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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13864 ***
+
+[Illustration: Daniel Lothrop]
+
+
+
+
+THE
+
+BAY STATE MONTHLY.
+
+_A Massachusetts Magazine_.
+
+VOL. II.
+
+DECEMBER, 1884.
+
+No. 3.
+
+Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1884, by John N.
+McClintock and Company, in the office of the Librarian of Congress at
+Washington.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DANIEL LOTHROP.
+
+By JOHN N. MCCLINTOCK, A.M.
+
+
+The fame, character and prosperity of a city have often depended upon
+its merchants,--burghers they were once called to distinguish them from
+haughty princes and nobles. Through the enterprise of the common
+citizens, Venice, Genoa, Antwerp, and London have become famous, and
+have controlled the destinies of nations. New England, originally
+settled by sturdy and liberty-loving yeomen and free citizens of free
+English cities, was never a congenial home for the patrician, with
+inherited feudal privileges, but has welcomed the thrifty Pilgrim, the
+Puritan, the Scotch Covenanter, the French Huguenot, the Ironsides
+soldiers of the great Cromwell. The men and women of this fusion have
+shaped our civilization. New England gave its distinctive character to
+the American colonies, and finally to the nation. New England influences
+still breathe from the Atlantic to the Pacific, and from the great lakes
+to Mexico; and Boston, still the focus of the New England idea, leads
+national movement and progress.
+
+Perhaps one of the broadest of these influences--broadest inasmuch as it
+interpenetrates the life of our whole people--proceeds from the lifework
+of one of the merchants of Boston, known by his name and his work to the
+entire English speaking world: Daniel Lothrop, of the famous firm of D.
+Lothrop & Co., publishers--the people's publishing house. Mr. Lothrop is
+a good representative of this early New England fusion of race,
+temperament, fibre, conscience and brain. He is a direct descendant of
+John Lowthroppe, who, in the thirty-seventh year of Henry VIII. (1545),
+was a gentleman of quite extensive landed estates, both in Cherry Burton
+(four miles removed from Lowthorpe), and in various other parts of the
+country.
+
+Lowthorpe is a small parish in the Wapentake of Dickering, in the East
+Riding of York, four and a half miles northeast from Great Driffield. It
+is a perpetual curacy in the archdeaconry of York. This parish gave name
+to the family of Lowthrop, Lothrop, or Lathrop. The Church, which was
+dedicated to St. Martin, and had for one of its chaplains, in the reign
+of Richard II., Robert de Louthorp, is now partly ruinated, the tower
+and chancel being almost entirely overgrown with ivy. It was a
+collegiate Church from 1333, and from the style of its architecture must
+have been built about the time of Edward III.
+
+From this English John Lowthroppe the New England Lothrops have their
+origin:--
+
+ "It is one of the most ancient of all the famous New England
+ families, whose blood in so many cases is better and purer than
+ that of the so-called noble families in England. The family roll
+ certainly shows a great deal of talent, and includes men who have
+ proved widely influential and useful, both in the early and later
+ periods. The pulpit has a strong representation. Educators are
+ prominent. Soldiers prove that the family has never been wanting in
+ courage. Lothrop missionaries have gone forth into foreign lands.
+ The bankers are in the forefront. The publishers are represented.
+ Art engraving has its exponent, and history has found at least one
+ eminent student, while law and medicine are likewise indebted to
+ this family, whose talent has been applied in every department of
+ useful industry,"[A]
+
+[Footnote A: _The Churchman_.]
+
+
+GENEALOGY.[B]
+
+[Footnote B: From a genealogical memoir of the Lo-Lathrop family, by
+Rev. E.B. Huntington, 1884.]
+
+I. Mark Lothrop, the pioneer, the grandson of John Lowthroppe and a
+relative of Rev. John Lothrop, settled in Salem, Mass., where he was
+received as an inhabitant January 11, 1643-4. He was living there in
+1652. In 1656 he was living in Bridgewater, Mass., of which town he was
+one of the proprietors, and in which he was prominent for about
+twenty-five years. He died October 25, 1685.
+
+II. Samuel Lothrop, born before 1660, married Sarah Downer, and lived in
+Bridgewater. His will was dated April 11, 1724.
+
+III. Mark Lothrop, born in Bridgewater September 9, 1689; married March
+29, 1722, Hannah Alden [Born February 1, 1696; died 1777]. She was the
+daughter of Deacon Joseph Alden of Bridgewater, and great grand-daughter
+of Honorable John and Priscilla (Mullins) Alden of Duxbury, of Mayflower
+fame. He settled in Easton, of which town he was one of the original
+proprietors. He was prominent in Church and town affairs.
+
+IV. Jonathan Lothrop, born March 11, 1722-3; married April 13, 1746,
+Susannah, daughter of Solomon and Susannah (Edson) Johnson of
+Bridgewater. She was born in 1723. He was a Deacon of the Church, and a
+prominent man in the town. He died in 1771.
+
+V. Solomon Lothrop, born February 9, 1761; married Mehitable, daughter
+of Cornelius White of Taunlon; settled in Easton, and later in Norton,
+where he died October 19, 1843. She died September 14, 1832, aged 73.
+
+VI. Daniel Lothrop, born in Easton, January 9, 1801; married October 16,
+1825, Sophia, daughter of Deacon Jeremiah Horne of Rochester, N.H. She
+died September 23, 1848, and he married (2) Mary E. Chamberlain. He
+settled in Rochester, N.H., and was one of the public men of the town.
+Of the strictest integrity, and possessing sterling qualities of mind
+and heart Mr. Lothrop was chosen to fill important offices of public
+trust in his town and state. He repeatedly represented his town in the
+Legislature, where his sound practical sense and clear wisdom were of
+much service, particularly in the formation of the Free Soil party, in
+which he was a bold defender of the rights of liberty to all men. He
+died May 31, 1870.
+
+VII. Daniel Lothrop, son of Daniel and Sophia (Horne) Lothrop, was born
+in Rochester, N.H., August 11, 1831.
+
+ "On the maternal side Mr. Lothrop is descended from William Horne,
+ of Horne's Hill, in Dover, who held his exposed position in the
+ Indian wars, and whose estate has been in the family name from 1662
+ until the present generation; but he was killed in the massacre of
+ June 28, 1689. Through the Horne line, also, came descent from Rev.
+ Joseph Hull, minister at Durham in 1662, a graduate at the
+ University at Cambridge, England; from John Ham, of Dover; from the
+ emigrant John Heard, and others of like vigorous stock. It was his
+ ancestress, Elizabeth (Hull) Heard, whom the old historians call a
+ "brave gentlewoman," who held her garrison house, the frontier fort
+ in Dover in the Indian wars, and successfully defended it in the
+ massacre of 1689. The father of the subject of this sketch was a
+ man of sterling qualities, strong in mind and will, but commanding
+ love as well as respect. The mother was a woman of outward beauty
+ and beauty of soul alike; with high ideals and reverent
+ conscientiousness. Her influence over her boys was life-long. The
+ home was a centre of intelligent intercourse, a sample of the
+ simplicity but earnestness of many of the best New Hampshire
+ homesteads."[A]
+
+[Footnote A: Rec. Alonzo H. Quint, D.D. in _Granite Monthly_.]
+
+Descended, as is here evident, from men and women accustomed to govern,
+legislate, protect, guide and represent the people, it is not surprising
+to find the Lothrops of the present day of this branch standing in high
+places, shaping affairs, and devising fresh and far-reaching measures
+for the general good.
+
+Daniel Lothrop was the youngest of the three sons of Daniel and Sophia
+Home Lothrop. The family residence was on Haven's Hill, in Rochester,
+and it was an ideal home in its laws, influences and pleasures. Under
+the guidance of the wise and gentle mother young Daniel developed in a
+sound body a mind intent on lofty aims, even in childhood, and a
+character early distinguished for sturdy uprightness. Here, too, on the
+farm was instilled into him the faith of his fathers, brought through
+many generations, and he openly acknowledged his allegiance to an
+Evangelical Church at the age of eleven.
+
+As a boy Daniel is remembered as possessing a retentive and singularly
+accurate memory; as very studious, seeking eagerly for knowledge, and
+rapidly absorbing it. His intuitive mastery of the relations of numbers,
+his grasp of the values and mysteries of the higher mathematics, was
+early remarkable. It might be reasonably expected of the child of seven
+who was brought down from the primary benches and lifted up to the
+blackboard to demonstrate a difficult problem in cube root to the big
+boys and girls of the upper class that he should make rapid and
+masterful business combinations in later life.
+
+At the age of fourteen he was sufficiently advanced in his studies to
+enter college, but judicious friends restrained him in order that his
+physique might be brought up to his intellectual growth, and presently
+circumstances diverted the boy from his immediate educational
+aspirations and thrust him into the arena of business:--the world may
+have lost a lawyer, a clergyman, a physician, or an engineer, but by
+this change in his youthful plans it certainly has gained a great
+publisher--a man whose influence in literature is extended, and who, by
+his powerful individuality, his executive force, and his originating
+brain has accomplished a literary revolution.
+
+To understand the business career of Daniel Lothrop it will be necessary
+to trace the origin and progress of the firm of D. Lothrop and Company.
+On reaching his decision to remain out of college for a year he assumed
+charge of the drug store, then recently opened by his eldest brother,
+James E. Lothrop, who, desiring to attend medical lectures in
+Philadelphia, confidently invited his brother Daniel to carry on the
+business during his absence.
+
+ "He urged the young boy to take charge of the store, promising as
+ an extra inducement an equal division as to profits, and that the
+ firm should read 'D. Lothrop & Co.' This last was too much for our
+ ambitious lad. When five years of age he had scratched on a piece
+ of tin these magic words, opening to fame and honor, 'D. Lothrop &
+ Co.,' nailing the embryo sign against the door of his play house.
+ How then could he resist, now, at fourteen? And why not spend the
+ vacation in this manner? And so the sign was made and put up, and
+ thus began the house of 'D. Lothrop & Co.,' the name of which is
+ spoken as a household word wherever the English language is used,
+ and whose publications are loved in more than one of the royal
+ families of Europe."[A]
+
+[Footnote A: Rev. Dr. Quint]
+
+The drug store became very lucrative. The classical drill which had
+been received by the young druggist was of great advantage to him, his
+thorough knowledge of Latin was of immediate service, and his skill and
+care and knowledge was widely recognized and respected. The store became
+his college, where his affection for books soon led him to introduce
+them as an adjunct to his business.
+
+Thus was he when a mere boy launched on a successful business career.
+His energy, since proved inexhaustible, soon began to open outward. When
+about seventeen his attention was attracted to the village of Newmarket
+as a desirable location for a drug store, and he seized an opportunity
+to hire a store and stock it. His executive and financial ability were
+strikingly honored in this venture. Having it in successful operation,
+he called the second brother, John C. Lothrop, who about this time was
+admitted to the firm, and left him in charge of the new establishment,
+while he started a similar store at Meredith Bridge, now called Laconia.
+The firm now consisted of the three brothers.
+
+ "These three brothers have presented a most remarkable spirit of
+ family union. Remarkable in that there was none of the drifting
+ away from each other into perilous friendships and moneyed
+ ventures. They held firmly to each other with a trust beyond words.
+ The simple word of each was as good as a bond. And as early as
+ possible they entered into an agreement that all three should
+ combine fortunes, and, though keeping distinct kinds of business,
+ should share equal profits under the firm name of 'D. Lothrop &
+ Co.' For thirty-six years, through all the stress and strain of
+ business life in this rushing age, their loyalty has been preserved
+ strong and pure. Without a question or a doubt, there has been an
+ absolute unity of interests, although James E., President of the
+ Cocheco Bank, and Mayor of the city of Dover, is in one city, John
+ C. in another, and Daniel in still another, and each having the
+ particular direction of the business which his enterprise and
+ sagacity has made extensive and profitable."[A]
+
+[Footnote A: Rev. Dr. Quint.]
+
+In 1850 occurred a point of fresh and important departure. The stock of
+books held by Elijah Wadleigh, who had conducted a large and flourishing
+book store in Dover, N.H., was purchased. Mr. Lothrop enlarged the
+business, built up a good jobbing trade, and also quietly experimented
+in publishing. The bookstore under his management also became something
+more than a commercial success: it grew to be the centre for the bright
+and educated people of the town, a favorite meeting place of men and
+women alive to the questions of the day.
+
+Now, arrived at the vigor of young manhood, Mr. Lothrop's aims and high
+reaches began their more open unfoldment. He rapidly extended the
+business into new and wide fields. He established branch stores at
+Berwick, Portsmouth, Amesbury, and other places. In each of these
+establishments books were prominently handled. While thus immediately
+busy, Mr. Lothrop began his "studies" for his ultimate work. He did not
+enter the publishing field without long surveys of investigation,
+comparison and reflection. In need of that kind of vacation we call
+"change of work and scene," Mr. Lothrop planned a western trip. The
+bookstores in the various large cities on the route were sedulously
+visited, and the tastes and the demands of the book trade were carefully
+studied from many standpoints.
+
+The vast possibilities of the Great West caught his attention and he
+hastened to grasp his opportunities. At St. Peter, in Minnesota, he was
+welcomed and resolved to locate. They needed such men as Mr. Lothrop to
+help build the new town into a city. The opening of the St. Peter store
+was characteristic of its young proprietor.
+
+The extreme cold of October and November, 1856, prevented, by the early
+freezing of the Upper Mississippi, the arrival of his goods. Having
+contracted with the St. Peter company to erect a building, and open his
+store on the first day of December, Mr. Lothrop, thinking that the goods
+might have come as far as some landing place below St. Paul, went down
+several hundred miles along the shore visiting the different landing
+places. Failing to find them he bought the entire closing-out stock of a
+drug store at St. Paul, and other goods necessary to a complete fitting
+of his store, had them loaded, and with several large teams started for
+St. Peter. The same day a blinding snow storm set in, making it
+extremely difficult to find the right road, or indeed any road at all,
+so that five days were spent in making a journey that in good weather
+could have been accomplished in two. When within a mile of St. Peter the
+Minnesota river was to be crossed, and it was feared the ice would not
+bear the heavy teams; all was unloaded and moved on small sledges across
+the river, and the drug store _was opened on the day agreed upon_. The
+papers of that section made special mention of this achievement, saying
+that it deserved honorable record, and that with such business
+enterprise the prosperity of Minnesota Valley was assured.
+
+He afterwards opened a banking house in St. Peter, of which his uncle,
+Dr. Jeremiah Horne, was cashier; and in the book and drug store he
+placed one of his clerks from the East, Mr. B.F. Paul, who is now one of
+the wealthiest men of the Minnesota Valley. He also established two
+other stores in the same section of country.
+
+Various elements of good generalship came into play during Mr. Lothrop's
+occupancy of this new field, not only in directing his extensive
+business combinations in prosperous times, but in guiding all his
+interests through the financial panic of 1857 and 1858. By the failure
+of other houses and the change of capital from St. Peter to St. Paul,
+Mr. Lothrop was a heavy loser, but by incessant labor and foresight he
+squarely met each complication, promptly paid each liability in full.
+But now he broke in health. The strain upon him had been intense, and
+when all was well the tension relaxed, and making his accustomed visit
+East to attend to his business interests in New England, without
+allowing himself the required rest, the change of climate, together with
+heavy colds taken on the journey, resulted in congestion of the lungs,
+and prostration. Dr. Bowditch, after examination, said that the young
+merchant had been doing the work of twenty years in ten. Under his
+treatment Mr. Lothrop so far recovered that he was able to take a trip
+to Florida, where the needed rest restored his health.
+
+For the next five years our future publisher directed the lucrative
+business enterprises which he had inaugurated, from the quiet book store
+in Dover, N. H., while he carefully matured his plans for his life's
+campaign--the publication, in many lines, of wholesome books for the
+people. Soon after the close of the Civil war the time arrived for the
+accomplishment of his designs, and he began by closing up advantageously
+his various enterprises in order to concentrate his forces. His was no
+ordinary equipment. Together with well-laid plans and inspirations, for
+some of which the time is not yet due, and a rich birthright of
+sagacity, insight and leadership, he possessed also a practical
+experience of American book markets and the tastes of the people,
+trained financial ability, practiced judgment, literary taste, and
+literary conscience; and last, but not least, he had traversed and
+mapped out the special field he proposed to occupy,--a field from which
+he has never been diverted.
+
+ "The foundations were solid. On these points Mr. Lothrop has had
+ but one mind from the first: 'Never to publish a work purely
+ sensational, no matter what chances of money it has in it;' 'to
+ publish books that will make true, steadfast growth in right
+ living.' Not alone right thinking, but right living. These were his
+ two determinations, rigidly adhered to, notwithstanding constant
+ advice, appeals, and temptations. His thoughts had naturally turned
+ to the young people, knowing from his own self-made fortunes, how
+ young men and women need help, encouragement and stimulus. He had
+ determined to throw all his time, strength and money into making
+ good books for the young people, who, with keen imaginations and
+ active minds, were searching in all directions for mental food.
+ 'The best way to fight the evil in the world,' reasoned Mr.
+ Lothrop, 'is to crowd it out with the good.' And therefore he bent
+ the energies of his mind to maturing plans toward this object,--the
+ putting good, helpful literature into their hands.
+
+ His first care was to determine the channels through which he could
+ address the largest audiences. The Sunday School library was one.
+ In it he hoped to turn a strong current of pure, healthful
+ literature for those young people who, dieting on the existing
+ library books, were rendered miserable on closing their covers,
+ either to find them dry or obsolete, or so sentimentally religious
+ as to have nothing in their own practical lives corresponding to
+ the situations of the pictured heroes and heroines.
+
+ The family library was another channel. To make evident to the
+ heads of households the paramount importance of creating a home
+ library, Mr. Lothrop set himself to work with a will. In the spring
+ of 1868 he invited to meet him a council of three gentlemen,
+ eminent in scholarship, sound of judgment, and of large experience:
+ the Reverend George T. Day, D. D., of Dover, N.H., Professor Heman
+ Lincoln, D.D., of Newton Seminary, the Rev. J.E. Rankin, D.D., of
+ Washington, D.C. Before them he laid his plans, matured and ready
+ for their acceptance: to publish good, strong, attractive
+ literature for the Sunday School, the home, the town, and school
+ library, and that nothing should be published save of that
+ character, asking their co-operation as readers of the several
+ manuscripts to be presented for acceptance. The gentlemen, one and
+ all, gave him their heartiest God-speed, but they frankly confessed
+ it a most difficult undertaking, and that the step must be taken
+ with the strong chance of failure. Mr. Lothrop had counted that
+ chance and reaffirmed his purpose to become a publisher of just
+ such literature, and imparted to them so much of his own courage
+ that before they left the room, all stood engaged as salaried
+ readers of the manuscripts to come in to the new publishing house
+ of D. Lothrop & Co., and during all these years no manuscripts have
+ been accepted without the sanction of one or more of these readers.
+
+ The store, Nos. 38 and 40 Cornhill, Boston, was taken, and a
+ complete refitting and stocking made it one of the finest
+ bookstores of the city. The first book published was 'Andy
+ Luttrell.' How many recall that first book! 'Andy Luttrell' was a
+ great success, the press saying that 'the series of which this is
+ the initiatory volume, marks a new era in Sunday School
+ literature.' Large editions were called for, and it is popular
+ still. In beginning any new business there are many difficulties to
+ face, old established houses to compete with, and new ones to
+ contest every inch of success. But tides turn, and patience and
+ pluck won the day, until from being steady, sure and reliable, Mr.
+ Lothrop's publishing business was increasing with such rapidity as
+ to soon make it one of the solid houses of Boston. Mr. Lothrop had
+ a remarkable instinct as regarded the discovering of new talent,
+ and many now famous writers owe their popularity with the public to
+ his kindness and courage in standing by them. He had great
+ enthusiasm and success in introducing this new element, encouraging
+ young writers, and creating a fresh atmosphere very stimulating and
+ enjoyable to their audience. To all who applied for work or brought
+ manuscript for examination, he had a hopeful word, and in rapid,
+ clear expression smoothed the difficulty out of their path if
+ possible, or pointed to future success as the result of patient
+ toil. He always brought out the best that was in a person, having
+ the rare quality of the union of perfect honesty with kind
+ consideration. This new blood in the old veins of literary life,
+ soon wrought a marvelous change in this class of literature. Mr.
+ Lothrop had been wise enough to see that such would be the case,
+ and he kept constantly on the lookout for all means that might
+ foster ambition and bring to the surface latent talent. For this
+ purpose he offered prizes of $1,000 and $500 for the best
+ manuscripts on certain subjects. Such a thing had scarcely been
+ heard of before and manuscripts flowed in, showing this to have
+ been a happy thought. It is interesting to look back and find many
+ of those young authors to be identical with names that are now
+ famous in art and literature, then presenting with much fear and
+ trembling, their first efforts.
+
+ Mr. Lothrop considered no time, money, or strength ill-spent by
+ which he could secure the wisest choice of manuscripts. As an
+ evidence of his success, we name a few out of his large list: 'Miss
+ Yonge's Histories;' 'Spare Minute Series,' most carefully edited
+ from Gladstone, George MacDonald, Dean Stanley, Thomas Hughes,
+ Charles Kingsley; 'Stories of American History;'' Lothrop's Library
+ of Entertaining History,' edited by Arthur Gilman, containing
+ Professor Harrison's 'Spain,' Mrs. Clement's 'Egypt,'
+ 'Switzerland,' 'India,' etc.; 'Library of famous Americans, 1st and
+ 2d series; George MacDonald's novels--Mr. Lothrop, while on a visit
+ to Europe, having secured the latest novels by this author in
+ manuscript, thus bringing them out in advance of any other
+ publisher in this country or abroad, now issues his entire works in
+ uniform style: 'Miss Yonge's Historical Stories;' 'Illustrated
+ Wonders;' The Pansy Books,' of world-wide circulation;' 'Natural
+ History Stories;' 'Poet's Homes Series;' S.G.W. Benjamin's
+ 'American Artists;' 'The Reading Union Library,' 'Business Boy's
+ Library,' library edition of 'The Odyssey,' done in prose by
+ Butcher and Lang; 'Jowett's Thucydides;' 'Rosetti's Shakspeare,' on
+ which nothing has been spared to make it the most complete for
+ students and family use, and many others.
+
+ Mr. Lothrop is constantly broadening his field in many directions,
+ gathering the rich thought of many men of letters, science and
+ theology among his publications. Such writers as Professor James H.
+ Harrison, Arthur Gilman, and Rev. E.E. Hale are allies of the
+ house, constantly working with it to the development of pure
+ literature; the list of the authors and contributors being so long
+ as to include representatives of all the finest thinkers of the
+ day. Elegant art gift books of poem, classic and romance, have been
+ added with wise discrimination, until the list embraces sixteen
+ hundred books, out of which last year were printed and sold
+ 1,500,000 volumes.
+
+ The great fire of 1872 brought loss to Mr. Lothrop among the many
+ who suffered. Much of the hard-won earnings of years of toil was
+ swept away in that terrible night. About two weeks later, a large
+ quantity of paper which had been destroyed during the great fire
+ had been replaced, and the printing of the same was in process at
+ the printing house of Rand, Avery & Co., when a fire broke out
+ there, destroying this second lot of paper, intended for the first
+ edition of sixteen volumes of the celebrated $1,000 prize books. A
+ third lot of paper was purchased for these books and sent to the
+ Riverside Press without delay. The books were at last printed, as
+ many thousand readers can testify, an enterprise that called out
+ from the Boston papers much commendation, adding, in one instance:
+ 'Mr. Lothrop seems _warmed_ up to his work.'
+
+ When the time was ripe, another form of Mr. Lothrop's plans for the
+ creation of a great popular literature was inaugurated. We refer to
+ the projection of his now famous 'Wide Awake,' a magazine into
+ which he has thrown a large amount of money. Thrown it, expecting
+ to wait for results. And they have begun to come. 'Wide Awake' now
+ stands abreast with the finest periodicals in our country, or
+ abroad. In speaking of 'Wide Awake' the Boston Herald says: 'No
+ such marvel of excellence could be reached unless there were
+ something beyond the strict calculations of money-making to push
+ those engaged upon it to such magnificent results.' Nothing that
+ money can do is spared for its improvement. Withal, it is the most
+ carefully edited of all magazines; Mr. Lothrop's strict
+ determination to that effect, having placed wise hands at the helm
+ to co-operate with him. Our best people have found this out. The
+ finest writers in this country and in Europe are giving of their
+ best thought to filling its pages, the most celebrated artists are
+ glad to work for it. Scientific men, professors, clergymen, and all
+ heads of households give in their testimony of its merits as a
+ family magazine, while the young folks are delighted with it. The
+ fortune of 'Wide Awake' is sure. Next Mr. Lothrop proceeded to
+ supply the babies with their own especial magazine. Hence came
+ bright, winsome, sparkling 'Babyland.' The mothers caught at the
+ idea. 'Babyland' jumped into success in an incredibly short space
+ of time. The editors of 'Wide Awake,' Mr. and Mrs. Pratt, edit this
+ also, which ensures it as safe, wholesome and sweet to put into
+ baby's hands. The intervening spaces between 'Babyland' and 'Wide
+ Awake' Mr. Lothrop soon filled with 'Our Little Men and Women,' and
+ 'The Pansy.' Urgent solicitations from parents and teachers who
+ need a magazine for those little folks, either at home or at
+ school, who were beginning to read and spell, brought out the
+ first, and Mrs. G.R. Alden (Pansy) taking charge of a weekly
+ pictorial paper of that name, was the reason for the beginning and
+ growth of the second. The 'Boston Book Bulletin,' a quarterly, is a
+ medium for acquaintance with the best literature, its prices, and
+ all news current pertaining to it.
+
+ [Illustration: Exterior View Of D. Lothrop & Co.'s Publishing
+ House.]
+
+ [Illustration: Interior View Of D. Lothrop & Co.'s Publishing
+ House]
+
+ 'The Chatauqua Young Folk's Journal' is the latest addition to the
+ sparkling list. This periodical was a natural growth of the modern
+ liking for clubs, circles, societies, reading unions, home studies,
+ and reading courses. It is the official voice of the Chatauqua
+ Young Folks Reading Union, and furnishes each year a valuable and
+ vivacious course of readings on topics of interest to youth. It is
+ used largely in schools. Its contributors are among our leading
+ clergymen, lawyers, university professors, critics, historians and
+ scientists, but all its literature is of a popular character,
+ suited to the family circle rather than the study. Mr. Lothrop now
+ has the remarkable success of seeing six flourishing periodicals
+ going forth from his house.
+
+ In 1875, Mr. Lothrop, finding his Cornhill quarters inaquate [sic],
+ leased the elegant building corner Franklin and Hawley streets,
+ belonging to Harvard College, for a term of years. The building is
+ 120 feet long by 40 broad, making the salesroom, which is on the
+ first floor, one of the most elegant in the country. On the second
+ floor are Mr. Lothrop's offices, also the editorial offices of
+ 'Wide Awake,' etc. On the third floor are the composing rooms and
+ mailing rooms of the different periodicals, while the bindery fills
+ the fourth floor.
+
+ This building also was found small; it could accommodate only
+ one-fourth of the work done, and accordingly a warehouse on
+ Purchase street was leased for storing and manufacturing purposes.
+
+ In 1879 Mr. Lothrop called to his assistance a younger brother, Mr.
+ M.H. Lothrop, who had already made a brilliant business record in
+ Dover, N.H., to whom he gives an interest in the business. All who
+ care for the circulation of the best literature will be glad to
+ know that everything indicates the work to be steadily increasing
+ toward complete development of Mr. Lothrop's life-long purpose."[A]
+
+[Footnote A: _The Paper World_.]
+
+This man of large purposes and large measures has, of course, his sturdy
+friends, his foes as sturdy. He has, without doubt, an iron will. He is,
+without doubt, a good fighter--a wise counselor. Approached by fraud he
+presents a front of granite; he cuts through intrigue with sudden,
+forceful blows. It is true that the sharp bargainer, the overreaching
+buyer he worsts and puts to confusion and loss without mercy. But, no
+less, candor and honor meet with frankness and generous dealing. He is
+as loyal to a friend as to a purpose. His interest in one befriended and
+taken into trust is for life. It has been more than once said of this
+immovable business man that he has the simple heart of a boy.
+
+Mr. Lothrop's summer home is in Concord, Mass. His house, known to
+literary pilgrims of both continents as "The Wayside," is a unique, many
+gabled old mansion, situated near the road at the base of a pine-covered
+hill, facing broad, level fields, and commanding a view of charming
+rural scenery. Its dozen green acres are laid out in rustic paths; but
+with the exception of the removal of unsightly underbrush, the landscape
+is left in a wild and picturesque state. Immediately in the rear of the
+house, however, A. Bronson Alcott, a former occupant, planned a series
+of terraces, and thereon is a system of trees. The house was commenced
+in the seventeenth century and has been added to at different periods,
+and withal is quaint enough to satisfy the most exacting antiquarian. At
+the back rise the more modern portions, and the tower, wherein was woven
+the most delightful of American romances, and about which cluster tender
+memories of the immortal Hawthorne. The boughs of the whispering pines
+almost touch the lofty windows.
+
+The interior of the dwelling is seemly. It corresponds with the various
+eras of its construction. The ancient low-posted rooms with their large
+open fire-places, in which the genial hickory crackles and glows as in
+the olden time, have furnishings and appointments in harmony. The more
+modern apartments are charming, the whole combination making a most
+delightful country house.
+
+Mr. Lothrop's enjoyment of art and his critical appreciation is
+illustrated here as throughout his publications, his house being adorned
+with many exquisite and valuable original paintings from the studios of
+modern artists; and there is, too, a certain literary fitness that his
+home should be in this most classic spot, and that the mistress of this
+home should be a lady of distinguished rank in literature, and that the
+fair baby daughter of the house should wear for her own the name her
+mother has made beloved in thousands of American and English households.
+
+[Illustration: "The Wayside."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+New England Conservatory of Music.
+
+[Illustration: New England CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC Franklin Square Boston]
+
+By MRS. M.J. DAVIS.
+
+
+One of the most important questions now occupying the minds of the
+world's deepest and best thinkers, is the intellectual, physical, moral,
+and political position of woman.
+
+Men are beginning to realize a fact that has been evident enough for
+ages: that the current of civilization can never rise higher than the
+springs of motherhood. Given the ignorant, debased mothers of the
+Turkish harem, and the inevitable result is a nation destitute of truth,
+honor or political position. All the power of the Roman legions, all the
+wealth of the imperial empire, could not save the throne of the Cæsars
+when the Roman matron was shorn of her honor, and womanhood became only
+the slave or the toy of its citizens. Men have been slow to grasp the
+fact that women are a "true constituent of the bone and sinew of
+society," and as such should be trained to bear the part of "bone and
+sinew." It has been finely said, "that as times have altered and
+conditions varied, the respect has varied in which woman has been held.
+At one time condemned to the field and counted with the cattle, at
+another time condemned to the drawing-room and inventoried with marbles,
+oils and water-colors; but only in instances comparatively rare,
+acknowledged and recognized in the fullness of her moral and
+intellectual possibilities, and in the beauteous completeness of her
+personal dignity, prowess and obligation."
+
+[Illustration: The Library Reading Room]
+
+[Illustration: Art Department Painting]
+
+Various and widely divergent as opinions are in regard to woman's place
+in the political sphere, there is fast coming to be unanimity of thought
+in regard to her intellectual development. Even in Turkey, fathers are
+beginning to see that their daughters are better, not worse, for being
+able to read and, write, and civilization is about ready to concede that
+the intellectual, physical and moral possibilities of woman are to be
+the only limits to her attainment. Vast strides in the direction of the
+higher and broader education of women have been made in the quarter of a
+century since John Vassar founded on the banks of the Hudson the noble
+college for women that bears his name; and others have been found who
+have lent willing hands to making broad the highway that leads to an
+ideal womanhood. Wellesley and Smith, as well as Vassar find their
+limits all too small for the throngs of eager girlhood that are pressing
+toward them. The Boston University, honored in being first to open
+professional courses to women, Michigan University, the New England
+Conservatory, the North Western University of Illinois, the Wesleyan
+Universities, both of Connecticut and Ohio, with others of the colleges
+of the country, have opened their doors and welcomed women to an equal
+share with men, in their advantages. And in the shadow of Oxford, on the
+Thames, and of Harvard, on the Charles, womanly minds are growing,
+womanly lives are shaping, and womanly patience is waiting until every
+barrier shall be removed, and all the green fields of learning shall be
+so free that whosoever will may enter.
+
+[Illustration: Art Department Modeling]
+
+[Illustration: Tuning Department]
+
+Among the foremost of the great educational institutions of the day, the
+New England Conservatory of Music takes rank, and its remarkable
+development and wonderful growth tends to prove that the youth of the
+land desire the highest advantages that can be offered them. More than
+thirty years ago the germ of the idea that is now embodied in this great
+institution, found lodgment in the brain of the man who has devoted his
+life to its development. Believing that music had a positive influence
+upon the elevation of the world hardly dreamed of as yet even by its
+most devoted students, Eben Tourjee returned to America from years of
+musical study in the great Conservatories of Europe. Knowing from
+personal observation the difficulties that lie in the way of American
+students, especially of young and inexperienced girls who seek to obtain
+a musical education abroad, battling as they must, not only with foreign
+customs and a foreign language, but exposed to dangers, temptations and
+disappointments, he determined to found in America a music school that
+should be unsurpassed in the world. Accepting the judgment of the great
+masters, Mendelsshon, David, and Joachim, that the conservatory system
+was the best possible system of musical instruction, doing for music
+what a college of liberal arts does for education in general, Dr.
+Tourjee in 1853, with what seems to have been large and earnest faith,
+and most entire devotion, took the first public steps towards the
+accomplishment of his purpose. During the long years his plan developed
+step by step. In 1870 the institution was chartered under its present
+name in Boston. In 1881 its founder deeded to it his entire personal
+property, and by a deed of trust gave the institution into the hands of
+a Board of Trustees to be perpetuated forever as a Christian Music
+School.
+
+[Illustration: The Dining Hall]
+
+In the carrying out of his plan to establish and equip an institution
+that should give the highest musical culture, Dr. Tourjee has been
+compelled, in order that musicians educated here should not be narrow,
+one-sided specialists only, but that they should be cultured men and
+women, to add department after department, until to-day under the same
+roof and management there are well equipped schools of Music, Art,
+Elocution, Literature, Languages, Tuning, Physical Culture, and a home
+with the safeguards of a Christian family life for young women students.
+
+[Illustration: _The Cabinet_]
+
+When, in 1882, the institution moved from Music Hall to its present
+quarters in Franklin Square, in what was the St. James Hotel, it became
+possessed of the largest and best equipped conservatory buildings in the
+world. It has upon its staff of seventy-five teachers, masters from the
+best schools of Europe. During the school year ending June 29, 1884,
+students coming from forty-one states and territories of the Union, from
+the British Provinces, from England and from the Sandwich Islands, have
+received instruction there. The growth of this institution, due in such
+large measure to the courage and faith of one man, has been remarkable,
+and it stands to-day self-supporting, without one dollar of endowment,
+carrying on alone its noble work, an institution of which Boston,
+Massachusetts and America may well be proud. From the first its
+invitation has been without limitation. It began with a firm belief that
+"what it is in the nature of a man or woman to become, is a Providential
+indication of what God wants it to become, by improvement and
+development," and it offered to men and women alike the same advantages,
+the same labor, and the same honor. It is working out for itself the
+problem of co-education, and it has never had occasion to take one
+backward step in the part it has chosen. Money by the millions has been
+poured out upon the schools and colleges of the land, and not one dollar
+too much has been given, for the money that educates is the money that
+saves the nation.
+
+Among those who have been made stewards of great wealth some liberal
+benefactor should come forward in behalf of this great school, that, by
+eighteen years of faithful living, has proved its right to live. Its
+founder says of it: "The institution has not yet compassed my thought of
+it." Certainly it has not reached its possibilities of doing good. It
+needs a hall in which its concerts and lectures can be given, and in
+which the great organ of Music Hall, may be placed. It needs that its
+chapel, library, studios, gymnasium and recitation rooms should be
+greatly enlarged to meet the actual demands now made upon them. It needs
+what other institutions have needed and received, a liberal endowment,
+to enable it, with them, to meet and solve the great question of the
+day, the education of the people.
+
+[Illustration: New England Conservatory of Music Boston]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SKETCH OF SAUGUS.
+
+By E.P. ROBINSON.
+
+
+Saugus lies about eight miles northeast of Boston. It was incorporated
+as an independent town February 17, 1815, and was formerly a part of
+Lynn, which once bore the name of Saugus, being an Indian name, and
+signifies great or extended. It has a taxable area of 5,880 acres, and
+its present population may be estimated at about 2,800, living in 535
+houses. The former boundary between Lynn and Suffolk County ran through
+the centre of the "Boardman House," in what is now Saugus, and standing
+near the line between Melrose and Saugus, and is one of the oldest
+houses in the town. It has forty miles of accepted streets and roads,
+which are proverbial as being kept in the very best condition. Its
+public buildings are a Town Hall, a wooden structure, of Gothic
+architecture, with granite steps and underpining, and has a seating
+capacity of seven hundred and eighty persons. It is considered to be the
+handsomest wooden building in Essex County, and cost $48,000. The High
+School is accommodated within its walls, and beside offices for the
+various boards of town officers; on the lower floor it has a room for a
+library. The upper flight has an auditorium with ante-rooms at the front
+and rear, a balcony at the front, seats one hundred and eighty persons,
+and a platform on the stage at the rear. It was built in 1874-5. The
+building committee were E.P. Robinson, Gilbert Waldron, J.W. Thomas,
+H.B. Newhall, Wilbur F. Newhall, Augustus B. Davis, George N. Miller,
+George H. Hull, Louis P. Hawkes, William F. Hitchings, E.E. Wilson,
+Warren P. Copp, David Knox, A. Brad. Edmunds and Henry Sprague. E.P.
+Robinson was chosen chairman and David Knox secretary. The architects
+were Lord & Fuller of Boston, and the work of building was put under
+contract to J.H. Kibby & Son of Chelsea.
