
litigious business, and confine himself
pretty much to the more agreeable and</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00111" SEQ="0111" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="105">	i866.]	Grzffitlz Gaunt; or; Y~ea lousy.	105

lucrative occupation of drawing wills,
settlements, and conveyances, and ef-
fecting loans, sales, and transfers. He
visited the landed proprietors, and dined
with them, and was a great favorite in
the country.
	Justicing day brought him many
visits; so on that day he was always at
his place of business. Indeed, a client
was with him when Griffith called, and
the young gentleman had to wait in the
outer office for full ten minutes.
	Then a door opened and the client in
question came out, looking mortified
and anxious. It was Squire Peyton.
At sight of Gaunt, who had risen to
take his vacant place, Kates father gave
him a stiff nod, and an unfriendly glance,
then hurried away.
	Griffith was hurt at his manner. He
knew very well Mr. Peyton looked high-
er for his daughter than Griffith Gaunt:
but for all that the old gentleman had
never shown him any personal dislike
or incivility until this moment.
	So Griffith could not but fear that
Neville was somehow at the bottom of
this, and that the combination was very
strong against him. Now in thus inter-
preting Mr. Peytons manner he fell
into a very common error and fruitful
cause of misunderstanding. We go and
fancy that Everybody is thinking of us.
But he is not: he is like us; he is
thinking of himself.
	Well, well, thought Griffith, if I
am not to have her, what better place
for me than the grave?
He entered i\Ir. Housemans private
room and opened his business at once.
But a singular concurrence of cir-
cumstances induced Lawyer Houseman
to confide to a third party the substance
of what passed between this young
gentleman and himself. So, to avoid
repetition, the best way will be to let
Houseman tell this part of my tale, in-
stead of me; and I only hope his com-
munication, when it comes, may be half
as interesting to my reader as it was to
his hearer.
Suffice it for me to say that lawyer
and client were closeted a good hour,
and were still conversing together when
a card was handed in to Mr. Houseman
that seemed to cause him both surprise
and pleasure.
	In five minutes, said he to the
clerk. Griffith took the hint, and bade
him good-bye directly.
	As he xvent out, the gentleman who
had sent in his card rose from a seat in
the outer office to go in.
	It was Mr. George Neville.
	Griffith Gaunt and he saluted and
scanned each other curiously. They
little thought to meet again so soon.
The clerks saw nothing more than two
polite gentlemen passing each other.

	The more Griffith thought of the ap-
proaching duel, the less he liked it. He
was an impulsive man, for one thing;
and with such, a cold fit naturally suc-
ceeds a hot one. And besides, as his
heat abated, Reason and Reflection
made themselves heard, and told him
that in a contest with a formidable rival
he was throwing away an advantage.
After all, Kate had shown him great
favor; she had ridden Nevilles horse
after him, and made him resign his pur-
pose of leaving her; surely, then, she
preferred him on the whole to Neville:
yet he must go and risk his chance of
possessing her upon a personal encoun-
ter, in which Neville was at least as
likely to kill him as he to kill Nev-
ille. He saw too late that he was
playing his rivals game. He felt cold
and despondent, and more and more
convinced that he should never marry
Kate, but that she would very likely
bury him.
With all this he was too game to re-
coil, and indeed he hated his rival too
deeply. So, like many a man before
him, he was going doggedly to the field
against his judgment, with little to win
and all to lose.
His deeper and more solemn anxie-
ties were diversified by a lighter one.
A few days ago he had invited half the
county to bury Mr. Charlton on Satur-
day, the i9th of February. But now
he had gone and fixed Friday the
~8th for a duel. A fine thing, if he
should be himself a corpse on Friday</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00112" SEQ="0112" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="106">Grz:ftitlz Gaunt; or, .7ea lousy.

afternoon! Who was to receive the
guests? who conduct the funeral?
	The man, with all his faults, had a
grateful heart; and Mr. Charlton was
his benefactor, and he felt he had no
right to go and get himself killed until
he had paid the last rites to his best
friend.
	The difficulty admits of course of a
comic viexv, and smells Hibernian; but
these things seem anything but droll to
those whose lives and feelings are at
stake; and, indeed, there was something
chivalrous and touching in Griffiths vex-
ation at the possibility of his benefac-
tor being buried without due honors, ow-
ing to his own intemperate haste to be
killed. He resolved to provide against
that contingency: so, on the Thursday,
he wrote an urgent letter to Mr. House-
man, telling him he must come early to
the funeral, and he prepared to conduct
it.
	This letter was carried to Mr. House-
mans office at three oclock on Thurs-
day afternoon.
	Mr. Houseman was not at home. He
was gone to a country-house nine miles
distant. But Griffiths servant was well
mounted, and had peremptory orders;
so he rode after Mr. Houseman, and
found him at Mr. Peytons house, 
whither, if you please, we, too, will fol-
low him.
	In the first place, you must know that
the real reason why Mr. Peyton looked
so savage, coming out of Mr. House-
mans office, was this: Neville had said
no more about the hundred pounds,
and, indeed, had not visited the house
since; so Peyton, who had now begun
to reckon on this sum, went to House-
man to borrow it. But Houseman po-
litely declined to lend it him, and gave
excellent reasons. All this was natural
enough, common enough; but the real
reason why Houseman declined was a
truly singular one. The fact is, Catha-
rine Peyton had made him promise to
refuse.
	Between that young lady and the
Housemans, husband and wife, there
was a sincere friendship, founded on
mutual esteem; and Catharine could
do almost what she liked with either of
them. Now, whatever might have been
her faults, she was a proud girl, and an
intelligent one : it mortified her pride
to see her father borrowing here, and
borrowing there, and unable to repay;
and she had also observed that he al-
ways celebrated a new loan by a new
extravagance, and so was never a penny
the richer for borrowed money. He had
inadvertently let fall that he should ap-
ply to Houseman. She raised no open
objection, but just mounted Piebald, and
rode off to Houseman, and made him
solemnly promise her not to lend her
father a shilling.
	Houseman kept his word; but his re-
fusal cost him more pain than he had
calculated on when he made the prom-
ise. Squire Peyton had paid him thou-
sands, first and last; and when he left
Housemans room, with disappointment,
mortification, and humiliation deeply
marked on his features, usually so hand-
some and jolly, the lawyer felt sorry and
ashamed,  and did not show it.
	But it rankled in him; and the very
next day he took advantage of a little
business he had to do in Mr. Peytons
neighborhood, and drove to Peyton
Hall, and asked for Mistress Kate.
	His was a curious errand. Indeed, I
think it would not be easy to find a par-
allel to it.
	For here was an attorney calling upon
a beautiful girl,to do what?
	To soften her.
	On a daughter,  to do what?
	To persuade her to permit him to
lend her father oo on insufficient
security.
	Well, he reminded her of his ancient
obligations to her family, and assured
her he could well afford to risk a hun-
dred or even a thousand pounds. He
then told her that her father had shown
great pain at his refusal, and that he
himself was human, and could not di-
vest himself of gratitude and pity and
goochnature,  all for LIoc.
	In a word, said he, I have brought
the money; and you must give in for
this once, and let me lend it him with-
out more ado.
io6
[January,</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00113" SEQ="0113" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="107">	i866.]	Grz~1h Gazini, or, ?/ealousy.	107

	Miss Peyton was gratified and affect-
ed, and a tear trembled a moment in her
eye, but went in-doors again; and left
her firm as a rock sprinkled with dew.
She told him she could quite understand
his feeling, and thanked him for it; but
she had long and seriously weighed the
matter, and could not release him from
his promise.
	No more of this base borrowing,
said she, and clenched her white teeth
indomitably.
	He attacked her with a good many
weapons; but she parried them all so
gently, yet so nobly1 and so successfully,
that he admired her more than ever.
	Still, lawyers fight hard, and die very
hard. Houseman got warm in his cause,
and cross-examined this defendant, and
asked her whether ske would refuse to
lend her father 100 out of a full purse.
	This question was answered only by
a flash of her glorious eyes, and a mag-
nificent look of disdain at the doubt im-
plied.
	Well, then, said Houseman, be
your fathers surety for repayment, with
interest at six per centum, and then
there will be nothing in the business to
wound your dignity. I have many hun-
dreds out at six per centum.
	Excuse me: that would be dishon-
est, said Kate; I have no money to
repay you with.
	But you have expectations.
	Nay, not I.
	I beg your pardon.
	Methinks I should know, Sir. What
expectations have I? and from whom?
Houseman fidgeted on his seat, and
then, with some hesitation, replied, 
Well, from two that I know of.
	You are jesting, methinks, good Mr.
Houseman, said she, reproachfully.
	Nay, dear Misfress Kate, I wish you
too well to jest on such a theme.
	The lawyer then fidgeted again on his
seat in silence,sign of an inward strug-
gle,  during which Kates eye watched
him with some curiosity. At last his
wavering balance inclined towards re-
vealing something or other.
	Mistress Kate, said he, my wife
and I are both your faithful friends and
humble admirers. We often say you
would grace a coronet, and wish you
were as rich as you are good and beau-
tiful.
	Kate turned her lovely head away, and
gave him her hand. That incongruous
movement, so full of womanly grace and
feeling, and the soft pressure of her
white hand, completed her victory, and
the remains of Houseman s reserve
melted away.
	Yes, my dear young lady, said he,
warmly, I have good news for you;
only mind, not a living soul must ever
know it from your lips. Why, I am go-
ing to do for you what I never did in
my life before,  going to tell you some-
thing that passed yesterday in my office.
But then I know you; you are a young
lady out of a thousand; I can trust you
to be discreet and silent,  can I not?
	As the grave.
	Well, then, my young mistress,in
truth it was like a play, though the scene
was but a lawyers office
	Was it? cried Kate. Then you
set me all of a flutter; you must sup
here, and sleep here. Nay, nay, said
she, her eyes sparkling with animation,
I 11 take no denial. My father dines
abroad: we shall have the house to our-
selves.
	Her interest was keenly excited: but
she was a true woman, and must co-
quette with her very curiosity; so she
ran off to see with her own eyes that
sheets were aired, and a roasting fire
lighted in the blue bed-room for her
guest.
	While she was away, a servant brought
in Griffith Gaunts letter, and a sheet of
paper had to be borrowed to answer it.
	The answer was hardly written and
sent out to Griffiths servant, when sup-
per and the fair hostess came in almost
together.
	After supper fresh logs were heaped
on the fire, and the lawyer sat in a cosey
arm-chair, and took out his diary, and
several papers, as methodically as if he
was going to lay the case by counsel
before a judge of assize.
	Kate sat opposite him with her gray
eyes beaming on him all the time, and</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00114" SEQ="0114" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="108">Grz:fti/h Gcm;z/; or, 7ca/ousy.