+
+The town also owns seven commodious schoolhouses, in which are
+maintained thirteen schools--one High, three Grammar, three
+Intermediate, three Primaries, one sub-Primary and two mixed schools,
+the town appropriating the sum of six thousand dollars therefor. There
+are five Churches--Congregational, Universalist, and three Methodist,
+besides two societies worshiping in halls (the St. John's Episcopal
+Mission and the Union at North Saugus). After the schism in the old
+Third Parish about 1809, the religious feud between the Trinitarians and
+the Unitarians became so intense that a lawsuit was had to obtain the
+fund, the Universalists retaining possession. The Trinitarians then
+built the old stone Church, under the direction of Squire Joseph Eames,
+which, as a piece of architecture, did not reflect much credit on
+builder or architect. It is now used as a grocery and post office; their
+present place of worship was built in 1852. The Church edifice of the
+old Third was erected in 1738, and was occupied without change until
+1859, when it was sold and moved off the spot, and the site is now
+marked by a flag staff and band stand, known as Central Square. The old
+Church was moved a short distance and converted into tenements, with a
+store underneath. The Universalist society built their present Church
+in 1860. The town farm consists of some 280 acres, and has a fine wood
+lot of 240 acres, the remainder being valuable tillage, costing in 1823
+$4,625.
+
+The town is rich in local history and has either produced or been the
+residence of a number of notable men and women.
+
+[Illustration: M.E. CHURCH, CLIFTONDALE.]
+
+Judge William Tudor, the father of the ice business, now so colossal in
+its proportions, started the trade here, living on what is now the poor
+farm. The Saugus Female Seminary once held quite a place in literary
+circles, Cornelius C. Felton, afterward president of Harvard College,
+being its "chore boy" (the remains of his parents lie in the cemetery
+near by). Fanny Fern, the sister of N.P. Willis, the wife of James
+Parton, the celebrated biographer, as well as two sisters of Dr.
+Alexander Vinton, pursued their studies here, together with Miss Flint,
+who married Honorable Daniel P. King, member of Congress for the Essex
+District, and Miss Dustin, who became the wife of Eben Sutton, and who
+has been so devoted and interested in the library of the Peabody
+Institute. Mr. Emerson, the preceptor, was for a time the pastor of the
+Third Parish of Lynn (now Saugus Universalist society), where Parson
+Roby preached for a period of fifty-three years--more than half a
+century, with a devotion and fidelity that greatly endeared him to his
+people. In passing we give the items of his salary as voted him in 1747,
+taken from the records of the Parish, being kindly furnished by the
+Clerk, Mr. W.F. Hitchings: "A suitable house and barn, standing in a
+suitable place; pasturing and sufficient warter meet for two Cows and
+one horse--the winter meet put in his barn; the improvement of two acres
+of land suitable to plant and to be kept well fenced; sixty pounds in
+lawful silver money, at six shillings and eight pence per ounce; twenty
+cords of wood at his Dore, and the Loose Contributions; and also the
+following artikles, or so much money as will purchase them, viz: Sixty
+Bushels Indian Corn, forty-one Bushels of Rye, Six hundred pounds wait
+of Pork and Eight Hundred and Eighty Eight pounds wait of Beefe."
+
+This would be considered a pretty liberal salary even now for a suburban
+people to pay. From the records of his parish it would seem he always
+enjoyed the love and confidence of his people, and was sincerely mourned
+by them at his death, which occurred January 31, 1803, at the advanced
+age of eighty years, and as stated above in the fifty-third year of his
+ministry. Among other good works and mementoes which he left behind him
+was the "Roby Elm," set out with his own hand, and which is now more
+than one hundred and twenty-five years old. It is in an excellent state
+of preservation, and with its perfectly conical shape at the top,
+attracts marked attention from all lovers and observers of trees. Among
+the names of worthy citizens who have impressed themselves upon the
+memory of their survivors, either as business men of rare executive
+ability, or as merchants of strict integrity, or scholars and men of
+literary genius, lawyers, artists, writers, poets, and men of inventive
+genius, we will first mention as eldest on the list "Landlord" Jacob
+Newhall, who used to keep a tavern in the east part of the town and gave
+"entertainment to man and beast" passing between Boston and Salem,
+notably so to General Washington on his journey from Boston to Salem in
+1797, and later to the Marquis De Lafayette in 1824, when making a
+similar journey. We also mention Zaccheus Stocker, Jonathan Makepeace,
+Charles Sweetser, Dr. Abijah Cheever, Benjamin F. Newhall and Benjamin
+Hitchings. These last all held town office with great credit to
+themselves and their constituents.
+
+Benjamin F. Newhall was a man of versatile parts. Beside writing rhymes
+he preached the Gospel, and was at one time County Commissioner for
+Essex County.
+
+To these may be added Salmon Snow, who held the office of Selectman for
+several years, and also kept the poor of Saugus for many years with
+great acceptance. He was a man of good judgment, strong in his likes and
+dislikes, and bitter in his resentments. George Henry Sweetser was also
+a Selectman for years, and was elected to the Legislature for both
+branches, being Senator for two terms. Frederick Stocker, noted as a
+manufacturer of brick, was also a man of sterling qualities, and shared
+in the confidence and esteem of his fellow citizens. Joseph Stocker
+Newhall, a manufacturer of roundings in sole leather, was a just man, of
+positive views, and although interesting himself in the political issues
+of the day would not take office. Eminently social he was at times
+somewhat abrupt and laconic in denouncing what he conceived to be shams.
+As a manufacturer his motto was, "the laborer is worthy of his hire." He
+died in 1875, aged 67 years. George Pearson was Treasurer of the town
+and one of the Selectmen, and also Treasurer and Deacon of the Orthodox
+parish for twenty-five years, living to the advanced age of eighty-seven
+years. He died in 1883.
+
+Later, about 1837, Edward Pranker, an Englishman, and Francis Scott, a
+Scotchman, became noted for their woollen factories, which they built in
+Saugus, and also became residents here for the rest of their lives.
+Enoch Train, too, a Boston ship merchant and founder of the famous line
+of packets between Boston and Liverpool for the transportation of
+emigrants, passed the last ten years of his life here, marrying Mrs.
+Almira Cheever. He was the father of Mrs. A.D.T. Whitney, the author of
+many works of fiction, which have been widely read; among them "Faith
+Gartney's Girlhood," "Odd or Even," "Sights and Insights," etc. In this
+connection we point to a living novelist of Saugus, Miss Ella Thayer,
+whose "Wired Lore" has been through several editions. George William
+Phillips, brother of Wendell, a lawyer of some note, also lived many
+years at Saugus and died in 1878. Joseph Ames, the artist, celebrated
+for his portraits, who was commissioned by the Catholics to visit Rome
+and paint Pope Pius IX., and who executed in a masterly manner other
+commissions, such as Rufus Choate, Daniel Webster, Abraham Lincoln,
+Madames Rachael and Ristori, learned the art in Saugus, though born in
+Roxbury, N.H. He died at New York while temporarily painting there, but
+was buried in Saugus in 1874. His brother Nathan was a patent solicitor,
+and considered an expert in such matters, and invented several useful
+machines. He was also a writer of both prose and poetry, writing among
+other books "Pirate's Glen," "Dungeon Rock" and "Childe Harold." He died
+in 1860.
+
+Rev. Fales H. Newhall, D.D., who was Professor of Languages at
+Middletown College, and who, as a writer, speaker or preacher, won
+merited distinction, died in 1882, lamented that his light should go
+prematurely out at the early age of 56 years.
+
+Henry Newhall, who went from Saugus to San Francisco, and there became a
+millionaire, may be spoken of as a succesful business man and merchant.
+The greatest instance of longevity since the incorporation of the town
+was that of Joseph Cheever, who was born February 22, 1772, and died
+June 19, 1872, aged 100 years, 4 months, 27 days. He was a farmer of
+great energy, industry and will power, and was given to much litigation.
+He, too, represented the town in 1817-18, 1820-21, 1831-32, and again in
+1835.
+
+Saugus, too, was the scene of the early labors of Rev. Edward T. Taylor,
+familiarly known as Father Taylor. Here he learned to read, and preached
+his first sermon at what was then known as the "Rock Schoolhouse," at
+East Saugus, though converted at North Saugus. Mrs. Sally Sweetser, a
+pious lady, taught him his letters, and Mrs. Jonathan Newhall used to
+read to him the chapter in the Bible from which he was to preach until
+he had committed it to memory.
+
+North Saugus is a fine agricultural section with table land, pleasant
+and well watered, well adapted to farming purposes, and it was here that
+Adam Hawkes, the first of this name in this county, settled with his
+five sons in 1630, and took up a large tract of land. He built his house
+on a rocky knoll, the spot being at the intersection of the road leading
+from Saugus to Lynnfield with the Newburyport turnpike, known as Hawkes'
+Corner. This house being burned the bricks of the old chimney were put
+into another, and when again this chimney was taken down a few years ago
+there were found bricks with the date of 1601 upon them. This shows,
+evidently, that the bricks were brought from England. This property is
+now in the hands of one of his lineal descendants, Louis P. Hawkes,
+having been handed down from sire to son for more than 250 years. On the
+28th and 29th of July, 1880, a family reunion of the descendents of Adam
+Hawkes was held to celebrate the 250th anniversary of his advent to the
+soil of Saugus. It was a notable meeting, and brought together the
+members of this respected and respectable family from Maine to
+California. Two large tents were spread and the trees and buildings were
+decorated with flags and mottoes in an appropriate and tasteful manner.
+Judges, Generals, artists, poets, clergymen, lawyers, farmers and
+mechanics were present to participate in the re-union. Addresses were
+made, poems suitable to the occasion rendered, and all passed off in a
+most creditable manner. Among the antique and curious documents in the
+possession of Samuel Hawkes was the "division of the estate of Adam
+Hawkes, made March 27, 1672."
+
+Mrs. Dinsmore resided in this part of the town. A most amiable woman, a
+good nurse, kind in sickness, and it was in this way that she discovered
+a most valuable medicine. Her specific is claimed to be very efficacious
+in cases of croup and kindred diseases, and its use in such cases has
+become very general, as well as for headache. She is almost as widely
+known as Lydia Pinkham. She died in 1881.
+
+[Illustration: MRS. DINSMORE.]
+
+Saugus nobly responded to the call for troops to put down the rebellion,
+furnishing a large contingent for Company K, Seventeenth Massachusetts
+Volunteers, which was recruited almost wholly from Malden and Saugus,
+under command of Captain Simonds of Malden. Thirty-six Saugus men also
+enlisted in Company A, Fortieth Massachusetts Volunteers, while quite a
+number joined the gallant Nineteenth Regiment, Col. E.W. Hinks, whose
+name Post 95, G.A.R., of Saugus bears, which is a large and flourishing
+organization. There were many others who enlisted in various other
+regiments, beside those who served in the navy.
+
+[Illustration: NINETEENTH REGIMENT BADGE.]
+
+Charles A. Newhall of this town is secretary and treasurer of the
+Nineteenth Regiment association, whose survivors still number nearly one
+hundred members.
+
+
+THE OLD IRON WORKS.
+
+These justly celebrated works, the first of their kind in this country,
+were situated on the west bank of the Saugus river, about one-fourth of
+a mile north of the Town Hall, on the road leading to Lynnfield, and
+almost immediately opposite the mansion of A.A. Scott, Esq., the present
+proprietor of the woolen mills which are located just above, the site of
+the old works being still marked by a mound of scoria and debris, the
+locality being familiarly known as the "Cinder Banks." Iron ore was
+discovered in the vicinity of these works at an early period, but no
+attempt was made to work it until 1643. The Braintree iron works, for
+which some have claimed precedence, were not commenced until 1647, in
+that part of the town known as Quincy.
+
+Among the artisans who found employment and scope for their mechanical
+skill at these works was Mr. Joseph Jenks who, when the colonial mint
+was started to coin the "Pine Tree Shilling," made the die for the first
+impressions at the Iron works at Saugus.
+
+The old house, formerly belonging to the Thomas Hudson estate of
+sixty-nine acres first purchased by the Iron Works, is still standing,
+and is probably one of the oldest in Essex County, although it has
+undergone so many repairs that it is something like the boy's
+jack-knife, which belonged to his grandfather and had received three new
+blades and two new handles since he had known it. One of the
+fire-places, with all its modernizing, a few years ago measured about
+thirteen feet front, and its whole contour is yet unique. It is now
+owned by A.A. Scott and John B. Walton.
+
+Near Pranker's Pond, on Appleton street, is a singular rock resembling a
+pulpit. This portion of the town is known as the Calemount.
+
+There is a legend of the Colonial period that a man by the name of
+Appleton harangued or preached to the people of the vicinity, urging
+them to stand by the Republican cause, hence the name of "Pulpit Rock."
+The name "Calemount" also comes, according to tradition, from the fact
+that one of the people named Caleb Appleton, who had become obnoxious to
+the party, had agreed upon a signal with his wife and intimate friends,
+that, when in danger, they should notify him by this expressive warning,
+"Cale, mount!" upon which he would take refuge in the rocky mountain,
+which, being then densely wooded, afforded a secure hiding place.
+Several members of this family of Appletons have since, during
+successive generations, been distinguished and well known citizens of
+Boston, one of whom, William Appleton, was elected to Congress over
+Anson Burlingame, in 1860.
+
+Recently, one of the descendants of this family has had a tablet of
+copper securely bolted to the rock with the following inscription:--
+
+ "APPLETON'S PULPIT!
+
+ In September, 1687, from this rock tradition asserts that resisting
+ the tyranny of Sir Edmond Andros, Major Samuel Appleton of Ipswich
+ spake to the people in behalf of those principles which later were
+ embodied in the declaration of Independence."
+
+This tablet was formally presented to the town by letter from the late
+Thomas Appleton, at the annual March meeting in 1882, and its care
+assumed by the town of Saugus.
+
+Among the present industries of Saugus are Pranker's Mills, a joint
+stock corporation, doing business under the style of Edward Pranker &
+Co., for the manufacture of woollen goods, employing about one hundred
+operatives, and producing about 1,800,000 yards of cloth annually--red,
+white and yellow flannel. The mill of A.A. Scott is just below on the
+same stream, making the same class of goods, with a much smaller
+production, both companies being noted for the standard quality of their
+fabrics. The spice and coffee mills of Herbert B. Newhall at East Saugus
+do a large business in their line, and his goods go all over New England
+and the West.
+
+Charles S. Hitchings, at Saugus, turns out some 1,500 cases of
+hand-made slippers of fine quality for the New York and New England
+trade. Otis M. Burrill, in the same line, is making the same kind of
+work, some 150 cases, Hiram Grover runs a stitching factory with steam
+power, and employs a large number of employees, mostly females.
+
+Win. E. Shaw also makes paper boxes and cartoons, and does quite a
+business for Lynn manufacturers.
+
+[Illustration: RESIDENCE OF RUFUS A. JOHNSON.]
+
+Enoch T. Kent at Saugus and his brother, Edward S. Kent, at Cliftondale,
+are engaged in washing crude hair and preparing it for plastering and
+other purposes, such as curled hair, hair cloth, blankets, etc. They
+each give employment to quite a number of men. Albert H. Sweetser makes
+snuff, succeeding to the firm of Sweetser Bros., who did an extensive
+business until after the war. The demand for this kind of goods is more
+limited than formerly. Joseph. A. Raddin, manufactures the crude tobacco
+from the leaf into chewing and smoking tobacco. Edward O. Copp, Martha
+Fiske, William Parker and a few others still manufacture cigars.
+
+Quite an, extensive ice business is done at Saugus by Solon V. Edmunds
+and Stephen Stackpole. A few years ago Eben Edmunds shipped by the
+Eastern Railroad some 1,200 tons to Gloucester, but the shrinkage and
+wastage of the ice by delays on the train did not render it a profitable
+operation.
+
+The strawberry culture has recently become quite a feature in the
+producing industry of Saugus. In 1884 Elbridge S. Upham marketed 3,600
+boxes, Charles S. Hitchings 1,200, Warren P. Copp 400, and others,
+Martin Carnes, Calvin Locke, Edward Saunders and Lorenzo Mansfield, more
+or less.
+
+John W. Blodgett and the Hatch Bros. do a large business in early and
+late vegetables for Boston and Lynn markets, such as asparagus, spinach,
+etc., and employ quite a number of men.
+
+Nor must we forget to mention the milk business. Louis P. Hawkes has a
+herd of some forty cows and has a milk route at Lynn. J.W. Blodgett
+keeps twenty-five cows, and takes his milk to market. Geo. N. Miller and
+T.O.W. Houghton also keep cows and have a route. Joshua Kingsbury,
+George H. Pearson and George Ames have a route, buying their milk. Byron
+Hone keeps fifty cows. Dudley Fiske has twenty-five, selling their milk.
+O.M. Hitchings, H. Burns, A.B. Davis, Lewis Austin, Richard Hawkes and
+others keep from seven to twelve cows for dairy purposes.
+
+[Illustration: RESIDENCE OF CHARLES H. BOND.]
+
+Having somewhat minutely noticed the industries we will speak briefly of
+some of the dwellings. The elegant mansion and gardens of Brainard and
+Henry George, Harmon Hall and Rufus A. Johnson of East Saugus, and Eli
+Barrett, A.A. Scott and E.E. Wilson of Saugus, C.A. Sweetser, C.H. Bond
+and Pliny Nickerson at Cliftondale, with their handsome lawns, rich and
+rare flowers and noble shade trees attract general attention. The last
+mentioned estate was formerly owned by a brother of Governor William
+Eustis, where his Excellency used to spend a portion of his time each
+year.
+
+At the south-westerly part of the town, not far from the old Eustis
+estate, the boundaries of three counties and four towns intersect with
+each other, viz: Suffolk, Essex and Middlesex counties, and the towns of
+Revere, Saugus, Melrose and Maiden. Near by, too, is the old Boynton
+estate, and the Franklin Trotting park, where some famous trotting was
+had, when Dr. Smith managed it in 1866-7, Flora Temple, Fashion, Lady
+Patchen and other noted horses contending. After a few years of use it
+was abandoned, but it has recently been fitted up by Marshall Abbott of
+Lynn, and several trots have taken place the present summer.
+
+[Illustration: TOWN HALL.]
+
+The Boynton estate above referred to is divided by a small brook, known
+as "Bride's Brook," which is also the dividing line between Saugus and
+Revere, and the counties of Suffolk and Essex. Tradition asserts that
+many years ago a couple were married here, the groom standing on one
+side and the bride on the other; hence the name "Bride's Brook."
+
+The existence of iron ore used for the manufacturing at the old Iron
+Works was well known, and there have been many who have believed that
+antimony also exists in large quantities in Saugus, but its precise
+location has as yet not become known to the public.
+
+As early as the year 1848, a man by the name of Holden, who was given to
+field searching and prospecting, frequently brought specimens to the
+late Benjamin F. Newhall and solemnly affirmed that he obtained them
+from the earth and soil within the limits of Saugus. Every means was
+used to induce him to divulge the secret of its locality. But Holden was
+wary and stolidly refused to disclose or share the knowledge of the
+place of the lode with anyone. He averred that he was going to make his
+fortune by it. Detectives were put upon his trail in his roaming about
+the fields, but he managed to elude all efforts at discovery. Being an
+intemperate man, one cold night after indulging in his cups, he was
+found by the roadside stark and stiff. Many rude attempts and imperfect
+searches have been made upon the assurances of Holden to discover the
+existence of antimony, but thus far in vain, and the supposed suppressed
+secret of the existence of it in Saugus died with him.
+
+"Pirate's Glen" is also within the territory of Saugus, while "Dungeon
+Rock," another romantic locality, described by Alonzo Lewis in his
+history of Lynn, is just over the line in that city. There is a popular
+tradition that the pirates buried their treasure at the foot of a
+certain hemlock tree in the glen, also the body of a beautiful female.
+The rotten stump of a tree may still be seen, and a hollow beside it,
+where people have dug in searching for human bones and treasure. This
+glen is highly romantic and is one of the places of interest to which
+all strangers visiting Saugus are conducted, and is invested with
+somewhat of the supernatural tales of Captain Kid and treasure trove.
+
+There is a fine quarry or ledge of jasper located in the easterly part
+of the town, near Saugus River, just at the foot of the conical-shaped
+elevation known as "Round Hill." which Professor Hitchcock, in his last
+geological survey, pronounced to be the best specimen in the state. Mrs.
+Hitchcock, an artist, who accompanied her husband in his surveying tour,
+delineated from this eminence, looking toward Nahant and Egg Rock, which
+is full in view, and from which steamers may be seen with a glass
+plainly passing in and out of Boston harbor. The scenery and drives
+about Saugus are delightful, especially beautiful is the view and
+landscape looking from the "Cinder Banks," so-called, down Saugus river
+toward Lynn.
+
+
+REPRESENTATIVES FROM SAUGUS SINCE THE TOWN WAS INCORPORATED.
+
+Saugus, (formerly the West Parish of Lynn), was formed in the year 1815,
+and the town was first represented by Mr. Robert Emes in 1816. Mr. Emes
+carried on morocco dressing, his business being located on Saugus river,
+on the spot now occupied by Scott's Flannel Mills.
+
+In 1817-18 Mr. Joseph Cheever represented the town, and again in
+1820-21; also, in 1831-32, and again, for the last time, in 1835. After
+having served the town seven times in the legislature, he seems to have
+quietly retired from political affairs.
+
+In 1822 Dr. Abijah Cheever was the Representative, and again in 1829-30.
+The doctor held a commission as surgeon in the army at the time of our
+last war with Great Britain. He was a man very decided in his manners,
+had a will of his own, and liked to have people respect it.
+
+In 1823 Mr. Jonathan Makepeace was elected. His business was the
+manufacture of snuff, at the old mills in the eastern part of the town,
+now owned by Sweetser Brothers, and known as the Sweetser Mills.
+
+In 1826-28 Mr. John Shaw was the Representative.
+
+In 1827 Mr. William Jackson was elected.
+
+In 1833-34 Mr. Zaccheus N. Stocker represented the town. Mr. Stocker
+held various offices, and looked very closely after the interests of the
+town.
+
+In 1837-38 Mr. William W. Boardman was the Representative. He has filled
+a great many offices in the town.
+
+In 1839 Mr. Charles Sweetser was elected, and again in 1851. Mr.
+Sweetser was largely engaged in the manufacture of snuff and cigars. He
+was a gentleman very decided in his opinions, and enjoyed the confidence
+of the people to a large degree.
+
+In 1840, the year of the great log cabin campaign, Mr. Francis Dizer was
+elected.
+
+In 1841 Mr. Benjamin Hitchings, Jr., was elected, and in 1842 the town
+was represented by Mr. Stephen E. Hawkes.
+
+In 1843-44 Benjamin F. Newhall, Esq., was the Representative, Mr.
+Newhall was a man of large and varied experience, and held various
+offices, always looking sharply after the real interests of the town. He
+also held the office of County Commissioner.
+
+In 1845 Mr. Pickmore Jackson was the Representative. He has also held
+various offices in the town, and has since served on the school
+committee with good acceptance.
+
+In 1846-47 Mr. Sewall Boardman represented the town.
+
+In 1852 Mr. George H. Sweetser was the Representative. Mr. Sweetser has
+also held a seat in our State Senate two years, and filled various town
+offices. He was a prompt and energetic business man, engaged in
+connection with his brother, Mr. Charles A. Sweetser, in the manufacture
+of snuff and cigars.
+
+In 1853 Mr. John B. Hitching was elected. He has held various offices in
+the town.
+
+In 1854 the town was represented by Mr. Samuel Hawkes, who has also
+served in several other positions, proving himself a very
+straightforward and reliable man.
+
+In 1855 Mr. Richard Mansfield was elected. He was for many years Tax
+Collector and Constable, and when he laid his hand on a man's shoulder,
+in the name of the law, the duty was performed in such a good-natured
+manner that it really did not seem so very bad, after all.
+
+In 1856 Mr. William H. Newhall represented the town. He has held the
+offices of Town Clerk and Selectman longer than any other person in
+town, and is still in office.
+
+In 1857 Mr. Jacob B. Calley was elected.
+
+In 1858 the district system was adopted, and Mr. Jonathan Newhall was
+elected to represent the twenty-fourth Essex District, comprising the
+towns of Saugus, Lynnfield and Middleton.
+
+[Illustration: _Sketch of Saugus._]
+
+In 1861 Mr. Harmon Hall represented the District. Mr. Hall is a very
+energetic business man, and has accumulated a very handsome property by
+the manufacture of boots and shoes. He has held various other important
+positions, and has been standing Moderator in all town meetings, always
+putting business through by daylight.
+
+In 1863 Mr. John Hewlett was elected. He resides in that part of the
+town called North Saugus, and was for a long series of years a
+manufacturer of snuff and cigars.
+
+In 1864 Mr. Charles W. Newhall was the Representative.
+
+In 1867 Mr. Sebastian S. Dunn represented the District. Mr. Dunn was a
+dealer in snuff, cigars and spices, and is now engaged in farming in
+Dakota.
+
+In 1870 Mr. John Armitage represented the District--the twentieth
+Essex--comprising the towns of Saugus, Lynnfield, Middleton and
+Topsfield. He has been engaged in the woollen business most of his life;
+formerly a partner with Pranker & Co. He has also held other town
+offices with great acceptance.
+
+J.B. Calley succeeded Mr. Armitage, it being the second time he had been
+elected. Otis M. Hitchings was the next Representative, a shoe
+manufacturer, being elected over A.A. Scott, Esq., the republican
+candidate.
+
+Joseph Whitehead was the next Representative from Saugus, a grocer in
+business. He was then and still is Town Treasurer, repeatedly having
+received every vote cast. J. Allston Newhall was elected in 1878 and for
+several years was selectman.
+
+Albert H. Sweetser was our last Representative, elected in 1882-3, by
+one of the largest majorities ever given in the District. He is a snuff
+manufacturer, doing business at Cliftondale, under the firm of Sweetser
+Bros., whom he succeeds in business. Saugus is entitled to the next
+Representative in 1885-6. The womb of the future will alone reveal his
+name.
+
+The future of Saugus would seem to be well assured, having frequent
+trains to and from Boston and Lynn, with enlarged facilities for
+building purposes, especially at Cliftondale, where a syndicate has
+recently been formed, composed of Charles H. Bond, Edward S. Kent, and
+Henry Waite, who have purchased thirty-four acres of land, formerly
+belonging to the Anthony Hatch estate, which, with other adjoining lands
+are to be laid out into streets and lots presenting such opportunities
+and facilities for building as cannot fail to attract all who are
+desirious of obtaining suburban residences, and thus largely add to the
+taxable property of Saugus and to the prosperity of this interesting
+locality.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE BARTHOLDI COLOSSUS.
+
+By WILLIAM HOWE DOWNES.
+
+
+The project of erecting a colossal statue of Liberty, which shall at
+once serve as a lighthouse and as a symbolic work of art, may be
+discussed from several different points of view. The abstract idea, as
+it occurred to the sculptor, Mr. Bartholdi, was noble. The colossus was
+to symbolize the historic friendship of the two great republics, the
+United States and France; it was to further symbolize the idea of
+freedom and fraternity which underlies the republican form of
+government. Lafayette and Jefferson would have been touched by the
+project. If we are not touched by it, it proves that we have forgotten
+much which it would become us to recall. Before our nation was, the
+democratic idea had been for many years existing and expanding among the
+French people; crushed again and again by tyrants, it ever rose, renewed
+and fresh for the irrepressible conflict. Through all their vicissitudes
+the people of France have upheld, unfaltering, their ideal--liberty,
+equality and fraternity. Our own republic exists to-day because France
+helped us when England sought to crush us. It is never amiss to freshen
+our memories as to these historic facts. The symbolism of the colossus
+would therefore be very fine; it would have a meaning which every one
+could understand. It would signify not only the amity of France and the
+United States, and the republican idea of brotherhood and freedom, as I
+have said; but it would also stand for American hospitality to the
+European emigrant, and Emma Lazarus has thus imagined the colossus
+endowed with speech:
+
+ "Keep, ancient lands, your storied pomp!" cries she.
+ With silent lips. "Give me your tired, your poor,
+ Your huddled masses, yearning to breathe free;
+ The wretched refuse of your teeming shore--
+ Send these, the homeless, temptest-tost to me--
+ I lift my lamp beside the golden door!"
+
+Now, there can be no two ways of thinking among patriotic Americans as
+to this aspect of the Bartholdi colossus question. It must be agreed
+that the motive of the work is extremely grand, and that its
+significance would be glorious. The sculptor's project was a generous
+inspiration, for which he must be cordially remembered. To be sure, it
+may be said he is getting well advertised; that is very true, but it
+would be mean in us to begrudge him what personal fame he may derive
+from the work. To assume that the whole affair is a "job," or that it is
+entirely the outcome of one man's scheming egotism and desire for
+notoriety, is to take a deplorably low view of it; to draw unwarranted
+conclusions and to wrong ourselves. The money to pay for the
+statue--about $250,000--was raised by popular subscription in France,
+under the auspices of the Franco-American Union, an association of
+gentlemen whose membership includes such names as Laboulaye, de
+Lafayette, de Rochambeau, de Noailles, de Toqueville, de Witt, Martin,
+de Remusat. The identification of these excellent men with the project
+should be a sufficient guarantee of its disinterested character. The
+efforts made in this country to raise the money--$250,000--required to
+build a suitable pedestal for the statue, are a subject of every day
+comment, and the failure to obtain the whole amount is a matter for no
+small degree of chagrin.
+
+Who and what is Mr. Bartholdi? He is a native of Colmar, in Alsace, and
+comes of a good stock; a pupil of the Lycee Louis-le-Grand, and of Ary
+Scheffer, he studied first painting then sculpture, and after a journey
+in the East with Gerome, established his atelier in Paris. He served in
+the irregular corps of Garibaldi during the war of 1870, and the
+following year visited the United States. It is admitted that he is a
+man of talent, but that he is not considered a great sculptor in his own
+country is equally beyond doubt. He would not be compared, for instance,
+with such men as Chapu, Dubois, Falguiere, Clesinger, Mercie, Fremiet,
+men who stand in the front rank of their profession. The list of his
+works is not long. It includes statues of General Rapp, Vercingetorix,
+Vauban, Champollion, Lafayette and Rouget de l'Isle; ideal groups
+entitled "Genius in the Grasp of Misery," and "the Malediction of
+Alsace;" busts of Messrs. Erckmann and Chatrain; single figures called
+"Le Vigneron," "Genie Funebre" and "Peace;" and a monument to Martin
+Schoengauer in the form of a fountain for the courtyard of the Colmar
+Museum. There may be a few others. Last, but by no means least, there is
+the great Lion of Belfort, his best work. This is about 91 by 52 feet in
+dimensions, and is carved from a block of reddish Vosges stone. It is
+intended to commemorate the defence of Belfort against the German army
+in 1870, an episode of heroic interest. The immense animal is
+represented as wounded but still capable of fighting, half lying, half
+standing, with an expression of rage and mighty defiance. It is not too
+much to say that Mr. Bartholdi in this case has shown a fine
+appreciation of the requirements of colossal sculpture. He has
+sacrificed all unnecessary details, and, taking a lesson from the old
+Egyptian stone-cutters, has presented an impressive arrangement of
+simple masses and unvexed surfaces which give to the composition a
+marvellous breadth of effect. The lion is placed in a sort of rude niche
+on the side of a rocky hill, which is the foundation of the fortress of
+Belfort. It is visible at a great distance, and is said to be strikingly
+noble from every point of view. The idea is not original, however well
+it may have been carried out, for the Lion of Lucerne by Thorwaldsen is
+its prototype on a smaller scale and commemorates an event of somewhat
+similar character. The bronze equestrian statue of Vercingetorix, the
+fiery Gallic chieftain, in the Clermont museum, is full of violent
+action. The horse is flying along with his legs in positions which set
+all the science of Mr. Muybridge at defiance; the man is brandishing his
+sword and half-turning in his saddle to shout encouragement to his
+followers. The whole is supported by a bit of artificial rock-work under
+the horse, and the body of a dead Gaul lies close beside it. In the
+statue of Rouget de l'Isle we see a young man striking an orator's
+attitude, with his right arm raised in a gesture which seems to say:
+
+"_Aux armes, citoyens / Formes vos bataillons!_"
+
+The Lafayette, in New York, is perhaps a mediocre statue, but even so,
+it is better than most of our statues. A Frenchman has said of it that
+the figure "resembles rather a young tenor hurling out his C sharp, than
+a hero offering his heart and sword to liberty." It represents our
+ancient ally extending his left hand in a gesture of greeting, while his
+right hand, which holds his sword, is pressed against his breast in a
+somewhat theatrical movement. It will be inferred that the general
+criticism to be made upon Mr. Bartholdi's statues is that they are
+violent and want repose. The Vercingetorix, the Rouget de l'Isle, the
+Lafayette, all have this exaggerated stress of action. They have
+counterbalancing features of merit, no doubt, but none of so
+transcendent weight that we can afford to overlook this grave defect.
+
+Coming now to the main question, which it is the design of this paper to
+discuss, the inquiry arises: What of the colossal statue of Liberty as a
+work of art? For, no matter how noble the motive may be, or how generous
+the givers, it must after all be subjected to this test. If it is not a
+work of art, the larger it is, the more offensive it must be. There are
+not wanting critics who maintain that colossal figures cannot be works
+of art; they claim that such representations of the human form are
+unnatural and monstrous, and it is true that they are able to point out
+some "terrible examples" of modern failures, such, for instance, as the
+"Bavaria" statue at Munich. But these writers appear to forget that the
+"Minerva" of the Parthenon and the Olympian Jupiter were the works of
+the greatest sculptor of ancient times, and that no less a man than
+Michael Angelo was the author of the "David" and "Moses." It is
+therefore apparent that those who deny the legitimacy of colossal
+sculptures _in toto_ go too far; but it is quite true that colossal
+works have their own laws and are subject to peculiar conditions. Mr.
+Lesbazeilles[A] says that "colossal statuary is in its proper place when
+it expresses power, majesty, the qualities that inspire respect and
+fear; but it would be out of place if it sought to please us by the
+expression of grace.... Its function is to set forth the sublime and the
+grandiose." The colossi found among the ruins of Egyptian Temples and
+Palaces cannot be seen without emotion, for if many of them are
+admirable only because of their great size, still no observer can avoid
+a feeling of astonishment on account of the vast energy, courage and
+industry of the men of old who could vanquish such gigantic
+difficulties. At the same time it will not do to assume that the
+Egyptian stone cutters were not artists. The great Sphinx of Giseh, huge
+as it is, is far from being a primitive and vulgar creation. "The
+portions of the head which have been preserved," says Mr. Charles Blanc,
+"the brow, the eyebrows, the corners of the eyes, the passage from the
+temples to the cheek-bones, and from the cheek-bones to the cheek, the
+remains of the mouth and chin,--all this testifies to an extraordinary
+fineness of chiselling. The entire face has a solemn serenity and a
+sovereign goodness." Leaving aside all consideration of the artistic
+merits of other Egyptian colossi,--those at Memphis, Thebes, Karnac and
+Luxor, with the twin marvels of Amenophis-Memnon--we turn to the most
+famous colossus of antiquity, that at Rhodes, only to find that we have
+even less evidence on which to base an opinion as to its quality than is
+available in the case of the numerous primitive works of Egypt and of
+India. We know its approximate dimensions, the material of which it was
+made, and that it was overthrown by an earthquake, but there seems to be
+reason to doubt its traditional attitude, and nothing is known as to
+what it amounted to as a work of art, though it may be presumed that,
+being the creation of a Greek, it had the merits of its classic age and
+school. Of the masterpieces of Phidias it may be said that they were
+designed for the interiors of Temples and were adopted with consummate
+art to the places they occupied; they have been reconstructed for us
+from authentic descriptions, and we are enabled to judge concerning that
+majestic and ponderous beauty which made them the fit presentments of
+the greatest pagan deities. I need say nothing of the immortal statues
+by Michael Angelo, and will therefore hasten to consider the modern
+outdoor colossi which now exist in Europe--the St. Charles Borromeo at
+Arona, Italy, the Bavaria at Munich, the Arminius in Westphalia, Our
+Lady of Puy in France. The St. Charles Borromeo, near the shore of Lake
+Maggiore, dates from 1697, and is the work of a sculptor known as Il
+Cerano. Its height is 76 feet, or with its pedestal, 114 feet. The arm
+is over 29 feet long, the nose 33 inches, and the forefinger 6 feet 4
+inches. The statue is entirely of hammered copper plates riveted
+together, supported by means of clamps and bands of iron on an interior
+mass of masonry. The effect of the work is far from being artistic. It
+is in a retired spot on a hill, a mile or two from the little village of
+Arona. The Bavaria, near Munich, erected in 1850, is 51 feet high, on a
+pedestal about 26 feet high, and is the work of Schwanthaler. It is of
+bronze and weighs about 78 tons. The location of this monstrous lump of
+metal directly in front of a building emphasizes its total want of
+sculptural merit, and makes it a doubly lamentable example of bad taste
+and bombast. The Arminius colossal, on a height near Detmold in
+Westphalia, was erected in 1875, is 65 feet high, and weighs 18 tons.
+The name of the sculptor is not given by any of the authorities
+consulted, which is perhaps just as well. This statue rests on "a
+dome-like summit of a monumental structure," and brandishes a sword 24
+feet long in one hand. The Virgin of Puy is by Bonassieux, was set up in
+1860, is 52 feet high, weighs 110 tons, and stands on a cliff some 400
+feet above the town. It is, like the Bavaria, of bronze, cast in
+sections, and made from cannons taken in warfare. The Virgin's head is
+surmounted by a crown of stars, and she carries the infant Christ on her
+left arm. The location of this statue is felicitous, but it has no
+intrinsic value as an art work. It will be seen, then, that these
+outdoor colossi of to-day do not afford us much encouragement to believe
+that Mr. Bartholdi will be able to surmount the difficulties which have
+vanquished one sculptor after another in their endeavors to perform
+similar prodigies. Sculpture is perhaps the most difficult of the arts
+of design. There is an antique statue in the Louvre which displays such
+wonderful anatomical knowledge, that Reynolds is said to have remarked,
+"to learn that alone might consume the labor of a whole life." And it is
+an undeniable fact that enlarging the scale of a statue adds in more
+than a corresponding degree to the difficulties of the undertaking. The
+colossi of the ancients were to a great extent designed for either the
+interiors or the exteriors of religious temples, where they were
+artfully adapted to be seen in connection with architectural effects.
+Concerning the sole prominent exception to this rule, the statue of
+Apollo at Rhodes, we have such scant information that even its position
+is a subject of dispute. It has been pointed out how the four modern
+outdoor colossi of Europe each and all fail to attain the requirements
+of a work of art. All our inquiries, it appears then, lead to the
+conclusion that Mr. Bartholdi has many chances against him, so far as we
+are able to learn from an examination of the precedents, and in view of
+these facts it would be a matter for surprise if the "Liberty" statue
+should prove to possess any title to the name of a work of art. We
+reserve a final decision, however, as to this most important phase of
+the affair, until the statue is in place.
+
+[Footnote A: "Les Colosses anciens et moderns," par E. Lesbazeilles;
+Paris: 1881.]
+
+The idea that great size in statues is necessarily vulgar, does not seem
+admissible. It would be quite as just to condemn the paintings on a
+colossal scale in which Tintoretto and Veronese so nobly manifested
+their exceptional powers. The size of a work of art _per se_ is an
+indifferent matter. Mere bigness or mere littleness decides nothing. But
+a colossal work has its conditions of being: it must conform to certain
+laws. It must be executed in a large style; it must represent a grand
+idea; it must possess dignity and strength; it must convey the idea of
+power and majesty; it must be located in a place where its surroundings
+shall augment instead of detracting from its aspect of grandeur; it must
+be magnificent, for if not it will be ridiculous. The engravings of Mr.
+Bartholdi's statue represent a woman clad in a peplum and tunic which
+fall in ample folds from waist and shoulder to her feet. The left foot,
+a trifle advanced supports the main weight of the body. The right arm is
+uplifted in a vigorous movement and holds aloft a blazing torch. The
+left hand grasps a tablet on which the date of the Declaration of
+Independence appears; this is held rather close to the body and at a
+slight angle from it. The head is that of a handsome, proud and brave
+woman. It is crowned by a diadem. The arrangement of the draperies is,
+if one may judge from the pictures, a feature of especial excellence in
+the design. There is merit in the disposition of the peplum or that
+portion of the draperies flung back over the left shoulder, the folds of
+which hang obliquely (from the left shoulder to the right side of the
+waist and thence downward almost to the right knee,) thus breaking up
+the monotony of the perpendicular lines formed by the folds of the tunic
+beneath. The movement of the uplifted right arm is characterized by a
+certain _elan_ which, however, does not suggest violence; the carriage
+of the head is dignified, and so far as one may judge from a variety of
+prints, the face is fine in its proportions and expression. I do not
+find the movement of the uplifted arm violent, and, on the whole, am
+inclined to believe the composition a very good one in its main
+features. There will be an undeniable heaviness in the great masses of
+drapery, especially as seen from behind, but the illusion as to the size
+of the figure created by its elevation on a pedestal and foundation
+nearly twice as high as itself may do much towards obviating this
+objection. The background of the figure will be the
+
+ ... Spacious firmament on high,
+ With all the blue etherial sky,
+ And spangled heavens ...
+
+The island is far enough removed from the city so that no direct
+comparisons can be made between the statue and any buildings. Seen from
+the deck of a steamer at a distance say of a quarter of a mile, the
+horizon, formed by the roofs, towers, spires and chimneys of three
+cities, will not appear higher than the lower half of the pedestal. In
+other words the statue will neither be dwarfed nor magnified by the
+contiguity of any discordant objects. It will stand alone. The abstract
+idea, as has been said, is noble. The plan of utilizing the statue as a
+lighthouse at night does not detract from its worth in this respect; it
+may be said to even emphasize the allegorial sense of the work.
+"Liberty enlightening the world," lights the way of the sailor in the
+crowded harbor of the second commercial city of the world. The very
+magnitude of the work typifies, after a manner, the vast extent of our
+country, and the audacity of the scheme is not inappropriate in the
+place where it is to stand. It may be, indeed, that when the statue is
+set up, we shall find it awkward and offensive, as some critics have
+already prophecied: but that it must be so inevitably does not appear to
+me to be a logical deduction from the information we have at hand as to
+the artist and his plans. It is freely admitted that no modern work of
+this nature has been successful, but that does not prove that this must
+absolutely be a failure. The project ought not to be condemned in
+advance because of the great difficulties surrounding it, its unequalled
+scope and its novelty. Mr. Bartholdi is above all ingenious, bold, and
+fertile in resources; it would be a great pity not to have him allowed
+every opportunity to carry out a design in which, as we have seen, there
+are so many elements of interest and even of grandeur. It has been said
+that "there does not exist on French soil such a bombastic work as this
+will be." Very well; admitting for the sake of argument that it will be
+bombastic, shall we reject and condemn a colossal statue before having
+seen it, because there is nothing like it in France? And is it true that
+it will be bomastic? That is by no means demonstrated. On the contrary
+an impartial examination of the design would show that the work has been
+seriously conceived and thought out; that it does not lack dignity; that
+it is intended to be full of spirit and significance. It would be the
+part of wisdom at least to avoid dogmatism in an advance judgment as to
+its worth as a work of art, and to wait awhile before pronouncing a
+final verdict.
+
+Hazlitt tells of a conceited English painter who went to Rome, and when
+he got into the Sistine Chapel, turning to his companion, said, "Egad,
+George, we're bit!" Our own tendency is, because of our ignorance, to be
+sceptical and suspicious as to foreign works of art, especially of a
+kind that are novel and daring. No one is so hard to please as a
+simpleton. We are so afraid of being taken in, that we are reluctant to
+commit ourselves in favor of any new thing until we have heard from
+headquarters; but it appears to be considered a sign of knowledge to
+vituperate pictures and statues which do not conform to some undefinable
+ideal standard of our own invention. There is, of course, a class of
+indulgent critics who are pernicious enough in their way; but the savage
+and destructive criticism of which I speak is quite as ignorant and far
+more harmful. It assumes an air of authority based on a superficial
+knowledge of art, and beguiles the public into a belief in its
+infallibility by means of a smooth style and an occasional epigram the
+smartness of which may and often does conceal a rank injustice. The
+expression of a hope that the result of Mr. Bartholdi's labors "will be
+something better than another gigantic asparagus stalk added to those
+that already give so comical a look to our sky-line," is truly an
+encouraging and generous utterance at this particular stage of the
+enterprise, and equals in moderation the courteous remark that the
+statue "could not fail to be ridiculous in the expanse of New York
+Bay."[A] It is not necessary to touch upon the question of courtesy at
+all, but it is possible that one of our critics may live to regret his
+vegetable metaphor, and the other to revise his prematurely positive
+censure. There is a sketch in charcoal which represents the Bartholdi
+colossus as the artist has seen it in his mind's eye, standing high
+above the waters of the beautiful harbor at twilight, when the lights
+are just beginning to twinkle in the distant cities and when darkness is
+softly stealing over the service of the busy earth and sea. The mystery
+of evening enwraps the huge form of the statue, which looms vaster than
+by day, and takes on an aspect of strange majesty, augmented by the
+background of hurrying clouds which fill the upper portion of the sky.
+So seen, the immense Liberty appears what the sculptor wishes and
+intends it to be, what we Americans sincerely hope it may be,--a fitting
+memorial of an inspiring episode in history, and a great work of modern
+art.
+
+[Footnote A: _Vide_ papers by Clarence Cook in The Studio, and by
+Professor D. Cady Eaton of Yale College in the New York Tribune.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ELIZABETH.[A]
+
+A ROMANCE OF COLONIAL DAYS.
+
+BY FRANCES C. SPARHAWK, Author of "A Lazy Man's Work."
+
+[Footnote A: Copyright, 1884, by Frances C. Sparhawk. All rights
+reserved.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+IDLESSE.
+
+
+"Don't move your head, Elizabeth, keep it in that position a little
+longer," said Katie Archdale, as she and her friend sat together the
+morning after the sail. "I wish an artist were here to paint you so;
+you've no idea how striking you are."
+
+"No, I have not," laughed the other, forgetting to keep still as she
+spoke, and turning the face that had been toward the window full upon
+her companion. The scene that Elizabeth's eyes had been dwelling upon
+was worthy of admiration; her enthusiasm had not escaped her in any
+word, but her eyes were enraptured with it, and her whole face, warmed
+with faint reflection of the inward glow, was beautiful with youth, and
+thought, and feeling.
+
+"Now you've spoilt it," cried Katie, "now you are merely a nice-looking
+young lady; you were beautiful before, perfectly beautiful, like a
+picture that one can look at, and look at, and go away filled with, and
+come back to, and never tire of. The people that see you so worship you,
+but then, nobody has a chance to do it. You just sit and don't say much
+except once in a while when you wake up, then you are brilliant, but
+never tender, as you know how to be. You give people an impression that
+you are hard. Sometimes I should like to shake you."
+
+Elizabeth laughed.
+
+"That's the way you worship me," she answered. "I suspected it was a
+strange kind of adoration, largely made up of snubbing."
+
+"It's not snubbing," retorted Katie, "it is trying to rouse you to what
+you you might be. But I am wasting my breath; you don't believe a word I
+say."
+
+"I should like to believe it," returned the girl, smiling a little
+sadly. "But even if I did believe every word of it, it would seem to me
+a great deal nicer to be like you, beautiful all the time, and one whom
+everybody loves. But there's one thing to be said, if it were I who were
+beautiful, I could'nt have the pleasure I do in looking at you, and
+perhaps, after all, I shouldn't get any more enjoyment out of it."
+
+"Oh, yes, you would," retorted the other, then bit her lips angrily at
+her inadvertence. A shrewd smile flitted over Elizabeth's face, but she
+made no comment, and Katie went on hurriedly to ask, "What shall we do
+to amuse ourselves to-day, Betsey?" Another slight movement of the
+hearer's lips responded. This name was Katie's special term of
+endearment, and never used except when they were alone; no one else ever
+called her by it.
+
+"I don't know," she said. "Let us sit here as we are doing now. Move
+your chair nearer the window and look down on the river. See the
+blue-black shadows on it. And look at the forests, how they stretch away
+with a few clearings here and there. A city behind us, to be sure, a
+little city, but before us the forests, and the Indians. I wonder what
+it all means for us."
+
+"The axe for one, the gun for the other," retorted Katie with a hardness
+which belief in the savageness and treachery of the red man had
+instilled into the age. "The forests mean fortune to some of us," she
+added.
+
+"Yes," answered Elizabeth slowly, finding an unsatisfactory element in
+her companion's summary.
+
+"Do you mean that we shall have to shoot down a whole race? That is
+dreadful," she added after a pause.
+
+"You and I have nothing to do with all that," returned Katie.
+
+Elizabeth waited in despair of putting the case as she felt it.
+
+"I was thinking," she said at last, "that if we have a whole land of
+forests to cut down and of cities to build up, somehow, everything will
+be different here from the Old England. I often wonder what it is to be
+in this New World. It must be unlike the Old," she repeated.
+
+"I don't wonder," returned Katie, "and that's just what you shouldn't
+do. Wonder what you're going to wear to-morrow when we dine at Aunt
+Faith's, or whether Master Harwin will call this morning, or Master
+Waldo, or wonder about something sensible."
+
+"Which means, 'or if it's to be Master Archdale,'" retorted Elizabeth,
+smiling into the laughing eyes fixed upon her face, and making them fall
+at the keenness of her glance, while a brighter rose than Katie cared to
+show tinted the creamy skin and made her bend a moment to arrange the
+rosette of her slipper. The movement showed her hair in all its
+perfection, for at this early hour it had not been tortured into
+elaborateness, but as she sat in her bedroom talking with her guest, was
+loosely coiled to be out of the way, and thus drawn back in its wavy
+abundance showed now burnished, and now a darker brown, as the sunlight
+or the shadow fell upon it.
+
+"He's not always sensible," she answered, lifting her head again with a
+half defiant gesture, and smiling. Katie's smile was irresistible, it
+won her admirers by the score, not altogether because it gave a glimpse
+of beautiful teeth, or because her mouth was at its perfection then, but
+that it was an expression of childlike abandonment to the spirit of the
+moment, which charmed the gay because they sympathized with it and the
+serious because it was a mood of mind into which they would be glad to
+enter. "Stephen has not been quite himself lately, rather stupid," and
+she looked as if she were not unsuspicious of the reason.
+
+"Too many of us admirers, he thinks?" laughed Elizabeth. "For he is
+bright enough when he takes the trouble to speak, but generally he
+doesn't seem to consider any one of sufficient importance to amuse."
+
+"That is not so," cried Katie, "you are mistaken. But you don't know
+Stephen very well," she added. "What a pity that you are not living
+here, then you would, and then we should have known each other all our
+lives, instead of only since we went to school together. What good times
+we had at Madam Flamingo's. There you sit, now, and look as meekly
+reproving as if you had'nt invented that name for her yourself. It was
+so good, it has stood by her ever since."
+
+"Did I? I had forgotten it."
+
+"Perhaps, at least, you remember the red shawl that got her the
+nickname? It was really something nice,--the shawl, I mean, but the old
+dame was so ridiculously proud of it and so perpetually flaunting it,
+she must have thought it very becoming. We girls were tired of the sight
+of it. And one day, when you were provoked with her about something and
+left her and came into the schoolroom after hours, you walked up to a
+knot of us, and with your air of scorn said something about Madam
+Flamingo. Didn't it spread like wildfire? Our set will call that
+venerable dame 'Flamingo' to the end of her days."
+
+"I suppose we shall, but I had no recollection that it was I who gave
+her the name."
+
+"Yes, you gave it to her," repeated Katie. "You may be very sure I
+should not have forgotten it if I had been so clever. Those were happy
+days for all their petty tribulations," she added after a pause.
+
+Elizabeth looked at her sitting there meditative.
+
+"I should think these were happy days for you, Katie. What more can you
+want than you have now?"
+
+"Oh, the roc's eggs, I suppose," answered the girl. "No, seriously, I am
+pretty likely to get what I want most. I am happy enough, only not
+absolutely happy quite yet."
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"Our good minister would say it was not intended for mortals."
+
+"If I felt like being quite content I should not give it up because
+somebody else said it was too much for me."
+
+"Oh, well," said Katie, laughing, "it has nothing to do with our good
+Parson Shurtleff, anyway."
+
+"I thought not. What, then?"
+
+The other did not answer, but sat looking out of the window with eyes
+that were not studying the landscape. Whether her little troubles
+dissolved into the cloudless sky, like mist too thin to take shape, or
+whether she preferred to keep her perplexities to herself is uncertain,
+but when she spoke it was about another reminiscence of school days.
+
+"Do you remember that morning Stephen came to see me?" she began. "Madam
+thought at first that Master Archdale must be my father, and she gave a
+most gracious assent to my request to go to walk with him. I was dying
+of fun all the time, I could scarcely keep my face straight; then, when
+she caught a glimpse of him as we were going out of the hall, she said
+in a dubious tone, 'Your brother, I presume, Mistress Archdale?' But I
+never heard a word. I was near the street door and I put myself the
+other side of it without much delay. So did Stephen. And we went off
+laughing. He said I was a wicked little cousin, and he spelled it
+'cozen;' but he didn't seem to mind my wickedness at all." There was a
+pause, during which Katie looked at her smiling friend, and her own
+face dimpled bewitchingly. "This is exactly what you would have done,
+Elizabeth," she said. "You would have heard that tentative remark of
+Madam's, of course you would, and you would have stood still in the hall
+and explained that Stephen was your cousin, instead of your brother, and
+have lost your walk beyond a doubt, you know the Flamingo. Now, I was
+just as good as you would have been, only, I was wiser. I, too, told
+Madam that he was my cousin, but I waited until I came home to do it.
+The poor old lady could not help herself then; it was impossible to take
+back my fun, and she could not punish me, because she had given me
+permission to go, nor could she affirm that I heard her remark, for it
+was made in an undertone. There was nothing left for her but to wrap her
+illustrious shawl about her and look dignified." "Do you think Master
+Harwin will come to-day?" Katie asked a few moments later, "and Master
+Waldo? I hope they will all three be here together; it will be fun, they
+can entertain each other, they are so fond of one another."
+
+"Katie! Katie!"
+
+The girl broke into a laugh.
+
+"Oh, yes, I remember," she said, "Stephen is your property."
+
+"Don't," cried Elizabeth, with sudden gravity and paleness in her face.
+"I think it was wicked in me to jest about such a sacred thing. Let me
+forget it."
+
+"I wont tease you if you really care. But if it was wicked, it was a
+great deal more my doing, and Master Waldo's, than your's or Stephen's.
+We wanted to see the fun. Your great fault, Elizabeth, is that you vex
+yourself too much about little things. Do you know it will make you have
+wrinkles?"
+
+This question was put with so much earnestness that Elizabeth laughed
+heartily.
+
+"One thing is sure," she said, "I shall not remain ignorant of my
+failings through want of being told them while I'm here. It would be
+better to go home."
+
+"Only try it!" cried Katie, going to her and kissing her. "But now,
+Elizabeth, I want to tell you something in all seriousness. Just listen
+to me, and profit by it, if you can. I've found it out for myself. The
+more you laugh at other people's absurdities the fewer of your own will
+be noticed, because, you see, it implies that you are on the right
+standpoint to get a review of other people."
+
+"That sounds more like eighty than eighteen."
+
+"Elizabeth, it is the greatest mistake in the world, I mean just that,
+to keep back all your wisdom until you get to be eighty. What use will
+it be to you then? All you can do with it will be to see how much more
+sensibly you might have acted. That's what will happen to you, my dear,
+if you don't look out. But at eighteen--I am nineteen--everything is
+before you, and you want to know how to guide your life to get all the
+best things you can out of it without being wickedly selfish--at least I
+do. Your aspirations, I suppose, are fixed upon the forests and the
+Indian, and problems concerning the future of the American Colonies. But
+I'm more reverent than you, I think the Lord is able to take care of
+those."
+
+Elizabeth looked vaguely troubled by the fallacy which she felt in this
+speech without being quite willing or able to bring it to light.
+
+"But, remember, I was twenty-one my last birthday," she answered. "I
+ought to take a broader view of things."
+
+"On the contrary, you're getting to be an old maid. You should consider
+which of your suitors you want, and say 'yes' to him on the spot. By the
+way, what has become of your friend, the handsome Master Edmonson?"
+
+Elizabeth colored.
+
+"I don't know," she answered. "Father has heard from him since he went
+away, so I suppose that he is well."
+
+"And he has not written to you?"
+
+"No, he has only sent a message." Then, after a pause, "He said that he
+was coming back in the autumn."
+
+"I hope so," cried Katie, "he is a most fascinating man, and of such
+family! Stephen was speaking of him the other day. He was very
+attentive, was he not, Betsey?"
+
+"Ye-es, I suppose so. But there was something that I fancied papa did
+not like."
+
+"I'm so sorry," cried Katie. She rose, and crossing the little space
+between herself and her friend, dropped upon the footstool at
+Elizabeth's feet, and laying her arms in the girl's lap and resting her
+chin upon them, looked up and added, "Tell me all about it, my dear."
+
+"There is nothing to tell," answered Elizabeth, caressing the beautiful
+hair and looking into the eyes that had tears of sympathy in them.
+
+"I was afraid something had gone wrong, afraid that you would care."
+
+Elizabeth sat thinking.
+
+"I don't know," she said slowly at last, "I don't know whether I should
+really care or not if I never saw him again."
+
+Her companion looked at her a moment in silence, and when she began to
+speak it was about something else.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+GIRDING ON THE HARNESS.
+
+
+Later that same morning a gentleman calling upon Mistress Katie Archdale
+was told that he would find her with friends in the garden. Walking
+through the paths with a leisurely step which the impatience of his mood
+chafed against, he came upon a picture that he never forgot.
+
+Great stretches of sunshine lay on the garden and in it brilliant beds
+of flowers glowed with their richest lights, poppies folded their
+gorgeous robes closely about them, Arab fashion, to keep out the heat;
+hollyhocks stood in their stateliness flecked with changing shadows from
+the aspen tree near by. Beds of tiger lilies, pinks, larkspur,
+sweetwilliams, canterbury bells, primroses, gillyflowers, lobelia,
+bloomed in a luxuriance that the methodical box which bordered them
+could not restrain. But the garden was by no means a blaze of sunshine,
+for ash trees, maples, elms, and varieties of the pine were there.
+Trumpet-vines climbed on the wall, and overtopping that, caught at
+trellises prepared to receive them, and formed screens of shadows that
+flickered in every breeze and changed their places with the changing
+sun. But it was only with a passing glance that the visitor saw these
+things, his eyes were fixed upon an arbor at the end of the garden; it
+was covered with clematis, while two great elms met overhead at its
+entrance and shaded the path to it for a little distance. Under these
+elms stood a group of young people. He was unannounced, and had
+opportunity without being himself perceived, to scan this little group
+as he went forward. His expression varied with each member of it, but
+showed an interest of some sort in each. Now it was full of passionate
+delight; then it changed as his look fell upon a tall young man with
+dark eyes and a bearing that in its most gracious moments seemed unable
+to lose a touch of haughtiness, but whose face now was alive with a
+restful joy. The gazer, as he perceived this happiness, so wanting in
+himself, scowled with a bitter hate and looked instantly toward another
+of the party, this time with an expression of triumph. At the fourth and
+last member of the group his glance though scowling, was contemptuous;
+but the receiver was as unconscious of contempt as he felt undeserving
+of it. From him the gazer's eyes returned to the person at whom he had
+first looked. She was standing on the step of the arbor, an end of the
+clematis vine swaying lightly back and forth over her head, and almost
+touching her bright hair which was now towered high in the fashion of
+the day. She was holding a spray of the vine in her hand. She had
+fastened one end in the hair of a young lady who stood beside her, and
+was now bringing the other about her neck, arranging the leaves and
+flowers with skilful touches. Three men, including the new-comer,
+watched her pretty air of absorption, and the deftness of her taper
+fingers, the sweep of her dark lashes on her cheek as from the height of
+her step she looked down at her companion, the curves of her beautiful
+mouth that at the moment was daintly holding a pin with which the end of
+the spray was to be fastened upon the front of the other's white dress.
+It was certainly effective there. Yet none of the three men noticed
+this, or saw that between the two girls the question as to beauty was a
+question of time, that while the one face was blooming now in the
+perfection of its charm, the charm of the other was still in its calyx.
+The adorner intuitively felt something of this. Perhaps she was not the
+less fond of her friend that the charms she saw in her were not patent
+to everybody. Bring her forward as much as she might, Katie felt that
+Elizabeth Royal would never be a rival. She even shrank from this kind
+of prominence into which Katie's play was bringing her now. She had been
+taken in hand at unawares and showed an impatience that if the other
+were not quick, would oblige her to leave the work unfinished.
+
+"There," cried Katie, at last giving the leaves a final pat of
+arrangement, "that looks well, don't you think so, Master Waldo?"
+
+"Good morning, Mistress Archdale," broke in a voice before Waldo could
+answer. "And you, Mistress Royal," bowing low to her. "After our late
+hours last night, permit me to felicitate you upon your good health this
+morning, and--" he was about to add, "your charming appearance," but
+something in the girl's eyes as she looked full at him held back the
+words, and for a moment ruffled his smooth assurance. But as he
+recovered himself and turned to salute the gentlemen, the smile on his
+lips had triumph through its vexation.
+
+"My proud lady, keep your pride a little longer," he said to himself.
+And as he bowed to Stephen Archdale with a dignity as great as Stephen's
+own, he was thinking: "My morning in that hot office has not been in
+vain. I know your weak point now, my lofty fellow, and it is there that
+I will undermine you. You detest business, indeed! John Archdale feels
+that with his only son in England studying for the ministry he needs a
+son-in-law in partnership with him. The thousands which I have been
+putting into his business this morning are well spent, they make me
+welcome here. Yes, your uncle needs me, Stephen Archdale, for your
+clever papa is not always brotherly in his treatment, he has more than
+once brought heavy losses upon the younger firm. It's a part of my
+pleasure in prospect that now I shall be able to checkmate him in such
+schemes, perhaps to bring back a little of the loss upon the shoulders
+of his heir. Ah, I am safer from you than you dream." He turned to
+Waldo, and as the two men bowed, they looked at one another steadily.
+Each was remembering their conversation the night before over some
+Bordeaux in Waldo's room, for they were staying at the same inn and
+often spent an hour together. They had drunk sparingly, but, just
+returned from their sail, each was filled with Katie Archdale's beauty,
+and each had spoken out his purpose plainly, Waldo with an assurance
+that, if it savored a little of conceit, was full of manliness, the
+other with a half-smothered fierceness of passion that argued danger to
+every obstacle in its way.
+
+"You've come at the very right moment, Master Harwin," broke in Katie's
+unconscious voice, and she smiled graciously, as she had a habit of
+doing at everybody; "We were talking about you not two minutes ago."
+
+"Then I am just in time to save my character."
+
+"Don't be too sure about that," returned Miss Royal.
+
+Waldo laughed, and Katie exchanged glances with him, and smiled
+mischievously.
+
+"No, don't be too sure; it will depend upon whether you say 'yes,' or
+'no,' to my question. We were wondering something about you."
+
+Harwin's heart sank, though he returned her smile and her glance with
+interest. For there were questions she might ask which would
+inconvenience him, but they should not embarrass him.
+
+"We were wondering," pursued Katie, "if you had ever been presented.
+Have you?"
+
+As the sun breaks out from a heavy cloud, the light returned to Harwin's
+blue eyes.
+
+"Yes," he said, "four years ago. I went to court with my uncle, Sir
+Rydal Harwin, and his majesty was gracious enough to nod in answer to my
+profound reverence."
+
+"It was a very brilliant scene, I am sure, and very interesting."
+
+"Deeply interesting," returned Harwin with all the traditional respect
+of an Englishman for his sovereign. Archdale's lip curled a trifle at
+what seemed to him obsequiousness, but Harwin was not looking at him.
+
+"Stephen has been," pursued Katie, "and he says it was very fine, but
+for all that he does not seem to care at all about it. He says he would
+rather go off for a day's hunting any time. The ladies looked charming,
+he said, and the gentlemen magnificent; but he was bored to death, for
+all that."
+
+"In order to appreciate it fully," returned Archdale, "it would be
+necessary that one should be majesty." He straightened himself as he
+spoke, and looked at Harwin with such gravity that the latter, meeting
+the light of his eyes, was puzzled whether this was jest or earnest,
+until Miss Royal's laugh relieved his uncertainty. Katie laid her hand
+on the speaker's arm and shook it lightly.
+
+"You told me I should be sure to enjoy it," she said. "Now, what do you
+mean?"
+
+"Ah! but you would be queen," said Harwin, "queen in your own right, a
+divine right of beauty that no one can resist."
+
+Katie looked at him, disposed for a moment to be angry, but her love of
+admiration could not resist the worship of his eyes, and the lips
+prepared to pout curved into a smile not less bewitching that the
+brightness of anger was still in her cheeks. Archdale and Waldo turned
+indignant glances on the speaker, but it was manifestly absurd to resent
+a speech that pleased the object of it, and that each secretly felt
+would not have sounded ill if he had made it himself. Elizabeth looked
+from Katie to Harwin with eyes that endorsed his assertion, and as the
+latter read her expression his scornful wonder in the boat returned.
+
+"Why are we all standing outside in the heat?" cried the hostess. "Let
+us go into the arbor, there is plenty of room to move about there, we
+have had a dozen together in it many a time." She passed in under the
+arch as she spoke, and the others followed her. There in her own way
+which was not so very witty or wise, and yet was very charming, she held
+her little court, and the three men who had been in love with her at the
+beginning of the hour were still more in love at the end of it. And
+Elizabeth who watched her with an admiration as deep as their's, if more
+tranquil, did not wonder that it was so. Katie did not forget her, nor
+did the gentlemen, or at least two of them, forget to be courteous, but
+if she had known what became of the spray of clematis which being in the
+way as she turned her head, she had soon unfastened and let slip to the
+ground, she would not have wondered, nor would she have cared. If she
+had seen Archdale's heel crush it unheedingly as he passed out of the
+arbor, the beat of her pulses would never have varied.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+ANTICIPATIONS.
+
+
+It was early in December. The months had brought serious changes to all
+but one of the group that the August morning had found in Mr. Archdale's
+garden. Two had disappeared from the scene of their defeat, and to two
+of them the future seemed opening up vistas of happiness as deep as the
+present joy. Elizabeth Royal alone was a spectator in the events of the
+past months, and even in her mind was a questioning that was at least
+wonderment, if not pain.
+
+Kenelm Waldo was in the West Indies, trying to escape from his pain at
+Katie Archdale's refusal, but carrying it everywhere with him, as he did
+recollections of her; to have lost them would have been to have lost his
+memory altogether.
+
+Ralph Harwin also had gone. His money was still in the firm of John
+Archdale & Co., which it had made one of the richest in the Colonies;
+its withdrawal was now to be expected at any moment, for Harwin did not
+mean to return, and Archdale, while endeavoring to be ready for this,
+saw that it would cripple him. Harwin had been right in believing that
+he should make himself very useful and very acceptable to Katie's
+father. For Archdale who was more desious of his daughter's happiness
+than of anything else in the world, was disappointed that this did not
+lie in the direction which, on the whole, would have been for his
+greatest advantage. Harwin and he could have done better for Katie in
+the way of fortune than Stephen Archdale with his distaste for business
+would do. The Archdale connection had always been a dream of his, until
+lately when this new possibility had superseded his nephew's interest in
+his thoughts. There was an address and business keenness about Harwin
+that, if Stephen possessed at all, was latent in him. The Colonel was
+wealthy enough to afford the luxury of a son who was only a fine
+gentleman. Stephen was a good fellow, he was sure, and Katie would be
+happy with him. And yet--but even these thoughts left him as he leaned
+back in his chair that day, sitting alone after dinner, and a mist came
+over his eyes as he thought that in less than a fortnight his home would
+no longer be his little daughter's.
+
+"It will be all right," he said to himself with that sigh of resignation
+with which we yield to the inevitable, as if there were a certain choice
+and merit in doing it. "It is well that the affairs of men are in higher
+hands than ours." John Archdale's piety was of the kind that utters
+itself in solitude, or under the breath.
+
+Katie at the moment was upstairs with her mother examining a package of
+wedding gear that had arrived that day. She had no hesitation as to whom
+her choice should have been. Yet, as she stood holding a pair of gloves,
+measuring the long wrists on her arm and then drawing out the fingers
+musingly, it was not of Stephen that she was thinking, or of him that
+she spoke at last, as she turned away to lay down the gloves and take up
+a piece of lace.
+
+"Mother," she said, "I do sometimes feel badly for Master Harwin; he is
+the only man in all the world that I ever had anything like fear of, and
+now and then I did of him, such a fierceness would come over him once in
+a while, not to me, but about me, I know, about losing me. He was
+terribly in earnest. Stephen never gets into these moods, he is always
+kind and lovable, just as he has been to me as far back as I can
+remember, only, of course more so now."
+
+"But things have gone differently with him and with poor Master Harwin,"
+answered Mrs. Archdale. "If you had said 'no' to Stephen, you would have
+seen the dark moods in him, too."
+
+The young girl looked at her mother and smiled, and blushed a little in
+a charming acknowledgment of feminine power to sway the minds of the
+sterner half of humanity. Then she grew thoughtful again, not even
+flattery diverting her long from her subject.
+
+"But Stephen never could be like that," she said. "Stephen couldn't be
+dark in that desperate sort of way. I can't describe it in Master
+Harwin, but I feel it. Somehow, he would rather Stephen would die, or I
+should, than have us marry."
+
+"Did he ever say so?"
+
+"Why, no, but you can feel things that nobody says. And, then, there is
+something else, too. I am quite sure that sometime in his life he did
+something, well, perhaps something wicked, I don't know what, but I do
+know that a load lies on his conscience; for one day he told me as much.
+It was just as he was going away, the day after I had refused him and he
+knew of my engagement. He asked permission to come and bid me goodby.
+Don't you remember?"
+
+"Yes," said Mrs. Archdale.
+
+"He looked at me and sighed. 'I've paid a heavy price,' he said half to
+himself, 'to lose.' Then he added, 'Mistress Archdale, will you always
+believe that I loved you devotedly, and always have loved you from the
+hour I first saw you? If I could undo'--then he waited a moment and grew
+dreadfully pale, and I think he finished differently from his first
+intention--'If I could undo something in the past,' he said, 'I would
+give my life to do it, but my life would be of no use.'"
+
+"That looks as if it was something against you, Katie."
+
+"Oh, no, I don't think so. Besides, he wouldn't have given his life at
+all; that's only the way men talk, you know, when they want to make an
+impression of their earnestness on women and they always think they do
+it that way. But the men that are the readiest to give up their lives
+don't say anything about it beforehand. Stephen would die for me, I'm
+sure, but he never told me so in his life. He don't make many
+protestations; he takes a great deal for granted. Why shouldn't he;
+we've known one another from babyhood? But Master Harwin knew, somehow,
+the minute after he spoke, if he didn't at the time, that he wouldn't
+die for his fault at all, whatever it was. And then, after he spoke it
+seemed to me as if he had changed his mind and didn't care about it in
+any way, he only cared that I had refused him, and that he was not going
+to see me any more. I am sorry for a man like that, and if he were going
+to stay here I should be afraid of him, afraid for Stephen. But he sails
+in a few days. I don't wonder he couldn't wait here for the next ship,
+wait over the wedding, and whatever danger from him there may have been
+sails with him. Poor man, I don't see what he liked me for." And with a
+sigh, Katie dismissed the thought of him and his grief and evil
+together, and turned her attention again to the wedding finery.
+
+"Only see what exquisite lace," she cried, throwing it out on the table
+to examine the web. "Where did Elizabeth get it, I wonder? She begged to
+be allowed to give me my bridal veil, and she has certainly done it
+handsomely, just as she always does everything, dear child. I suppose it
+came out in one of her father's ships."
+
+"Everything Master Royal touches turns into gold," said Mrs. Archdale,
+after a critical examination of the lace had called forth her
+admiration. "It's Mechlin, Katie. There is nobody in the Colonies richer
+than he," she went on, "unless, possibly, the Colonel."
+
+"I dare say I ought to pretend not to care that Stephen will have ever
+so much money," returned the girl, taking up a broad band of India
+muslin wrought with gold, and laying it over her sleeve to examine the
+pattern, at which she smiled approvingly. "But then I do care. Stephen
+is a great deal more interesting rich than he would be poor; he is not
+made for a grub, neither am I, and living is much better fun when one
+has laces like cobwebs, and velvets and paduasoys, and diamonds, mother,
+to fill one's heart's desire."
+
+As she spoke she looked an embodiment of fair youth and innocent
+pleasure, and her mother, with a mother's admiration and sympathy in her
+heart, gave her a lingering glance before she put on a little sternness,
+and said, "My child, I don't like to hear you talk in that light way.
+Your heart's desires, I trust, are set upon better things, those of
+another world."
+
+"Yes, mother, of course. But, then you know, we are to give our mind
+faithfully to the things next to us, in order to get to those beyond
+them, and that's what I am doing now, don't you see? O, mother, dear,
+how I shall miss you, and all your dear, solemn talks, and your dear,
+smiling looks." And winding her arms about her mother, Katie kissed her
+so affectionately that Mrs. Archdale felt quite sure that the laces and
+paduasoys had not yet spoilt her little daughter.
+
+"Now, for my part," she said a few minutes later as she laid down a pair
+of dainty white kid shoes, glittering with spangles from the tip of
+their peaked toes to their very heels,--high enough for modern
+days,--"These fit you to perfection, my dear. For my part," she
+repeated, "you know that I have always hoped you would marry Stephen,
+yet my sympathies go with Master Waldo in his loss, instead of with the
+other one, whom I think your father at last grew to like best of the
+three; it was strange that such a man could have gotten such an
+influence, but then, they were in business together, and there is always
+something mysterious about business. Master Waldo is a fine,
+open-hearted young man, and he was very fond of you."
+
+"Yes, I suppose so," answered the girl, with an effort to merge a smile
+into the expression accompanying a sympathetic sigh. "It's too bad. But,
+then, men must look out for themselves, women have to, and Kenelm Waldo
+probably thinks he is worth any woman's heart."
+
+"So he is, Katie."
+
+"Um!" said the girl. "Well, he'd be wiser to be a little humble about
+it. It takes better."
+
+"Do you call Stephen humble?"
+
+Katie laughed merrily. "But," she said, at last, "Stephen is Stephen,
+and humility wouldn't suit him. He would look as badly without his pride
+as without his lace ruffles."
+
+"Is it his lace ruffles you're in love with, my child?"
+
+"I don't know, mother," and she laughed again. "When should a young girl
+laugh if not on the eve of her marriage with the man of her choice, when
+friends and wealth conspire to make the event auspicious?"
+
+"I shall not write to thank Elizabeth for her gift," she said, "for she
+will be here before a letter can reach her. She leaves Boston to-morrow,
+that's Tuesday, and she must be here by Friday, perhaps Thursday night,
+if they start very early."
+
+"I thought Master Royal's letter said Monday?"
+
+"Tuesday," repeated Katie, "if the weather be suitable for his daughter.
+Look at this letter and you'll see; his world hinges on his daughter's
+comfort, he is father and mother both to her. Elizabeth needs it, too;
+she can't take care of herself well. Perhaps she could wake up and do it
+for somebody else. But I am not sure. She's a dear child, though she
+seems to me younger than I am. Isn't it funny, mother, for she knows a
+good deal more, and she's very bright sometimes? But she never makes the
+best of anything, especially of herself."
+
+It was the day before the wedding. The great old house was full of
+bustle from its gambrel roof to its very cellar in which wines were
+decanted to be in readiness, and into which pastries and sweetmeats were
+carried from the pantry shelves overloaded with preparations for the
+next day's festivities. Servants ran hither and thither, full of
+excitement and pleasant anticipations. They all loved Katie who had
+grown up among them. And, besides, the morrow's pleasures were not to be
+enjoyed by them wholly by proxy, for if there was to be only wedding
+enough for one pair, at least the remains of the feast would go round
+handsomely. Two or three black faces were seen among the English ones,
+but though they were owned by Mr. Archdale, the disgrace and the badge
+of servitude had fallen upon them lightly, and the shining of merry eyes
+and the gleam of white teeth relieved a darkness that nature, and not
+despair, had made. In New England, masters were always finding reasons
+why their slaves should be manumitted. How could slavery flourish in a
+land where the wind of freedom was so strong that it could blow a whole
+cargo of tea into the ocean?