searching for the hidden meaning of ev-
erything he told her. During the recital
which follows, her color often came and
~vent, hut those wonderful eyes never
left the narrators face a moment.
	They put the attorney on his mettle,
and he elaborated the matter more than
I should have done: he articulated his
topics; marked each salient fact hy a
long pause. In short, he told his story
like an attorney, and not like a roman-
cist. I cannot help that, you know; I
m not Procrustes.


MR. HOUSEMAN S LITTLE NARRATIVE.


	WEDNESDAY, the seventeenth day
of February, at ahout one of the clock,
called on me at my place of husiness
Mr. Griffith Gaunt, whom I need not
here describe, inasmuch as his person
and place of residence are well known
to the court  what am I saying ?  I
mean, well known to yourself, Mistress
Kate.

	The said Griffith, on entering my
room, seemed moved, and I might say
distempered, and did not give himself
time to salute me and receive my obei-
sknce, but addressed me abruptly and
said as follows: Mr. Houseman, I am
come to make my will.
	(Dear me! said Kate: then blush-
ed, and was more on her guard.)

	I seated the young gentleman, and
then replied, that his resolution afore-
said did him credit, the young heing as
mortal as the old. I said further, that
many disasters had happened, in my ex-
perience, owing to the ohstinacy with
which men, in the days of their strength,
shut their eyes to the precarious tenure
under which all sons of Adam hold ex-
istence; and so, many a worthy gentle-
man dies in his sins,  and, what is
worse, dies intestate.

	But the said Griffith interrupted me
with some signs of impatience, and ask-
ed me bluntly, would I draw his will, and
have it executed on the spot.
	I assented, generally; hut I request-
ed him, hy way of needful preliminary,
to obtain for me a copy of Mr. Charl-
tons will, under which, as I have al-
ways understood, the said Griffith in-
herits whatever real estate he hath to
bequeath.

	Mr. Griffith Gaunt then replied to
me, that Mr. Charltons will was in Lon-
don, and the exact terms of it could not
he known until after the funeral,that
is to say, upon the nineteenth instant.

	Thereupon I ex~4ained to Mr. Gaunt
that I must see and know what proper-
ties were devised in the will aforesaid,
by the said Charlton, to Gaunt afore-
said, and how devised and described.
Without this, I said, I could not cor-
rectly and sufficiently describe the same
in the instrument I was now requested
to prepare.

	Mr. Gaunt did not directly reply to
this objection. But he pondered a lit-
tle while, and then asked me if it were
not possible for him, by means of gen-
eral terms, to convey to a sole legatee
whatever lands, goods, chattels, etc.,
Mr. Chariton might hereafter prove to
have devised to him, the said Griffith
Gaunt.

	I admitted this was possible, hut ob-
jected that it was dangerous. I let him
know that in matters of law general
terms are a fruitful source of dispute,
and I said I was one of those who hold
it a duty to avert litigation from our cli-
ents.

	Thereupon Mr. Gaunt drew out of
his bosom a pocket-book.

	The said pocket-book was shown to
me by the said Gaunt, and I say it con-
tained a paragraph from a newspaper,
which I believe to have been cut out of
the said newspaper with a knife, or a
pair of scissors, or some trenchant in-
strument; and the said paragraph pur-
ported to contain an exact copy of a cer-
tain will and testament under which
io8
[January,</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00115" SEQ="0115" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="109">Grzfi/k Gauii/; o~ ~ealousy.

(as is, indeed, matter of public notori-
ety) one Dame Butcher bath inherited
and now enjoys the lands, goods, and
chattels of a certain merry parson late
deceased in these parts, and, I believe,
little missed.

	Mr. Gaunt would have me read the
will and testament aforesaid, and I
read it accordingly: and inasmuch as
bad things are best remembered, the
said will and testament did, by its sin-
gularity and profaneness, fix itself forth-
with in my memory; so that I can by
no means dislodge it thence, do what I
may.
	The said document, to the best of
my memory and belief; runneth after
this fashion.
	I, John Raymond, clerk, at pres-
ent residing at Whitbeck, in the County
of Cumberland, being a man sound in
body, mind, and judgment, do deliver
this as my last will and testament.
	I give and bequeath all my real
property, and all my personal property,
and all the property, whether real or
personal, I may hereafter possess or
become entitled to, to my housekeeper,
Janet Butcher.
	And I appoint Janet Butcher my
sole executrix, and I make Janet Butch-
er my sole residuary legatee; save and
except that I leave my solemn curse to
any knave who hereafter shall at any
time pretend that he does not under-
stand the meaninb of this my will and
testament.
	(Catharine smiled a little at this last
bequest.)

	Mr. Gaunt then solemnly appealed
to me as an honest man to tell him
whether the aforesaid document was
bad, or good, in law.

	I was fain to admit that it was suf-
ficient in law; but I qualified, and said
I thought it might be attacked on the
score of the hussys undue influence,
and the testators apparent insanity.
Nevertheless, I concluded candidly that
neither objection would prevail in our
courts, owing to the sturdy prejudice
in the breasts of English jurymen, whose
ground of faith it is that every man has
a right to do what he will with his own,
and even to do it how he likes.

	Mr. Gaunt did speedily abuse this
my candor. He urged me to lose no
time, but to draw his will according to
the form and precedent in that case
made and provided by this mad parson;
and my clerks, forsooth, were to be the
witnesses thereof.

	I refused, with some heat, to sully
my office by allowing such an in~stru-
ment to issue therefrom; and I asked
the said Gaunt, in high dudgeon, for
what he took me.

	Mr. Gaunt then offered, in reply,
two suggestions that shook me. fin-
~ rimis, he told me the person to whom
he now desired to leave his all was Mis-
tress Catharine Peyton. (An ejacula-
tion from Kate.) Secundo, he said he
would go straight from me to that cox-
comb Harrison, were I to refuse to serve
him in the matter.

	On this, having regard to your in-
terest and my own, I temporized : I of-
fered to let him draw a will after his
parsons precedent, and I agreed it
should be witnessed in my office; only
I stipulated that next week a proper
document should be drawn by my~elf;
with due particulars, on two sheets of
paper, and afterwards engrossed and
witnessed: and to this Mr. Gaunt as-
sented, and immediately drew his will
according to newspaper precedent.

	But when I came to examine his
masterpiece, I found he had taken ad-
vantage of my pliability to attach an
unreasonable condition, to wit: that the
said Catharine should forfeit all interest
under this will, in case she should ever
marry a certain party therein ncminat-
ed, specified, and described.
	(Now that was Griffith all over,
cried Catharine, merrily.)

	I objected stoutly to this. I took
1866.1
109</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00116" SEQ="0116" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="110">	110	Grzftith Gazi;i/; or, .7/calousy.	[January,

leave to remind the young gentleman,
that, when a Christian man makes his
last will and testament, he should think
of the grave and of the place beyond,
whither we may carry our affections,
hu.t must leave the bundle of our hates
behind, the gate being narrow. I even
xvent so far as to doubt whether such a
proviso could stand in law; and I also.
put a practical query: what was to hin-
der the legatee from selling the proper-
ty and diverting the funds, and then
marrying whom she liked?