+
+But there were not only servants going back and forth through the
+house, for it was full of guests. The Colonel's family living so near,
+would not come until the morning of the ceremony, but other relatives
+were there in force. Mrs. Archdale's brother,--a little patronizing but
+very rich and gracious, and his family who having been well patronized,
+were disposed to be humble and admiring, and her sister who not having
+fed on the roses of life, had a good deal of wholesome strength about
+her, together with a touch of something which, if it were wholesome, was
+not exactly grateful. Cousins of Mr. Archdale were there also. Elizabeth
+Royal, at Katie's special request, had been her guest for the last ten
+days. Her father had gone home again the day he brought her and was
+unable to return for the wedding and to take his daughter home
+afterward, as he had intended; but he had sent Mrs. Eveleigh, his cousin
+and housekeeper. It seemed strange that the father and daughter were so
+companionable, for superficially they were entirely unlike. Mr. Royal
+was considered stern and shrewd, and, though a well-read man, eminently
+practical, more inclined to business than scholarship, while Elizabeth
+was dreamy, generous, wholly unacquainted with business of any kind, and
+it seemed too much uninterested in it ever to be acquainted. To most
+people the affection between them seemed only that of nature and
+circumstances, Elizabeth being an only child, and her mother having died
+while she was very young. It is the last analysis of character that
+discovers the same trait under different forms. None of her friends
+carried analysis so far, and it was possible that no effort could have
+discovered subtle likeness then. Perhaps it was still latent and would
+only hereafter find some outward expression for itself. It sometimes
+happens that physical likeness comes out only after death, mental not
+until late in life, and likeness of character in the midst of unlikeness
+is revealed usually only in the crucible of events.
+
+That day, Elizabeth, from her window overlooking the garden, had seen a
+picture that she never forgot. It was about noon, all the warmth that
+was in the December sun filled the garden (which the leafless trees no
+longer shaded). There was no snow on the ground, for the few stray
+flakes premonitory of winter which had fallen from time to time in the
+month had melted almost as soon as they had touched the ground. The air
+was like an Indian summer's day; it seemed impossible that winter could
+be round the corner waiting only for a change of wind. The tracery of
+the boughs of the trees and of all their little twigs against the blue
+sky was exquisite, the stalks of the dead flowers warmed into a livelier
+brown in the sunlight. Yet it may have been partly the figures in the
+foreground that made the whole picture so bright to Elizabeth, for to
+her the place was filled with the lovers who were walking there and
+talking, probably saying those nothings, so far as practical matters go,
+which they may indulge in freely only before the thousand cares of life
+interfere with their utterances. Stephen had come to the house, and
+Katie and he were taking what they were sure would prove to be their
+last opportunity for quiet talk before the wedding. They went slowly
+down the long path to the clematis arbor, and then turned back again,
+for it was not warm enough to sit down out of doors. Elizabeth watched
+them as they walked toward the house, and a warmth came into her own
+face in her pleasure. "Dear Katie," she said to herself, "she is sure to
+be so happy." The young girl's hand lay on Archdale's arm, and she was
+looking up at him with a smile full of joyousness. Archdale's head was
+bent and the watcher could not see his eyes, but his attitude of
+devotion, his smile, and Katie's face told the story.
+
+[TO BE CONTINUED.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+GLORIFYING TRIAL BY JURY.
+
+By CHARLES COWLEY, LL.D.
+
+
+Twice within two years representatives of the highest courts of
+Massachusetts have published in the North American Review, panegyrics of
+jurics and jury trials. The late Judge Foster and Judge Pitman both
+concede--what indeed is too notorious to be denied--that there are
+frequent and gross miscarriages of justice; but they touch lightly on
+this aspect of the question. Being personally identified with the
+institution which they extol, their self-complacency is neither
+unnatural nor unpardonable. It seems not to have occurred to them, that
+if a reform of our judiciary is really needed, they are "a part of the
+thing to be reformed." But in weighing their testimony to the advantages
+of trial by jury, allowance must be made for the bias of office and for
+the bias of interest. In the idolatrous throng which drowned the voice
+of St. Paul with their halcyon and vociferous shouts, "Great is Diana of
+the Ephesians!" there was no one who shouted louder than the thrifty
+silversmith, Demetrius, who added the naive remark, "By this craft we
+live."
+
+In the outset of his presentation of the beauties of jury trials, Judge
+Pitman says that "certain elementary rules of law are so closely
+associated with this system that change in one would require alteration
+of the other." Now, these rules of law are either good or bad. If they
+are bad, they should be revised; and the fact that they are so closely
+associated with trial by jury, that they can not be amended without
+injury thereto, adds little lustre to that time-honored institution. One
+the other hand, if these "elementary rules of law" are good, it is
+presumed that courts will be able to appreciate and apply them quite as
+well as juries.
+
+Judge Pitman then proceeds to argue that criminal trials without juries
+would be attended with disadvantages, because he thinks that judges
+would have, oftener than juries, that "reasonable doubt" which by law
+entitles the accused to an acquittal. This warrants one of two
+inferences: either the writer would have men convicted whose guilt is
+involved in "reasonable doubt," or he fears that the learning and
+experience of the bar and the bench tend to unfit the mind to weigh the
+evidence of guilt or innocence. It is curious that in a former number of
+the same Review, another learned writer expressed exactly the contrary
+opinion.[A] Mr. Edward A. Thomas thinks that "judges are too much
+inclined to convict persons charged with criminal offences," and that
+juries are too much inclined to acquit them. And Judge Foster seemingly
+agrees with Mr. Thomas upon this point.
+
+[Footnote A: N.A. Review, No. CCCIV, March, 1882.]
+
+Again: Judge Pitman argues that a jury is better qualified than a judge
+to determine what is "due care." And Judge Foster, going still further,
+says, "common men belonging to various walks in life, are, in most
+cases, better fitted to decide correctly ordinary questions of fact
+than any single judge or bench of judges." There are, unquestionably,
+many cases in which the main questions are so entirely within the scope
+of ordinary men's observation and experience that no special knowledge
+is required to decide them. With respect to such cases, it is true that
+
+ "A few strong instincts and a few plain rules
+ Are worthy all the learning of the schools."
+
+But where the questions involved are many in number, intricate and
+complicated in character, and enveloped in a mass of conflicting
+testimony requiring many days to hear it, is it not manifest that a
+jury,--not one of whom has taken a note during the trial, some of whose
+members have heard as though hearing not, and seen as though seeing not,
+the testimony and the witnesses,--deals with such a case at a great
+disadvantage, as compared with a judge whose notes contain all the
+material testimony, and who has all the opportunity for rest and
+relaxation that he may require before filing the finding which is his
+verdict? With respect to such cases, it is clear that, as a learned
+English judge has said, "the securities which can be taken for justice
+in the case of a trial by a judge without a jury, are infinitely greater
+than those which can be taken for trial by a judge and jury."[A] A judge
+may be required to state what facts he finds, as well as the general
+conclusion at which he has arrived, and to state upon what views of the
+legal questions he has acted.
+
+[Footnote A: Stephen's History of the Criminal Law, 568.]
+
+Judge Foster most justly remarks: "There can be no such thing as a good
+jury trial without the co-operation of a learned, upright, conscientious
+and efficient presiding judge, ... holding firmly and steadily the
+reins, and guiding the entire proceedings." This is what Judge Foster
+was, and what Judge Pitman is, accustomed to do. But if the jury
+requires such "guiding" from the court, and if the court is competent
+thus to guide them, it is clear that the court must know the way and
+must be able to follow it; otherwise it could not so guide the jury.
+
+Judge Pitman also argues that the jury can eliminate "the personal
+equation" better than the judge. But is this so? Does education count
+for nothing in producing that calm, firm, passionless state of mind
+which is essential in those who determine causes between party and
+party?
+
+Are not juries quite as often as judges swayed by popular clamor, by
+prejudice, by appeals to their passions, and by considerations foreign
+to the merits of the case? As Mr. Thomas asks in the article before
+quoted: "How many juries are strictly impartial? How many remain
+entirely uninfluenced by preference for one or the other of the parties,
+one or the other counsel, or the leaning of some friend to either, or by
+political affiliations, or church connections, or relations to secret
+societies, or by what they have heard, or by what they have read? Can
+they be as discerning and impartial as a bench of judges, or if inclined
+to some bias or prejudice, can they as readily as a judge divest their
+minds of such an impression?" If it be true that juries composed of such
+material as Judge Pitman shows our juries to be largely composed of, are
+as capable of mastering and determining intricate questions of fact as
+judges trained to that duty, then we may truly say--
+
+ "Thinking is but an idle waste of thought,
+ And naught is everything, and everything is naught."
+
+According to Judge Pitman, the system which prevails in some of the
+states, of trials by the court without juries (with the provision that
+the trial shall be by jury if either party demand it), "works
+satisfactorily." The testimony of lawyers and litigants in
+Massachusetts, Connecticut and other states where this system prevails,
+is to the same effect. For ourselves, while far from desiring the
+abolition of trial by jury, whether in civil or in criminal causes, we
+are by no means disposed to "throw glamour" (as the Scotch say), over an
+instrumentality for ascertaining legal truth, which is so cumbersome in
+its operation, and so uncertain in its results. A jury is, at best, a
+means, and not an end; and although much may be said about the
+incidental usefulness of jury service on account of its tendency to
+enlarge the intellectual horizon of jurors, all that is beside the main
+question.
+
+Whether a particular occurrence took place or not, is a question which,
+whether it be tried by a judge or by a jury, must be decided upon
+evidence; which consists, in part, of circumstances, and, in part, of
+acts, but in part also, and very largely, of the sworn statements of
+individuals. While falsehood and corruption prevail among all classes of
+the community so extensively as they now do, it is useless to claim that
+decisions based upon human testimony are always or generally correct.
+Perjury is as rife as ever, and works as much wrong as ever. To a
+conscientious judge, like Judge Pitman, "the investigation of a mass of
+tangled facts and conflicting testimony" cannot but be wearisome, as he
+says it is; and, in many cases, the sense of responsibility "cannot but
+be oppressive;" but he has so often repeated a _dictum_ of Lord
+Redesdale that he must be presumed to have found solace in it--"it is
+more important that an end be put to litigation, than that justice
+should be done in every case." There is truth in that _dictum_; but,
+like other truths, it has often been abused, especially by incompetent
+or lazy or drowsy judges. More unfortunate suitors have suffered as
+martyrs to that truth than the judges who jauntily "cast" them would
+admit.
+
+Judges may do their best; juries may do their best; they will often fall
+into error; and instead of glorifying themselves or the system of which
+they are a part, it would be more modest in them to say, "We are
+unprofitable servants." Not many judges have been great enough to say,
+"I know I sometimes err," but some have said it. The lamented Judge Colt
+said it publicly more than once, and the admission raised, rather than
+lowered, him in the general esteem. When he died the voice of the bar
+and of the people said, "Other judges have been revered, but we loved
+Judge Colt."
+
+Massachusetts gives her litigants the choice of a forum. All trials in
+civil causes are by the courts alone, unless one party or the other
+claims a jury. If the reader has a case of much complexity, either with
+respect to the facts, or with respect to the law, perhaps he would like
+to have our opinion as to which is the better forum. The answer is the
+same that was given by one who lived at the parting of the ways, to a
+weary traveller who inquired which fork of the road he should take:
+"Both are full of snags, quagmires and pitfalls. No matter which you
+take, before you reach the end of your journey you will wish you had
+taken the other." In the trial by jury, and in the trial by the court,
+just as in the trial by ordeal, and in the trial by battle in the days
+of old, the element of chance is of the first magnitude.
+
+
+
+
+PUBLISHERS' DEPARTMENT.
+
+SENEFELDER, THE INVENTOR OF LITHOGRAPHY AND CHROMO-LITHOGRAPHY.--HIS ART
+IN BOSTON DEVELOPED BY L. PRANG & CO.--COLOR-PRINTING ON SATIN, ETC.
+
+
+A century ago the world knew nothing of the art of lithography;
+color-printing was confined to comparatively crude products from wooden
+blocks, most of which were hardly equal to the Japanese fan pictures now
+familiar to all of us. The year 1799 gave us a new invention which was
+destined to revolutionize reproductive art and add immensely to the
+means for education, culture and enjoyment.
+
+Alois Senefelder, born 1771, at Prague (Austria), started life with
+writing plays, and too poor to pay a printer, he determined to invent a
+process of his own which should serve to print his manuscript without
+dependence upon the (to him) too costly types.
+
+A born inventor, this Alois Senefelder, a genius, supported by boundless
+hope, immense capability for hard, laborious work, and an indomitable
+energy; he started with the plan of etching his writings in relief on
+metal plates, to take impressions therefrom by means of rollers. He
+found the metal too costly for his experiments; and limestone slabs from
+the neighboring quarries--he living then in Munich--were tried as a
+substitute. Although partly successful in this direction, he continued
+through years of hard, and often disappointing trials, to find something
+more complete. He hit upon the discovery that a printed sheet of paper
+(new or old) moistened with a thin solution of gum Arabic would, when
+dabbled over printers' ink, accept the ink from the dabbler only on its
+printed parts and remain perfectly clean in the blank spaces, so that a
+facsimile impression could be taken from this inked-in sheet. He found
+that this operation might be repeated until the original print gave out
+by wear. Here was a new discovery, based on the properties of attraction
+and repulsion between fatty matters (printers ink), and the watery
+solution of gum Arabic. The extremely delicate nature of the paper
+matrix was a serious drawback, and had to be overcome. The slabs of
+limestone which served Senefelder in a previous emergency were now
+recurred to by him as an absorbent material similar to paper, and a
+trial by making an impression from his above-mentioned paper matrix on
+the stone, and subsequent gumming, convinced him that he was correct in
+his surmise. By this act lithography became an established fact.
+
+A few short years of intelligent experimenting revealed to him all the
+possibilities of this new discovery. Inventions of processes followed
+each other closely until in 1818 he disclosed to the world in a volume
+of immortal interest not only a complete history of his invention and
+his processes, but also a reliable description of the same for others to
+follow. Nothing really new except photo-lithography has been added to
+this charming art since that time; improvement only by manual skill and
+by chemical progress, can be claimed by others.
+
+Chromo-lithography (printing in colors from stone) was experimented on
+by the great inventor. He outlined its possibilities by saying, that he
+verily believed that printed pictures like paintings would sometimes be
+made thereby, and whoever has seen the productions of our Boston firm,
+L. Prang & Co., will bear him out in the verity of his prediction.
+
+When Prang touched this art in 1856 it was in its infancy in this
+country. Stray specimens of more or less merit had been produced,
+especially by Martin Thurwanger (pen work) and Fabronius (crayon work),
+but much was left to be perfected. A little bunch of roses to embellish
+a ladies' magazine just starting in Boston, was the first work with
+which the firm occupied its single press. Crude enough it was, but
+diligence and energy soon developed therefrom the works which have
+astonished not only this country but even Europe, and the firm, which
+took thereby the lead in their speciality of art reproduction in color,
+has succeeded in keeping it ever since from year to year without one
+faltering step, until there is no single competitor in the civilized
+world to dispute its mastery. This is something to be proud of, not only
+for the firm in question, but even for the country at large, and to
+crown its achievements, the firm of L. Prang & Co. have this year made,
+apart from their usual wonderful variety of original Christmas cards and
+other holiday art prints, a reproduction of a flower piece of the
+celebrated Belgian flower painter, Jean Robie, and printed it on satin
+by a process invented and patented by Mr. Prang. For truthfulness as a
+copy this print challenges the admiration of our best artists and
+connoisseurs. The gorgeous work as it lies before our eyes seems to us
+to be as perfect as if it left the very brush of the master, and even in
+close comparison with the original it does not lose an iota of its
+charms.
+
+Of the marvellous excellence of this, the latest achievement of this
+remarkable house, thousands who visited the late exhibition of the
+Massachusetts Charitable Mechanic's Association and saw Messrs. L. Prang
+& Co.'s, extensive exhibit, can bear witness. Everybody who looked at
+the two pictures, the original masterpiece by Robie and its reproduction
+by Prang, side by side, was puzzled to distinguish which was which, many
+pointing to the reproduction as the better, and in their eyes, therefore
+as the original picture. The same was true with regard to many more of
+this justly celebrated firm's reproductions, which they did not hesitate
+to exhibit, alongside of the original paintings. Altogether, their
+exhibit with its large collection of elegant satin prints, its studies
+for artists, its historical feature, showing the enormous development of
+the firm's work since 1856, its interesting illustration by successive
+printings of how their pictures are made, and its instructive and
+artistic arrangement of their collection, made it one of the most
+attractive features of the fair.
+
+What more can we say but that we are proud ourselves of this achievement
+within our city limits; it cannot fail to increase the fame our beloved
+Boston as a town of masters in thought and art. Honor to the firm of L.
+Prang & Co.
+
+
+
+
+NOTICES OF NEW BOOKS.
+
+
+THE VOYAGE OF THE "VIVIAN" to the North Pole and Beyond, or Adventures
+of Two Youths in the Open Polar sea. By COLONEL THOMAS W. KNOX, the
+author of "The Boy Travellers in the Far East," "The Young Nimrods,"
+etc. Illustrated; 8vo.; cloth, $3. Harper & Brothers, New York.
+
+A fascinating story for boys, into which is woven by the graceful pen of
+the author the history of Arctic exploration for centuries past. The
+young readers who have followed the "Boy Travellers in the Far East"
+will welcome this addition to the literature of adventure and travel.
+
+
+LITTLE PEOPLE OF THE AIR, By the authors of "Little Playfellows."
+Illustrated; 8vo., $1. D. Lothrop & Co., Boston.
+
+A series of pretty stories of feathered songsters, for little men and
+women, alike interesting to the young and children of an older growth.
+
+
+POLITICS FOR YOUNG AMERICANS. By CHARLES NORDHOFF, author of "The
+Communistic Societies of the United States," etc. Popular edition;
+paper, 12mo., 400. Harper and Brothers, New York.
+
+A series of essays in the form of letters, calculated to instruct the
+youth of this country in their duty as American citizens.
+
+
+A PERILOUS SECRET. By CHARLES READE. Cloth, 12mo.; 75 cents. Harper and
+Brothers, New York.
+
+This volume forms one of Harper's Household editions of the works of
+this popular novelist.
+
+
+THE ICE QUEEN. By ERNEST INGERSOLL, author of "Friends Worth Knowing,"
+"Knocking Around the Rockies," etc. Illustrated; Cloth, 16mo., $1.
+Harper and Brothers, New York.
+
+A story for boys and girls of the adventures of a small party
+storm-bound in winter, on a desolate island in Lake Erie.
+
+
+GOD AND THE FUTURE LIFE; or the Reasonableness of Christianity. By
+CHARLES NORDHOFF, author of "Politics for Young Americans," etc. 16mo.,
+cloth, $1. Harper and Brothers, New York.
+
+Paley's "Natural Theology," familiar to students, is supplemented by
+this volume, which brings the argument down to the present developement
+of science. It is a book for thoughtful men and women, whose faith in
+the immortality of the soul needs strengthening.
+
+
+MOTHERS IN COUNCIL. 16mo., cloth, $1. Harper and Brothers, New York.
+
+A series of essays and discussions of value to the family circle,
+teaching how sons can be brought up to be good husbands, and daughters
+to be contented and useful old maids, and many other valuable lessons.
+
+
+GOOD STORIES. By CHARLES READE, 16mo., cloth, $1. Harper and Brothers,
+New York.
+
+These short stories by Mr. Reade, some of which have appeared from time
+to time in the Bazar, are here gathered in one volume. They are "The
+History of an Acre," "The Knightsbridge Mystery," "Single Heart and
+Double Face," and many others.
+
+
+I SAY NO; or, the Love Letter Answered. By WILKIE COLLINS; 16mo.,
+cloth,$1. Harper and Brothers, New York.
+
+The announcement that a new novel from the pen of Mr. Collins has
+appeared is enough to insure a large and steady demand for it.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Bay State Monthly - Volume 2,
+Issue 3, December, 1884, by Various
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13864 ***
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+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13864 ***</div>
+
+ <a name="page121" id="page121"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 121]</span>
+ <h1>THE BAY STATE MONTHLY.</h1>
+ <center>
+ <i>A Massachusetts Magazine</i>.
+ </center>
+ <center>
+ VOL. II.
+ </center>
+ <center>
+ DECEMBER, 1884.
+ </center>
+ <center>
+ No. 3.
+ </center>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <center>
+ Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1884, by John N. McClintock and
+ Company, in the office of the Librarian of Congress at Washington.
+ </center>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="images/image1_full.png"><img src="images/image1_thumbnail.png"
+ alt="Daniel Lothrop" /></a>
+ <p>Daniel Lothrop</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+ <h2>DANIEL LOTHROP.</h2>
+ <center>
+ By JOHN N. MCCLINTOCK, A.M.
+ </center>
+ <p>The fame, character and prosperity of a city have often depended upon its
+ merchants,&mdash;burghers they were once called to distinguish them from haughty
+ princes and nobles. Through the enterprise of the common citizens, Venice, Genoa,
+ Antwerp, and London have become famous, and have controlled the destinies of nations.
+ New England, originally settled by sturdy and liberty-loving yeomen and free citizens
+ of free English cities, was never a congenial home for the patrician, with inherited
+ feudal privileges, but has welcomed the thrifty Pilgrim, the Puritan, the Scotch
+ Covenanter, the French Huguenot, the Ironsides soldiers of the great Cromwell. The
+ men and women of this fusion have shaped our civilization. New England gave its
+ distinctive character to the American colonies, and finally to the nation. New
+ England influences still breathe from the Atlantic to the Pacific, and from the great
+ lakes to Mexico; and Boston, still the focus of the New England idea, leads national
+ movement and progress.</p>
+ <p>Perhaps one of the broadest of these influences&mdash;broadest inasmuch as it
+ interpenetrates the life of our whole people&mdash;proceeds from the lifework of one
+ of the merchants of Boston, known by his name and his work to the entire English
+ speaking world: Daniel Lothrop, of the famous firm of D. Lothrop &amp; Co.,
+ publishers&mdash;the people's publishing house. Mr. Lothrop is a good representative
+ of this early New England fusion of race, temperament, fibre, conscience and brain.
+ He is a direct descendant of John Lowthroppe, who, in the thirty-seventh year of
+ Henry VIII. (1545), was a gentleman of quite extensive landed estates, both in Cherry
+ Burton (four miles removed from Lowthorpe), and in various other parts of the
+ country.</p>
+ <p>Lowthorpe is a small parish in the Wapentake of Dickering, in the East Riding of
+ York, four and a half miles northeast from Great Driffield. It is a perpetual curacy
+ in the archdeaconry of York. This parish gave name to the family of Lowthrop,
+ Lothrop, or Lathrop. The Church, which was dedicated to St. Martin, and had for one
+ of <a name="page122" id="page122"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 122]</span> its
+ chaplains, in the reign of Richard II., Robert de Louthorp, is now partly ruinated,
+ the tower and chancel being almost entirely overgrown with ivy. It was a collegiate
+ Church from 1333, and from the style of its architecture must have been built about
+ the time of Edward III.</p>
+ <p>From this English John Lowthroppe the New England Lothrops have their
+ origin:&mdash;</p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"It is one of the most ancient of all the famous New England families, whose
+ blood in so many cases is better and purer than that of the so-called noble
+ families in England. The family roll certainly shows a great deal of talent, and
+ includes men who have proved widely influential and useful, both in the early and
+ later periods. The pulpit has a strong representation. Educators are prominent.
+ Soldiers prove that the family has never been wanting in courage. Lothrop
+ missionaries have gone forth into foreign lands. The bankers are in the forefront.
+ The publishers are represented. Art engraving has its exponent, and history has
+ found at least one eminent student, while law and medicine are likewise indebted to
+ this family, whose talent has been applied in every department of useful
+ industry."<a id="footnotetag1" name="footnotetag1"></a> <a
+ href="#footnote1"><sup>1</sup></a></p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <h3>GENEALOGY.<a id="footnotetag2" name="footnotetag2"></a> <a
+ href="#footnote2"><sup>2</sup></a></h3>
+ <p>I. Mark Lothrop, the pioneer, the grandson of John Lowthroppe and a relative of
+ Rev. John Lothrop, settled in Salem, Mass., where he was received as an inhabitant
+ January 11, 1643-4. He was living there in 1652. In 1656 he was living in
+ Bridgewater, Mass., of which town he was one of the proprietors, and in which he was
+ prominent for about twenty-five years. He died October 25, 1685.</p>
+ <p>II. Samuel Lothrop, born before 1660, married Sarah Downer, and lived in
+ Bridgewater. His will was dated April 11, 1724.</p>
+ <p>III. Mark Lothrop, born in Bridgewater September 9, 1689; married March 29, 1722,
+ Hannah Alden [Born February 1, 1696; died 1777]. She was the daughter of Deacon
+ Joseph Alden of Bridgewater, and great grand-daughter of Honorable John and Priscilla
+ (Mullins) Alden of Duxbury, of Mayflower fame. He settled in Easton, of which town he
+ was one of the original proprietors. He was prominent in Church and town affairs.</p>
+ <p>IV. Jonathan Lothrop, born March 11, 1722-3; married April 13, 1746, Susannah,
+ daughter of Solomon and Susannah (Edson) Johnson of Bridgewater. She was born in
+ 1723. He was a Deacon of the Church, and a prominent man in the town. He died in
+ 1771.</p>
+ <p>V. Solomon Lothrop, born February 9, 1761; married Mehitable, daughter of
+ Cornelius White of Taunlon; settled in Easton, and later in Norton, where he died
+ October 19, 1843. She died September 14, 1832, aged 73.</p>
+ <p>VI. Daniel Lothrop, born in Easton, January 9, 1801; married October 16, 1825,
+ Sophia, daughter of Deacon Jeremiah Horne of Rochester, N.H. She died September 23,
+ 1848, and he married (2) Mary E. Chamberlain. He settled in Rochester, N.H., and was
+ one of the public men of the town. Of the strictest integrity, and possessing
+ sterling qualities of mind and heart Mr. Lothrop was chosen to fill important offices
+ of public trust in his town and state. He repeatedly represented his town in the
+ Legislature, where his sound practical sense and clear wisdom were of much service,
+ particularly in the formation of the Free Soil party, in which he was a bold defender
+ of the rights of liberty to all men. He died May 31, 1870.</p>
+ <p>VII. Daniel Lothrop, son of Daniel and Sophia (Horne) Lothrop, was born in
+ Rochester, N.H., August 11, 1831.</p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"On the maternal side Mr. Lothrop is descended from William Horne, of Horne's
+ Hill, in Dover, who held his exposed position in the Indian wars, and whose estate
+ has been in the family name from 1662 until the present generation; but he was
+ killed in the massacre of June 28, 1689. Through the Horne line, also, came descent
+ from Rev. Joseph Hull, minister at Durham in 1662, a graduate at the University at
+ Cambridge, England; from John Ham, of Dover; from the emigrant John Heard, and
+ others of like vigorous stock. It was his ancestress, Elizabeth (Hull) Heard, whom
+ the old historians call a "brave gentlewoman," who held her garrison house, the
+ frontier fort in Dover in the Indian wars, and successfully defended it in the
+ massacre of 1689. The father of the subject of this sketch was a man of sterling
+ qualities, strong in mind and will, but commanding love as well as respect. The
+ mother was a woman of outward beauty and beauty <a name="page123"
+ id="page123"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 123]</span> of soul alike; with high
+ ideals and reverent conscientiousness. Her influence over her boys was life-long.
+ The home was a centre of intelligent intercourse, a sample of the simplicity but
+ earnestness of many of the best New Hampshire homesteads."<a id="footnotetag3"
+ name="footnotetag3"></a> <a href="#footnote3"><sup>3</sup></a></p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>Descended, as is here evident, from men and women accustomed to govern, legislate,
+ protect, guide and represent the people, it is not surprising to find the Lothrops of
+ the present day of this branch standing in high places, shaping affairs, and devising
+ fresh and far-reaching measures for the general good.</p>
+ <p>Daniel Lothrop was the youngest of the three sons of Daniel and Sophia Home
+ Lothrop. The family residence was on Haven's Hill, in Rochester, and it was an ideal
+ home in its laws, influences and pleasures. Under the guidance of the wise and gentle
+ mother young Daniel developed in a sound body a mind intent on lofty aims, even in
+ childhood, and a character early distinguished for sturdy uprightness. Here, too, on
+ the farm was instilled into him the faith of his fathers, brought through many
+ generations, and he openly acknowledged his allegiance to an Evangelical Church at
+ the age of eleven.</p>
+ <p>As a boy Daniel is remembered as possessing a retentive and singularly accurate
+ memory; as very studious, seeking eagerly for knowledge, and rapidly absorbing it.
+ His intuitive mastery of the relations of numbers, his grasp of the values and
+ mysteries of the higher mathematics, was early remarkable. It might be reasonably
+ expected of the child of seven who was brought down from the primary benches and
+ lifted up to the blackboard to demonstrate a difficult problem in cube root to the
+ big boys and girls of the upper class that he should make rapid and masterful
+ business combinations in later life.</p>
+ <p>At the age of fourteen he was sufficiently advanced in his studies to enter
+ college, but judicious friends restrained him in order that his physique might be
+ brought up to his intellectual growth, and presently circumstances diverted the boy
+ from his immediate educational aspirations and thrust him into the arena of
+ business:&mdash;the world may have lost a lawyer, a clergyman, a physician, or an
+ engineer, but by this change in his youthful plans it certainly has gained a great
+ publisher&mdash;a man whose influence in literature is extended, and who, by his
+ powerful individuality, his executive force, and his originating brain has
+ accomplished a literary revolution.</p>
+ <p>To understand the business career of Daniel Lothrop it will be necessary to trace
+ the origin and progress of the firm of D. Lothrop and Company. On reaching his
+ decision to remain out of college for a year he assumed charge of the drug store,
+ then recently opened by his eldest brother, James E. Lothrop, who, desiring to attend
+ medical lectures in Philadelphia, confidently invited his brother Daniel to carry on
+ the business during his absence.</p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"He urged the young boy to take charge of the store, promising as an extra
+ inducement an equal division as to profits, and that the firm should read 'D.
+ Lothrop &amp; Co.' This last was too much for our ambitious lad. When five years of
+ age he had scratched on a piece of tin these magic words, opening to fame and
+ honor, 'D. Lothrop &amp; Co.,' nailing the embryo sign against the door of his play
+ house. How then could he resist, now, at fourteen? And why not spend the vacation
+ in this manner? And so the sign was made and put up, and thus began the house of
+ 'D. Lothrop &amp; Co.,' the name of which is spoken as a household word wherever
+ the English language is used, and whose publications are loved in more than one of
+ the royal families of Europe."<a id="footnotetag4" name="footnotetag4"></a> <a
+ href="#footnote4"><sup>4</sup></a></p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>The drug store became very lucrative. The classical drill which had <a
+ name="page124" id="page124"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 124]</span> been received
+ by the young druggist was of great advantage to him, his thorough knowledge of Latin
+ was of immediate service, and his skill and care and knowledge was widely recognized
+ and respected. The store became his college, where his affection for books soon led
+ him to introduce them as an adjunct to his business.</p>
+ <p>Thus was he when a mere boy launched on a successful business career. His energy,
+ since proved inexhaustible, soon began to open outward. When about seventeen his
+ attention was attracted to the village of Newmarket as a desirable location for a
+ drug store, and he seized an opportunity to hire a store and stock it. His executive
+ and financial ability were strikingly honored in this venture. Having it in
+ successful operation, he called the second brother, John C. Lothrop, who about this
+ time was admitted to the firm, and left him in charge of the new establishment, while
+ he started a similar store at Meredith Bridge, now called Laconia. The firm now
+ consisted of the three brothers.</p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"These three brothers have presented a most remarkable spirit of family union.
+ Remarkable in that there was none of the drifting away from each other into
+ perilous friendships and moneyed ventures. They held firmly to each other with a
+ trust beyond words. The simple word of each was as good as a bond. And as early as
+ possible they entered into an agreement that all three should combine fortunes,
+ and, though keeping distinct kinds of business, should share equal profits under
+ the firm name of 'D. Lothrop &amp; Co.' For thirty-six years, through all the
+ stress and strain of business life in this rushing age, their loyalty has been
+ preserved strong and pure. Without a question or a doubt, there has been an
+ absolute unity of interests, although James E., President of the Cocheco Bank, and
+ Mayor of the city of Dover, is in one city, John C. in another, and Daniel in still
+ another, and each having the particular direction of the business which his
+ enterprise and sagacity has made extensive and profitable."<a id="footnotetag5"
+ name="footnotetag5"></a> <a href="#footnote5"><sup>5</sup></a></p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>In 1850 occurred a point of fresh and important departure. The stock of books held
+ by Elijah Wadleigh, who had conducted a large and flourishing book store in Dover,
+ N.H., was purchased. Mr. Lothrop enlarged the business, built up a good jobbing
+ trade, and also quietly experimented in publishing. The bookstore under his
+ management also became something more than a commercial success: it grew to be the
+ centre for the bright and educated people of the town, a favorite meeting place of
+ men and women alive to the questions of the day.</p>
+ <p>Now, arrived at the vigor of young manhood, Mr. Lothrop's aims and high reaches
+ began their more open unfoldment. He rapidly extended the business into new and wide
+ fields. He established branch stores at Berwick, Portsmouth, Amesbury, and other
+ places. In each of these establishments books were prominently handled. While thus
+ immediately busy, Mr. Lothrop began his "studies" for his ultimate work. He did not
+ enter the publishing field without long surveys of investigation, comparison and
+ reflection. In need of that kind of vacation we call "change of work and scene," Mr.
+ Lothrop planned a western trip. The bookstores in the various large cities on the
+ route were sedulously visited, and the tastes and the demands of the book trade were
+ carefully studied from many standpoints.</p>
+ <p>The vast possibilities of the Great West caught his attention and he hastened to
+ grasp his opportunities. At St. Peter, in Minnesota, he was welcomed and resolved to
+ locate. They needed such men as Mr. Lothrop to help build the new town into a city.
+ The opening of the St. Peter store was characteristic of its young proprietor.</p>
+ <p>The extreme cold of October and November, <a name="page125" id="page125"></a><span
+ class="pagenum">[pg 125]</span> 1856, prevented, by the early freezing of the Upper
+ Mississippi, the arrival of his goods. Having contracted with the St. Peter company
+ to erect a building, and open his store on the first day of December, Mr. Lothrop,
+ thinking that the goods might have come as far as some landing place below St. Paul,
+ went down several hundred miles along the shore visiting the different landing
+ places. Failing to find them he bought the entire closing-out stock of a drug store
+ at St. Paul, and other goods necessary to a complete fitting of his store, had them
+ loaded, and with several large teams started for St. Peter. The same day a blinding
+ snow storm set in, making it extremely difficult to find the right road, or indeed
+ any road at all, so that five days were spent in making a journey that in good
+ weather could have been accomplished in two. When within a mile of St. Peter the
+ Minnesota river was to be crossed, and it was feared the ice would not bear the heavy
+ teams; all was unloaded and moved on small sledges across the river, and the drug
+ store <i>was opened on the day agreed upon</i>. The papers of that section made
+ special mention of this achievement, saying that it deserved honorable record, and
+ that with such business enterprise the prosperity of Minnesota Valley was
+ assured.</p>
+ <p>He afterwards opened a banking house in St. Peter, of which his uncle, Dr.
+ Jeremiah Horne, was cashier; and in the book and drug store he placed one of his
+ clerks from the East, Mr. B.F. Paul, who is now one of the wealthiest men of the
+ Minnesota Valley. He also established two other stores in the same section of
+ country.</p>
+ <p>Various elements of good generalship came into play during Mr. Lothrop's occupancy
+ of this new field, not only in directing his extensive business combinations in
+ prosperous times, but in guiding all his interests through the financial panic of
+ 1857 and 1858. By the failure of other houses and the change of capital from St.
+ Peter to St. Paul, Mr. Lothrop was a heavy loser, but by incessant labor and
+ foresight he squarely met each complication, promptly paid each liability in full.
+ But now he broke in health. The strain upon him had been intense, and when all was
+ well the tension relaxed, and making his accustomed visit East to attend to his
+ business interests in New England, without allowing himself the required rest, the
+ change of climate, together with heavy colds taken on the journey, resulted in
+ congestion of the lungs, and prostration. Dr. Bowditch, after examination, said that
+ the young merchant had been doing the work of twenty years in ten. Under his
+ treatment Mr. Lothrop so far recovered that he was able to take a trip to Florida,
+ where the needed rest restored his health.</p>
+ <p>For the next five years our future publisher directed the lucrative business
+ enterprises which he had inaugurated, from the quiet book store in Dover, N. H.,
+ while he carefully matured his plans for his life's campaign&mdash;the publication,
+ in many lines, of wholesome books for the people. Soon after the close of the Civil
+ war the time arrived for the accomplishment of his designs, and he began by closing
+ up advantageously his various enterprises in order to concentrate his forces. His was
+ no ordinary equipment. Together with well-laid plans and inspirations, for some of
+ which the time is not yet due, and a rich birthright of sagacity, insight and
+ leadership, he possessed also a practical experience of American book markets and the
+ tastes of the people, trained financial ability, practiced judgment, literary <a
+ name="page126" id="page126"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 126]</span> taste, and
+ literary conscience; and last, but not least, he had traversed and mapped out the
+ special field he proposed to occupy,&mdash;a field from which he has never been
+ diverted.</p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"The foundations were solid. On these points Mr. Lothrop has had but one mind
+ from the first: 'Never to publish a work purely sensational, no matter what chances
+ of money it has in it;' 'to publish books that will make true, steadfast growth in
+ right living.' Not alone right thinking, but right living. These were his two
+ determinations, rigidly adhered to, notwithstanding constant advice, appeals, and
+ temptations. His thoughts had naturally turned to the young people, knowing from
+ his own self-made fortunes, how young men and women need help, encouragement and
+ stimulus. He had determined to throw all his time, strength and money into making
+ good books for the young people, who, with keen imaginations and active minds, were
+ searching in all directions for mental food. 'The best way to fight the evil in the
+ world,' reasoned Mr. Lothrop, 'is to crowd it out with the good.' And therefore he
+ bent the energies of his mind to maturing plans toward this object,&mdash;the
+ putting good, helpful literature into their hands.</p>
+ <p>His first care was to determine the channels through which he could address the
+ largest audiences. The Sunday School library was one. In it he hoped to turn a
+ strong current of pure, healthful literature for those young people who, dieting on
+ the existing library books, were rendered miserable on closing their covers, either
+ to find them dry or obsolete, or so sentimentally religious as to have nothing in
+ their own practical lives corresponding to the situations of the pictured heroes
+ and heroines.</p>
+ <p>The family library was another channel. To make evident to the heads of
+ households the paramount importance of creating a home library, Mr. Lothrop set
+ himself to work with a will. In the spring of 1868 he invited to meet him a council
+ of three gentlemen, eminent in scholarship, sound of judgment, and of large
+ experience: the Reverend George T. Day, D. D., of Dover, N.H., Professor Heman
+ Lincoln, D.D., of Newton Seminary, the Rev. J.E. Rankin, D.D., of Washington, D.C.
+ Before them he laid his plans, matured and ready for their acceptance: to publish
+ good, strong, attractive literature for the Sunday School, the home, the town, and
+ school library, and that nothing should be published save of that character, asking
+ their co-operation as readers of the several manuscripts to be presented for
+ acceptance. The gentlemen, one and all, gave him their heartiest God-speed, but
+ they frankly confessed it a most difficult undertaking, and that the step must be
+ taken with the strong chance of failure. Mr. Lothrop had counted that chance and
+ reaffirmed his purpose to become a publisher of just such literature, and imparted
+ to them so much of his own courage that before they left the room, all stood
+ engaged as salaried readers of the manuscripts to come in to the new publishing
+ house of D. Lothrop &amp; Co., and during all these years no manuscripts have been
+ accepted without the sanction of one or more of these readers.</p>
+ <p>The store, Nos. 38 and 40 Cornhill, Boston, was taken, and a complete refitting
+ and stocking made it one of the finest bookstores of the city. The first book
+ published was 'Andy Luttrell.' How many recall that first book! 'Andy Luttrell' was
+ a great success, the press saying that 'the series of which this is the initiatory
+ volume, marks a new era in Sunday School literature.' Large editions were called
+ for, and it is popular still. In beginning any new business there are many
+ difficulties to face, old established houses to compete with, and new ones to
+ contest every inch of success. But tides turn, and patience and pluck won the day,
+ until from being steady, sure and reliable, Mr. Lothrop's publishing business was
+ increasing with such rapidity as to soon make it one of the solid houses of Boston.
+ Mr. Lothrop had a remarkable instinct as regarded the discovering of new talent,
+ and many now famous writers owe their popularity with the public to his kindness
+ and courage in standing by them. He had great enthusiasm and success in introducing
+ this new element, encouraging young writers, and creating a fresh atmosphere very
+ stimulating and enjoyable to their audience. To all who applied for work or brought
+ manuscript for examination, he had a hopeful word, and in rapid, clear expression
+ smoothed the difficulty out of their path if possible, or pointed to future success
+ as the result of patient toil. He always brought out the best that was in a person,
+ having the rare quality of the union of perfect honesty with kind consideration.
+ This new blood in the old veins of literary life, soon wrought a marvelous change
+ in this class of literature. Mr. Lothrop had been wise enough to see that such
+ would be the case, and he kept <a name="page127" id="page127"></a><span
+ class="pagenum">[pg 127]</span> constantly on the lookout for all means that might
+ foster ambition and bring to the surface latent talent. For this purpose he offered
+ prizes of $1,000 and $500 for the best manuscripts on certain subjects. Such a
+ thing had scarcely been heard of before and manuscripts flowed in, showing this to
+ have been a happy thought. It is interesting to look back and find many of those
+ young authors to be identical with names that are now famous in art and literature,
+ then presenting with much fear and trembling, their first efforts.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Lothrop considered no time, money, or strength ill-spent by which he could
+ secure the wisest choice of manuscripts. As an evidence of his success, we name a
+ few out of his large list: 'Miss Yonge's Histories;' 'Spare Minute Series,' most
+ carefully edited from Gladstone, George MacDonald, Dean Stanley, Thomas Hughes,
+ Charles Kingsley; 'Stories of American History;'' Lothrop's Library of Entertaining
+ History,' edited by Arthur Gilman, containing Professor Harrison's 'Spain,' Mrs.
+ Clement's 'Egypt,' 'Switzerland,' 'India,' etc.; 'Library of famous Americans, 1st
+ and 2d series; George MacDonald's novels&mdash;Mr. Lothrop, while on a visit to
+ Europe, having secured the latest novels by this author in manuscript, thus
+ bringing them out in advance of any other publisher in this country or abroad, now
+ issues his entire works in uniform style: 'Miss Yonge's Historical Stories;'
+ 'Illustrated Wonders;' The Pansy Books,' of world-wide circulation;' 'Natural
+ History Stories;' 'Poet's Homes Series;' S.G.W. Benjamin's 'American Artists;' 'The
+ Reading Union Library,' 'Business Boy's Library,' library edition of 'The Odyssey,'
+ done in prose by Butcher and Lang; 'Jowett's Thucydides;' 'Rosetti's Shakspeare,'
+ on which nothing has been spared to make it the most complete for students and
+ family use, and many others.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Lothrop is constantly broadening his field in many directions, gathering the
+ rich thought of many men of letters, science and theology among his publications.
+ Such writers as Professor James H. Harrison, Arthur Gilman, and Rev. E.E. Hale are
+ allies of the house, constantly working with it to the development of pure
+ literature; the list of the authors and contributors being so long as to include
+ representatives of all the finest thinkers of the day. Elegant art gift books of
+ poem, classic and romance, have been added with wise discrimination, until the list
+ embraces sixteen hundred books, out of which last year were printed and sold
+ 1,500,000 volumes.</p>
+ <p>The great fire of 1872 brought loss to Mr. Lothrop among the many who suffered.
+ Much of the hard-won earnings of years of toil was swept away in that terrible
+ night. About two weeks later, a large quantity of paper which had been destroyed
+ during the great fire had been replaced, and the printing of the same was in
+ process at the printing house of Rand, Avery &amp; Co., when a fire broke out
+ there, destroying this second lot of paper, intended for the first edition of
+ sixteen volumes of the celebrated $1,000 prize books. A third lot of paper was
+ purchased for these books and sent to the Riverside Press without delay. The books
+ were at last printed, as many thousand readers can testify, an enterprise that
+ called out from the Boston papers much commendation, adding, in one instance: 'Mr.
+ Lothrop seems <i>warmed</i> up to his work.'</p>
+ <p>When the time was ripe, another form of Mr. Lothrop's plans for the creation of
+ a great popular literature was inaugurated. We refer to the projection of his now
+ famous 'Wide Awake,' a magazine into which he has thrown a large amount of money.
+ Thrown it, expecting to wait for results. And they have begun to come. 'Wide Awake'
+ now stands abreast with the finest periodicals in our country, or abroad. In
+ speaking of 'Wide Awake' the Boston Herald says: 'No such marvel of excellence
+ could be reached unless there were something beyond the strict calculations of
+ money-making to push those engaged upon it to such magnificent results.' Nothing
+ that money can do is spared for its improvement. Withal, it is the most carefully
+ edited of all magazines; Mr. Lothrop's strict determination to that effect, having
+ placed wise hands at the helm to co-operate with him. Our best people have found
+ this out. The finest writers in this country and in Europe are giving of their best
+ thought to filling its pages, the most celebrated artists are glad to work for it.
+ Scientific men, professors, clergymen, and all heads of households give in their
+ testimony of its merits as a family magazine, while the young folks are delighted
+ with it. The fortune of 'Wide Awake' is sure. Next Mr. Lothrop proceeded to supply
+ the babies with their own especial magazine. Hence came bright, winsome, sparkling
+ 'Babyland.' The mothers caught at the idea. 'Babyland' jumped into success in an
+ incredibly short space of time. The editors of 'Wide Awake,' Mr. and Mrs. Pratt,
+ edit this also, which ensures it as safe, wholesome and sweet to put into baby's
+ hands. The intervening spaces between 'Babyland' and 'Wide <a name="page128"
+ id="page128"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 128]</span> Awake' Mr. Lothrop soon
+ filled with 'Our Little Men and Women,' and 'The Pansy.' Urgent solicitations from
+ parents and teachers who need a magazine for those little folks, either at home or
+ at school, who were beginning to read and spell, brought out the first, and Mrs.
+ G.R. Alden (Pansy) taking charge of a weekly pictorial paper of that name, was the
+ reason for the beginning and growth of the second. The 'Boston Book Bulletin,' a
+ quarterly, is a medium for acquaintance with the best literature, its prices, and
+ all news current pertaining to it.</p>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="images/image2_full.png"><img src="images/image2_thumbnail.png"
+ alt="Exterior View Of D. Lothrop &amp; Co.'s Publishing House." /></a>
+ <p>Exterior View Of D. Lothrop &amp; Co.'s Publishing House.</p>
+ </div>
+ <a name="page129" id="page129"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 129]</span>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="images/image3_full.png"><img src="images/image3_thumbnail.png"
+ alt="Interior View Of D. Lothrop &amp; Co.'s Publishing House." /></a>
+ <p>Interior View Of D. Lothrop &amp; Co.'s Publishing House.</p>
+ </div>
+ <a name="page130" id="page130"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 130]</span>
+ <p>'The Chatauqua Young Folk's Journal' is the latest addition to the sparkling
+ list. This periodical was a natural growth of the modern liking for clubs, circles,
+ societies, reading unions, home studies, and reading courses. It is the official
+ voice of the Chatauqua Young Folks Reading Union, and furnishes each year a
+ valuable and vivacious course of readings on topics of interest to youth. It is
+ used largely in schools. Its contributors are among our leading clergymen, lawyers,
+ university professors, critics, historians and scientists, but all its literature
+ is of a popular character, suited to the family circle rather than the study. Mr.
+ Lothrop now has the remarkable success of seeing six flourishing periodicals going
+ forth from his house.</p>
+ <p>In 1875, Mr. Lothrop, finding his Cornhill quarters inaquate [sic], leased the
+ elegant building corner Franklin and Hawley streets, belonging to Harvard College,
+ for a term of years. The building is 120 feet long by 40 broad, making the
+ salesroom, which is on the first floor, one of the most elegant in the country. On
+ the second floor are Mr. Lothrop's offices, also the editorial offices of 'Wide
+ Awake,' etc. On the third floor are the composing rooms and mailing rooms of the
+ different periodicals, while the bindery fills the fourth floor.</p>
+ <p>This building also was found small; it could accommodate only one-fourth of the
+ work done, and accordingly a warehouse on Purchase street was leased for storing
+ and manufacturing purposes.</p>
+ <p>In 1879 Mr. Lothrop called to his assistance a younger brother, Mr. M.H.
+ Lothrop, who had already made a brilliant business record in Dover, N.H., to whom
+ he gives an interest in the business. All who care for the circulation of the best
+ literature will be glad to know that everything indicates the work to be steadily
+ increasing toward complete development of Mr. Lothrop's life-long purpose."<a
+ id="footnotetag6" name="footnotetag6"></a> <a
+ href="#footnote6"><sup>6</sup></a></p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>This man of large purposes and large measures has, of course, his sturdy friends,
+ his foes as sturdy. He has, without doubt, an iron will. He is, without doubt, a good
+ fighter&mdash;a wise counselor. Approached by fraud he presents a front of granite;
+ he cuts through intrigue with sudden, forceful blows. It is true that the sharp
+ bargainer, the overreaching buyer he worsts and puts to confusion and loss without
+ mercy. But, no less, candor and honor meet with frankness and generous dealing. He is
+ as loyal to a friend as to a purpose. His interest in one befriended and taken into
+ trust is for life. It has been more than once said of this immovable business man
+ that he has the simple heart of a boy.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Lothrop's summer home is in Concord, Mass. His house, known to literary
+ pilgrims of both continents as "The Wayside," is a unique, many gabled old mansion,
+ situated near the road at the base of a pine-covered hill, facing broad, level
+ fields, and commanding a view of charming rural scenery. Its dozen green acres are
+ laid out in rustic paths; but with the exception of the removal of unsightly
+ underbrush, the landscape is left in a wild and picturesque state. Immediately in the
+ rear of the house, however, A. Bronson Alcott, a former occupant, planned a series of
+ terraces, and thereon is a system of trees. The house was commenced in the
+ seventeenth century and has been added to at different periods, and withal is quaint
+ enough to satisfy the most exacting antiquarian. At the back rise the more modern
+ portions, and the tower, wherein was woven the most delightful of American romances,
+ and about which cluster tender memories of the immortal Hawthorne. The boughs of the
+ whispering pines almost touch the lofty windows.</p>
+ <p>The interior of the dwelling is seemly. <a name="page131" id="page131"></a><span
+ class="pagenum">[pg 131]</span> It corresponds with the various eras of its
+ construction. The ancient low-posted rooms with their large open fire-places, in
+ which the genial hickory crackles and glows as in the olden time, have furnishings
+ and appointments in harmony. The more modern apartments are charming, the whole
+ combination making a most delightful country house.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Lothrop's enjoyment of art and his critical appreciation is illustrated here
+ as throughout his publications, his house being adorned with many exquisite and
+ valuable original paintings from the studios of modern artists; and there is, too, a
+ certain literary fitness that his home should be in this most classic spot, and that
+ the mistress of this home should be a lady of distinguished rank in literature, and
+ that the fair baby daughter of the house should wear for her own the name her mother
+ has made beloved in thousands of American and English households.</p>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="images/image4_full.png"><img src="images/image4_thumbnail.png"
+ alt="&quot;The Wayside.&quot;" /></a>
+ <p>"The Wayside."</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+ <a name="page132" id="page132"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 132]</span>
+ <h2>New England Conservatory of Music.</h2>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="images/image5_full.png"><img src="images/image5_thumbnail.png"
+ alt="New England CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC Franklin Square Boston" /></a>
+ <p>New England CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC Franklin Square Boston</p>
+ </div>
+ <center>
+ By MRS. M.J. DAVIS.
+ </center>
+ <p>One of the most important questions now occupying the minds of the world's deepest
+ and best thinkers, is the intellectual, physical, moral, and political position of
+ woman.</p>
+ <p>Men are beginning to realize a fact that has been evident enough for ages: that
+ the current of civilization can never rise higher than the springs of motherhood.
+ Given the ignorant, debased mothers of the Turkish harem, and the inevitable result
+ is a nation destitute of truth, honor or political position. All the power of the
+ Roman legions, all the wealth of the imperial empire, could not save the throne of
+ the C&aelig;sars when the Roman matron was shorn of her honor, and womanhood became
+ only the slave or the toy of its citizens. Men have been slow to grasp the fact that
+ women are a "true constituent of the bone and sinew of society," and as such should
+ be trained to bear the part of "bone and sinew." It has been finely said, "that as
+ times have altered and conditions varied, the respect has varied <a name="page133"
+ id="page133"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 133]</span> in which woman has been held.
+ At one time condemned to the field and counted with the cattle, at another time
+ condemned to the drawing-room and inventoried with marbles, oils and water-colors;
+ but only in instances comparatively rare, acknowledged and recognized in the fullness
+ of her moral and intellectual possibilities, and in the beauteous completeness of her
+ personal dignity, prowess and obligation."</p>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="images/image6_full.png"><img src="images/image6_thumbnail.png"
+ alt="The Library Reading Room" /></a>
+ <p>The Library Reading Room</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="images/image7_full.png"><img src="images/image7_thumbnail.png"
+ alt="Art Department Painting" /></a>
+ <p>Art Department Painting</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>Various and widely divergent as opinions are in regard to woman's place in the
+ political sphere, there is fast coming to be unanimity of thought in regard to her
+ intellectual development. Even in Turkey, fathers are beginning to see that their
+ daughters are better, not worse, for being able to read and, write, and civilization
+ is about ready to concede that the intellectual, physical and moral possibilities of
+ woman are to <a name="page134" id="page134"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 134]</span>
+ be the only limits to her attainment. Vast strides in the direction of the higher and
+ broader education of women have been made in the quarter of a century since John
+ Vassar founded on the banks of the Hudson the noble college for women that bears his
+ name; and others have been found who have lent willing hands to making broad the
+ highway that leads to an ideal womanhood. Wellesley and Smith, as well as Vassar find
+ their limits all too small for the throngs of eager girlhood that are pressing toward
+ them. The Boston University, honored in being first to open professional courses to
+ women, Michigan University, the New England Conservatory, the North Western
+ University of Illinois, the Wesleyan Universities, both of Connecticut and Ohio, with
+ others of the colleges of the country, have opened their doors and welcomed women to
+ an equal share with men, in their advantages. And in the shadow of Oxford, on the
+ Thames, and of Harvard, on the Charles, womanly <a name="page135"
+ id="page135"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 135]</span> minds are growing, womanly
+ lives are shaping, and womanly patience is waiting until every barrier shall be
+ removed, and all the green fields of learning shall be so free that whosoever will
+ may enter.</p>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="images/image8_full.png"><img src="images/image8_thumbnail.png"
+ alt="Art Department Modeling" /></a>
+ <p>Art Department Modeling</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="images/image9_full.png"><img src="images/image9_thumbnail.png"
+ alt="Tuning Department" /></a>
+ <p>Tuning Department</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>Among the foremost of the great educational institutions of the day, the New
+ England Conservatory of Music takes rank, and its remarkable development and
+ wonderful growth tends to prove that the youth of the land desire the highest
+ advantages that can be offered them. More than thirty years ago the germ of the idea
+ that is now embodied in this great institution, found lodgment in the brain of the
+ man who has devoted his life to its development. Believing that music had a positive
+ influence <a name="page136" id="page136"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 136]</span>
+ upon the elevation of the world hardly dreamed of as yet even by its most devoted
+ students, Eben Tourjee returned to America from years of musical study in the great
+ Conservatories of Europe. Knowing from personal observation the difficulties that lie
+ in the way of American students, especially of young and inexperienced girls who seek
+ to obtain a musical education abroad, battling as they must, not only with foreign
+ customs and a foreign language, but exposed to dangers, temptations and
+ disappointments, he determined to found in America a music school that should be
+ unsurpassed in the world. Accepting <a name="page137" id="page137"></a><span
+ class="pagenum">[pg 137]</span> the judgment of the great masters, Mendelsshon,
+ David, and Joachim, that the conservatory system was the best possible system of
+ musical instruction, doing for music what a college of liberal arts does for
+ education in general, Dr. Tourjee in 1853, with what seems to have been large and
+ earnest faith, and most entire devotion, took the first public steps towards the
+ accomplishment of his purpose. During the long years his plan developed step by step.
+ In 1870 the institution was chartered under its present name in Boston. In 1881 its
+ founder deeded to it his entire personal property, and by a deed of trust gave the
+ institution into the hands of a Board of Trustees to be perpetuated forever as a
+ Christian Music School.</p>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="images/image10_full.png"><img src="images/image10_thumbnail.png"
+ alt="The Dining Hall." /></a>
+ <p>The Dining Hall.</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>In the carrying out of his plan to establish and equip an institution that should
+ give the highest musical culture, Dr. Tourjee has been compelled, in order that
+ musicians educated here <a name="page138" id="page138"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg
+ 138]</span> should not be narrow, one-sided specialists only, but that they should be
+ cultured men and women, to add department after department, until to-day under the
+ same roof and management there are well equipped schools of Music, Art, Elocution,
+ Literature, Languages, Tuning, Physical Culture, and a home with the safeguards of a
+ Christian family life for young women students.</p>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="images/image11_full.png"><img src="images/image11_thumbnail.png"
+ alt="&lt;i&gt;The Cabinet&lt;/i&gt;" /></a>
+ <p><i>The Cabinet</i></p>
+ </div>
+ <p>When, in 1882, the institution moved from Music Hall to its present quarters in
+ Franklin Square, in what was the St. James Hotel, it became possessed of the largest
+ and best equipped conservatory buildings in the world. It has upon its staff of
+ seventy-five teachers, masters from the best schools of Europe. During the school
+ year ending June 29, 1884, students coming from forty-one states and territories of
+ the Union, from the British Provinces, from England and from the Sandwich Islands,
+ have received instruction there. The growth <a name="page139" id="page139"></a><span
+ class="pagenum">[pg 139]</span> of this institution, due in such large measure to the
+ courage and faith of one man, has been remarkable, and it stands to-day
+ self-supporting, without one dollar of endowment, carrying on alone its noble work,
+ an institution of which Boston, Massachusetts and America may well be proud. From the
+ first its invitation has been without limitation. It began with a firm belief that
+ "what it is in the nature of a man or woman to become, is a Providential indication
+ of what God wants it to become, by improvement and development," and it offered to
+ men and women alike the same advantages, the same labor, and the same honor. It is
+ working out for itself the problem of co-education, and it has never had occasion to
+ take one backward step in the part it has chosen. Money by the millions has been
+ poured out upon the schools and colleges of the land, and not one dollar too much has
+ been given, for the money that educates is the money that saves the nation.</p>
+ <p>Among those who have been made stewards of great wealth some liberal benefactor
+ should come forward in behalf of this great school, that, by eighteen years of
+ faithful living, has proved its right to live. Its founder says of it: "The
+ institution has not yet compassed my thought of it." Certainly it has not reached its
+ possibilities of doing good. It needs a hall in which its concerts and lectures can
+ be given, and in which the great organ of Music Hall, may be placed. It needs that
+ its chapel, library, studios, gymnasium and recitation rooms should be greatly
+ enlarged to meet the actual demands now made upon them. It needs what other
+ institutions have needed and received, a liberal endowment, to enable it, with them,
+ to meet and solve the great question of the day, the education of the people.</p>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="images/image12_full.png"><img src="images/image12_thumbnail.png"
+ alt="New England Conservatory of Music Boston" /></a>
+ <p>New England Conservatory of Music Boston</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+ <a name="page140" id="page140"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 140]</span>
+ <h2>SKETCH OF SAUGUS.</h2>
+ <center>
+ By E.P. ROBINSON.
+ </center>
+ <p>Saugus lies about eight miles northeast of Boston. It was incorporated as an
+ independent town February 17, 1815, and was formerly a part of Lynn, which once bore
+ the name of Saugus, being an Indian name, and signifies great or extended. It has a
+ taxable area of 5,880 acres, and its present population may be estimated at about
+ 2,800, living in 535 houses. The former boundary between Lynn and Suffolk County ran
+ through the centre of the "Boardman House," in what is now Saugus, and standing near
+ the line between Melrose and Saugus, and is one of the oldest houses in the town. It
+ has forty miles of accepted streets and roads, which are proverbial as being kept in
+ the very best condition. Its public buildings are a Town Hall, a wooden structure, of
+ Gothic architecture, with granite steps and underpining, and has a seating capacity
+ of seven hundred and eighty persons. It is considered to be the handsomest wooden
+ building in Essex County, and cost $48,000. The High School is accommodated within
+ its walls, and beside offices for the various boards of town officers; on the lower
+ floor it has a room for a library. The upper flight has an auditorium with ante-rooms
+ at the front and rear, a balcony at the front, seats one hundred and eighty persons,
+ and a platform on the stage at the rear. It was built in 1874-5. The building
+ committee were E.P. Robinson, Gilbert Waldron, J.W. Thomas, H.B. Newhall, Wilbur F.
+ Newhall, Augustus B. Davis, George N. Miller, George H. Hull, Louis P. Hawkes,
+ William F. Hitchings, E.E. Wilson, Warren P. Copp, David Knox, A. Brad. Edmunds and
+ Henry Sprague. E.P. Robinson was chosen chairman and David Knox secretary. The
+ architects were Lord &amp; Fuller of Boston, and the work of building was put under
+ contract to J.H. Kibby &amp; Son of Chelsea.</p>
+ <p>The town also owns seven commodious schoolhouses, in which are maintained thirteen
+ schools&mdash;one High, three Grammar, three Intermediate, three Primaries, one
+ sub-Primary and two mixed schools, the town appropriating the sum of six thousand
+ dollars therefor. There are five Churches&mdash;Congregational, Universalist, and
+ three Methodist, besides two societies worshiping in halls (the St. John's Episcopal
+ Mission and the Union at North Saugus). After the schism in the old Third Parish
+ about 1809, the religious feud between the Trinitarians and the Unitarians became so
+ intense that a lawsuit was had to obtain the fund, the Universalists retaining
+ possession. The Trinitarians then built the old stone Church, under the direction of
+ Squire Joseph Eames, which, as a piece of architecture, did not reflect much credit
+ on builder or architect. It is now used as a grocery and post office; their present
+ place of worship was built in 1852. The Church edifice of the old Third was erected
+ in 1738, and was occupied without change until 1859, when it was sold and moved off
+ the spot, and the site is now marked by a flag staff and band stand, known as Central
+ Square. The old Church was moved a short distance and converted into tenements, with
+ a store underneath. The Universalist society built their present Church <a
+ name="page141" id="page141"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 141]</span> in 1860. The
+ town farm consists of some 280 acres, and has a fine wood lot of 240 acres, the
+ remainder being valuable tillage, costing in 1823 $4,625.</p>
+ <p>The town is rich in local history and has either produced or been the residence of
+ a number of notable men and women.</p>
+ <div class="figleft">
+ <a href="images/image13_full.png"><img src="images/image13_thumbnail.png"
+ alt="M.E. CHURCH, CLIFTONDALE." /></a>
+ <p>M.E. CHURCH, CLIFTONDALE.</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>Judge William Tudor, the father of the ice business, now so colossal in its
+ proportions, started the trade here, living on what is now the poor farm. The Saugus
+ Female Seminary once held quite a place in literary circles, Cornelius C. Felton,
+ afterward president of Harvard College, being its "chore boy" (the remains of his
+ parents lie in the cemetery near by). Fanny Fern, the sister of N.P. Willis, the wife
+ of James Parton, the celebrated biographer, as well as two sisters of Dr. Alexander
+ Vinton, pursued their studies here, together with Miss Flint, who married Honorable
+ Daniel P. King, member of Congress for the Essex District, and Miss Dustin, who
+ became the wife of Eben Sutton, and who has been so devoted and interested in the
+ library of the Peabody Institute. Mr. Emerson, the preceptor, was for a time the
+ pastor of the Third Parish of Lynn (now Saugus Universalist society), where Parson
+ Roby preached for a period of fifty-three years&mdash;more than half a century, with
+ a devotion and fidelity that greatly endeared him to his people. In passing we give
+ the items of his salary as voted him in 1747, taken from the records of the Parish,
+ being kindly furnished by the Clerk, Mr. W.F. Hitchings: "A suitable house and barn,
+ standing in a suitable place; pasturing and sufficient warter meet for two Cows and
+ one horse&mdash;the winter meet put in his barn; the improvement of two acres of land
+ suitable to plant and to be kept well fenced; sixty pounds in lawful silver money, at
+ six shillings and eight pence per ounce; twenty cords of wood at his Dore, and the
+ Loose Contributions; and also the following artikles, or so much money as will
+ purchase them, viz: Sixty Bushels Indian Corn, forty-one Bushels of Rye, Six <a
+ name="page142" id="page142"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 142]</span> hundred pounds
+ wait of Pork and Eight Hundred and Eighty Eight pounds wait of Beefe."</p>
+ <p>This would be considered a pretty liberal salary even now for a suburban people to
+ pay. From the records of his parish it would seem he always enjoyed the love and
+ confidence of his people, and was sincerely mourned by them at his death, which
+ occurred January 31, 1803, at the advanced age of eighty years, and as stated above
+ in the fifty-third year of his ministry. Among other good works and mementoes which
+ he left behind him was the "Roby Elm," set out with his own hand, and which is now
+ more than one hundred and twenty-five years old. It is in an excellent state of
+ preservation, and with its perfectly conical shape at the top, attracts marked
+ attention from all lovers and observers of trees. Among the names of worthy citizens
+ who have impressed themselves upon the memory of their survivors, either as business
+ men of rare executive ability, or as merchants of strict integrity, or scholars and
+ men of literary genius, lawyers, artists, writers, poets, and men of inventive
+ genius, we will first mention as eldest on the list "Landlord" Jacob Newhall, who
+ used to keep a tavern in the east part of the town and gave "entertainment to man and
+ beast" passing between Boston and Salem, notably so to General Washington on his
+ journey from Boston to Salem in 1797, and later to the Marquis De Lafayette in 1824,
+ when making a similar journey. We also mention Zaccheus Stocker, Jonathan Makepeace,
+ Charles Sweetser, Dr. Abijah Cheever, Benjamin F. Newhall and Benjamin Hitchings.
+ These last all held town office with great credit to themselves and their
+ constituents.</p>
+ <p>Benjamin F. Newhall was a man of versatile parts. Beside writing rhymes he
+ preached the Gospel, and was at one time County Commissioner for Essex County.</p>
+ <p>To these may be added Salmon Snow, who held the office of Selectman for several
+ years, and also kept the poor of Saugus for many years with great acceptance. He was
+ a man of good judgment, strong in his likes and dislikes, and bitter in his
+ resentments. George Henry Sweetser was also a Selectman for years, and was elected to
+ the Legislature for both branches, being Senator for two terms. Frederick Stocker,
+ noted as a manufacturer of brick, was also a man of sterling qualities, and shared in
+ the confidence and esteem of his fellow citizens. Joseph Stocker Newhall, a
+ manufacturer of roundings in sole leather, was a just man, of positive views, and
+ although interesting himself in the political issues of the day would not take
+ office. Eminently social he was at times somewhat abrupt and laconic in denouncing
+ what he conceived to be shams. As a manufacturer his motto was, "the laborer is
+ worthy of his hire." He died in 1875, aged 67 years. George Pearson was Treasurer of
+ the town and one of the Selectmen, and also Treasurer and Deacon of the Orthodox
+ parish for twenty-five years, living to the advanced age of eighty-seven years. He
+ died in 1883.</p>
+ <p>Later, about 1837, Edward Pranker, an Englishman, and Francis Scott, a Scotchman,
+ became noted for their woollen factories, which they built in Saugus, and also became
+ residents here for the rest of their lives. Enoch Train, too, a Boston ship merchant
+ and founder of the famous line of packets between Boston and Liverpool for the
+ transportation of emigrants, passed the last ten years of his life here, marrying
+ Mrs. Almira Cheever. He was the father of Mrs. A.D.T. Whitney, the <a name="page143"
+ id="page143"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 143]</span> author of many works of
+ fiction, which have been widely read; among them "Faith Gartney's Girlhood," "Odd or
+ Even," "Sights and Insights," etc. In this connection we point to a living novelist
+ of Saugus, Miss Ella Thayer, whose "Wired Lore" has been through several editions.
+ George William Phillips, brother of Wendell, a lawyer of some note, also lived many
+ years at Saugus and died in 1878. Joseph Ames, the artist, celebrated for his
+ portraits, who was commissioned by the Catholics to visit Rome and paint Pope Pius
+ IX., and who executed in a masterly manner other commissions, such as Rufus Choate,
+ Daniel Webster, Abraham Lincoln, Madames Rachael and Ristori, learned the art in
+ Saugus, though born in Roxbury, N.H. He died at New York while temporarily painting
+ there, but was buried in Saugus in 1874. His brother Nathan was a patent solicitor,
+ and considered an expert in such matters, and invented several useful machines. He
+ was also a writer of both prose and poetry, writing among other books "Pirate's
+ Glen," "Dungeon Rock" and "Childe Harold." He died in 1860.</p>
+ <p>Rev. Fales H. Newhall, D.D., who was Professor of Languages at Middletown College,
+ and who, as a writer, speaker or preacher, won merited distinction, died in 1882,
+ lamented that his light should go prematurely out at the early age of 56 years.</p>
+ <p>Henry Newhall, who went from Saugus to San Francisco, and there became a
+ millionaire, may be spoken of as a succesful business man and merchant. The greatest
+ instance of longevity since the incorporation of the town was that of Joseph Cheever,
+ who was born February 22, 1772, and died June 19, 1872, aged 100 years, 4 months, 27
+ days. He was a farmer of great energy, industry and will power, and was given to much
+ litigation. He, too, represented the town in 1817-18, 1820-21, 1831-32, and again in
+ 1835.</p>
+ <p>Saugus, too, was the scene of the early labors of Rev. Edward T. Taylor,
+ familiarly known as Father Taylor. Here he learned to read, and preached his first
+ sermon at what was then known as the "Rock Schoolhouse," at East Saugus, though
+ converted at North Saugus. Mrs. Sally Sweetser, a pious lady, taught him his letters,
+ and Mrs. Jonathan Newhall used to read to him the chapter in the Bible from which he
+ was to preach until he had committed it to memory.</p>
+ <p>North Saugus is a fine agricultural section with table land, pleasant and well
+ watered, well adapted to farming purposes, and it was here that Adam Hawkes, the
+ first of this name in this county, settled with his five sons in 1630, and took up a
+ large tract of land. He built his house on a rocky knoll, the spot being at the
+ intersection of the road leading from Saugus to Lynnfield with the Newburyport
+ turnpike, known as Hawkes' Corner. This house being burned the bricks of the old
+ chimney were put into another, and when again this chimney was taken down a few years
+ ago there were found bricks with the date of 1601 upon them. This shows, evidently,
+ that the bricks were brought from England. This property is now in the hands of one
+ of his lineal descendants, Louis P. Hawkes, having been handed down from sire to son
+ for more than 250 years. On the 28th and 29th of July, 1880, a family reunion of the
+ descendents of Adam Hawkes was held to celebrate the 250th anniversary of his advent
+ to the soil of Saugus. It was a notable meeting, and brought together the members of
+ this respected and respectable <a name="page144" id="page144"></a><span
+ class="pagenum">[pg 144]</span> family from Maine to California. Two large tents were
+ spread and the trees and buildings were decorated with flags and mottoes in an
+ appropriate and tasteful manner. Judges, Generals, artists, poets, clergymen,
+ lawyers, farmers and mechanics were present to participate in the re-union. Addresses
+ were made, poems suitable to the occasion rendered, and all passed off in a most
+ creditable manner. Among the antique and curious documents in the possession of
+ Samuel Hawkes was the "division of the estate of Adam Hawkes, made March 27,
+ 1672."</p>
+ <p>Mrs. Dinsmore resided in this part of the town. A most amiable woman, a good
+ nurse, kind in sickness, and it was in this way that she discovered a most valuable
+ medicine. Her specific is claimed to be very efficacious in cases of croup and
+ kindred diseases, and its use in such cases has become very general, as well as for
+ headache. She is almost as widely known as Lydia Pinkham. She died in 1881.</p>
+ <div class="figleft">
+ <a href="images/image14_full.png"><img src="images/image14_thumbnail.png"
+ alt="MRS. DINSMORE." /></a>
+ <p>MRS. DINSMORE.</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>Saugus nobly responded to the call for troops to put down the rebellion,
+ furnishing a large contingent for Company K, Seventeenth Massachusetts Volunteers,
+ which was recruited almost wholly from Malden and Saugus, under command of Captain
+ Simonds of Malden. Thirty-six Saugus men also enlisted in Company A, Fortieth
+ Massachusetts Volunteers, while quite a number joined the gallant Nineteenth
+ Regiment, Col. E.W. Hinks, whose name Post 95, G.A.R., of Saugus bears, which is a
+ large and flourishing organization. There were many others who enlisted in various
+ other regiments, beside those who served in the navy.</p>
+ <br clear="all" />
+ <div class="figleft">
+ <img src="images/image15_full.png" alt="NINETEENTH REGIMENT BADGE." />
+ <p>NINETEENTH REGIMENT BADGE.</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>Charles A. Newhall of this town is secretary and treasurer of the Nineteenth
+ Regiment association, whose survivors still number nearly one hundred members.</p>
+ <h3>THE OLD IRON WORKS.</h3>
+ <p>These justly celebrated works, the first of their kind in this country, were
+ situated on the west bank of the Saugus river, about one-fourth of a mile north of
+ the Town Hall, on the road leading to Lynnfield, and almost immediately opposite the
+ mansion of A.A. Scott, Esq., the present proprietor of the woolen mills which are
+ located just above, the site of the old works being still marked by a mound of scoria
+ and <a name="page145" id="page145"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 145]</span> debris,
+ the locality being familiarly known as the "Cinder Banks." Iron ore was discovered in
+ the vicinity of these works at an early period, but no attempt was made to work it
+ until 1643. The Braintree iron works, for which some have claimed precedence, were
+ not commenced until 1647, in that part of the town known as Quincy.</p>
+ <p>Among the artisans who found employment and scope for their mechanical skill at
+ these works was Mr. Joseph Jenks who, when the colonial mint was started to coin the
+ "Pine Tree Shilling," made the die for the first impressions at the Iron works at
+ Saugus.</p>
+ <p>The old house, formerly belonging to the Thomas Hudson estate of sixty-nine acres
+ first purchased by the Iron Works, is still standing, and is probably one of the
+ oldest in Essex County, although it has undergone so many repairs that it is
+ something like the boy's jack-knife, which belonged to his grandfather and had
+ received three new blades and two new handles since he had known it. One of the
+ fire-places, with all its modernizing, a few years ago measured about thirteen feet
+ front, and its whole contour is yet unique. It is now owned by A.A. Scott and John B.
+ Walton.</p>
+ <p>Near Pranker's Pond, on Appleton street, is a singular rock resembling a pulpit.