	1\Jr. Gaunt was deaf to reason. He
bade me remember that he was neither
saint nor apostle, hut a poor gentle-
man of Cumberland, who saw a stran-
ger come between him and his lover
dear: with that he was much moved,
and did not conclude his argument at
all, hut hroke o$ and was fain to hide
his face with both hands awhile. In
truth, this touched me; and I looked
another way, and began to ask myself;
why should I interfere, who, after all,
know not your heart in the matter; and,
to he hrief, I withstood him and Par-
sons law no more, hut sent his draught
will to the clerks, the which they copied
fair in a trice, and the duplicates were
signed and witnessed in red-hot haste,
	as most of mens follies are done, for
that matter.

	The paper writing now produced
and shown to metush! what am I
saying ?  I mean, the paper writing I
now produce and show to you is the
draught of the xvill aforesaid, in the hand-
writing of the testator.

	And with this he handed Kate Pey-
ton Griffith Gaunts will, and took a
long and satirical pinch of snuff while
she examined it.
	Miss Peyton took the will in her
white hands and read it. But, in read-
ing it, she held it up and turned it so
that her friend could not see her face
while she read it, hut only her white
hands, in which the document rustled a
little.
	It ran thus : 
	I, Griffith Gaunt, late of the Eyrie,
and now residing at Bolton Hall, in the
County of Cumberland, being sound in
body and mind, do deliver this as my
last will and testament. I give and
bequeath all the property, real or per-
sonal, which I now possess or may
hereafter become entitled to, to my dear
friend and mistress, Catharine Peyton,
daughter of Henry Peyton, Esquire, of
Peyton Hall: provided always that the
said Catharine Peyton shall at no time
within the next ten years marry George
Neville of Nevilles Court in this coun-
ty. But should the said Catharine mar-
ry the said George within ten years of
this day, then I leave all my said prop-
erty, in possession, remainder, or rever-
sion, to my heir-at-law.

	The fair legatee read this extraor-
dinary testament more than once. At
last she handed it back to Mr. House-
man without a word. But her cheek
was red, and her eyes glistening.
	Mr. Houseman was surprised at her
silence; and as he was curious to know
her heart, he sounded her, asked her
what she thought of that part of his
story. But she evaded him with all the
tact of her sex.
	What! that is not all, then? said
she, quickly.
	Houseman replied, that it was barely
half.
	Then sell me all, pray tell me all,
said Kate, earnestly.
	I am here to that end, said House-
man, and recommenced his narrative.

	The business being done to Mr.
Gaunts satisfaction, though not tomine,
we fell into some friendly talk; but in
the midst of it my clerk Thomas brought
me in the card of a gentleman whom I
was very desirous to secure as a client.

	Mr. Gaunt, I think, read my mind;
for he took leave of me forthwith. I
attended him to the door, and then wel-
comed the gentleman aforesaid. It was
no other than Mr. George Neville.

	Mr. Neville, after such gracious</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00117" SEQ="0117" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="111">	i866.J	Grz:ffihlz Gazud; o~ lealousy.	III

civilities as his native breeding and for-
eign travel have taught him, came to
business, and requested me  to draw
his will.
	(La! said Kate.)

	I was a little startled, but hid it and
took his instructions. This done, I re-
quested to see the title-deeds of his es-
tates, with a view to describing them,
and he went himself to his bankers for
them and placed them in my hands.

	I then promised to have the will
re.ady in a week or ten days. But Mr.
Neville, with many polite regrets for
hurrying me, told me upon his honor he
could give me but twenty - four hours.
After that, said he, it might be too
late.
	(Ah! said Miss Peyton.)

	Determined to retain my new client,
I set my clerks to work, and this very
day was engrossed, signed, and witness-
ed, the last will and testament of George
Neville, Esquire, of Nevilles Court, in
the County of Cumberland, and Leices-
ter Square, London, where he bath a
noble mansion.

	Now as to the general dis position of
his lands, manorial rights, messuages,
tenements, goods, chattels, etc., and his
special legacies to divers ladies and
gentlemen and domestic servants, these
I will not reveal even to you.

	The paper I now produce is a copy
of that particular bequest which I have
decided to communicate to you in strict
and sacred confidence.
	And he handed her an extract from
George Nevilles will.
	Miss Peyton then read what fol-
lows 
And I give and bequeath to Mis-
tress Catharine Peyton, of Peyton Hall,
in the said County of Cumberland, in
token of my respect and regard, all that
my freehold estate called Moniton
Grange, with the messuage or tenement
standing and being thereon, and the
farm-yard buildings and appurtenances
belonging thereto, containing by esti-
mation three hundred and seventy-six
acres three roods and five perches, be
the same little more or less, to hold to
her the said Catharine Peyton, her heirs
and assigns, forever.

	The legatee laid doxvn the paper, and
leaned her head softly on her fair hand,
and her eyes explored vacancy.
	What means all this ? said she,
aloud, but to herself
	Mr. Houseman undertook the office
of interpreter.
	Means? Why, that he has left you
one of the snuggest estates in the coun-
ty. T is not quite so large as Bolton;
but lies sunnier, and the land richer.
Well, Mistress, was I right? Are you
not good for a thousand pounds ?
	Kate, still manifestly thinking of
something else, let fall, as it were, out
of her mouth, that Mr. Gaunt and Mr.
Neville were both men in the flower of
their youth, and how was she the richer
for their folly?
	Why, said Houseman, you will
not have to wait for the death of these
testators,  Heaven forbid! But what
does all this making of wills show me
That both these gentlemen are deep in
love with you, and you can pick and
choose; I say, you can wed with Bol-
ton Hall or Nevilles Court to-morrow;
so, prithee, let the Squire have his hun-
dred pounds, and do you repay me at
your leisure.
	Miss Peyton made no reply, but lean-
ed her exquisite head upon her hand
and pondered.
	She did not knit her brows, nor labor
visibly at the mental oar; yet a certain
reposeful gravity and a fixity of the
thoughtful eye showed she was apply-
ing all the powers of her mind.
	Mr. Houseman was not surprised at
that: his own wife had but little intel-
lect; yet had he seen her weigh two
rival bonnets in mortal silence, and
with all the seeming profundity of a
judge on the bench. And now this
young lady was doubtless weighing
farms with similar gravity, care, and
intelligence.</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00118" SEQ="0118" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="112">	112	GrzfftIi Gaunt; or, Yealousy.	[January,

	But as this continued, and still she
did not communicate her decision, he
asked her point-blank which of the two
she settled to wed Nevilles Court or
Bolton Grange.
	Thus appealed to, Miss Peyton turn-
ed her gre at eye on him, without really
looking at him, and replied, 
You have made me very uneasy.
He stared. She relapsed into thought
a moment, and then, turning to House-
man, asked him how he accounted for
those two gentlemen making their wills.
They were very young to make their
wills all of a sudden.
	Why, said Houseman, Mr. Nev-
ille is a man of sense, and every man
or sense makes his will; and as for
Mr. Gaunt, he has just come into pros-
pect of an estate; that s why.
	Ah, hut why could not Griffith wait
till after the funeral?
	Oh, clients are always in a hurry.
	 So you see nothing in it? nothing
alarming, I mean?
	Nothing very alarming. Two land-
ed proprietors in love with you; that is
all.
	But, dear Mr. Houseman, that is
what makes me uneasy: at this rate,
they must look on one another as  as
 rivals; and you know rivals are some-
times enemies.~~
	Oh, I see now, said Houseman:
you apprehend a quarrel between the
gentlemen. Of course there is no love
lost between them: but they met in my
office and saluted each other with perfect
civility. I saw them with my own eyes.
	Indeed! I am glad to hear that,
very glad. I hope it was only a coin-
cidence then, their both making their
wills.
	Nothing more, you may depend: nei-
ther of them knows from me what the
other has done, nor ever will.
	That is true, said Kate, and seem-
ed considerably relieved.
	To ease her mind entirely, Houseman
went on to say, that, as to the report that
high words had passed between the cli-
ents in question at the Roebuck, he
had no doubt it was exaggerated.
	Besides, said he, that was not
about a lady: I m told it was about a
horse,  some bet belike.
	Catharine uttered a faint cry.
	About a horse? said she. Not
about a gray horse?
	Nay, that is more than I know.
	High words about a horse, said
Catharine, and they are making their
wills. Oh! my mind misgave me from
the first. And she turned pale. Pres-
ently she clasped her hands together,
Mr. Houseman! she cried, what
shall I do? What! do you not see that
both their lives are in danger, and that
is why they make their wills? And how
should both their lives be in danger, but
from each other? Madmen! they have
quarrelled; they are going to fight, 
fight to the death; and I fear it is about
me,  me, who love neither of them,
you know.~~
	In that case, let them fight, said her
legal adviser, dispassionately. Which-
ever fool gets killed, you will be none
the poorer. And the dog wore a sober
complacency.
	Catharine turned her large eyes on
him with horror and amazement, but
said nothing.
	As for the lawyer, he was more struck
with her sagacity than with anything.
He somewhat overrated it,  not being
aware of the private reasons she had
for thinking that her two testators were
enemies to the death.
	I almost think you are right, said
he; for I got a curious missive from
Mr. Gaunt scarce an hour agone, and
he says let me see what he says
	Nay, let vie see, said Kate.
On that he handed her Griffiths note.
It ran thus : 
It is possible I may not be able to
conduct the funeral. Should this be so,
I appoint you to act for me. So, then,
good Mr. Houseman, let me count on
you to be here at nine of the clock. For
Heavens sake fail me not.
Your humble servant,
G. G.