+ This portion of the town is known as the Calemount.</p>
+ <p>There is a legend of the Colonial period that a man by the name of Appleton
+ harangued or preached to the people of the vicinity, urging them to stand by the
+ Republican cause, hence the name of "Pulpit Rock." The name "Calemount" also comes,
+ according to tradition, from the fact that one of the people named Caleb Appleton,
+ who had become obnoxious to the party, had agreed upon a signal with his wife and
+ intimate friends, that, when in danger, they should notify him by this expressive
+ warning, "Cale, mount!" upon which he would take refuge in the rocky mountain, which,
+ being then densely wooded, afforded a secure hiding place. Several members of this
+ family of Appletons have since, during successive generations, been distinguished and
+ well known citizens of Boston, one of whom, William Appleton, was elected to Congress
+ over Anson Burlingame, in 1860.</p>
+ <p>Recently, one of the descendants of this family has had a tablet of copper
+ securely bolted to the rock with the following inscription:&mdash;</p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"APPLETOX'S PULPIT!</p>
+ <p>In September, 1687, from this rock tradition asserts that resisting the tyranny
+ of Sir Edmond Andros, Major Samuel Appleton of Ipswich spake to the people in
+ behalf of those principles which later were embodied in the declaration of
+ Independence."</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>This tablet was formally presented to the town by letter from the late Thomas
+ Appleton, at the annual March meeting in 1882, and its care assumed by the town of
+ Saugus.</p>
+ <p>Among the present industries of Saugus are Pranker's Mills, a joint stock
+ corporation, doing business under the style of Edward Pranker &amp; Co., for the
+ manufacture of woollen goods, employing about one hundred operatives, and producing
+ about 1,800,000 yards of cloth annually&mdash;red, white and yellow flannel. The mill
+ of A.A. Scott is just below on the same stream, making the same class of goods, with
+ a much smaller production, both companies being noted for the standard quality of
+ their fabrics. The spice and coffee mills of Herbert B. Newhall at East Saugus do a
+ large business in their line, and his goods go all over New England and the West.</p>
+ <p>Charles S. Hitchings, at Saugus, turns <a name="page146" id="page146"></a><span
+ class="pagenum">[pg 146]</span> out some 1,500 cases of hand-made slippers of fine
+ quality for the New York and New England trade. Otis M. Burrill, in the same line, is
+ making the same kind of work, some 150 cases, Hiram Grover runs a stitching factory
+ with steam power, and employs a large number of employees, mostly females.</p>
+ <p>Win. E. Shaw also makes paper boxes and cartoons, and does quite a business for
+ Lynn manufacturers.</p>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="images/image16_full.png"><img src="images/image16_thumbnail.png"
+ alt="RESIDENCE OF RUFUS A. JOHNSON." /></a>
+ <p>RESIDENCE OF RUFUS A. JOHNSON.</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>Enoch T. Kent at Saugus and his brother, Edward S. Kent, at Cliftondale, are
+ engaged in washing crude hair and preparing it for plastering and other purposes,
+ such as curled hair, hair cloth, blankets, etc. They each give employment to quite a
+ number of men. Albert H. Sweetser makes snuff, succeeding to the firm of Sweetser
+ Bros., who did an extensive business until after the war. The demand for this kind of
+ goods is more limited than formerly. Joseph. A. Raddin, manufactures the crude
+ tobacco from the leaf into chewing and smoking tobacco. Edward O. Copp, Martha Fiske,
+ William Parker and a few others still manufacture cigars.</p>
+ <p>Quite an, extensive ice business is done at Saugus by Solon V. Edmunds and Stephen
+ Stackpole. A few years ago Eben Edmunds shipped by the Eastern Railroad some 1,200
+ tons to Gloucester, but the shrinkage and wastage of the ice by delays on the train
+ did not render it a profitable operation.</p>
+ <p>The strawberry culture has recently become quite a feature in the producing
+ industry of Saugus. In 1884 <a name="page147" id="page147"></a><span
+ class="pagenum">[pg 147]</span> Elbridge S. Upham marketed 3,600 boxes, Charles S.
+ Hitchings 1,200, Warren P. Copp 400, and others, Martin Carnes, Calvin Locke, Edward
+ Saunders and Lorenzo Mansfield, more or less.</p>
+ <p>John W. Blodgett and the Hatch Bros. do a large business in early and late
+ vegetables for Boston and Lynn markets, such as asparagus, spinach, etc., and employ
+ quite a number of men.</p>
+ <p>Nor must we forget to mention the milk business. Louis P. Hawkes has a herd of
+ some forty cows and has a milk route at Lynn. J.W. Blodgett keeps twenty-five cows,
+ and takes his milk to market. Geo. N. Miller and T.O.W. Houghton also keep cows and
+ have a route. Joshua Kingsbury, George H. Pearson and George Ames have a route,
+ buying their milk. Byron Hone keeps fifty cows. Dudley Fiske has twenty-five, selling
+ their milk. O.M. Hitchings, H. Burns, A.B. Davis, Lewis Austin, Richard Hawkes and
+ others keep from seven to twelve cows for dairy purposes.</p>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="images/image17_full.png"><img src="images/image17_thumbnail.png"
+ alt="RESIDENCE OF CHARLES H. BOND." /></a>
+ <p>RESIDENCE OF CHARLES H. BOND.</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>Having somewhat minutely noticed the industries we will speak briefly of some of
+ the dwellings. The elegant mansion and gardens of Brainard and Henry George, Harmon
+ Hall and Rufus A. Johnson of East Saugus, and Eli Barrett, A.A. Scott and E.E. Wilson
+ of Saugus, C.A. Sweetser, C.H. Bond and Pliny Nickerson at Cliftondale, with their
+ handsome lawns, rich and rare flowers and noble shade trees attract general
+ attention. The last mentioned estate was formerly owned by a brother of Governor
+ William Eustis, where his Excellency used to spend a portion of his time each
+ year.</p>
+ <p>At the south-westerly part of the town, not far from the old Eustis estate, the
+ boundaries of three counties and four towns intersect with each other, viz: Suffolk,
+ Essex and Middlesex counties, and the towns of Revere, Saugus, Melrose and Maiden.
+ Near by, too, is the old Boynton estate, and the Franklin Trotting park, where some
+ <a name="page148" id="page148"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 148]</span> famous
+ trotting was had, when Dr. Smith managed it in 1866-7, Flora Temple, Fashion, Lady
+ Patchen and other noted horses contending. After a few years of use it was abandoned,
+ but it has recently been fitted up by Marshall Abbott of Lynn, and several trots have
+ taken place the present summer.</p>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="images/image18_full.png"><img src="images/image18_thumbnail.png"
+ alt="TOWN HALL." /></a>
+ <p>TOWN HALL.</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>The Boynton estate above referred to is divided by a small brook, known as
+ "Bride's Brook," which is also the dividing line between Saugus and Revere, <a
+ name="page149" id="page149"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 149]</span> and the
+ counties of Suffolk and Essex. Tradition asserts that many years ago a couple were
+ married here, the groom standing on one side and the bride on the other; hence the
+ name "Bride's Brook."</p>
+ <p>The existence of iron ore used for the manufacturing at the old Iron Works was
+ well known, and there have been many who have believed that antimony also exists in
+ large quantities in Saugus, but its precise location has as yet not become known to
+ the public.</p>
+ <p>As early as the year 1848, a man by the name of Holden, who was given to field
+ searching and prospecting, frequently brought specimens to the late Benjamin F.
+ Newhall and solemnly affirmed that he obtained them from the earth and soil within
+ the limits of Saugus. Every means was used to induce him to divulge the secret of its
+ locality. But Holden was wary and stolidly refused to disclose or share the knowledge
+ of the place of the lode with anyone. He averred that he was going to make his
+ fortune by it. Detectives were put upon his trail in his roaming about the fields,
+ but he managed to elude all efforts at discovery. Being an intemperate man, one cold
+ night after indulging in his cups, he was found by the roadside stark and stiff. Many
+ rude attempts and imperfect searches have been made upon the assurances of Holden to
+ discover the existence of antimony, but thus far in vain, and the supposed suppressed
+ secret of the existence of it in Saugus died with him.</p>
+ <p>"Pirate's Glen" is also within the territory of Saugus, while "Dungeon Rock,"
+ another romantic locality, described by Alonzo Lewis in his history of Lynn, is just
+ over the line in that city. There is a popular tradition that the pirates buried
+ their treasure at the foot of a certain hemlock tree in the glen, also the body of a
+ beautiful female. The rotten stump of a tree may still be seen, and a hollow beside
+ it, where people have dug in searching for human bones and treasure. This glen is
+ highly romantic and is one of the places of interest to which all strangers visiting
+ Saugus are conducted, and is invested with somewhat of the supernatural tales of
+ Captain Kid and treasure trove.</p>
+ <p>There is a fine quarry or ledge of jasper located in the easterly part of the
+ town, near Saugus River, just at the foot of the conical-shaped elevation known as
+ "Round Hill." which Professor Hitchcock, in his last geological survey, pronounced to
+ be the best specimen in the state. Mrs. Hitchcock, an artist, who accompanied her
+ husband in his surveying tour, delineated from this eminence, looking toward Nahant
+ and Egg Rock, which is full in view, and from which steamers may be seen with a glass
+ plainly passing in and out of Boston harbor. The scenery and drives about Saugus are
+ delightful, especially beautiful is the view and landscape looking from the "Cinder
+ Banks," so-called, down Saugus river toward Lynn.</p>
+ <h3>REPRESENTATIVES FROM SAUGUS SINCE THE TOWN WAS INCORPORATED.</h3>
+ <p>Saugus, (formerly the West Parish of Lynn), was formed in the year 1815, and the
+ town was first represented by Mr. Robert Emes in 1816. Mr. Emes carried on morocco
+ dressing, his business being located on Saugus river, on the spot now occupied by
+ Scott's Flannel Mills.</p>
+ <p>In 1817-18 Mr. Joseph Cheever represented the town, and again in 1820-21; also, in
+ 1831-32, and again, for the last time, in 1835. After having served the town seven
+ times in the legislature, <a name="page150" id="page150"></a><span
+ class="pagenum">[pg 150]</span> he seems to have quietly retired from political
+ affairs.</p>
+ <p>In 1822 Dr. Abijah Cheever was the Representative, and again in 1829-30. The
+ doctor held a commission as surgeon in the army at the time of our last war with
+ Great Britain. He was a man very decided in his manners, had a will of his own, and
+ liked to have people respect it.</p>
+ <p>In 1823 Mr. Jonathan Makepeace was elected. His business was the manufacture of
+ snuff, at the old mills in the eastern part of the town, now owned by Sweetser
+ Brothers, and known as the Sweetser Mills.</p>
+ <p>In 1826-28 Mr. John Shaw was the Representative.</p>
+ <p>In 1827 Mr. William Jackson was elected.</p>
+ <p>In 1833-34 Mr. Zaccheus N. Stocker represented the town. Mr. Stocker held various
+ offices, and looked very closely after the interests of the town.</p>
+ <p>In 1837-38 Mr. William W. Boardman was the Representative. He has filled a great
+ many offices in the town.</p>
+ <p>In 1839 Mr. Charles Sweetser was elected, and again in 1851. Mr. Sweetser was
+ largely engaged in the manufacture of snuff and cigars. He was a gentleman very
+ decided in his opinions, and enjoyed the confidence of the people to a large
+ degree.</p>
+ <p>In 1840, the year of the great log cabin campaign, Mr. Francis Dizer was
+ elected.</p>
+ <p>In 1841 Mr. Benjamin Hitchings, Jr., was elected, and in 1842 the town was
+ represented by Mr. Stephen E. Hawkes.</p>
+ <p>In 1843-44 Benjamin F. Newhall, Esq., was the Representative, Mr. Newhall was a
+ man of large and varied experience, and held various offices, always looking sharply
+ after the real interests of the town. He also held the office of County
+ Commissioner.</p>
+ <p>In 1845 Mr. Pickmore Jackson was the Representative. He has also held various
+ offices in the town, and has since served on the school committee with good
+ acceptance.</p>
+ <p>In 1846-47 Mr. Sewall Boardman represented the town.</p>
+ <p>In 1852 Mr. George H. Sweetser was the Representative. Mr. Sweetser has also held
+ a seat in our State Senate two years, and filled various town offices. He was a
+ prompt and energetic business man, engaged in connection with his brother, Mr.
+ Charles A. Sweetser, in the manufacture of snuff and cigars.</p>
+ <p>In 1853 Mr. John B. Hitching was elected. He has held various offices in the
+ town.</p>
+ <p>In 1854 the town was represented by Mr. Samuel Hawkes, who has also served in
+ several other positions, proving himself a very straightforward and reliable man.</p>
+ <p>In 1855 Mr. Richard Mansfield was elected. He was for many years Tax Collector and
+ Constable, and when he laid his hand on a man's shoulder, in the name of the law, the
+ duty was performed in such a good-natured manner that it really did not seem so very
+ bad, after all.</p>
+ <p>In 1856 Mr. William H. Newhall represented the town. He has held the offices of
+ Town Clerk and Selectman longer than any other person in town, and is still in
+ office.</p>
+ <p>In 1857 Mr. Jacob B. Calley was elected.</p>
+ <p>In 1858 the district system was adopted, and Mr. Jonathan Newhall was elected to
+ represent the twenty-fourth Essex District, comprising the towns of Saugus, Lynnfield
+ and Middleton.</p>
+ <a name="page151" id="page151"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 151]</span>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="images/image19_full.png"><img src="images/image19_thumbnail.png"
+ alt="&lt;i&gt;Sketch of Saugus.&lt;/i&gt;" /></a>
+ <p><i>Sketch of Saugus.</i></p>
+ </div>
+ <p>In 1861 Mr. Harmon Hall represented the District. Mr. Hall is a very energetic
+ business man, and has accumulated a very handsome property by <a name="page152"
+ id="page152"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 152]</span> the manufacture of boots and
+ shoes. He has held various other important positions, and has been standing Moderator
+ in all town meetings, always putting business through by daylight.</p>
+ <p>In 1863 Mr. John Hewlett was elected. He resides in that part of the town called
+ North Saugus, and was for a long series of years a manufacturer of snuff and
+ cigars.</p>
+ <p>In 1864 Mr. Charles W. Newhall was the Representative.</p>
+ <p>In 1867 Mr. Sebastian S. Dunn represented the District. Mr. Dunn was a dealer in
+ snuff, cigars and spices, and is now engaged in farming in Dakota.</p>
+ <p>In 1870 Mr. John Armitage represented the District&mdash;the twentieth
+ Essex&mdash;comprising the towns of Saugus, Lynnfield, Middleton and Topsfield. He
+ has been engaged in the woollen business most of his life; formerly a partner with
+ Pranker &amp; Co. He has also held other town offices with great acceptance.</p>
+ <p>J.B. Calley succeeded Mr. Armitage, it being the second time he had been elected.
+ Otis M. Hitchings was the next Representative, a shoe manufacturer, being elected
+ over A.A. Scott, Esq., the republican candidate.</p>
+ <p>Joseph Whitehead was the next Representative from Saugus, a grocer in business. He
+ was then and still is Town Treasurer, repeatedly having received every vote cast. J.
+ Allston Newhall was elected in 1878 and for several years was selectman.</p>
+ <p>Albert H. Sweetser was our last Representative, elected in 1882-3, by one of the
+ largest majorities ever given in the District. He is a snuff manufacturer, doing
+ business at Cliftondale, under the firm of Sweetser Bros., whom he succeeds in
+ business. Saugus is entitled to the next Representative in 1885-6. The womb of the
+ future will alone reveal his name.</p>
+ <p>The future of Saugus would seem to be well assured, having frequent trains to and
+ from Boston and Lynn, with enlarged facilities for building purposes, especially at
+ Cliftondale, where a syndicate has recently been formed, composed of Charles H. Bond,
+ Edward S. Kent, and Henry Waite, who have purchased thirty-four acres of land,
+ formerly belonging to the Anthony Hatch estate, which, with other adjoining lands are
+ to be laid out into streets and lots presenting such opportunities and facilities for
+ building as cannot fail to attract all who are desirious of obtaining suburban
+ residences, and thus largely add to the taxable property of Saugus and to the
+ prosperity of this interesting locality.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <a name="page153" id="page153"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 153]</span>
+ <h2>THE BARTHOLDI COLOSSUS.</h2>
+ <center>
+ By WILLIAM HOWE DOWNES.
+ </center>
+ <p>The project of erecting a colossal statue of Liberty, which shall at once serve as
+ a lighthouse and as a symbolic work of art, may be discussed from several different
+ points of view. The abstract idea, as it occurred to the sculptor, Mr. Bartholdi, was
+ noble. The colossus was to symbolize the historic friendship of the two great
+ republics, the United States and France; it was to further symbolize the idea of
+ freedom and fraternity which underlies the republican form of government. Lafayette
+ and Jefferson would have been touched by the project. If we are not touched by it, it
+ proves that we have forgotten much which it would become us to recall. Before our
+ nation was, the democratic idea had been for many years existing and expanding among
+ the French people; crushed again and again by tyrants, it ever rose, renewed and
+ fresh for the irrepressible conflict. Through all their vicissitudes the people of
+ France have upheld, unfaltering, their ideal&mdash;liberty, equality and fraternity.
+ Our own republic exists to-day because France helped us when England sought to crush
+ us. It is never amiss to freshen our memories as to these historic facts. The
+ symbolism of the colossus would therefore be very fine; it would have a meaning which
+ every one could understand. It would signify not only the amity of France and the
+ United States, and the republican idea of brotherhood and freedom, as I have said;
+ but it would also stand for American hospitality to the European emigrant, and Emma
+ Lazarus has thus imagined the colossus endowed with speech:</p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="line">
+ "Keep, ancient lands, your storied pomp!" cries she.
+ </div>
+ <div class="line">
+ With silent lips. "Give me your tired, your poor,
+ </div>
+ <div class="line">
+ Your huddled masses, yearning to breathe free;
+ </div>
+ <div class="line">
+ The wretched refuse of your teeming shore&mdash;
+ </div>
+ <div class="line">
+ Send these, the homeless, temptest-tost to me&mdash;
+ </div>
+ <div class="line">
+ I lift my lamp beside the golden door!"
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>Now, there can be no two ways of thinking among patriotic Americans as to this
+ aspect of the Bartholdi colossus question. It must be agreed that the motive of the
+ work is extremely grand, and that its significance would be glorious. The sculptor's
+ project was a generous inspiration, for which he must be cordially remembered. To be
+ sure, it may be said he is getting well advertised; that is very true, but it would
+ be mean in us to begrudge him what personal fame he may derive from the work. To
+ assume that the whole affair is a "job," or that it is entirely the outcome of one
+ man's scheming egotism and desire for notoriety, is to take a deplorably low view of
+ it; to draw unwarranted conclusions and to wrong ourselves. The money to pay for the
+ statue&mdash;about $250,000&mdash;was raised by popular subscription in France, under
+ the auspices of the Franco-American Union, an association of gentlemen whose
+ membership includes such names as Laboulaye, de Lafayette, de Rochambeau, de
+ Noailles, de Toqueville, de Witt, Martin, de Remusat. The identification of these
+ excellent men with the project should be a sufficient guarantee of its disinterested
+ character. The efforts made in this country to raise the
+ money&mdash;$250,000&mdash;required to build a suitable pedestal for the statue, are
+ a subject of every day comment, and the failure to obtain the whole amount is a
+ matter for no small degree of chagrin.</p>
+ <a name="page154" id="page154"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 154]</span>
+ <p>Who and what is Mr. Bartholdi? He is a native of Colmar, in Alsace, and comes of a
+ good stock; a pupil of the Lycee Louis-le-Grand, and of Ary Scheffer, he studied
+ first painting then sculpture, and after a journey in the East with Gerome,
+ established his atelier in Paris. He served in the irregular corps of Garibaldi
+ during the war of 1870, and the following year visited the United States. It is
+ admitted that he is a man of talent, but that he is not considered a great sculptor
+ in his own country is equally beyond doubt. He would not be compared, for instance,
+ with such men as Chapu, Dubois, Falguiere, Clesinger, Mercie, Fremiet, men who stand
+ in the front rank of their profession. The list of his works is not long. It includes
+ statues of General Rapp, Vercingetorix, Vauban, Champollion, Lafayette and Rouget de
+ l'Isle; ideal groups entitled "Genius in the Grasp of Misery," and "the Malediction
+ of Alsace;" busts of Messrs. Erckmann and Chatrain; single figures called "Le
+ Vigneron," "Genie Funebre" and "Peace;" and a monument to Martin Schoengauer in the
+ form of a fountain for the courtyard of the Colmar Museum. There may be a few others.
+ Last, but by no means least, there is the great Lion of Belfort, his best work. This
+ is about 91 by 52 feet in dimensions, and is carved from a block of reddish Vosges
+ stone. It is intended to commemorate the defence of Belfort against the German army
+ in 1870, an episode of heroic interest. The immense animal is represented as wounded
+ but still capable of fighting, half lying, half standing, with an expression of rage
+ and mighty defiance. It is not too much to say that Mr. Bartholdi in this case has
+ shown a fine appreciation of the requirements of colossal sculpture. He has
+ sacrificed all unnecessary details, and, taking a lesson from the old Egyptian
+ stone-cutters, has presented an impressive arrangement of simple masses and unvexed
+ surfaces which give to the composition a marvellous breadth of effect. The lion is
+ placed in a sort of rude niche on the side of a rocky hill, which is the foundation
+ of the fortress of Belfort. It is visible at a great distance, and is said to be
+ strikingly noble from every point of view. The idea is not original, however well it
+ may have been carried out, for the Lion of Lucerne by Thorwaldsen is its prototype on
+ a smaller scale and commemorates an event of somewhat similar character. The bronze
+ equestrian statue of Vercingetorix, the fiery Gallic chieftain, in the Clermont
+ museum, is full of violent action. The horse is flying along with his legs in
+ positions which set all the science of Mr. Muybridge at defiance; the man is
+ brandishing his sword and half-turning in his saddle to shout encouragement to his
+ followers. The whole is supported by a bit of artificial rock-work under the horse,
+ and the body of a dead Gaul lies close beside it. In the statue of Rouget de l'Isle
+ we see a young man striking an orator's attitude, with his right arm raised in a
+ gesture which seems to say:</p>
+ <p>"<i>Aux armes, citoyens / Formes vos bataillons!</i>"</p>
+ <p>The Lafayette, in New York, is perhaps a mediocre statue, but even so, it is
+ better than most of our statues. A Frenchman has said of it that the figure
+ "resembles rather a young tenor hurling out his C sharp, than a hero offering his
+ heart and sword to liberty." It represents our ancient ally extending his left hand
+ in a gesture of greeting, while his right hand, which holds his sword, is pressed
+ against his breast in a somewhat theatrical movement. It will be inferred that the
+ general criticism to <a name="page155" id="page155"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg
+ 155]</span> be made upon Mr. Bartholdi's statues is that they are violent and want
+ repose. The Vercingetorix, the Rouget de l'Isle, the Lafayette, all have this
+ exaggerated stress of action. They have counterbalancing features of merit, no doubt,
+ but none of so transcendent weight that we can afford to overlook this grave
+ defect.</p>
+ <p>Coming now to the main question, which it is the design of this paper to discuss,
+ the inquiry arises: What of the colossal statue of Liberty as a work of art? For, no
+ matter how noble the motive may be, or how generous the givers, it must after all be
+ subjected to this test. If it is not a work of art, the larger it is, the more
+ offensive it must be. There are not wanting critics who maintain that colossal
+ figures cannot be works of art; they claim that such representations of the human
+ form are unnatural and monstrous, and it is true that they are able to point out some
+ "terrible examples" of modern failures, such, for instance, as the "Bavaria" statue
+ at Munich. But these writers appear to forget that the "Minerva" of the Parthenon and
+ the Olympian Jupiter were the works of the greatest sculptor of ancient times, and
+ that no less a man than Michael Angelo was the author of the "David" and "Moses." It
+ is therefore apparent that those who deny the legitimacy of colossal sculptures <i>in
+ toto</i> go too far; but it is quite true that colossal works have their own laws and
+ are subject to peculiar conditions. Mr. Lesbazeilles<a id="footnotetag7"
+ name="footnotetag7"></a><a href="#footnote7"><sup>7</sup></a> says that "colossal
+ statuary is in its proper place when it expresses power, majesty, the qualities that
+ inspire respect and fear; but it would be out of place if it sought to please us by
+ the expression of grace.... Its function is to set forth the sublime and the
+ grandiose." The colossi found among the ruins of Egyptian Temples and Palaces cannot
+ be seen without emotion, for if many of them are admirable only because of their
+ great size, still no observer can avoid a feeling of astonishment on account of the
+ vast energy, courage and industry of the men of old who could vanquish such gigantic
+ difficulties. At the same time it will not do to assume that the Egyptian stone
+ cutters were not artists. The great Sphinx of Giseh, huge as it is, is far from being
+ a primitive and vulgar creation. "The portions of the head which have been
+ preserved," says Mr. Charles Blanc, "the brow, the eyebrows, the corners of the eyes,
+ the passage from the temples to the cheek-bones, and from the cheek-bones to the
+ cheek, the remains of the mouth and chin,&mdash;all this testifies to an
+ extraordinary fineness of chiselling. The entire face has a solemn serenity and a
+ sovereign goodness." Leaving aside all consideration of the artistic merits of other
+ Egyptian colossi,&mdash;those at Memphis, Thebes, Karnac and Luxor, with the twin
+ marvels of Amenophis-Memnon&mdash;we turn to the most famous colossus of antiquity,
+ that at Rhodes, only to find that we have even less evidence on which to base an
+ opinion as to its quality than is available in the case of the numerous primitive
+ works of Egypt and of India. We know its approximate dimensions, the material of
+ which it was made, and that it was overthrown by an earthquake, but there seems to be
+ reason to doubt its traditional attitude, and nothing is known as to what it amounted
+ to as a work of art, though it may be presumed that, being the creation of a Greek,
+ it had the merits of its classic age and school. Of the masterpieces of Phidias it
+ may be said that they were designed for the interiors <a name="page156"
+ id="page156"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 156]</span> of Temples and were adopted
+ with consummate art to the places they occupied; they have been reconstructed for us
+ from authentic descriptions, and we are enabled to judge concerning that majestic and
+ ponderous beauty which made them the fit presentments of the greatest pagan deities.
+ I need say nothing of the immortal statues by Michael Angelo, and will therefore
+ hasten to consider the modern outdoor colossi which now exist in Europe&mdash;the St.
+ Charles Borromeo at Arona, Italy, the Bavaria at Munich, the Arminius in Westphalia,
+ Our Lady of Puy in France. The St. Charles Borromeo, near the shore of Lake Maggiore,
+ dates from 1697, and is the work of a sculptor known as Il Cerano. Its height is 76
+ feet, or with its pedestal, 114 feet. The arm is over 29 feet long, the nose 33
+ inches, and the forefinger 6 feet 4 inches. The statue is entirely of hammered copper
+ plates riveted together, supported by means of clamps and bands of iron on an
+ interior mass of masonry. The effect of the work is far from being artistic. It is in
+ a retired spot on a hill, a mile or two from the little village of Arona. The
+ Bavaria, near Munich, erected in 1850, is 51 feet high, on a pedestal about 26 feet
+ high, and is the work of Schwanthaler. It is of bronze and weighs about 78 tons. The
+ location of this monstrous lump of metal directly in front of a building emphasizes
+ its total want of sculptural merit, and makes it a doubly lamentable example of bad
+ taste and bombast. The Arminius colossal, on a height near Detmold in Westphalia, was
+ erected in 1875, is 65 feet high, and weighs 18 tons. The name of the sculptor is not
+ given by any of the authorities consulted, which is perhaps just as well. This statue
+ rests on "a dome-like summit of a monumental structure," and brandishes a sword 24
+ feet long in one hand. The Virgin of Puy is by Bonassieux, was set up in 1860, is 52
+ feet high, weighs 110 tons, and stands on a cliff some 400 feet above the town. It
+ is, like the Bavaria, of bronze, cast in sections, and made from cannons taken in
+ warfare. The Virgin's head is surmounted by a crown of stars, and she carries the
+ infant Christ on her left arm. The location of this statue is felicitous, but it has
+ no intrinsic value as an art work. It will be seen, then, that these outdoor colossi
+ of to-day do not afford us much encouragement to believe that Mr. Bartholdi will be
+ able to surmount the difficulties which have vanquished one sculptor after another in
+ their endeavors to perform similar prodigies. Sculpture is perhaps the most difficult
+ of the arts of design. There is an antique statue in the Louvre which displays such
+ wonderful anatomical knowledge, that Reynolds is said to have remarked, "to learn
+ that alone might consume the labor of a whole life." And it is an undeniable fact
+ that enlarging the scale of a statue adds in more than a corresponding degree to the
+ difficulties of the undertaking. The colossi of the ancients were to a great extent
+ designed for either the interiors or the exteriors of religious temples, where they
+ were artfully adapted to be seen in connection with architectural effects. Concerning
+ the sole prominent exception to this rule, the statue of Apollo at Rhodes, we have
+ such scant information that even its position is a subject of dispute. It has been
+ pointed out how the four modern outdoor colossi of Europe each and all fail to attain
+ the requirements of a work of art. All our inquiries, it appears then, lead to the
+ conclusion that Mr. Bartholdi has many chances against him, so far as we are able to
+ learn from <a name="page157" id="page157"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 157]</span>
+ an examination of the precedents, and in view of these facts it would be a matter for
+ surprise if the "Liberty" statue should prove to possess any title to the name of a
+ work of art. We reserve a final decision, however, as to this most important phase of
+ the affair, until the statue is in place.</p>
+ <p>The idea that great size in statues is necessarily vulgar, does not seem
+ admissible. It would be quite as just to condemn the paintings on a colossal scale in
+ which Tintoretto and Veronese so nobly manifested their exceptional powers. The size
+ of a work of art <i>per se</i> is an indifferent matter. Mere bigness or mere
+ littleness decides nothing. But a colossal work has its conditions of being: it must
+ conform to certain laws. It must be executed in a large style; it must represent a
+ grand idea; it must possess dignity and strength; it must convey the idea of power
+ and majesty; it must be located in a place where its surroundings shall augment
+ instead of detracting from its aspect of grandeur; it must be magnificent, for if not
+ it will be ridiculous. The engravings of Mr. Bartholdi's statue represent a woman
+ clad in a peplum and tunic which fall in ample folds from waist and shoulder to her
+ feet. The left foot, a trifle advanced supports the main weight of the body. The
+ right arm is uplifted in a vigorous movement and holds aloft a blazing torch. The
+ left hand grasps a tablet on which the date of the Declaration of Independence
+ appears; this is held rather close to the body and at a slight angle from it. The
+ head is that of a handsome, proud and brave woman. It is crowned by a diadem. The
+ arrangement of the draperies is, if one may judge from the pictures, a feature of
+ especial excellence in the design. There is merit in the disposition of the peplum or
+ that portion of the draperies flung back over the left shoulder, the folds of which
+ hang obliquely (from the left shoulder to the right side of the waist and thence
+ downward almost to the right knee,) thus breaking up the monotony of the
+ perpendicular lines formed by the folds of the tunic beneath. The movement of the
+ uplifted right arm is characterized by a certain <i>elan</i> which, however, does not
+ suggest violence; the carriage of the head is dignified, and so far as one may judge
+ from a variety of prints, the face is fine in its proportions and expression. I do
+ not find the movement of the uplifted arm violent, and, on the whole, am inclined to
+ believe the composition a very good one in its main features. There will be an
+ undeniable heaviness in the great masses of drapery, especially as seen from behind,
+ but the illusion as to the size of the figure created by its elevation on a pedestal
+ and foundation nearly twice as high as itself may do much towards obviating this
+ objection. The background of the figure will be the</p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="line">
+ ... Spacious firmament on high,
+ </div>
+ <div class="line">
+ With all the blue etherial sky,
+ </div>
+ <div class="line">
+ And spangled heavens ...
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>The island is far enough removed from the city so that no direct comparisons can
+ be made between the statue and any buildings. Seen from the deck of a steamer at a
+ distance say of a quarter of a mile, the horizon, formed by the roofs, towers, spires
+ and chimneys of three cities, will not appear higher than the lower half of the
+ pedestal. In other words the statue will neither be dwarfed nor magnified by the
+ contiguity of any discordant objects. It will stand alone. The abstract idea, as has
+ been said, is noble. The plan of utilizing the statue as a lighthouse at night does
+ not detract from its worth in this respect; it may be said to even emphasize the
+ allegorial sense of the work. <a name="page158" id="page158"></a><span
+ class="pagenum">[pg 158]</span> "Liberty enlightening the world," lights the way of
+ the sailor in the crowded harbor of the second commercial city of the world. The very
+ magnitude of the work typifies, after a manner, the vast extent of our country, and
+ the audacity of the scheme is not inappropriate in the place where it is to stand. It
+ may be, indeed, that when the statue is set up, we shall find it awkward and
+ offensive, as some critics have already prophecied: but that it must be so inevitably
+ does not appear to me to be a logical deduction from the information we have at hand
+ as to the artist and his plans. It is freely admitted that no modern work of this
+ nature has been successful, but that does not prove that this must absolutely be a
+ failure. The project ought not to be condemned in advance because of the great
+ difficulties surrounding it, its unequalled scope and its novelty. Mr. Bartholdi is
+ above all ingenious, bold, and fertile in resources; it would be a great pity not to
+ have him allowed every opportunity to carry out a design in which, as we have seen,
+ there are so many elements of interest and even of grandeur. It has been said that
+ "there does not exist on French soil such a bombastic work as this will be." Very
+ well; admitting for the sake of argument that it will be bombastic, shall we reject
+ and condemn a colossal statue before having seen it, because there is nothing like it
+ in France? And is it true that it will be bomastic? That is by no means demonstrated.
+ On the contrary an impartial examination of the design would show that the work has
+ been seriously conceived and thought out; that it does not lack dignity; that it is
+ intended to be full of spirit and significance. It would be the part of wisdom at
+ least to avoid dogmatism in an advance judgment as to its worth as a work of art, and
+ to wait awhile before pronouncing a final verdict.</p>
+ <p>Hazlitt tells of a conceited English painter who went to Rome, and when he got
+ into the Sistine Chapel, turning to his companion, said, "Egad, George, we're bit!"
+ Our own tendency is, because of our ignorance, to be sceptical and suspicious as to
+ foreign works of art, especially of a kind that are novel and daring. No one is so
+ hard to please as a simpleton. We are so afraid of being taken in, that we are
+ reluctant to commit ourselves in favor of any new thing until we have heard from
+ headquarters; but it appears to be considered a sign of knowledge to vituperate
+ pictures and statues which do not conform to some undefinable ideal standard of our
+ own invention. There is, of course, a class of indulgent critics who are pernicious
+ enough in their way; but the savage and destructive criticism of which I speak is
+ quite as ignorant and far more harmful. It assumes an air of authority based on a
+ superficial knowledge of art, and beguiles the public into a belief in its
+ infallibility by means of a smooth style and an occasional epigram the smartness of
+ which may and often does conceal a rank injustice. The expression of a hope that the
+ result of Mr. Bartholdi's labors "will be something better than another gigantic
+ asparagus stalk added to those that already give so comical a look to our sky-line,"
+ is truly an encouraging and generous utterance at this particular stage of the
+ enterprise, and equals in moderation the courteous remark that the statue "could not
+ fail to be ridiculous in the expanse of New York Bay."<a id="footnotetag8"
+ name="footnotetag8"></a><a href="#footnote8"><sup>8</sup></a> It is not necessary to
+ touch upon the question of courtesy at <a name="page159" id="page159"></a><span
+ class="pagenum">[pg 159]</span> all, but it is possible that one of our critics may
+ live to regret his vegetable metaphor, and the other to revise his prematurely
+ positive censure. There is a sketch in charcoal which represents the Bartholdi
+ colossus as the artist has seen it in his mind's eye, standing high above the waters
+ of the beautiful harbor at twilight, when the lights are just beginning to twinkle in
+ the distant cities and when darkness is softly stealing over the service of the busy
+ earth and sea. The mystery of evening enwraps the huge form of the statue, which
+ looms vaster than by day, and takes on an aspect of strange majesty, augmented by the
+ background of hurrying clouds which fill the upper portion of the sky. So seen, the
+ immense Liberty appears what the sculptor wishes and intends it to be, what we
+ Americans sincerely hope it may be,&mdash;a fitting memorial of an inspiring episode
+ in history, and a great work of modern art.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <h2>ELIZABETH.<a id="footnotetag9" name="footnotetag9"></a><a
+ href="#footnote9"><sup>9</sup></a></h2>
+ <h3>A ROMANCE OF COLONIAL DAYS.</h3>
+ <center>
+ BY FRANCES C. SPARHAWK, Author of "A Lazy Man's Work."
+ </center>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <h3>CHAPTER III.</h3>
+ <h4>IDLESSE.</h4>
+ <p>"Don't move your head, Elizabeth, keep it in that position a little longer," said
+ Katie Archdale, as she and her friend sat together the morning after the sail. "I
+ wish an artist were here to paint you so; you've no idea how striking you are."</p>
+ <p>"No, I have not," laughed the other, forgetting to keep still as she spoke, and
+ turning the face that had been toward the window full upon her companion. The scene
+ that Elizabeth's eyes had been dwelling upon was worthy of admiration; her enthusiasm
+ had not escaped her in any word, but her eyes were enraptured with it, and her whole
+ face, warmed with faint reflection of the inward glow, was beautiful with youth, and
+ thought, and feeling.</p>
+ <p>"Now you've spoilt it," cried Katie, "now you are merely a nice-looking young
+ lady; you were beautiful before, perfectly beautiful, like a picture that one can
+ look at, and look at, and go away filled with, and come back to, and never tire of.
+ The people that see you so worship you, but then, nobody has a chance to do it. You
+ just sit and don't say much except once in a while when you wake up, then you are
+ brilliant, but never tender, as you know how to be. You give people an impression
+ that you are hard. Sometimes I should like to shake you."</p>
+ <p>Elizabeth laughed.</p>
+ <p>"That's the way you worship me," she answered. "I suspected it was a strange kind
+ of adoration, largely made up of snubbing."</p>
+ <p>"It's not snubbing," retorted Katie, "it is trying to rouse you to what you you
+ might be. But I am wasting my breath; you don't believe a word I say."</p>
+ <p>"I should like to believe it," returned the girl, smiling a little sadly. "But
+ even if I did believe every word of it, it would seem to me a great deal nicer to be
+ like you, beautiful all the time, <a name="page160" id="page160"></a><span
+ class="pagenum">[pg 160]</span> and one whom everybody loves. But there's one thing
+ to be said, if it were I who were beautiful, I could'nt have the pleasure I do in
+ looking at you, and perhaps, after all, I shouldn't get any more enjoyment out of
+ it."</p>
+ <p>"Oh, yes, you would," retorted the other, then bit her lips angrily at her
+ inadvertence. A shrewd smile flitted over Elizabeth's face, but she made no comment,
+ and Katie went on hurriedly to ask, "What shall we do to amuse ourselves to-day,
+ Betsey?" Another slight movement of the hearer's lips responded. This name was
+ Katie's special term of endearment, and never used except when they were alone; no
+ one else ever called her by it.</p>
+ <p>"I don't know," she said. "Let us sit here as we are doing now. Move your chair
+ nearer the window and look down on the river. See the blue-black shadows on it. And
+ look at the forests, how they stretch away with a few clearings here and there. A
+ city behind us, to be sure, a little city, but before us the forests, and the
+ Indians. I wonder what it all means for us."</p>
+ <p>"The axe for one, the gun for the other," retorted Katie with a hardness which
+ belief in the savageness and treachery of the red man had instilled into the age.