	This note left no doubt in Kates
mind.</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00119" SEQ="0119" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="113">	i866.]	Grz~ftitk Gaunt; or, Y~ealousy.	3

	Now, first of all, said she, what
answer made you to this?
	What answer should I make? I
pledged my word to be at Bolton at nine
of the clock.
	Oh, blind! sighed Kate. And I
must be out of the room! What shall I
do? My dear friend, forgive me: I am
a wretched girl. I am to blame. I ought
to have dismissed them both, or else
decided between them. But who would
have thought it would go this length? I
did not think Griffith was brave enough.
Have pity on me, and help me. Stop
this fearful fighting. And now the
young creature clung to the man-of-
business, and prayed and prayed him
earnestly to avert bloodshed.
	Mr. Houseman was staggered by this
passionate appeal from one who so rare-
ly lost her self-c6mmand. He soothed
her as well as he could, and said he
would do his best,but added, which
was very true, that he thought her inter-
ference would be more effective than his
own.
	What care these young bloods for
an old attorney? I should fare ill, came
I between their rapiers. To be sure, I
might bind them over to keep the peace.
But, Mistress Kate, now be frank with
me; then I can serve you better. You
love one of these two: that is clear.
Which is the man ?  that I may know
what I am about.
	For all her agitation, Kate was on her
guard in some things.
	Nay, she faltered, I love neither,
 not to say love them: but I pity him
so!
Which?
 Both.
	Ay, Mistress; but which do you
pity most? asked the shrewd lawyer.
	Whichever shall come to harm for
my sake, replied the simple girl.
	You could not go to them to-night,
and bring them to reason? asked she,
piteously.
	She went to the window to see what
sort of a night it was. She drew the
heavy crimson curtains and opened the
window. In rushed a bitter blast laden
with flying snow. The window-ledges,
	VOL. XVII.  NO. 99.	8
too, were clogged with snow, and all the
ground was white.
	Horseman shuddered, and drew near-
er to the blazing logs. Kate closed the
window with a groan.
	It is not to be thought of, said she,
at your age, and not a road to be seen
for snow. What shall I do?
	Wait till to - morrow, said Mr.
Houseman.
	(Procrastination was his daily work,
being an attorney.)
	 To - morrow ! cried Catharine.
Perhaps to-morrow will be too late.
Perhaps even now they have met, and
he lies a corpse.
Who ?
	Whichever it is, I shall end my days
in a convent praying for his soul.
	She wrung her hands while she said
this, and still there was no catching
her.
	Little did the lawyer think to rouse
such a storm with his good news. And
now he made a feeble and vain attempt
to soothe her, and ended by promising
to start the first thing in the morning
and get both her testators bound over
to keep the peace by noon. With this
resolution he went to bed early.
	She was glad to be alone, at all events.
	Now, mind you, there were plenty of
vain and vulgar, yet respectable girls, in
Cumberland, xvho would have been de-
lighted to be fought about, even though
bloodshed were to be the result. But
this young lady was not vain, but proud.
She was sensitive, too, and troubled
with a conscience. It reproached her
bitterly: it told her she had permitted
the addresses of two gentlemen, and so
mischief had somehow arisen  out of
her levity. Now her life had been un-
eventful and innocent: this was the very
first time she had been connected with
anything like a crime, and her remorse
was great; so was her grief; but her
fears were greater still. The terrible
look Griffith had cast at his rival flash-
ed on her; so did his sinister words.
She felt, that, if he and Neville met,
nothing less than Nevilles death or his
own would separate them. Suppose
that even now one of them lay a corpse,</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00120" SEQ="0120" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="114">	4	Grzflu/k Gauut,~ or, 7ea lousy.	[January,

cold and ghastly as the snow that now
covered Natures face!
	The agitation of her mind was such
that her body could not be still. Now
she walked the room in violent distress,
wringing her hands; now she kneeled
and prayed fervently for both those lives
she had endangered; often she flew to
the window and looked eagerly out,
writhing and rebelling against the net-
work of female custom that entangled
her and would not let her fly out of her
cage even to do a good action,  to avert
a catastrophe by her prayers, or her
tears, or her good sense.
	And all ended in her realizing that
she was a woman, a poor, impotent be-
ing, born to lie quiet and let things go:
at that she wept helplessly.
	So wore away the first night of agony
this young creature ever knew.
	Towards morning, exhausted by her
inward struggles, she fell asleep upon a
sofa.
But her trouble followed her. She
dreamed she was on a horse, hurried
along with prodigious rapidity, in a dark-
ened atmosphere, a so.rt of dry fog: she
knew somehow she was being taken to
see some awful, mysterious thing. By-
and-by the haze cleared and she came
out upon pleasant, open, sunny fields,
that almost dazzled her. She passed
gates, and hedges too, all clear, dis-
tinct, and individual. Presently a voice
by her side said, This way! and her
horse seemed to turn of his own accord
through a gap, and in one moment she
came on a group of gentlemen. It was
Griffith Gaunt, and two strangers. Then
she spoke, and said,
But Mr. Neville?
	No answer was made her; but the
group opened in solemn silence, and
there lay George Neville on the snow,
stark and stiff, with blood issuing from
his temple, and trickling along the snow.
	She saw distinctly all his well-known
features: but they were pinched and
sharpened now. And his dark olive
skin was turned to bluish white. It
was his corpse. And now her horse
thrust out his nose and snorted like
a demon. She looked down, and, ah!
the blood was running at her preternat-
urally fast along the snow. She scream-
ed, her horse reared high, and she was
falling on the blood-stained snow. She
awoke, screaming; and the sunlight
seemed to rush in at the window.
	Her joy that it was only a dream over-
powered every other feeling at first.
She kneeled and thanked God for that.
	The next thing was, she thouTht it
might be a revelation of what had ac-
tually occurred.
	But this chilling fear did not affect
her long. Nothing could shake her con-
viction that a duel was on foot,  and,
indeed, the intelligent of her sex do
sometimes put this and that together,
and spring to a just, but obvious infer-
ence, in a way that looks to a slower
and safer reasoner like divination,but
then she knew that yesterday evening
both parties were alive. Coupling this
with Griffiths broad hint that after the
funeral might be too late to make his
will, she felt sure that it was this very
day the combatants were to meet. Yes,
and this very morning: for she knew
that gentlemen always fought in the
morning.
	If her dream was false as to the past,
it might be true as to what was at hand.
Was it not a supernatural warning, sent
to her in mercy? The history of her
Church abounded in such dreams and
visions; and, indeed, the time and place
she lived in were rife with stories of the
kind,one, in particular, of recent date.
	This thou~ ht took hold of her, and
grew on her, till it overpowered even
the diffidence of her sex; and then up
started her individual character; and
now nothing could hold her. For, lan-
guid and dreamy in the cohmon things
of life, this Catharine Peyton was one
of those who rise into rare ardor and
activity in such great crises as seem to
benumb the habitually brisk, and they
turn tame and passive.
	She had seen at a glance that House-
man was too slow and apathetic for such
an emergency. She resolved to act her-
self. She washed her face and neck and
arms and hands in cold water, and was
refreshed and invigorated. She put on</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00121" SEQ="0121" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="115">	i866.]	Griftith Gaunt; or, ~ealousy.

her riding-habit and her little gold spur,
(Griffith Gaunt had given it her,) and
hurried into the stable-yard.
	Old Joe and his boy had gone away
to breakfast: he lived in the village.
	This was unlucky: Catharine must
wait his, return and lose time, or else
saddle the horse herself. She chose the
latter. The piebald was a good horse,
but a fidgetty one; so she saddled and
bridled him at his stall. She then led
him out to the stone steps in the stable-
yard, and tried to mount him. But he
sidled away; she had nobody to square
him; and she could get nothing to
mount but his head. She coaxed him,
she tickled him on the other side with
her whip. It was all in vain.
	It was absurd, but heart-sickening.
She stared at him with wonder that he
could be so cruel as to play the fool
when every minute might be life or
death. She spoke to him, she implor-
ed him piteously, she patted him. All
was in vain.
	As a last resource, she walked him
back to the stable and gave him a sieve-
ful of oats, and set it down by the corn-
bin for him, and took an opportunity to
mount the bin softly.
	He ate the oats, but with retroverted
eye watched her. She kept quiet and
affected nonchalance till he became less
cautious,then suddenly sprang on him,
and taught him to set his wit against a
womans. My Lord wheeled round di-
rectly, ere she could get her leg over the
pommel, and made for the stable-door.
She lowered her head to his mane and
just scraped out without injury,  not an
inch to spare. He set off at once, but
luckily for her she had often ridden a
bare-backed horse. She sat him for the
first few yards by balance, then reined
him in quietly, and soon whipped her
left foot into the stirrup and her right
leg over the pommel; and then the pie-
bald nag had to pay for his pranks: the
roads were clogged with snow, but she
fanned him along without mercy, and
never drew bridle till she pulled him up,
drenched and steaming like a washtub,
at Netley Cross-Roads.
	Here she halted irresolute. The road
to the right led to Bolton, distant two
miles and a half. The road in front led
to Nevilles Court, distant three miles.
Which should she take? She had
asked herself this a dozen times upon
the road, yet could never decide until
she got to the place and must. The
question was, With which of them had
she most influence? She hardly knew.
But Griffith Gaunt was her old sweet-
heart; it seemed somewhat less strange
and indelicate to go to him than to the
new one. So she turned her horses
head towards Bolton; but she no lon-
ger went quite so fast as she had gone
before she felt going to either in par-
ticular. Such is the female mind.
	She reached Bolton at half-past elev-
en, and, now she was there, put a bold
face on it, rode up to the door, and,
leaning forward on her horse, rang the
hall-bell.
	A footman came to the door.
	With composed visage, though beat-
ing heart, she told him she desired to
speak for a moment to Mr. Griffith
Gaunt. He asked her, would she be
pleased to alight; and it was clear by
his manner no calamity had yet fallen.
	No, no, said Kate; let me speak
to him here.
	The servant went in to tell his mas-
ter. Kate sat quiet, with her heart still
beating, but glowing now with joy. She
was in time, then, thanks to her good
horse. She patted him, and made the
prettiest excuses aloud to him for rid-
ing him so hard through the snow.
	The footman came back to say that
Mr. Gaunt had gone out.
	Gone out? Whither? On horse-
back?
	The footman did not know, but would
ask within.
	While he was gone to inquire, Cath-
anne lost patience, and rode into the
stable-yard, and asked a young lout,
who was lounging there, whether his
n~aster was gone out on horseback.
	The lounging youth took the trouble~~
to call out the groom, and asked him.
	The groom said, No, and that
Mr. Gaunt was somewhere about the
grounds, he thought..
5</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00122" SEQ="0122" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="116">Grz)~i/k Gaunt; or, !Xealousy.

	But in the midst of this colloquy, one
of the maids, curious to see the lady,
came out by the kitchen-door, and curt-
sied to Kate, and told her Mr. Gaunt
was gone out walking with two other
gentlemen. In the midst of her dis-
course, she recognized the visitor, and,
having somehow imbibed the notion
that Miss Pe.yton was likely to be Mrs.
Gaunt, and govern Bolton Hall, decided
to curry favor with her; so she called
her My Lady, and was very commu-
nicative. She said one of the gentle-
men was strange to her; but the other
was Doctor Islip, from Stanhope town.
She knew him well: he had taken off
her own brothers leg in a jiffy.
	But, dear heart, Mistress, said she,
how pale you be! Do come in, and
have a morsel of meat and a horn of
ale.
	Nay, my good girl, said Kate; I
could not eat; but bring me a mug of
new milk, if you will. I have not broken
my fast this day.
	The maid bustled in, and Catharine
asked the groom if there were no means
of knowing where Mr. Gaunt was. The
groom and the boy scratched their heads,
and looked puzzled. The lounging lout
looked at their perplexity, and grinned
satirically.
	This youth was Tom Leicester, born
in wedlock, and therefore, in the laws
eye, son of old Simon Leicester; but
gossips said his true father was the late
Captain Gaunt. Tom ran with the
hounds for his own sport,  went out
shooting with gentlemen, and belabored
the briers for them at twopence per
day and his dinner,  and abhorred all
that sober men call work.
	By trade, a Beater; profession, a
Scamp.
Two maids came out together now, 
one with the milk and a roll, the other
with a letter. Catharine drank the
milk, but could not eat. Then says the
other maid, 
If so be you are Mistress Peyton,
why, this letter is for you. Master left
it on his table in his bedroom.
	:Kate took the letter and opened it,
all in a flutter. It ran thus : 
	SWEET MISTRESS,  When this
reaches you, I shall be no more here
to trouble you with my jealousy. This
Neville set it abroad that you had
changed horses with him, as much as
to say you had plighted troth with him.
He is a liar, and I told him so to his
teeth. We are to meet at noon this
day, and one most die. Methinks I
shall be the one. But come what may,
I have taken care of thee; ask Jack
Houseman else. But, 0 dear Kate,
think of all that bath passed between
us, and do not wed this Neville, or I
could not rest in my grave. Sweet-
heart, many a letter have I written thee,
but none so sad as this. Let the grave
hide my faults from thy memory; think
only that I loved thee well. I leave
thee my substance  would it were ten
times more !  and the last thought of
my heart.
	So no more in this world
From him that is thy true lover
And humble servant till death,
GRIFFITH GAUNT.


	There seems to be room in the mind
for only one violent emotion at one in-
stant of time. This touching letter did
not just then draw a tear from her, who
now received it some hours sooner than
the writer intended. Its first effect
was to paralyze her. She sat white
and trembling, and her great eyes filled
with horror. Then she began to scream
wildly for help. The men and women
came round her.
	Murder! murder! she shrieked.
Tell me where to find him, ye wretch-
es, or may his blood be on your heads!
	The Scamp bounded from his loung-
ing position, and stood before her
straight as an arrow.
	Follow me ! he shouted.
	Her gray eyes and the Scamps black
ones flashed into one another directly.
He dashed out of the yard without an-
other word.
	And she spurred her horse, and clat-
tered out after him.
	He ran as fast as her horse could
canter, and soon took her all round the
house; and while he ran, his black
ii6
[January,</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00123" SEQ="0123" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="117">	i866.]	Griffith Gaunt; or, YeaZousy.	7

gypsy eyes were glancing in every di-
rection.
When they got to the lawn at the
back of the house, he halted a moment,
and said quietly, 
Here they be.
	He pointed to some enormous foot-
steps in the snow, and bade her notice
that they commenced at a certain glass
door belonging to the house, and that
they all poihted outwards. The lawn
was covered with such marks, but the
Scamp followed those his intelligence
had selected, and they took him through
a gate, and down a long walk, and into
the park. Here no other feet had trod-
den that morning except those Tom
Leicester was following.
	This is our game, said he. See,
there be six footsteps; and, now I look,
this here track is Squire Gaunts. I
know his foot in the snow among a hun-
dred. Bless your heart, I ye often been
out shooting with Squire Gaunt, and
lost him in the woods, and found him
again by tracking him on dead leaves,
let alone snow. I say, was nt they use-
less idiots? Could nt tell ye how to run
into a man, and snow on the ground!
Why, you can track a hare to her form,
and a rat to his hole,  let alone such
big game as this, with a hoof like a fry-
ing-pan,  in the snow.
	Oh, do not talk; let us make haste,
panted Kate.
	Canter away! replied the Scamp.
She cantered on, and he ran by her
side.
Shall I not tire you? said she.
The mauvals sulet laughed at her.
Tire me Y Not over this ground.
Why, I run with the hounds, and mostly
always in at the death; but that is not
altogether speed ye see I know Pugs
mind. What! dont you know me
I m Tom Leicester. Why, I know you:
I say, you are a good-hearted one, you
are.
Oh, no! no! sighed Kate.
Nay, but you are, said Tom. I
saw you take Harrowden Brook that
day, when the rest turned tail; and that
is what I call having a good heart.
Gently, Mistress, here,  this is full of
rabbit-holes. I seen Sir Ralphs sorrel
mare break her leg in a moment in one
of these. Shot her dead that afternoon,
a did, and then biled her for the hounds.
She d often follow at their tails ; next
hunting-day she ran inside their bellies.
Ha! ha! ha!
	Oh, dont laugh! I am in agony!
	Why, what is up, Mistress? asked
the young savage, lowering his voice.
Murder, says you; but that means
nought. The lasses they cry murder, if
you do but kiss em.
	Oh, Tom Leicester, it is murder!
It s a duel, a fight to the death, unless
we are in time to. prevent them.
	A jewel! cried Master Leicester,
his eyes glittering with delight. I
never saw a jeweL Dont you hold
him in for me, Mistress: gallop down
this slope as hard as .you can pelt; it is
grass under foot, and ye cant lose the
tracks, and I shall be sure to catch ye
in the next field.
	The young savage was now as anx-
ious to be in at the death as Kate was
to save life. As he spoke, he gave her
horse a whack on the quarter with his
stick, and away she went full gallop, and
soon put a hundred yards between her
and Tom.
	The next field was a .deep fallow,
and the hard furrows reduced her to a
trot; and before she got out of it Tom
was by her side.
	Did nt I tell you? said he. I d
run you to Peyton Hall for a pot o
beer.
	Oh, you good, brave, clever boy!
said Kate, how fortunate I am to have
you! I think we shall be in time.
	Tom was flattered.
	Why, you see, I am none of Daddy
Leicesters breed, said he. I m a
gentlemans by-blow, if you know what
that is.
	I cant say I d~o, said Kate; but
I know you are very bold and hand-
some, and swift of foot; and I know
my patron saint has sent you to me in
my misery. And, oh, my lad, if we are
in time,  what can I do for you? Are.
you fond of money,~Tom?
	That I be,  when I can get it.</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00124" SEQ="0124" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="118">	Gr~ftUh Gaunt; or, 7ea lousy.	[January,