+ "The forests mean fortune to some of us," she added.</p>
+ <p>"Yes," answered Elizabeth slowly, finding an unsatisfactory element in her
+ companion's summary.</p>
+ <p>"Do you mean that we shall have to shoot down a whole race? That is dreadful," she
+ added after a pause.</p>
+ <p>"You and I have nothing to do with all that," returned Katie.</p>
+ <p>Elizabeth waited in despair of putting the case as she felt it.</p>
+ <p>"I was thinking," she said at last, "that if we have a whole land of forests to
+ cut down and of cities to build up, somehow, everything will be different here from
+ the Old England. I often wonder what it is to be in this New World. It must be unlike
+ the Old," she repeated.</p>
+ <p>"I don't wonder," returned Katie, "and that's just what you shouldn't do. Wonder
+ what you're going to wear to-morrow when we dine at Aunt Faith's, or whether Master
+ Harwin will call this morning, or Master Waldo, or wonder about something
+ sensible."</p>
+ <p>"Which means, 'or if it's to be Master Archdale,'" retorted Elizabeth, smiling
+ into the laughing eyes fixed upon her face, and making them fall at the keenness of
+ her glance, while a brighter rose than Katie cared to show tinted the creamy skin and
+ made her bend a moment to arrange the rosette of her slipper. The movement showed her
+ hair in all its perfection, for at this early hour it had not been tortured into
+ elaborateness, but as she sat in her bedroom talking with her guest, was loosely
+ coiled to be out of the way, and thus drawn back in its wavy abundance showed now
+ burnished, and now a darker brown, as the sunlight or the shadow fell upon it.</p>
+ <p>"He's not always sensible," she answered, lifting her head again with a half
+ defiant gesture, and smiling. Katie's smile was irresistible, it won her admirers by
+ the score, not altogether because it gave a glimpse of beautiful teeth, or because
+ her mouth was at its perfection then, but that it was an expression of childlike
+ abandonment to the spirit of the moment, which charmed the gay because they
+ sympathized with it and the serious because it was a mood of mind into which they
+ would be glad to enter. "Stephen has not been quite himself lately, rather stupid,"
+ and she looked as if she were not unsuspicious of the reason.</p>
+ <a name="page161" id="page161"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 161]</span>
+ <p>"Too many of us admirers, he thinks?" laughed Elizabeth. "For he is bright enough
+ when he takes the trouble to speak, but generally he doesn't seem to consider any one
+ of sufficient importance to amuse."</p>
+ <p>"That is not so," cried Katie, "you are mistaken. But you don't know Stephen very
+ well," she added. "What a pity that you are not living here, then you would, and then
+ we should have known each other all our lives, instead of only since we went to
+ school together. What good times we had at Madam Flamingo's. There you sit, now, and
+ look as meekly reproving as if you had'nt invented that name for her yourself. It was
+ so good, it has stood by her ever since."</p>
+ <p>"Did I? I had forgotten it."</p>
+ <p>"Perhaps, at least, you remember the red shawl that got her the nickname? It was
+ really something nice,&mdash;the shawl, I mean, but the old dame was so ridiculously
+ proud of it and so perpetually flaunting it, she must have thought it very becoming.
+ We girls were tired of the sight of it. And one day, when you were provoked with her
+ about something and left her and came into the schoolroom after hours, you walked up
+ to a knot of us, and with your air of scorn said something about Madam Flamingo.
+ Didn't it spread like wildfire? Our set will call that venerable dame 'Flamingo' to
+ the end of her days."</p>
+ <p>"I suppose we shall, but I had no recollection that it was I who gave her the
+ name."</p>
+ <p>"Yes, you gave it to her," repeated Katie. "You may be very sure I should not have
+ forgotten it if I had been so clever. Those were happy days for all their petty
+ tribulations," she added after a pause.</p>
+ <p>Elizabeth looked at her sitting there meditative.</p>
+ <p>"I should think these were happy days for you, Katie. What more can you want than
+ you have now?"</p>
+ <p>"Oh, the roc's eggs, I suppose," answered the girl. "No, seriously, I am pretty
+ likely to get what I want most. I am happy enough, only not absolutely happy quite
+ yet."</p>
+ <p>"Why not?"</p>
+ <p>"Our good minister would say it was not intended for mortals."</p>
+ <p>"If I felt like being quite content I should not give it up because somebody else
+ said it was too much for me."</p>
+ <p>"Oh, well," said Katie, laughing, "it has nothing to do with our good Parson
+ Shurtleff, anyway."</p>
+ <p>"I thought not. What, then?"</p>
+ <p>The other did not answer, but sat looking out of the window with eyes that were
+ not studying the landscape. Whether her little troubles dissolved into the cloudless
+ sky, like mist too thin to take shape, or whether she preferred to keep her
+ perplexities to herself is uncertain, but when she spoke it was about another
+ reminiscence of school days.</p>
+ <p>"Do you remember that morning Stephen came to see me?" she began. "Madam thought
+ at first that Master Archdale must be my father, and she gave a most gracious assent
+ to my request to go to walk with him. I was dying of fun all the time, I could
+ scarcely keep my face straight; then, when she caught a glimpse of him as we were
+ going out of the hall, she said in a dubious tone, 'Your brother, I presume, Mistress
+ Archdale?' But I never heard a word. I was near the street door and I put myself the
+ other side of it without much delay. So did Stephen. And we went off laughing. He
+ said I was a wicked little cousin, and he spelled it 'cozen;' but he didn't seem to
+ mind my wickedness at all." There was a <a name="page162" id="page162"></a><span
+ class="pagenum">[pg 162]</span> pause, during which Katie looked at her smiling
+ friend, and her own face dimpled bewitchingly. "This is exactly what you would have
+ done, Elizabeth," she said. "You would have heard that tentative remark of Madam's,
+ of course you would, and you would have stood still in the hall and explained that
+ Stephen was your cousin, instead of your brother, and have lost your walk beyond a
+ doubt, you know the Flamingo. Now, I was just as good as you would have been, only, I
+ was wiser. I, too, told Madam that he was my cousin, but I waited until I came home
+ to do it. The poor old lady could not help herself then; it was impossible to take
+ back my fun, and she could not punish me, because she had given me permission to go,
+ nor could she affirm that I heard her remark, for it was made in an undertone. There
+ was nothing left for her but to wrap her illustrious shawl about her and look
+ dignified." "Do you think Master Harwin will come to-day?" Katie asked a few moments
+ later, "and Master Waldo? I hope they will all three be here together; it will be
+ fun, they can entertain each other, they are so fond of one another."</p>
+ <p>"Katie! Katie!"</p>
+ <p>The girl broke into a laugh.</p>
+ <p>"Oh, yes, I remember," she said, "Stephen is your property."</p>
+ <p>"Don't," cried Elizabeth, with sudden gravity and paleness in her face. "I think
+ it was wicked in me to jest about such a sacred thing. Let me forget it."</p>
+ <p>"I wont tease you if you really care. But if it was wicked, it was a great deal
+ more my doing, and Master Waldo's, than your's or Stephen's. We wanted to see the
+ fun. Your great fault, Elizabeth, is that you vex yourself too much about little
+ things. Do you know it will make you have wrinkles?"</p>
+ <p>This question was put with so much earnestness that Elizabeth laughed
+ heartily.</p>
+ <p>"One thing is sure," she said, "I shall not remain ignorant of my failings through
+ want of being told them while I'm here. It would be better to go home."</p>
+ <p>"Only try it!" cried Katie, going to her and kissing her. "But now, Elizabeth, I
+ want to tell you something in all seriousness. Just listen to me, and profit by it,
+ if you can. I've found it out for myself. The more you laugh at other people's
+ absurdities the fewer of your own will be noticed, because, you see, it implies that
+ you are on the right standpoint to get a review of other people."</p>
+ <p>"That sounds more like eighty than eighteen."</p>
+ <p>"Elizabeth, it is the greatest mistake in the world, I mean just that, to keep
+ back all your wisdom until you get to be eighty. What use will it be to you then? All
+ you can do with it will be to see how much more sensibly you might have acted. That's
+ what will happen to you, my dear, if you don't look out. But at eighteen&mdash;I am
+ nineteen&mdash;everything is before you, and you want to know how to guide your life
+ to get all the best things you can out of it without being wickedly selfish&mdash;at
+ least I do. Your aspirations, I suppose, are fixed upon the forests and the Indian,
+ and problems concerning the future of the American Colonies. But I'm more reverent
+ than you, I think the Lord is able to take care of those."</p>
+ <p>Elizabeth looked vaguely troubled by the fallacy which she felt in this speech
+ without being quite willing or able to bring it to light.</p>
+ <p>"But, remember, I was twenty-one my last birthday," she answered. "I ought to take
+ a broader view of things."</p>
+ <a name="page163" id="page163"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 163]</span>
+ <p>"On the contrary, you're getting to be an old maid. You should consider which of
+ your suitors you want, and say 'yes' to him on the spot. By the way, what has become
+ of your friend, the handsome Master Edmonson?"</p>
+ <p>Elizabeth colored.</p>
+ <p>"I don't know," she answered. "Father has heard from him since he went away, so I
+ suppose that he is well."</p>
+ <p>"And he has not written to you?"</p>
+ <p>"No, he has only sent a message." Then, after a pause, "He said that he was coming
+ back in the autumn."</p>
+ <p>"I hope so," cried Katie, "he is a most fascinating man, and of such family!
+ Stephen was speaking of him the other day. He was very attentive, was he not,
+ Betsey?"</p>
+ <p>"Ye-es, I suppose so. But there was something that I fancied papa did not
+ like."</p>
+ <p>"I'm so sorry," cried Katie. She rose, and crossing the little space between
+ herself and her friend, dropped upon the footstool at Elizabeth's feet, and laying
+ her arms in the girl's lap and resting her chin upon them, looked up and added, "Tell
+ me all about it, my dear."</p>
+ <p>"There is nothing to tell," answered Elizabeth, caressing the beautiful hair and
+ looking into the eyes that had tears of sympathy in them.</p>
+ <p>"I was afraid something had gone wrong, afraid that you would care."</p>
+ <p>Elizabeth sat thinking.</p>
+ <p>"I don't know," she said slowly at last, "I don't know whether I should really
+ care or not if I never saw him again."</p>
+ <p>Her companion looked at her a moment in silence, and when she began to speak it
+ was about something else.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <h3>CHAPTER IV.</h3>
+ <h4>GIRDING ON THE HARNESS.</h4>
+ <p>Later that same morning a gentleman calling upon Mistress Katie Archdale was told
+ that he would find her with friends in the garden. Walking through the paths with a
+ leisurely step which the impatience of his mood chafed against, he came upon a
+ picture that he never forgot.</p>
+ <p>Great stretches of sunshine lay on the garden and in it brilliant beds of flowers
+ glowed with their richest lights, poppies folded their gorgeous robes closely about
+ them, Arab fashion, to keep out the heat; hollyhocks stood in their stateliness
+ flecked with changing shadows from the aspen tree near by. Beds of tiger lilies,
+ pinks, larkspur, sweetwilliams, canterbury bells, primroses, gillyflowers, lobelia,
+ bloomed in a luxuriance that the methodical box which bordered them could not
+ restrain. But the garden was by no means a blaze of sunshine, for ash trees, maples,
+ elms, and varieties of the pine were there. Trumpet-vines climbed on the wall, and
+ overtopping that, caught at trellises prepared to receive them, and formed screens of
+ shadows that flickered in every breeze and changed their places with the changing
+ sun. But it was only with a passing glance that the visitor saw these things, his
+ eyes were fixed upon an arbor at the end of the garden; it was covered with clematis,
+ while two great elms met overhead at its entrance and shaded the path to it for a
+ little distance. Under these elms stood a group of young people. He was unannounced,
+ and had opportunity without being himself perceived, to scan this little group as he
+ went forward. His expression varied with each member of it, but showed an interest of
+ some sort in each. Now it was full of <a name="page164" id="page164"></a><span
+ class="pagenum">[pg 164]</span> passionate delight; then it changed as his look fell
+ upon a tall young man with dark eyes and a bearing that in its most gracious moments
+ seemed unable to lose a touch of haughtiness, but whose face now was alive with a
+ restful joy. The gazer, as he perceived this happiness, so wanting in himself,
+ scowled with a bitter hate and looked instantly toward another of the party, this
+ time with an expression of triumph. At the fourth and last member of the group his
+ glance though scowling, was contemptuous; but the receiver was as unconscious of
+ contempt as he felt undeserving of it. From him the gazer's eyes returned to the
+ person at whom he had first looked. She was standing on the step of the arbor, an end
+ of the clematis vine swaying lightly back and forth over her head, and almost
+ touching her bright hair which was now towered high in the fashion of the day. She
+ was holding a spray of the vine in her hand. She had fastened one end in the hair of
+ a young lady who stood beside her, and was now bringing the other about her neck,
+ arranging the leaves and flowers with skilful touches. Three men, including the
+ new-comer, watched her pretty air of absorption, and the deftness of her taper
+ fingers, the sweep of her dark lashes on her cheek as from the height of her step she
+ looked down at her companion, the curves of her beautiful mouth that at the moment
+ was daintly holding a pin with which the end of the spray was to be fastened upon the
+ front of the other's white dress. It was certainly effective there. Yet none of the
+ three men noticed this, or saw that between the two girls the question as to beauty
+ was a question of time, that while the one face was blooming now in the perfection of
+ its charm, the charm of the other was still in its calyx. The adorner intuitively
+ felt something of this. Perhaps she was not the less fond of her friend that the
+ charms she saw in her were not patent to everybody. Bring her forward as much as she
+ might, Katie felt that Elizabeth Royal would never be a rival. She even shrank from
+ this kind of prominence into which Katie's play was bringing her now. She had been
+ taken in hand at unawares and showed an impatience that if the other were not quick,
+ would oblige her to leave the work unfinished.</p>
+ <p>"There," cried Katie, at last giving the leaves a final pat of arrangement, "that
+ looks well, don't you think so, Master Waldo?"</p>
+ <p>"Good morning, Mistress Archdale," broke in a voice before Waldo could answer.
+ "And you, Mistress Royal," bowing low to her. "After our late hours last night,
+ permit me to felicitate you upon your good health this morning, and&mdash;" he was
+ about to add, "your charming appearance," but something in the girl's eyes as she
+ looked full at him held back the words, and for a moment ruffled his smooth
+ assurance. But as he recovered himself and turned to salute the gentlemen, the smile
+ on his lips had triumph through its vexation.</p>
+ <p>"My proud lady, keep your pride a little longer," he said to himself. And as he
+ bowed to Stephen Archdale with a dignity as great as Stephen's own, he was thinking:
+ "My morning in that hot office has not been in vain. I know your weak point now, my
+ lofty fellow, and it is there that I will undermine you. You detest business, indeed!
+ John Archdale feels that with his only son in England studying for the ministry he
+ needs a son-in-law in partnership with him. The thousands which I have been putting
+ into his business this morning are well spent, they make me welcome here. Yes, your
+ uncle needs me, <a name="page165" id="page165"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg
+ 165]</span> Stephen Archdale, for your clever papa is not always brotherly in his
+ treatment, he has more than once brought heavy losses upon the younger firm. It's a
+ part of my pleasure in prospect that now I shall be able to checkmate him in such
+ schemes, perhaps to bring back a little of the loss upon the shoulders of his heir.
+ Ah, I am safer from you than you dream." He turned to Waldo, and as the two men
+ bowed, they looked at one another steadily. Each was remembering their conversation
+ the night before over some Bordeaux in Waldo's room, for they were staying at the
+ same inn and often spent an hour together. They had drunk sparingly, but, just
+ returned from their sail, each was filled with Katie Archdale's beauty, and each had
+ spoken out his purpose plainly, Waldo with an assurance that, if it savored a little
+ of conceit, was full of manliness, the other with a half-smothered fierceness of
+ passion that argued danger to every obstacle in its way.</p>
+ <p>"You've come at the very right moment, Master Harwin," broke in Katie's
+ unconscious voice, and she smiled graciously, as she had a habit of doing at
+ everybody; "We were talking about you not two minutes ago."</p>
+ <p>"Then I am just in time to save my character."</p>
+ <p>"Don't be too sure about that," returned Miss Royal.</p>
+ <p>Waldo laughed, and Katie exchanged glances with him, and smiled mischievously.</p>
+ <p>"No, don't be too sure; it will depend upon whether you say 'yes,' or 'no,' to my
+ question. We were wondering something about you."</p>
+ <p>Harwin's heart sank, though he returned her smile and her glance with interest.
+ For there were questions she might ask which would inconvenience him, but they should
+ not embarrass him.</p>
+ <p>"We were wondering," pursued Katie, "if you had ever been presented. Have
+ you?"</p>
+ <p>As the sun breaks out from a heavy cloud, the light returned to Harwin's blue
+ eyes.</p>
+ <p>"Yes," he said, "four years ago. I went to court with my uncle, Sir Rydal Harwin,
+ and his majesty was gracious enough to nod in answer to my profound reverence."</p>
+ <p>"It was a very brilliant scene, I am sure, and very interesting."</p>
+ <p>"Deeply interesting," returned Harwin with all the traditional respect of an
+ Englishman for his sovereign. Archdale's lip curled a trifle at what seemed to him
+ obsequiousness, but Harwin was not looking at him.</p>
+ <p>"Stephen has been," pursued Katie, "and he says it was very fine, but for all that
+ he does not seem to care at all about it. He says he would rather go off for a day's
+ hunting any time. The ladies looked charming, he said, and the gentlemen magnificent;
+ but he was bored to death, for all that."</p>
+ <p>"In order to appreciate it fully," returned Archdale, "it would be necessary that
+ one should be majesty." He straightened himself as he spoke, and looked at Harwin
+ with such gravity that the latter, meeting the light of his eyes, was puzzled whether
+ this was jest or earnest, until Miss Royal's laugh relieved his uncertainty. Katie
+ laid her hand on the speaker's arm and shook it lightly.</p>
+ <p>"You told me I should be sure to enjoy it," she said. "Now, what do you mean?"</p>
+ <p>"Ah! but you would be queen," said Harwin, "queen in your own right, a divine
+ right of beauty that no one can resist."</p>
+ <p>Katie looked at him, disposed for a moment to be angry, but her love of admiration
+ <a name="page166" id="page166"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 166]</span> could not
+ resist the worship of his eyes, and the lips prepared to pout curved into a smile not
+ less bewitching that the brightness of anger was still in her cheeks. Archdale and
+ Waldo turned indignant glances on the speaker, but it was manifestly absurd to resent
+ a speech that pleased the object of it, and that each secretly felt would not have
+ sounded ill if he had made it himself. Elizabeth looked from Katie to Harwin with
+ eyes that endorsed his assertion, and as the latter read her expression his scornful
+ wonder in the boat returned.</p>
+ <p>"Why are we all standing outside in the heat?" cried the hostess. "Let us go into
+ the arbor, there is plenty of room to move about there, we have had a dozen together
+ in it many a time." She passed in under the arch as she spoke, and the others
+ followed her. There in her own way which was not so very witty or wise, and yet was
+ very charming, she held her little court, and the three men who had been in love with
+ her at the beginning of the hour were still more in love at the end of it. And
+ Elizabeth who watched her with an admiration as deep as their's, if more tranquil,
+ did not wonder that it was so. Katie did not forget her, nor did the gentlemen, or at
+ least two of them, forget to be courteous, but if she had known what became of the
+ spray of clematis which being in the way as she turned her head, she had soon
+ unfastened and let slip to the ground, she would not have wondered, nor would she
+ have cared. If she had seen Archdale's heel crush it unheedingly as he passed out of
+ the arbor, the beat of her pulses would never have varied.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <h3>CHAPTER V.</h3>
+ <h4>ANTICIPATIONS.</h4>
+ <p>It was early in December. The months had brought serious changes to all but one of
+ the group that the August morning had found in Mr. Archdale's garden. Two had
+ disappeared from the scene of their defeat, and to two of them the future seemed
+ opening up vistas of happiness as deep as the present joy. Elizabeth Royal alone was
+ a spectator in the events of the past months, and even in her mind was a questioning
+ that was at least wonderment, if not pain.</p>
+ <p>Kenelm Waldo was in the West Indies, trying to escape from his pain at Katie
+ Archdale's refusal, but carrying it everywhere with him, as he did recollections of
+ her; to have lost them would have been to have lost his memory altogether.</p>
+ <p>Ralph Harwin also had gone. His money was still in the firm of John Archdale &amp;
+ Co., which it had made one of the richest in the Colonies; its withdrawal was now to
+ be expected at any moment, for Harwin did not mean to return, and Archdale, while
+ endeavoring to be ready for this, saw that it would cripple him. Harwin had been
+ right in believing that he should make himself very useful and very acceptable to
+ Katie's father. For Archdale who was more desious of his daughter's happiness than of
+ anything else in the world, was disappointed that this did not lie in the direction
+ which, on the whole, would have been for his greatest advantage. Harwin and he could
+ have done better for Katie in the way of fortune than Stephen Archdale with his
+ distaste for business would do. The Archdale connection had always been a dream of
+ his, until lately when this new possibility had superseded his nephew's interest in
+ his thoughts. There was an address and business keenness about Harwin that, if
+ Stephen possessed at all, was latent in him. The Colonel was wealthy enough to afford
+ <a name="page167" id="page167"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 167]</span> the luxury
+ of a son who was only a fine gentleman. Stephen was a good fellow, he was sure, and
+ Katie would be happy with him. And yet&mdash;but even these thoughts left him as he
+ leaned back in his chair that day, sitting alone after dinner, and a mist came over
+ his eyes as he thought that in less than a fortnight his home would no longer be his
+ little daughter's.</p>
+ <p>"It will be all right," he said to himself with that sigh of resignation with
+ which we yield to the inevitable, as if there were a certain choice and merit in
+ doing it. "It is well that the affairs of men are in higher hands than ours." John
+ Archdale's piety was of the kind that utters itself in solitude, or under the
+ breath.</p>
+ <p>Katie at the moment was upstairs with her mother examining a package of wedding
+ gear that had arrived that day. She had no hesitation as to whom her choice should
+ have been. Yet, as she stood holding a pair of gloves, measuring the long wrists on
+ her arm and then drawing out the fingers musingly, it was not of Stephen that she was
+ thinking, or of him that she spoke at last, as she turned away to lay down the gloves
+ and take up a piece of lace.</p>
+ <p>"Mother," she said, "I do sometimes feel badly for Master Harwin; he is the only
+ man in all the world that I ever had anything like fear of, and now and then I did of
+ him, such a fierceness would come over him once in a while, not to me, but about me,
+ I know, about losing me. He was terribly in earnest. Stephen never gets into these
+ moods, he is always kind and lovable, just as he has been to me as far back as I can
+ remember, only, of course more so now."</p>
+ <p>"But things have gone differently with him and with poor Master Harwin," answered
+ Mrs. Archdale. "If you had said 'no' to Stephen, you would have seen the dark moods
+ in him, too."</p>
+ <p>The young girl looked at her mother and smiled, and blushed a little in a charming
+ acknowledgment of feminine power to sway the minds of the sterner half of humanity.
+ Then she grew thoughtful again, not even flattery diverting her long from her
+ subject.</p>
+ <p>"But Stephen never could be like that," she said. "Stephen couldn't be dark in
+ that desperate sort of way. I can't describe it in Master Harwin, but I feel it.
+ Somehow, he would rather Stephen would die, or I should, than have us marry."</p>
+ <p>"Did he ever say so?"</p>
+ <p>"Why, no, but you can feel things that nobody says. And, then, there is something
+ else, too. I am quite sure that sometime in his life he did something, well, perhaps
+ something wicked, I don't know what, but I do know that a load lies on his
+ conscience; for one day he told me as much. It was just as he was going away, the day
+ after I had refused him and he knew of my engagement. He asked permission to come and
+ bid me goodby. Don't you remember?"</p>
+ <p>"Yes," said Mrs. Archdale.</p>
+ <p>"He looked at me and sighed. 'I've paid a heavy price,' he said half to himself,
+ 'to lose.' Then he added, 'Mistress Archdale, will you always believe that I loved
+ you devotedly, and always have loved you from the hour I first saw you? If I could
+ undo'&mdash;then he waited a moment and grew dreadfully pale, and I think he finished
+ differently from his first intention&mdash;'If I could undo something in the past,'
+ he said, 'I would give my life to do it, but my life would be of no use.'"</p>
+ <p>"That looks as if it was something against you, Katie."</p>
+ <p>"Oh, no, I don't think so. Besides, he wouldn't have given his life at all; <a
+ name="page168" id="page168"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 168]</span> that's only the
+ way men talk, you know, when they want to make an impression of their earnestness on
+ women and they always think they do it that way. But the men that are the readiest to
+ give up their lives don't say anything about it beforehand. Stephen would die for me,
+ I'm sure, but he never told me so in his life. He don't make many protestations; he
+ takes a great deal for granted. Why shouldn't he; we've known one another from
+ babyhood? But Master Harwin knew, somehow, the minute after he spoke, if he didn't at
+ the time, that he wouldn't die for his fault at all, whatever it was. And then, after
+ he spoke it seemed to me as if he had changed his mind and didn't care about it in
+ any way, he only cared that I had refused him, and that he was not going to see me
+ any more. I am sorry for a man like that, and if he were going to stay here I should
+ be afraid of him, afraid for Stephen. But he sails in a few days. I don't wonder he
+ couldn't wait here for the next ship, wait over the wedding, and whatever danger from
+ him there may have been sails with him. Poor man, I don't see what he liked me for."
+ And with a sigh, Katie dismissed the thought of him and his grief and evil together,
+ and turned her attention again to the wedding finery.</p>
+ <p>"Only see what exquisite lace," she cried, throwing it out on the table to examine
+ the web. "Where did Elizabeth get it, I wonder? She begged to be allowed to give me
+ my bridal veil, and she has certainly done it handsomely, just as she always does
+ everything, dear child. I suppose it came out in one of her father's ships."</p>
+ <p>"Everything Master Royal touches turns into gold," said Mrs. Archdale, after a
+ critical examination of the lace had called forth her admiration. "It's Mechlin,
+ Katie. There is nobody in the Colonies richer than he," she went on, "unless,
+ possibly, the Colonel."</p>
+ <p>"I dare say I ought to pretend not to care that Stephen will have ever so much
+ money," returned the girl, taking up a broad band of India muslin wrought with gold,
+ and laying it over her sleeve to examine the pattern, at which she smiled
+ approvingly. "But then I do care. Stephen is a great deal more interesting rich than
+ he would be poor; he is not made for a grub, neither am I, and living is much better
+ fun when one has laces like cobwebs, and velvets and paduasoys, and diamonds, mother,
+ to fill one's heart's desire."</p>
+ <p>As she spoke she looked an embodiment of fair youth and innocent pleasure, and her
+ mother, with a mother's admiration and sympathy in her heart, gave her a lingering
+ glance before she put on a little sternness, and said, "My child, I don't like to
+ hear you talk in that light way. Your heart's desires, I trust, are set upon better
+ things, those of another world."</p>
+ <p>"Yes, mother, of course. But, then you know, we are to give our mind faithfully to
+ the things next to us, in order to get to those beyond them, and that's what I am
+ doing now, don't you see? O, mother, dear, how I shall miss you, and all your dear,
+ solemn talks, and your dear, smiling looks." And winding her arms about her mother,
+ Katie kissed her so affectionately that Mrs. Archdale felt quite sure that the laces
+ and paduasoys had not yet spoilt her little daughter.</p>
+ <p>"Now, for my part," she said a few minutes later as she laid down a pair of dainty
+ white kid shoes, glittering with spangles from the tip of their peaked toes to their
+ very heels,&mdash;high enough for modern days,&mdash;"These fit you to perfection, my
+ dear. For my part," she repeated, "you know that I have <a name="page169"
+ id="page169"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 169]</span> always hoped you would marry
+ Stephen, yet my sympathies go with Master Waldo in his loss, instead of with the
+ other one, whom I think your father at last grew to like best of the three; it was
+ strange that such a man could have gotten such an influence, but then, they were in
+ business together, and there is always something mysterious about business. Master
+ Waldo is a fine, open-hearted young man, and he was very fond of you."</p>
+ <p>"Yes, I suppose so," answered the girl, with an effort to merge a smile into the
+ expression accompanying a sympathetic sigh. "It's too bad. But, then, men must look
+ out for themselves, women have to, and Kenelm Waldo probably thinks he is worth any
+ woman's heart."</p>
+ <p>"So he is, Katie."</p>
+ <p>"Um!" said the girl. "Well, he'd be wiser to be a little humble about it. It takes
+ better."</p>
+ <p>"Do you call Stephen humble?"</p>
+ <p>Katie laughed merrily. "But," she said, at last, "Stephen is Stephen, and humility
+ wouldn't suit him. He would look as badly without his pride as without his lace
+ ruffles."</p>
+ <p>"Is it his lace ruffles you're in love with, my child?"</p>
+ <p>"I don't know, mother," and she laughed again. "When should a young girl laugh if
+ not on the eve of her marriage with the man of her choice, when friends and wealth
+ conspire to make the event auspicious?"</p>
+ <p>"I shall not write to thank Elizabeth for her gift," she said, "for she will be
+ here before a letter can reach her. She leaves Boston to-morrow, that's Tuesday, and
+ she must be here by Friday, perhaps Thursday night, if they start very early."</p>
+ <p>"I thought Master Royal's letter said Monday?"</p>
+ <p>"Tuesday," repeated Katie, "if the weather be suitable for his daughter. Look at
+ this letter and you'll see; his world hinges on his daughter's comfort, he is father
+ and mother both to her. Elizabeth needs it, too; she can't take care of herself well.
+ Perhaps she could wake up and do it for somebody else. But I am not sure. She's a
+ dear child, though she seems to me younger than I am. Isn't it funny, mother, for she
+ knows a good deal more, and she's very bright sometimes? But she never makes the best
+ of anything, especially of herself."</p>
+ <p>It was the day before the wedding. The great old house was full of bustle from its
+ gambrel roof to its very cellar in which wines were decanted to be in readiness, and
+ into which pastries and sweetmeats were carried from the pantry shelves overloaded
+ with preparations for the next day's festivities. Servants ran hither and thither,
+ full of excitement and pleasant anticipations. They all loved Katie who had grown up
+ among them. And, besides, the morrow's pleasures were not to be enjoyed by them
+ wholly by proxy, for if there was to be only wedding enough for one pair, at least
+ the remains of the feast would go round handsomely. Two or three black faces were
+ seen among the English ones, but though they were owned by Mr. Archdale, the disgrace
+ and the badge of servitude had fallen upon them lightly, and the shining of merry
+ eyes and the gleam of white teeth relieved a darkness that nature, and not despair,
+ had made. In New England, masters were always finding reasons why their slaves should
+ be manumitted. How could slavery flourish in a land where the wind of freedom was so
+ strong that it could blow a whole cargo of tea into the ocean?</p>
+ <p>But there were not only servants going <a name="page170" id="page170"></a><span
+ class="pagenum">[pg 170]</span> back and forth through the house, for it was full of
+ guests. The Colonel's family living so near, would not come until the morning of the
+ ceremony, but other relatives were there in force. Mrs. Archdale's brother,&mdash;a
+ little patronizing but very rich and gracious, and his family who having been well
+ patronized, were disposed to be humble and admiring, and her sister who not having
+ fed on the roses of life, had a good deal of wholesome strength about her, together
+ with a touch of something which, if it were wholesome, was not exactly grateful.
+ Cousins of Mr. Archdale were there also. Elizabeth Royal, at Katie's special request,
+ had been her guest for the last ten days. Her father had gone home again the day he
+ brought her and was unable to return for the wedding and to take his daughter home
+ afterward, as he had intended; but he had sent Mrs. Eveleigh, his cousin and
+ housekeeper. It seemed strange that the father and daughter were so companionable,
+ for superficially they were entirely unlike. Mr. Royal was considered stern and
+ shrewd, and, though a well-read man, eminently practical, more inclined to business
+ than scholarship, while Elizabeth was dreamy, generous, wholly unacquainted with
+ business of any kind, and it seemed too much uninterested in it ever to be
+ acquainted. To most people the affection between them seemed only that of nature and
+ circumstances, Elizabeth being an only child, and her mother having died while she
+ was very young. It is the last analysis of character that discovers the same trait
+ under different forms. None of her friends carried analysis so far, and it was
+ possible that no effort could have discovered subtle likeness then. Perhaps it was
+ still latent and would only hereafter find some outward expression for itself. It
+ sometimes happens that physical likeness comes out only after death, mental not until
+ late in life, and likeness of character in the midst of unlikeness is revealed
+ usually only in the crucible of events.</p>
+ <p>That day, Elizabeth, from her window overlooking the garden, had seen a picture
+ that she never forgot. It was about noon, all the warmth that was in the December sun
+ filled the garden (which the leafless trees no longer shaded). There was no snow on
+ the ground, for the few stray flakes premonitory of winter which had fallen from time
+ to time in the month had melted almost as soon as they had touched the ground. The
+ air was like an Indian summer's day; it seemed impossible that winter could be round
+ the corner waiting only for a change of wind. The tracery of the boughs of the trees
+ and of all their little twigs against the blue sky was exquisite, the stalks of the
+ dead flowers warmed into a livelier brown in the sunlight. Yet it may have been
+ partly the figures in the foreground that made the whole picture so bright to
+ Elizabeth, for to her the place was filled with the lovers who were walking there and
+ talking, probably saying those nothings, so far as practical matters go, which they
+ may indulge in freely only before the thousand cares of life interfere with their
+ utterances. Stephen had come to the house, and Katie and he were taking what they
+ were sure would prove to be their last opportunity for quiet talk before the wedding.
+ They went slowly down the long path to the clematis arbor, and then turned back
+ again, for it was not warm enough to sit down out of doors. Elizabeth watched them as
+ they walked toward the house, and a warmth came into her own face in her pleasure.
+ "Dear Katie," she said to herself, "she is sure to be so happy." The young <a
+ name="page171" id="page171"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 171]</span> girl's hand lay
+ on Archdale's arm, and she was looking up at him with a smile full of joyousness.
+ Archdale's head was bent and the watcher could not see his eyes, but his attitude of
+ devotion, his smile, and Katie's face told the story.</p>
+ <p>[TO BE CONTINUED.]</p>
+ <hr />
+ <h2>GLORIFYING TRIAL BY JURY.</h2>
+ <center>
+ By CHARLES COWLEY, LL.D.
+ </center>
+ <p>Twice within two years representatives of the highest courts of Massachusetts have
+ published in the North American Review, panegyrics of jurics and jury trials. The
+ late Judge Foster and Judge Pitman both concede&mdash;what indeed is too notorious to
+ be denied&mdash;that there are frequent and gross miscarriages of justice; but they
+ touch lightly on this aspect of the question. Being personally identified with the
+ institution which they extol, their self-complacency is neither unnatural nor
+ unpardonable. It seems not to have occurred to them, that if a reform of our
+ judiciary is really needed, they are "a part of the thing to be reformed." But in
+ weighing their testimony to the advantages of trial by jury, allowance must be made
+ for the bias of office and for the bias of interest. In the idolatrous throng which
+ drowned the voice of St. Paul with their halcyon and vociferous shouts, "Great is
+ Diana of the Ephesians!" there was no one who shouted louder than the thrifty
+ silversmith, Demetrius, who added the naive remark, "By this craft we live."</p>
+ <p>In the outset of his presentation of the beauties of jury trials, Judge Pitman
+ says that "certain elementary rules of law are so closely associated with this system
+ that change in one would require alteration of the other." Now, these rules of law
+ are either good or bad. If they are bad, they should be revised; and the fact that
+ they are so closely associated with trial by jury, that they can not be amended
+ without injury thereto, adds little lustre to that time-honored institution. One the
+ other hand, if these "elementary rules of law" are good, it is presumed that courts
+ will be able to appreciate and apply them quite as well as juries.</p>
+ <p>Judge Pitman then proceeds to argue that criminal trials without juries would be
+ attended with disadvantages, because he thinks that judges would have, oftener than
+ juries, that "reasonable doubt" which by law entitles the accused to an acquittal.
+ This warrants one of two inferences: either the writer would have men convicted whose
+ guilt is involved in "reasonable doubt," or he fears that the learning and experience
+ of the bar and the bench tend to unfit the mind to weigh the evidence of guilt or
+ innocence. It is curious that in a former number of the same Review, another learned
+ writer expressed exactly the contrary opinion.<a id="footnotetag10"
+ name="footnotetag10"></a><a href="#footnote10"><sup>10</sup></a> Mr. Edward A. Thomas
+ thinks that "judges are too much inclined to convict persons charged with criminal
+ offences," and that juries are too much inclined to acquit them. And Judge Foster
+ seemingly agrees with Mr. Thomas upon this point.</p>
+ <p>Again: Judge Pitman argues that a jury is better qualified than a judge to
+ determine what is "due care." And Judge Foster, going still further, says, "common
+ men belonging to various walks in life, are, in most cases, better <a name="page172"
+ id="page172"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 172]</span> fitted to decide correctly
+ ordinary questions of fact than any single judge or bench of judges." There are,
+ unquestionably, many cases in which the main questions are so entirely within the
+ scope of ordinary men's observation and experience that no special knowledge is
+ required to decide them. With respect to such cases, it is true that</p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="line">
+ "A few strong instincts and a few plain rules
+ </div>
+ <div class="line">
+ Are worthy all the learning of the schools."
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>But where the questions involved are many in number, intricate and complicated in
+ character, and enveloped in a mass of conflicting testimony requiring many days to
+ hear it, is it not manifest that a jury,&mdash;not one of whom has taken a note
+ during the trial, some of whose members have heard as though hearing not, and seen as
+ though seeing not, the testimony and the witnesses,&mdash;deals with such a case at a
+ great disadvantage, as compared with a judge whose notes contain all the material
+ testimony, and who has all the opportunity for rest and relaxation that he may
+ require before filing the finding which is his verdict? With respect to such cases,
+ it is clear that, as a learned English judge has said, "the securities which can be
+ taken for justice in the case of a trial by a judge without a jury, are infinitely
+ greater than those which can be taken for trial by a judge and jury."<a
+ id="footnotetag11" name="footnotetag11"></a><a href="#footnote11"><sup>11</sup></a> A
+ judge may be required to state what facts he finds, as well as the general conclusion
+ at which he has arrived, and to state upon what views of the legal questions he has
+ acted.</p>
+ <p>Judge Foster most justly remarks: "There can be no such thing as a good jury trial
+ without the co-operation of a learned, upright, conscientious and efficient presiding
+ judge, ... holding firmly and steadily the reins, and guiding the entire
+ proceedings." This is what Judge Foster was, and what Judge Pitman is, accustomed to
+ do. But if the jury requires such "guiding" from the court, and if the court is
+ competent thus to guide them, it is clear that the court must know the way and must
+ be able to follow it; otherwise it could not so guide the jury.</p>
+ <p>Judge Pitman also argues that the jury can eliminate "the personal equation"
+ better than the judge. But is this so? Does education count for nothing in producing
+ that calm, firm, passionless state of mind which is essential in those who determine
+ causes between party and party?</p>
+ <p>Are not juries quite as often as judges swayed by popular clamor, by prejudice, by
+ appeals to their passions, and by considerations foreign to the merits of the case?