	Then you shall have all I have got
in the world, if you get me there in time
to hinder mischief.
Come on! shouted Tom, excited
in his turn, and took the lead; and not
a word more passed till they came to
the foot of a long hill. Then said
Tom, 
Once we are at top of this, they
cant fight without our seeing em.
That is Scutchemsee Nob: you can
see ten miles all round from there.
	At this information Kate uttered an
ejaculation, and urged her horse for-
ward.
	The first part of this hill, which stood
between her and those whose tracks
she followed, was grass; then came a
strip of turnips; then on the bleak top
a broad piece of heather. She soon
cantered over the grass, and left Tom
so far behind he could not quite catch
her in the turnips. She entered the
heather, but here she was much retard-
ed by the snow-drifts and the ups and
downs of the rough place. But she
struggled on bravely, s till leading.
	She fixed her eyes earnestly on the
ridge, whence she could cry to the com-
batants, however distant, and stop the
combat.
	Now as she struggled on, and Tom
came after, panting a little for the first
time, suddenly there rose from the crest
of the hill two columns of smoke, and
the next moment two sharp reports
ran through the frosty air.
	Kate stopped; and looked round to
Tom with a scared, inquiring air.
	Pistols! yelled Tom behind her.
	At that the woman overpowered the
heroine, and Kate hid her face and fell
to trembling and wailing. Her wearied
horse came down to a walk.
	Presently up comes Tom.
	Dont lose your stomach for that,
he panted out. Gentlefolks do pop at
one another all day sometimes, and no
harm done.
	Oh, bless you! cried Kate; I
may yet be in time.
	She spurred her horse on. He did his
best, but ere he had gone twenty yards
he plunged into a cavity hidden by the
snow.
	While he was floundering there, crack
went a single pistol, and the smoke rose
and drifted over the hill-top.
	Whoop! muttered Tom, with
horrible sang-fvid. There s one
done for this time. Could nt shoot back,
ye see.
	At this horrible explanation Kate sank
forward on her horses mane as if she
herself had been killed; and the smoke
from the pistol came floating, thinner
and thinner, and eddied high over her
head.
	Tom spoke rude words of encourage-
ment to her. She did not even seem to
hear them. Then he lost all patience
at her, and clutched her arm to make
her hear him. But at that it seemed as
if some of his nature passed into her
down his arm; for she turned wild di-
rectly, and urged her horse fiercely up
the crest. Her progress was slow at
first; but the sun had melted the snow
on the Nob or extreme summit. She
tore her way through the last of the
snow on to the clear piece,  then, white
as ashes, spurred and lashed her horse
over the ridge, and dashed in amongst
them on the other side. For there they
were.
	What was the sight that met her
eyes?
	That belongs to the male branch of
my story, and shall be told forthwith,
but in its proper sequence.
uS</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00125" SEQ="0125" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="119">	i 366.J	   Reviews and Literary Notice!.	9
		REVIEWS AND LITERARY NOTICES.

Life and Letters of Frederick W Robertson,
	Al. A., Incumbent of Trinity Chapel,
	Brighton, 1847 1853. Edited by STOP-
	FORD A. BROOKE, M. A. Two Volumes.
Boston:	Ticknor &#38; Fields.

	THE Life and Letters of Mr. Robertson
will find a most extended and appreciative
welcome among a large company of sympa-
thizing and grateful readers on both sides of
the ocean. The way has been prepared for
them, and their most hearty reception has
been assured, by the acquaintance opened
for us with his mind and heart through
the extensive circulation of the several vol-
umes containing his Sermons and Address-
es. When the first of those volumes was
reprinted here, it wrought an immediate
effect upon hundreds, who were instinc-
tively drawn to its perusal, and who have
since seized with avidity upon each subse-
quent opportunity furnished them for pos-
sessing themselves of everything that could
be put into print which would renew and
intensify that effect. An exhaustive review
of that one department of our religious
literature which embraces utterances from
the pulpit would, we believe, fully establish
these two positions: first, that the ability
shown alike in the composition .and in the
delivery of sermons is at least equal in each
age and generation to the average of that
which is exhibited in the forum and at the
bar; and, second, that preachers of extraor-
dinary power appear at just such inter-
vals and under just such conditions as will
best assure us of a reserved and as yet un-
recognized capability in the pulpit, redeem-
ing it from the charge of a general dulness
and exhaustion. It was at the very time
when the newspaper press of England and
America was reiterating and illustrating this
charge, not without many tokens that sup-
ported it, that the sermons of Mr. Robert-
son were offering at least one signal excep-
tion to its truth, sufficient even to silence it
within the range of his ministry. An emi-
nently able and effective preacher appears
often enough to reassert the loftiest ideal of
his profession, and, what is more, to vindi-
cate it against the distrust and contempt to
which it may seem to be exposed by the
popular preachers. As we write, there
is circulating through the papers a very
striking paragraph from an article by that
distinguished divine, Mr. Caird, in which,
with a sharp criticism, he deals, as we should
suppose a man of his high tone would deal,
with the theme of popular preaching, espe-
cially as to its effects upon the dispenser of
it and upon the crowds who gather to it.
Mr. Robertson shrank from the repute of it,
and the inflictions which it visits, as he did
from sin. He knew full well, that, as the
popular taste and standard were not edu-
cated to an appreciation and approval of
the very loftiest style of ministration, the
more of curious, gaping notoriety, or even
admiration, he might draw towards him, the
poorer was the incense.
	Yet there must be a fallacy somewhere
involved in the common judgment on this
subject. For Mr. Robertson certainly was
a popular preacher; and yet, as he never
made the slightest concession to any of the
arts or trickeries, the displays or exagger-
ations, which are supposed to be essential
conditions of that repute, his own example
and experience may stand as at least an ex-
ceptional proof of the possible dignity and
solidity of the position. When he had been
addressing a thronged congregation, who
hung, impressed and awed, upon his utter-
ances, he goes home to write about the scene
and its circumstances in strong disdain, al-
most with angry contempt, as if it were a
reproach to himself. Did not the large ma-
jority of his hearers receive in their hearts
and minds the electric power of his earnest
and ever instructive speech? Suppose it
were true, as he had painful reasons for
knowing, that there were always before him
frivolous, empty - eaded, and unapprecia-
tive hearers, the hangers-on of a fashionable
watering-place, who went to listen to him
because he was the rage; such as these
could be only a scattering among his audi-
tors. Suppose, too, that the captious, the
jealous, the bigoted, and the conceited were
represented there, intending to catch matter
for bringing him under public odium in their
own circles, because he trespassed upon the
borders of heresy, or shocked the conven-
tional standards of snobbish society, or
spread his range broadly over the widest
fields of moral and political relation5; the
very presence and purpose of such listen-
ers were, to one of his grandeur and purity
of spirit, a new inspiration of courage and
fidelity. On the whole, so far as Mr. Rob-</PB></P>
</DIV1>
<DIV1 TYPE="article" DECLS="/moa/atla/atla0017/" ID="ABK2934-0017-15">
<BIBL>
<TITLE TYPE="ART">Life and Letters of Frederick W. Robertson</TITLE>
<TITLE TYPE="SECTION">Reviews and Literary Notices</TITLE>
<BIBLSCOPE TYPE="pg">119-122</BIBLSCOPE>
</BIBL>
<P><PB REF="IMG00125" SEQ="0125" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="119">	i 366.J	   Reviews and Literary Notice!.	9
		REVIEWS AND LITERARY NOTICES.

Life and Letters of Frederick W Robertson,
	Al. A., Incumbent of Trinity Chapel,
	Brighton, 1847 1853. Edited by STOP-
	FORD A. BROOKE, M. A. Two Volumes.
Boston:	Ticknor &#38; Fields.

	THE Life and Letters of Mr. Robertson
will find a most extended and appreciative
welcome among a large company of sympa-
thizing and grateful readers on both sides of
the ocean. The way has been prepared for
them, and their most hearty reception has
been assured, by the acquaintance opened
for us with his mind and heart through
the extensive circulation of the several vol-
umes containing his Sermons and Address-
es. When the first of those volumes was
reprinted here, it wrought an immediate
effect upon hundreds, who were instinc-
tively drawn to its perusal, and who have
since seized with avidity upon each subse-
quent opportunity furnished them for pos-
sessing themselves of everything that could
be put into print which would renew and
intensify that effect. An exhaustive review
of that one department of our religious
literature which embraces utterances from
the pulpit would, we believe, fully establish
these two positions: first, that the ability
shown alike in the composition .and in the
delivery of sermons is at least equal in each
age and generation to the average of that
which is exhibited in the forum and at the
bar; and, second, that preachers of extraor-
dinary power appear at just such inter-
vals and under just such conditions as will
best assure us of a reserved and as yet un-
recognized capability in the pulpit, redeem-
ing it from the charge of a general dulness
and exhaustion. It was at the very time
when the newspaper press of England and
America was reiterating and illustrating this
charge, not without many tokens that sup-
ported it, that the sermons of Mr. Robert-
son were offering at least one signal excep-
tion to its truth, sufficient even to silence it
within the range of his ministry. An emi-
nently able and effective preacher appears
often enough to reassert the loftiest ideal of
his profession, and, what is more, to vindi-
cate it against the distrust and contempt to
which it may seem to be exposed by the
popular preachers. As we write, there
is circulating through the papers a very
striking paragraph from an article by that
distinguished divine, Mr. Caird, in which,
with a sharp criticism, he deals, as we should
suppose a man of his high tone would deal,
with the theme of popular preaching, espe-
cially as to its effects upon the dispenser of
it and upon the crowds who gather to it.
Mr. Robertson shrank from the repute of it,
and the inflictions which it visits, as he did
from sin. He knew full well, that, as the
popular taste and standard were not edu-
cated to an appreciation and approval of
the very loftiest style of ministration, the
more of curious, gaping notoriety, or even
admiration, he might draw towards him, the
poorer was the incense.
	Yet there must be a fallacy somewhere
involved in the common judgment on this
subject. For Mr. Robertson certainly was
a popular preacher; and yet, as he never
made the slightest concession to any of the
arts or trickeries, the displays or exagger-
ations, which are supposed to be essential
conditions of that repute, his own example
and experience may stand as at least an ex-
ceptional proof of the possible dignity and
solidity of the position. When he had been
addressing a thronged congregation, who
hung, impressed and awed, upon his utter-
ances, he goes home to write about the scene
and its circumstances in strong disdain, al-
most with angry contempt, as if it were a
reproach to himself. Did not the large ma-
jority of his hearers receive in their hearts
and minds the electric power of his earnest
and ever instructive speech? Suppose it
were true, as he had painful reasons for
knowing, that there were always before him
frivolous, empty - eaded, and unapprecia-
tive hearers, the hangers-on of a fashionable
watering-place, who went to listen to him
because he was the rage; such as these
could be only a scattering among his audi-
tors. Suppose, too, that the captious, the
jealous, the bigoted, and the conceited were
represented there, intending to catch matter
for bringing him under public odium in their
own circles, because he trespassed upon the
borders of heresy, or shocked the conven-
tional standards of snobbish society, or
spread his range broadly over the widest
fields of moral and political relation5; the
very presence and purpose of such listen-
ers were, to one of his grandeur and purity
of spirit, a new inspiration of courage and
fidelity. On the whole, so far as Mr. Rob-</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00126" SEQ="0126" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="120">	120	Reviews and L iterary Notices.	[January,

ertson really came under the designation
which he so dreaded to bear, he has made
it an honorable one. Perhaps it would not
be saying the right, as it certainly is not say-
ing the best thing about his sermons, now
so widely circulated on both sides of the
Atlantic, to speak of them as meeting any
popular taste. Would that we could esti-
mate so highly the craving and the standard,
among what are called religious readers, as
to assert for him a favoritism equal to that
accorded to a Cumming, a Spurgeon, or
even a Chalmers. Chalmers may have spok-
en from what was, in his time, the highest
round of elevation at which he would have
been listened to by those who demanded
fidelity to an accepted doctrinal system as
the basis for whatever eloquence, logic, rhet-
oric, or unction might avail in presenting it.
But Mr. Robertson rose to a higher plane,
and took a far wider horoscope. His freest
ventures require that he have readers able
and willing to share them.
	The biographical materials now furnished
will afford a high gratification to readers on
this continent, who, after perusing the ser-
mons of Mr. Robertson, have felt a keen
desire to know something about the man.
We believe that very many of those readers,
after availing themselves of the information
concerning him imparted in these volumes,
will turn back again to his discourses to
give them a more deliberate study. He was
a man to engage the profoundest interest
of those who live to scrutinize the elements
of character and the developments of a life-
history and work in an individual whose
mission is that of a reconciler and a recon-
structor of opinions, creeds, and theories,
in one of the great transitional periods of
thought and belief.
	The biography before us is a model which
cannot be too closely followed by any one
who in time to come shall be privileged to
have a subject for his pen at all resembling,
or approximating to, the character and ca-
reer of this extraordinary man. The editor
was himself rarely privileged for his work
in the quality of his materials, and he has
shown an admirable skill in their use. His
chapters begin with the statement of dates,
facts, incidents of a biographical or local
character, marking the life-periods, the ex-
ternal relations and positions of Mr. Rob-
ertson, and are then substantially made up
of his correspondence. We can recall now
no collection of letters which can be com-
pared with these for comprehensiveness of
matter, felicity of diction, and elevation of
tone and sentiment, in discussing alike the
commonplace and the loftiest themes of
didactic and spiritual religion, under the
most vitalized and intense dealing with it
in our modern life. If we should utter all
we have felt, as we have lingered as if en-
tranced over many of these pages, we should
fail of carrying with us those who, not hav-
ing yet read them, would, after their peru-
sal, pronounce our encomiums inadequate.
Mr. Robertsons life was a short one, cov-
ering only thirty-seven years. There was
nothing conspicuous in the sphere of it. He
held only the lower offices of his clerical
profession. Yet we believe we can say,
without exaggeration, that no one member
of that profession, from its bishops down to
its curates, with perhaps the single excep-
tion of Dean Stanley, has so wisely divined
or so ably presented as he did the modifi-
cations which must be made in the popular
dispensation of religion through the Church,
if it is longer to expect a hearing, or even
its present show of tolerance, from those
who share the average intelligence of the
age.
	This man, who so nobly, and with a rare
consistency of character and life, fulfilled
the office of a minister of the Prince of
Peace, seems all along to have bad a heart
divided by its first love for a military life and
service. Many readers will find a puzzling
problem in reconciling themselves to this
fact, as it shows tokens all through his
career that the preference of his youth was
also that of his experienced manhood. His
honored father still survives him as a Cap-
tain in the Royal Artillery, retired from ser-
vice. Three brothers in the military ser-
vice also survive the preacher. He was
brought up, as he often writes, in camps and
barracks, and loved no sound as he did the
boom of artillery. It was a grievous cross
to his cherished inclinations, when he was
sent by parental authority to the University.
Being there, he had no misgiving as to the
choice left him for life. He gave himself
heart and soul to the ministry, and that, too,
under views of doctrine and duty, to be fol-
lowed out in its discharge, amazingly unlike
those to which the free, expanding, and
grandly independent growth of his own rare
powers finally led him. Would he have
been the same heroic, conscientious, and de-
vout man as a soldier that he was as a min-
ister? the reader will more than once be
prompted to ask over these pages. He
would have been a splendid example of
heroism and chivalry in any cause which</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00127" SEQ="0127" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="121">Reviews and Literary Notices.

his conscience could have espoused. But if
military orders had constrained his loyalty
in behalf of some of the infamous predatory
outrages which English arms have of late
years visited upon India and China, could
a man such as he was have retained his
commission? His letters give abundant
proof that his ecclesiastical superiors had
no prerogative sway over his conscience.
How could he have borne the constraints
of subordination in following a flag which
recognizes no scruples of distinctions be-
tween right and wrong when it rallies its
champions? However this might have
been, certain it is that all the grand imagery
of the battle-field and the fight, of spear and
breastplate, shield and sword, of soldierly
manliness and fidelity, by which St. Paul
symbolizes the warfare of life, and the ar-
mor of those who would come off conquer-
ors, is literally and gloriously realized in
Mr. Robertsons course and in himself. He
was a soldier of the sublimest type,  a
bold, earnest, self-denying, effective, and
high-souled battler of the worst foes of man,
and the gentle, kindly, loving defender of
the weak, the unfriended, the wronged. He
had no occasion to regret the overruling of
his wishes which left him free to fight the
enemies of truth and righteousness.
	During his stude~it-life at Oxford his mind
seemed to have been held in a balance by
his affections between those who had com-
mitted themselves respectively to the Trac-
tarian and the Evangelical parties. The
solution which he was to work out for
himself of any real perplexities involved in
the issue between them was to lead him
clear of both of them. His own devout-
ness and sincerity, aided no doubt by the
domestic and social influences of his early
religious training, set him forward, in the
first experimentings as a curate, as an ear-
nest disciple of the evangelical~ fellow-
ship. He made a faithful trial of its prin-
ciples and methods. His reading and his
self-training, his standard of fidelity, and
the tone and style of his ministerial work,
were all dictated by the teaching of that
school. He outgrew it, and cast aside all
that belonged to it: he came utterly to de-
test and loathe its characteristic peculiari-
ties. Ever remaining heartily loyal, as he
believed, in essential doctrinal conviction,
and in practical conformity, to the Church of
England, he allowed himself a range of lib-
erty within the terms of its formulas, which
left him, as he felt, not oiily unfettered, but
also quickened by the inspiration of a free-
dom restrained by no other bounds than
those of humility and reverence. His power
of apprehension, his skill in analysis, his
keen sagacity and penetration in detecting
the kernel of truth through all husks and
integuments, made him the most facile of
critics, as well as one of the most trust-
worthy interpreters of conflicting theories.
His magnanimity and catholicity of spirit
gave him an almost preternatural compre-
hensiveness of sympathy with minds and
consciences struggling in opposite direc-
tions for satisfaction. He engaged himself
upon all the freshest problems which the
critical, scientific, and radical restlessness
of our age has opened. We believe that
professional experts, and even the foremost
pioneers in the new fields which have thus
been opened, will find valued help, either
of cheering encouragement, or of wise, re-
straining caution, in his passing comments
on their materials or methods. He was
wholly free of that conceit and supercilious-
ness of temper by which most of the rash
and blatant empirics of advanced thought~
manage to disgust the slow and conservative
makeweights of moderation. If we should
attempt to express in a single phrase the
charm and loftiness of Mr. Robertsons
personal and representative manifestation,
we should say, that he, more than any oth-
er man of the age, was the saint of the
new liberalism, even of the extreme radical-
ism. More than any other conspicuous
man who had cast aside and spurned the
old traditionalisms of credulity, ignorance,
and prejudice, he consecrated free-thinking.
For each single negation he offers a posi-
tive belief, or a tenable ground of belief,
which substitutes an efficient and quicken-
ing tenet for a faith such as will satisfy and
sanctify. Of course he shocked and star-
tled many, but none through flippancy or
irreverence. He was capable of a holy in-
dignation, and even occasionally, it would
seem, of bitterness of tone, when he knew,
by a divining spirit which no sham or hy-
pocrisy could blind, that he was challenged
not in the interests of truth, but of false-
hood. Like all great and searching souls,
he had a dark shadow of melancholy oft-
en cast over him. He is another witness
to us of a well - certified truth, that deep
thoughts, while they are in process, not in
repose, are sad thoughts. What sort of
friends he had, and by what tenacity of love,
reverence, and gratitude he held them, and
how the delicate ties which bound them to
his heart were felt by him as inspirations
1866.1
121</PB>
<PB REF="IMG00128" SEQ="0128" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="122">	122	Reviews and Literary Notices.	[January,

to fidelity in such lofty trusts, a score of
letters in these volumes will touchingly il-
lustrate. As we have been enjoying their
perusal with a rare delight, we have antici-
pated the same experience as multitudes
around us will share in.


The Works of the Right Honorable Edmund
Burke. Revised Edition. Vols. I.  III.
Boston: Little, Brown, &#38; Co.

	Ir is interesting to know that Burke was
not really accounted among the attractive
orators of his day, and that people had a
habit of going out of Parliament when he
rose to his feet. It illustrates the compen-
sations of time, atoning to the literary man
for the immediate superiorities of the public
speaker. Fox said, that, the better a man
spoke, the harder it usually was for him to
compose; and that brilliant orator now lin-
gers only as a name, while his laborious ad-
versary still holds his own in literature, and
resumes his career in this admirable Ameri-
can edition.
	It shows the intellectual comprehensive.
ness of our people, that they are ready to he
taught by this great man, so resolute an op-
ponent of our most fundamental ideas. Ev-
erything that American institutions affirm
Burke denied, except the spirit of truth
and faith which alone give any institutions
their value. Grattan said of him, that, so
great was his love for arbitrary power, he
could not sleep comfortably on his pillow,
unless he thought the king had a right to
take it from under him. He demonstrated
to his own satisfaction that it was far more
congenial to the human mind to yield to the
will of one ruler than of a majority, and
stated it as a  ridiculous theory, that
twenty-four millions should prevail over
two hundred thousand. Regarding it as the
very essence of property that it should be
unequal, he could conceive of no safeguard
for it but that it should be out of all pro-
portion predominant in the representation.
	Yet, so vast were his natural abilities, his
acquirements, and his aims, that he is in-
structive even as an antagonist, and has,
moreover, left much that can now be quoted
on the right side of every great question.
If he can also be quoted on the other side,
no matter. For instance, Buckle claims for
him, that he insisted on an obedience to
the popular wishes which no man before him
had paid, and which too many statesmen
since him have forgotten. Yet Burke him-
self boasted, at the time of his separation
from Fox, that he was the first man who,
on the hustings, at a popular election, re-
jected the authority of instructions from con-
stituents, or who in any place has argued so
fully against it


Songs of Seven. By JEAN INGELOW. Il-
lustrated. Boston: Roberts Brothers

	THE sweet female singer who has been
so warmly welcomed of late in England
and America deserves to be illustrated.
Songs of Seven is one of her best pieces,
but not her best. The High Tide on the
Coast of Lincolnshire is certainly worthy
of the special honor here accorded to the
Songs of Seven; and we are somewhat
surprised at the selection, by her American
publishers, of these particular verses for il-
lustration.
	The wood-cuts in Songs of Seven vary
materially, and are not in.harmony through-
out. Some are of the first order of excel-
lence, while some are weak and inadequate.
Nearly all the square blocks show artistic
thought and skill, and really illustrate the
poem. Those by another hand (the artists
names are not given) .betray paucity of
mind, as well as uncertain fingers.
	The most attractive merit of this volume
is the printers part of it. The red borders
are as beautiful in their way as any orna-
mental inclosures can be; and we have only
to compare them with some others in books
published this year in America to note how
superior they are in every respect. The
University Press, to which belongs the
credit of this work, has justly won to itself
the first praise where printing is appreciated
as a fine art. We have recently seen an
edition of the Kings-Chapel Liturgy, with
rubrics, from this press, which must rank
among the best-printed books of our time.


A Chronological History of the Boston Watch
and Police, from 1631 to 1865 ; together
with the Recollections of a Boston Police-
Officer, or Boston by Daylight and Gas-
light. From the Diary of an Officer Fif-
teen Years in the Service. By EDWARn
H. SAVAGE. Boston: Published and
sold by the Author.

	THIs hook can hardly be characterized as
an important addition to elegant or learned</PB></P>
</DIV1>
<DIV1 TYPE="article" DECLS="/moa/atla/atla0017/" ID="ABK2934-0017-16">
<BIBL>
<TITLE TYPE="ART">Jean Ingelow's Songs of Seven</TITLE>
<TITLE TYPE="SECTION">Reviews and Literary Notices</TITLE>
<BIBLSCOPE TYPE="pg">122</BIBLSCOPE>
</BIBL>
<P><PB REF="IMG00128" SEQ="0128" RES="600dpi" FMT="TIFF5.0" FTR="UNSPEC" N="122">	122	Reviews and Literary Notices.	[January,

to fidelity in such lofty trusts, a score of
letters in these volumes will touchingly il-
lustrate. As we have been enjoying their
perusal with a rare delight, we have antici-
pated the same experience as multitudes
around us will share in.


The Works of the Right Honorable Edmund
Burke. Revised Edition. Vols. I.  III.
Boston: Little, Brown, &#38; Co.

	Ir is interesting to know that Burke was
not really accounted among the attractive
orators of his day, and that people had a
habit of going out of Parliament when he
rose to his feet. It illustrates the compen-
sations of time, atoning to the literary man
for the immediate superiorities of the public
speaker. Fox said, that, the better a man
spoke, the harder it usually was for him to
compose; and that brilliant orator now lin-
gers only as a name, while his laborious ad-
versary still holds his own in literature, and
resumes his career in this admirable Ameri-
can edition.
	It shows the intellectual comprehensive.
ness of our people, that they are ready to he
taught by this great man, so resolute an op-
ponent of our most fundamental ideas. Ev-
erything that American institutions affirm
Burke denied, except the spirit of truth
and faith which alone give any institutions
their value. Grattan said of him, that, so
great was his love for arbitrary power, he
could not sleep comfortably on his pillow,
unless he thought the king had a right to
take it from under him. He demonstrated
to his own satisfaction that it was far more
congenial to the human mind to yield to the
will of one ruler than of a majority, and
stated it as a  ridiculous theory, that
twenty-four millions should prevail over
two hundred thousand. Regarding it as the
very essence of property that it should be
unequal, he could conceive of no safeguard
for it but that it should be out of all pro-
portion predominant in the representation.
	Yet, so vast were his natural abilities, his
acquirements, and his aims, that he is in-
structive even as an antagonist, and has,
moreover, left much that can now be quoted
on the right side of every great question.
If he can also be quoted on the other side,
no matter. For instance, Buckle claims for
him, that he insisted on an obedience to
the popular wishes which no man before him
had paid, and which too many statesmen
since him have forgotten. Yet Burke him-
self boasted, at the time of his separation
from Fox, that he was the first man who,
on the hustings, at a popular election, re-
jected the authority of instructions from con-
stituents, or who in any place has argued so
fully against it


Songs of Seven. By JEAN INGELOW. Il-
lustrated. Boston: Roberts Brothers

	THE sweet female singer who has been
so warmly welcomed of late in England
and America deserves to be illustrated.
Songs of Seven is one of her best pieces,
but not her best. The High Tide on the
Coast of Lincolnshire is certainly worthy
of the special honor here accorded to the
Songs of Seven; and we are somewhat
surprised at the selection, by her American
publishers, of these particular verses for il-
lustration.
	The wood-cuts in Songs of Seven vary
materially, and are not in.harmony through-
out. Some are of the first order of excel-
lence, while some are weak and inadequate.
Nearly all the square blocks show artistic
thought and skill, and really illust