+ As Mr. Thomas asks in the article before quoted: "How many juries are strictly
+ impartial? How many remain entirely uninfluenced by preference for one or the other
+ of the parties, one or the other counsel, or the leaning of some friend to either, or
+ by political affiliations, or church connections, or relations to secret societies,
+ or by what they have heard, or by what they have read? Can they be as discerning and
+ impartial as a bench of judges, or if inclined to some bias or prejudice, can they as
+ readily as a judge divest their minds of such an impression?" If it be true that
+ juries composed of such material as Judge Pitman shows our juries to be largely
+ composed of, are as capable of mastering and determining intricate questions of fact
+ as judges trained to that duty, then we may truly say&mdash;</p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="line">
+ "Thinking is but an idle waste of thought,
+ </div>
+ <div class="line">
+ And naught is everything, and everything is naught."
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>According to Judge Pitman, the system which prevails in some of the states, of
+ trials by the court without juries <a name="page173" id="page173"></a><span
+ class="pagenum">[pg 173]</span> (with the provision that the trial shall be by jury
+ if either party demand it), "works satisfactorily." The testimony of lawyers and
+ litigants in Massachusetts, Connecticut and other states where this system prevails,
+ is to the same effect. For ourselves, while far from desiring the abolition of trial
+ by jury, whether in civil or in criminal causes, we are by no means disposed to
+ "throw glamour" (as the Scotch say), over an instrumentality for ascertaining legal
+ truth, which is so cumbersome in its operation, and so uncertain in its results. A
+ jury is, at best, a means, and not an end; and although much may be said about the
+ incidental usefulness of jury service on account of its tendency to enlarge the
+ intellectual horizon of jurors, all that is beside the main question.</p>
+ <p>Whether a particular occurrence took place or not, is a question which, whether it
+ be tried by a judge or by a jury, must be decided upon evidence; which consists, in
+ part, of circumstances, and, in part, of acts, but in part also, and very largely, of
+ the sworn statements of individuals. While falsehood and corruption prevail among all
+ classes of the community so extensively as they now do, it is useless to claim that
+ decisions based upon human testimony are always or generally correct. Perjury is as
+ rife as ever, and works as much wrong as ever. To a conscientious judge, like Judge
+ Pitman, "the investigation of a mass of tangled facts and conflicting testimony"
+ cannot but be wearisome, as he says it is; and, in many cases, the sense of
+ responsibility "cannot but be oppressive;" but he has so often repeated a
+ <i>dictum</i> of Lord Redesdale that he must be presumed to have found solace in
+ it&mdash;"it is more important that an end be put to litigation, than that justice
+ should be done in every case." There is truth in that <i>dictum</i>; but, like other
+ truths, it has often been abused, especially by incompetent or lazy or drowsy judges.
+ More unfortunate suitors have suffered as martyrs to that truth than the judges who
+ jauntily "cast" them would admit.</p>
+ <p>Judges may do their best; juries may do their best; they will often fall into
+ error; and instead of glorifying themselves or the system of which they are a part,
+ it would be more modest in them to say, "We are unprofitable servants." Not many
+ judges have been great enough to say, "I know I sometimes err," but some have said
+ it. The lamented Judge Colt said it publicly more than once, and the admission
+ raised, rather than lowered, him in the general esteem. When he died the voice of the
+ bar and of the people said, "Other judges have been revered, but we loved Judge
+ Colt."</p>
+ <p>Massachusetts gives her litigants the choice of a forum. All trials in civil
+ causes are by the courts alone, unless one party or the other claims a jury. If the
+ reader has a case of much complexity, either with respect to the facts, or with
+ respect to the law, perhaps he would like to have our opinion as to which is the
+ better forum. The answer is the same that was given by one who lived at the parting
+ of the ways, to a weary traveller who inquired which fork of the road he should take:
+ "Both are full of snags, quagmires and pitfalls. No matter which you take, before you
+ reach the end of your journey you will wish you had taken the other." In the trial by
+ jury, and in the trial by the court, just as in the trial by ordeal, and in the trial
+ by battle in the days of old, the element of chance is of the first magnitude</p>
+ <a name="page174" id="page174"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 174]</span>
+ <hr />
+ <h2>PUBLISHERS' DEPARTMENT.</h2>
+ <center>
+ SENEFELDER, THE INVENTOR OF LITHOGRAPHY AND CHROMO-LITHOGRAPHY.&mdash;HIS ART IN
+ BOSTON DEVELOPED BY L. PRANG &amp; CO.&mdash;COLOR-PRINTING ON SATIN, ETC.
+ </center>
+ <p>A century ago the world knew nothing of the art of lithography; color-printing was
+ confined to comparatively crude products from wooden blocks, most of which were
+ hardly equal to the Japanese fan pictures now familiar to all of us. The year 1799
+ gave us a new invention which was destined to revolutionize reproductive art and add
+ immensely to the means for education, culture and enjoyment.</p>
+ <p>Alois Senefelder, born 1771, at Prague (Austria), started life with writing plays,
+ and too poor to pay a printer, he determined to invent a process of his own which
+ should serve to print his manuscript without dependence upon the (to him) too costly
+ types.</p>
+ <p>A born inventor, this Alois Senefelder, a genius, supported by boundless hope,
+ immense capability for hard, laborious work, and an indomitable energy; he started
+ with the plan of etching his writings in relief on metal plates, to take impressions
+ therefrom by means of rollers. He found the metal too costly for his experiments; and
+ limestone slabs from the neighboring quarries&mdash;he living then in
+ Munich&mdash;were tried as a substitute. Although partly successful in this
+ direction, he continued through years of hard, and often disappointing trials, to
+ find something more complete. He hit upon the discovery that a printed sheet of paper
+ (new or old) moistened with a thin solution of gum Arabic would, when dabbled over
+ printers' ink, accept the ink from the dabbler only on its printed parts and remain
+ perfectly clean in the blank spaces, so that a facsimile impression could be taken
+ from this inked-in sheet. He found that this operation might be repeated until the
+ original print gave out by wear. Here was a new discovery, based on the properties of
+ attraction and repulsion between fatty matters (printers ink), and the watery
+ solution of gum Arabic. The extremely delicate nature of the paper matrix was a
+ serious drawback, and had to be overcome. The slabs of limestone which served
+ Senefelder in a previous emergency were now recurred to by him as an absorbent
+ material similar to paper, and a trial by making an impression from his
+ above-mentioned paper matrix on the stone, and subsequent gumming, convinced him that
+ he was correct in his surmise. By this act lithography became an established
+ fact.</p>
+ <p>A few short years of intelligent experimenting revealed to him all the
+ possibilities of this new discovery. Inventions of processes followed each other
+ closely until in 1818 he disclosed to the world in a volume of immortal interest not
+ only a complete history of his invention and his processes, but also a reliable
+ description of the same for others to follow. Nothing really new except
+ photo-lithography has been added to this charming art since that time; improvement
+ only by manual skill and by chemical progress, can be claimed by others.</p>
+ <p>Chromo-lithography (printing in colors from stone) was experimented on by <a
+ name="page175" id="page175"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 175]</span> the great
+ inventor. He outlined its possibilities by saying, that he verily believed that
+ printed pictures like paintings would sometimes be made thereby, and whoever has seen
+ the productions of our Boston firm, L. Prang &amp; Co., will bear him out in the
+ verity of his prediction.</p>
+ <p>When Prang touched this art in 1856 it was in its infancy in this country. Stray
+ specimens of more or less merit had been produced, especially by Martin Thurwanger
+ (pen work) and Fabronius (crayon work), but much was left to be perfected. A little
+ bunch of roses to embellish a ladies' magazine just starting in Boston, was the first
+ work with which the firm occupied its single press. Crude enough it was, but
+ diligence and energy soon developed therefrom the works which have astonished not
+ only this country but even Europe, and the firm, which took thereby the lead in their
+ speciality of art reproduction in color, has succeeded in keeping it ever since from
+ year to year without one faltering step, until there is no single competitor in the
+ civilized world to dispute its mastery. This is something to be proud of, not only
+ for the firm in question, but even for the country at large, and to crown its
+ achievements, the firm of L. Prang &amp; Co. have this year made, apart from their
+ usual wonderful variety of original Christmas cards and other holiday art prints, a
+ reproduction of a flower piece of the celebrated Belgian flower painter, Jean Robie,
+ and printed it on satin by a process invented and patented by Mr. Prang. For
+ truthfulness as a copy this print challenges the admiration of our best artists and
+ connoisseurs. The gorgeous work as it lies before our eyes seems to us to be as
+ perfect as if it left the very brush of the master, and even in close comparison with
+ the original it does not lose an iota of its charms.</p>
+ <p>Of the marvellous excellence of this, the latest achievement of this remarkable
+ house, thousands who visited the late exhibition of the Massachusetts Charitable
+ Mechanic's Association and saw Messrs. L. Prang &amp; Co.'s, extensive exhibit, can
+ bear witness. Everybody who looked at the two pictures, the original masterpiece by
+ Robie and its reproduction by Prang, side by side, was puzzled to distinguish which
+ was which, many pointing to the reproduction as the better, and in their eyes,
+ therefore as the original picture. The same was true with regard to many more of this
+ justly celebrated firm's reproductions, which they did not hesitate to exhibit,
+ alongside of the original paintings. Altogether, their exhibit with its large
+ collection of elegant satin prints, its studies for artists, its historical feature,
+ showing the enormous development of the firm's work since 1856, its interesting
+ illustration by successive printings of how their pictures are made, and its
+ instructive and artistic arrangement of their collection, made it one of the most
+ attractive features of the fair.</p>
+ <p>What more can we say but that we are proud ourselves of this achievement within
+ our city limits; it cannot fail to increase the fame our beloved Boston as a town of
+ masters in thought and art. Honor to the firm of L. Prang &amp; Co.</p>
+ <a name="page176" id="page176"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 176]</span>
+ <hr />
+ <h2>NOTICES OF NEW BOOKS.</h2>
+ <p>THE VOYAGE OF THE "VIVIAN" to the North Pole and Beyond, or Adventures of Two
+ Youths in the Open Polar sea. By COLONEL THOMAS W. KNOX, the author of "The Boy
+ Travellers in the Far East," "The Young Nimrods," etc. Illustrated; 8vo.; cloth, $3.
+ Harper &amp; Brothers, New York.</p>
+ <p>A fascinating story for boys, into which is woven by the graceful pen of the
+ author the history of Arctic exploration for centuries past. The young readers who
+ have followed the "Boy Travellers in the Far East" will welcome this addition to the
+ literature of adventure and travel.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <p>LITTLE PEOPLE OF THE AIR, By the authors of "Little Playfellows." Illustrated;
+ 8vo., $1. D. Lothrop &amp; Co., Boston.</p>
+ <p>A series of pretty stories of feathered songsters, for little men and women, alike
+ interesting to the young and children of an older growth.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <p>POLITICS FOR YOUNG AMERICANS. By CHARLES NORDHOFF, author of "The Communistic
+ Societies of the United States," etc. Popular edition; paper, 12mo., 400. Harper and
+ Brothers, New York.</p>
+ <p>A series of essays in the form of letters, calculated to instruct the youth of
+ this country in their duty as American citizens.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <p>A PERILOUS SECRET. By CHARLES READE. Cloth, 12mo.; 75 cents. Harper and Brothers,
+ New York.</p>
+ <p>This volume forms one of Harper's Household editions of the works of this popular
+ novelist.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <p>THE ICE QUEEN. By ERNEST INGERSOLL, author of "Friends Worth Knowing," "Knocking
+ Around the Rockies," etc. Illustrated; Cloth, 16mo., $1. Harper and Brothers, New
+ York.</p>
+ <p>A story for boys and girls of the adventures of a small party storm-bound in
+ winter, on a desolate island in Lake Erie.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <p>GOD AND THE FUTURE LIFE; or the Reasonableness of Christianity. By CHARLES
+ NORDHOFF, author of "Politics for Young Americans," etc. 16mo., cloth, $1. Harper and
+ Brothers, New York.</p>
+ <p>Paley's "Natural Theology," familiar to students, is supplemented by this volume,
+ which brings the argument down to the present developement of science. It is a book
+ for thoughtful men and women, whose faith in the immortality of the soul needs
+ strengthening.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <p>MOTHERS IN COUNCIL. 16mo., cloth, $1. Harper and Brothers, New York.</p>
+ <p>A series of essays and discussions of value to the family circle, teaching how
+ sons can be brought up to be good husbands, and daughters to be contented and useful
+ old maids, and many other valuable lessons.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <p>GOOD STORIES. By CHARLES READE, 16mo., cloth, $1. Harper and Brothers, New
+ York.</p>
+ <p>These short stories by Mr. Reade, some of which have appeared from time to time in
+ the Bazar, are here gathered in one volume. They are "The History of an Acre," "The
+ Knightsbridge Mystery," "Single Heart and Double Face," and many others.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <p>I SAY NO; or, the Love Letter Answered. By WILKIE COLLINS; 16mo., cloth,$1. Harper
+ and Brothers, New York.</p>
+ <p>The announcement that a new novel from the pen of Mr. Collins has appeared is
+ enough to insure a large and steady demand for it.</p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1" name="footnote1"></a> <b>Footnote 1</b>: (<a
+ href="#footnotetag1">return</a>)
+ <p><i>The Churchman</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote2" name="footnote2"></a> <b>Footnote 2</b>: (<a
+ href="#footnotetag2">return</a>)
+ <p>From a genealogical memoir of the Lo-Lathrop family, by Rev. E.B. Huntington,
+ 1884.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote3" name="footnote3"></a> <b>Footnote 3</b>: (<a
+ href="#footnotetag3">return</a>)
+ <p>Rec. Alonzo H. Quint, D.D. in <i>Granite Monthly</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote4" name="footnote4"></a> <b>Footnote 4</b>: (<a
+ href="#footnotetag4">return</a>)
+ <p>Rev. Dr. Quint.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote5" name="footnote5"></a> <b>Footnote 5</b>: (<a
+ href="#footnotetag5">return</a>)
+ <p>Rev. Dr. Quint.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote6" name="footnote6"></a> <b>Footnote 6</b>: (<a
+ href="#footnotetag6">return</a>)
+ <p><i>The Paper World</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote7" name="footnote7"></a> <b>Footnote 7</b>: (<a
+ href="#footnotetag7">return</a>)
+ <p>"Les Colosses anciens et moderns," par E. Lesbazeilles; Paris: 1881.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote8" name="footnote8"></a> <b>Footnote 8</b>: (<a
+ href="#footnotetag8">return</a>)
+ <p><i>Vide</i> papers by Clarence Cook in The Studio, and by Professor D. Cady
+ Eaton of Yale College in the New York Tribune.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote9" name="footnote9"></a> <b>Footnote 9</b>: (<a
+ href="#footnotetag9">return</a>)
+ <p>Copyright, 1884, by Frances C. Sparhawk. All rights reserved.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote10" name="footnote10"></a> <b>Footnote 10</b>: (<a
+ href="#footnotetag10">return</a>)
+ <p>N.A. Review, No. CCCIV, March, 1882.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote11" name="footnote11"></a> <b>Footnote 11</b>: (<a
+ href="#footnotetag11">return</a>)
+ <p>Stephen's History of the Criminal Law, 568.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13864 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Bay State Monthly - Volume 2, Issue 3,
+December, 1884, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Bay State Monthly - Volume 2, Issue 3, December, 1884
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: October 25, 2004 [EBook #13864]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BAY STATE MONTHLY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Cornell University, Joshua Hutchinson, Josephine Paolucci
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <a name="page121" id="page121"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 121]</span>
+ <h1>THE BAY STATE MONTHLY.</h1>
+ <center>
+ <i>A Massachusetts Magazine</i>.
+ </center>
+ <center>
+ VOL. II.
+ </center>
+ <center>
+ DECEMBER, 1884.
+ </center>
+ <center>
+ No. 3.
+ </center>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <center>
+ Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1884, by John N. McClintock and
+ Company, in the office of the Librarian of Congress at Washington.
+ </center>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="images/image1_full.png"><img src="images/image1_thumbnail.png"
+ alt="Daniel Lothrop" /></a>
+ <p>Daniel Lothrop</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+ <h2>DANIEL LOTHROP.</h2>
+ <center>
+ By JOHN N. MCCLINTOCK, A.M.
+ </center>
+ <p>The fame, character and prosperity of a city have often depended upon its
+ merchants,&mdash;burghers they were once called to distinguish them from haughty
+ princes and nobles. Through the enterprise of the common citizens, Venice, Genoa,
+ Antwerp, and London have become famous, and have controlled the destinies of nations.
+ New England, originally settled by sturdy and liberty-loving yeomen and free citizens
+ of free English cities, was never a congenial home for the patrician, with inherited
+ feudal privileges, but has welcomed the thrifty Pilgrim, the Puritan, the Scotch
+ Covenanter, the French Huguenot, the Ironsides soldiers of the great Cromwell. The
+ men and women of this fusion have shaped our civilization. New England gave its
+ distinctive character to the American colonies, and finally to the nation. New
+ England influences still breathe from the Atlantic to the Pacific, and from the great
+ lakes to Mexico; and Boston, still the focus of the New England idea, leads national
+ movement and progress.</p>
+ <p>Perhaps one of the broadest of these influences&mdash;broadest inasmuch as it
+ interpenetrates the life of our whole people&mdash;proceeds from the lifework of one
+ of the merchants of Boston, known by his name and his work to the entire English
+ speaking world: Daniel Lothrop, of the famous firm of D. Lothrop &amp; Co.,
+ publishers&mdash;the people's publishing house. Mr. Lothrop is a good representative
+ of this early New England fusion of race, temperament, fibre, conscience and brain.
+ He is a direct descendant of John Lowthroppe, who, in the thirty-seventh year of
+ Henry VIII. (1545), was a gentleman of quite extensive landed estates, both in Cherry
+ Burton (four miles removed from Lowthorpe), and in various other parts of the
+ country.</p>
+ <p>Lowthorpe is a small parish in the Wapentake of Dickering, in the East Riding of
+ York, four and a half miles northeast from Great Driffield. It is a perpetual curacy
+ in the archdeaconry of York. This parish gave name to the family of Lowthrop,
+ Lothrop, or Lathrop. The Church, which was dedicated to St. Martin, and had for one
+ of <a name="page122" id="page122"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 122]</span> its
+ chaplains, in the reign of Richard II., Robert de Louthorp, is now partly ruinated,
+ the tower and chancel being almost entirely overgrown with ivy. It was a collegiate
+ Church from 1333, and from the style of its architecture must have been built about
+ the time of Edward III.</p>
+ <p>From this English John Lowthroppe the New England Lothrops have their
+ origin:&mdash;</p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"It is one of the most ancient of all the famous New England families, whose
+ blood in so many cases is better and purer than that of the so-called noble
+ families in England. The family roll certainly shows a great deal of talent, and
+ includes men who have proved widely influential and useful, both in the early and
+ later periods. The pulpit has a strong representation. Educators are prominent.
+ Soldiers prove that the family has never been wanting in courage. Lothrop
+ missionaries have gone forth into foreign lands. The bankers are in the forefront.
+ The publishers are represented. Art engraving has its exponent, and history has
+ found at least one eminent student, while law and medicine are likewise indebted to
+ this family, whose talent has been applied in every department of useful
+ industry."<a id="footnotetag1" name="footnotetag1"></a> <a
+ href="#footnote1"><sup>1</sup></a></p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <h3>GENEALOGY.<a id="footnotetag2" name="footnotetag2"></a> <a
+ href="#footnote2"><sup>2</sup></a></h3>
+ <p>I. Mark Lothrop, the pioneer, the grandson of John Lowthroppe and a relative of
+ Rev. John Lothrop, settled in Salem, Mass., where he was received as an inhabitant
+ January 11, 1643-4. He was living there in 1652. In 1656 he was living in
+ Bridgewater, Mass., of which town he was one of the proprietors, and in which he was
+ prominent for about twenty-five years. He died October 25, 1685.</p>
+ <p>II. Samuel Lothrop, born before 1660, married Sarah Downer, and lived in
+ Bridgewater. His will was dated April 11, 1724.</p>
+ <p>III. Mark Lothrop, born in Bridgewater September 9, 1689; married March 29, 1722,
+ Hannah Alden [Born February 1, 1696; died 1777]. She was the daughter of Deacon
+ Joseph Alden of Bridgewater, and great grand-daughter of Honorable John and Priscilla
+ (Mullins) Alden of Duxbury, of Mayflower fame. He settled in Easton, of which town he
+ was one of the original proprietors. He was prominent in Church and town affairs.</p>
+ <p>IV. Jonathan Lothrop, born March 11, 1722-3; married April 13, 1746, Susannah,
+ daughter of Solomon and Susannah (Edson) Johnson of Bridgewater. She was born in
+ 1723. He was a Deacon of the Church, and a prominent man in the town. He died in
+ 1771.</p>
+ <p>V. Solomon Lothrop, born February 9, 1761; married Mehitable, daughter of
+ Cornelius White of Taunlon; settled in Easton, and later in Norton, where he died
+ October 19, 1843. She died September 14, 1832, aged 73.</p>
+ <p>VI. Daniel Lothrop, born in Easton, January 9, 1801; married October 16, 1825,
+ Sophia, daughter of Deacon Jeremiah Horne of Rochester, N.H. She died September 23,
+ 1848, and he married (2) Mary E. Chamberlain. He settled in Rochester, N.H., and was
+ one of the public men of the town. Of the strictest integrity, and possessing
+ sterling qualities of mind and heart Mr. Lothrop was chosen to fill important offices
+ of public trust in his town and state. He repeatedly represented his town in the
+ Legislature, where his sound practical sense and clear wisdom were of much service,
+ particularly in the formation of the Free Soil party, in which he was a bold defender
+ of the rights of liberty to all men. He died May 31, 1870.</p>
+ <p>VII. Daniel Lothrop, son of Daniel and Sophia (Horne) Lothrop, was born in
+ Rochester, N.H., August 11, 1831.</p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"On the maternal side Mr. Lothrop is descended from William Horne, of Horne's
+ Hill, in Dover, who held his exposed position in the Indian wars, and whose estate
+ has been in the family name from 1662 until the present generation; but he was
+ killed in the massacre of June 28, 1689. Through the Horne line, also, came descent
+ from Rev. Joseph Hull, minister at Durham in 1662, a graduate at the University at
+ Cambridge, England; from John Ham, of Dover; from the emigrant John Heard, and
+ others of like vigorous stock. It was his ancestress, Elizabeth (Hull) Heard, whom
+ the old historians call a "brave gentlewoman," who held her garrison house, the
+ frontier fort in Dover in the Indian wars, and successfully defended it in the
+ massacre of 1689. The father of the subject of this sketch was a man of sterling
+ qualities, strong in mind and will, but commanding love as well as respect. The
+ mother was a woman of outward beauty and beauty <a name="page123"
+ id="page123"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 123]</span> of soul alike; with high
+ ideals and reverent conscientiousness. Her influence over her boys was life-long.
+ The home was a centre of intelligent intercourse, a sample of the simplicity but
+ earnestness of many of the best New Hampshire homesteads."<a id="footnotetag3"
+ name="footnotetag3"></a> <a href="#footnote3"><sup>3</sup></a></p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>Descended, as is here evident, from men and women accustomed to govern, legislate,
+ protect, guide and represent the people, it is not surprising to find the Lothrops of
+ the present day of this branch standing in high places, shaping affairs, and devising
+ fresh and far-reaching measures for the general good.</p>
+ <p>Daniel Lothrop was the youngest of the three sons of Daniel and Sophia Home
+ Lothrop. The family residence was on Haven's Hill, in Rochester, and it was an ideal
+ home in its laws, influences and pleasures. Under the guidance of the wise and gentle
+ mother young Daniel developed in a sound body a mind intent on lofty aims, even in
+ childhood, and a character early distinguished for sturdy uprightness. Here, too, on
+ the farm was instilled into him the faith of his fathers, brought through many
+ generations, and he openly acknowledged his allegiance to an Evangelical Church at
+ the age of eleven.</p>
+ <p>As a boy Daniel is remembered as possessing a retentive and singularly accurate
+ memory; as very studious, seeking eagerly for knowledge, and rapidly absorbing it.
+ His intuitive mastery of the relations of numbers, his grasp of the values and
+ mysteries of the higher mathematics, was early remarkable. It might be reasonably
+ expected of the child of seven who was brought down from the primary benches and
+ lifted up to the blackboard to demonstrate a difficult problem in cube root to the
+ big boys and girls of the upper class that he should make rapid and masterful
+ business combinations in later life.</p>
+ <p>At the age of fourteen he was sufficiently advanced in his studies to enter
+ college, but judicious friends restrained him in order that his physique might be
+ brought up to his intellectual growth, and presently circumstances diverted the boy
+ from his immediate educational aspirations and thrust him into the arena of
+ business:&mdash;the world may have lost a lawyer, a clergyman, a physician, or an
+ engineer, but by this change in his youthful plans it certainly has gained a great
+ publisher&mdash;a man whose influence in literature is extended, and who, by his
+ powerful individuality, his executive force, and his originating brain has
+ accomplished a literary revolution.</p>
+ <p>To understand the business career of Daniel Lothrop it will be necessary to trace
+ the origin and progress of the firm of D. Lothrop and Company. On reaching his
+ decision to remain out of college for a year he assumed charge of the drug store,
+ then recently opened by his eldest brother, James E. Lothrop, who, desiring to attend
+ medical lectures in Philadelphia, confidently invited his brother Daniel to carry on
+ the business during his absence.</p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"He urged the young boy to take charge of the store, promising as an extra
+ inducement an equal division as to profits, and that the firm should read 'D.
+ Lothrop &amp; Co.' This last was too much for our ambitious lad. When five years of
+ age he had scratched on a piece of tin these magic words, opening to fame and
+ honor, 'D. Lothrop &amp; Co.,' nailing the embryo sign against the door of his play
+ house. How then could he resist, now, at fourteen? And why not spend the vacation
+ in this manner? And so the sign was made and put up, and thus began the house of
+ 'D. Lothrop &amp; Co.,' the name of which is spoken as a household word wherever
+ the English language is used, and whose publications are loved in more than one of
+ the royal families of Europe."<a id="footnotetag4" name="footnotetag4"></a> <a
+ href="#footnote4"><sup>4</sup></a></p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>The drug store became very lucrative. The classical drill which had <a
+ name="page124" id="page124"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 124]</span> been received
+ by the young druggist was of great advantage to him, his thorough knowledge of Latin
+ was of immediate service, and his skill and care and knowledge was widely recognized
+ and respected. The store became his college, where his affection for books soon led
+ him to introduce them as an adjunct to his business.</p>
+ <p>Thus was he when a mere boy launched on a successful business career. His energy,
+ since proved inexhaustible, soon began to open outward. When about seventeen his
+ attention was attracted to the village of Newmarket as a desirable location for a
+ drug store, and he seized an opportunity to hire a store and stock it. His executive
+ and financial ability were strikingly honored in this venture. Having it in
+ successful operation, he called the second brother, John C. Lothrop, who about this
+ time was admitted to the firm, and left him in charge of the new establishment, while
+ he started a similar store at Meredith Bridge, now called Laconia. The firm now
+ consisted of the three brothers.</p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"These three brothers have presented a most remarkable spirit of family union.
+ Remarkable in that there was none of the drifting away from each other into
+ perilous friendships and moneyed ventures. They held firmly to each other with a
+ trust beyond words. The simple word of each was as good as a bond. And as early as
+ possible they entered into an agreement that all three should combine fortunes,
+ and, though keeping distinct kinds of business, should share equal profits under
+ the firm name of 'D. Lothrop &amp; Co.' For thirty-six years, through all the
+ stress and strain of business life in this rushing age, their loyalty has been
+ preserved strong and pure. Without a question or a doubt, there has been an
+ absolute unity of interests, although James E., President of the Cocheco Bank, and
+ Mayor of the city of Dover, is in one city, John C. in another, and Daniel in still
+ another, and each having the particular direction of the business which his
+ enterprise and sagacity has made extensive and profitable."<a id="footnotetag5"
+ name="footnotetag5"></a> <a href="#footnote5"><sup>5</sup></a></p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>In 1850 occurred a point of fresh and important departure. The stock of books held
+ by Elijah Wadleigh, who had conducted a large and flourishing book store in Dover,
+ N.H., was purchased. Mr. Lothrop enlarged the business, built up a good jobbing
+ trade, and also quietly experimented in publishing. The bookstore under his
+ management also became something more than a commercial success: it grew to be the
+ centre for the bright and educated people of the town, a favorite meeting place of
+ men and women alive to the questions of the day.</p>
+ <p>Now, arrived at the vigor of young manhood, Mr. Lothrop's aims and high reaches
+ began their more open unfoldment. He rapidly extended the business into new and wide
+ fields. He established branch stores at Berwick, Portsmouth, Amesbury, and other
+ places. In each of these establishments books were prominently handled. While thus
+ immediately busy, Mr. Lothrop began his "studies" for his ultimate work. He did not
+ enter the publishing field without long surveys of investigation, comparison and
+ reflection. In need of that kind of vacation we call "change of work and scene," Mr.
+ Lothrop planned a western trip. The bookstores in the various large cities on the
+ route were sedulously visited, and the tastes and the demands of the book trade were
+ carefully studied from many standpoints.</p>
+ <p>The vast possibilities of the Great West caught his attention and he hastened to
+ grasp his opportunities. At St. Peter, in Minnesota, he was welcomed and resolved to
+ locate. They needed such men as Mr. Lothrop to help build the new town into a city.
+ The opening of the St. Peter store was characteristic of its young proprietor.</p>
+ <p>The extreme cold of October and November, <a name="page125" id="page125"></a><span
+ class="pagenum">[pg 125]</span> 1856, prevented, by the early freezing of the Upper
+ Mississippi, the arrival of his goods. Having contracted with the St. Peter company
+ to erect a building, and open his store on the first day of December, Mr. Lothrop,
+ thinking that the goods might have come as far as some landing place below St. Paul,
+ went down several hundred miles along the shore visiting the different landing
+ places. Failing to find them he bought the entire closing-out stock of a drug store
+ at St. Paul, and other goods necessary to a complete fitting of his store, had them
+ loaded, and with several large teams started for St. Peter. The same day a blinding
+ snow storm set in, making it extremely difficult to find the right road, or indeed
+ any road at all, so that five days were spent in making a journey that in good
+ weather could have been accomplished in two. When within a mile of St. Peter the
+ Minnesota river was to be crossed, and it was feared the ice would not bear the heavy
+ teams; all was unloaded and moved on small sledges across the river, and the drug
+ store <i>was opened on the day agreed upon</i>. The papers of that section made
+ special mention of this achievement, saying that it deserved honorable record, and
+ that with such business enterprise the prosperity of Minnesota Valley was
+ assured.</p>
+ <p>He afterwards opened a banking house in St. Peter, of which his uncle, Dr.
+ Jeremiah Horne, was cashier; and in the book and drug store he placed one of his
+ clerks from the East, Mr. B.F. Paul, who is now one of the wealthiest men of the
+ Minnesota Valley. He also established two other stores in the same section of
+ country.</p>
+ <p>Various elements of good generalship came into play during Mr. Lothrop's occupancy
+ of this new field, not only in directing his extensive business combinations in
+ prosperous times, but in guiding all his interests through the financial panic of
+ 1857 and 1858. By the failure of other houses and the change of capital from St.
+ Peter to St. Paul, Mr. Lothrop was a heavy loser, but by incessant labor and
+ foresight he squarely met each complication, promptly paid each liability in full.
+ But now he broke in health. The strain upon him had been intense, and when all was
+ well the tension relaxed, and making his accustomed visit East to attend to his
+ business interests in New England, without allowing himself the required rest, the
+ change of climate, together with heavy colds taken on the journey, resulted in
+ congestion of the lungs, and prostration. Dr. Bowditch, after examination, said that
+ the young merchant had been doing the work of twenty years in ten. Under his
+ treatment Mr. Lothrop so far recovered that he was able to take a trip to Florida,
+ where the needed rest restored his health.</p>
+ <p>For the next five years our future publisher directed the lucrative business
+ enterprises which he had inaugurated, from the quiet book store in Dover, N. H.,
+ while he carefully matured his plans for his life's campaign&mdash;the publication,
+ in many lines, of wholesome books for the people. Soon after the close of the Civil
+ war the time arrived for the accomplishment of his designs, and he began by closing
+ up advantageously his various enterprises in order to concentrate his forces. His was
+ no ordinary equipment. Together with well-laid plans and inspirations, for some of
+ which the time is not yet due, and a rich birthright of sagacity, insight and
+ leadership, he possessed also a practical experience of American book markets and the
+ tastes of the people, trained financial ability, practiced judgment, literary <a
+ name="page126" id="page126"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 126]</span> taste, and
+ literary conscience; and last, but not least, he had traversed and mapped out the
+ special field he proposed to occupy,&mdash;a field from which he has never been
+ diverted.</p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"The foundations were solid. On these points Mr. Lothrop has had but one mind
+ from the first: 'Never to publish a work purely sensational, no matter what chances
+ of money it has in it;' 'to publish books that will make true, steadfast growth in
+ right living.' Not alone right thinking, but right living. These were his two
+ determinations, rigidly adhered to, notwithstanding constant advice, appeals, and
+ temptations. His thoughts had naturally turned to the young people, knowing from
+ his own self-made fortunes, how young men and women need help, encouragement and
+ stimulus. He had determined to throw all his time, strength and money into making
+ good books for the young people, who, with keen imaginations and active minds, were
+ searching in all directions for mental food. 'The best way to fight the evil in the
+ world,' reasoned Mr. Lothrop, 'is to crowd it out with the good.' And therefore he
+ bent the energies of his mind to maturing plans toward this object,&mdash;the
+ putting good, helpful literature into their hands.</p>
+ <p>His first care was to determine the channels through which he could address the
+ largest audiences. The Sunday School library was one. In it he hoped to turn a
+ strong current of pure, healthful literature for those young people who, dieting on
+ the existing library books, were rendered miserable on closing their covers, either
+ to find them dry or obsolete, or so sentimentally religious as to have nothing in
+ their own practical lives corresponding to the situations of the pictured heroes
+ and heroines.</p>
+ <p>The family library was another channel. To make evident to the heads of
+ households the paramount importance of creating a home library, Mr. Lothrop set
+ himself to work with a will. In the spring of 1868 he invited to meet him a council
+ of three gentlemen, eminent in scholarship, sound of judgment, and of large
+ experience: the Reverend George T. Day, D. D., of Dover, N.H., Professor Heman
+ Lincoln, D.D., of Newton Seminary, the Rev. J.E. Rankin, D.D., of Washington, D.C.
+ Before them he laid his plans, matured and ready for their acceptance: to publish
+ good, strong, attractive literature for the Sunday School, the home, the town, and
+ school library, and that nothing should be published save of that character, asking
+ their co-operation as readers of the several manuscripts to be presented for
+ acceptance. The gentlemen, one and all, gave him their heartiest God-speed, but
+ they frankly confessed it a most difficult undertaking, and that the step must be
+ taken with the strong chance of failure. Mr. Lothrop had counted that chance and
+ reaffirmed his purpose to become a publisher of just such literature, and imparted
+ to them so much of his own courage that before they left the room, all stood
+ engaged as salaried readers of the manuscripts to come in to the new publishing
+ house of D. Lothrop &amp; Co., and during all these years no manuscripts have been
+ accepted without the sanction of one or more of these readers.</p>
+ <p>The store, Nos. 38 and 40 Cornhill, Boston, was taken, and a complete refitting
+ and stocking made it one of the finest bookstores of the city. The first book
+ published was 'Andy Luttrell.' How many recall that first book! 'Andy Luttrell' was
+ a great success, the press saying that 'the series of which this is the initiatory
+ volume, marks a new era in Sunday School literature.' Large editions were called
+ for, and it is popular still. In beginning any new business there are many
+ difficulties to face, old established houses to compete with, and new ones to
+ contest every inch of success. But tides turn, and patience and pluck won the day,
+ until from being steady, sure and reliable, Mr. Lothrop's publishing business was
+ increasing with such rapidity as to soon make it one of the solid houses of Boston.
+ Mr. Lothrop had a remarkable instinct as regarded the discovering of new talent,
+ and many now famous writers owe their popularity with the public to his kindness
+ and courage in standing by them. He had great enthusiasm and success in introducing
+ this new element, encouraging young writers, and creating a fresh atmosphere very
+ stimulating and enjoyable to their audience. To all who applied for work or brought
+ manuscript for examination, he had a hopeful word, and in rapid, clear expression
+ smoothed the difficulty out of their path if possible, or pointed to future success
+ as the result of patient toil. He always brought out the best that was in a person,
+ having the rare quality of the union of perfect honesty with kind consideration.
+ This new blood in the old veins of literary life, soon wrought a marvelous change
+ in this class of literature. Mr. Lothrop had been wise enough to see that such
+ would be the case, and he kept <a name="page127" id="page127"></a><span
+ class="pagenum">[pg 127]</span> constantly on the lookout for all means that might
+ foster ambition and bring to the surface latent talent. For this purpose he offered
+ prizes of $1,000 and $500 for the best manuscripts on certain subjects. Such a
+ thing had scarcely been heard of before and manuscripts flowed in, showing this to
+ have been a happy thought. It is interesting to look back and find many of those
+ young authors to be identical with names that are now famous in art and literature,
+ then presenting with much fear and trembling, their first efforts.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Lothrop considered no time, money, or strength ill-spent by which he could
+ secure the wisest choice of manuscripts. As an evidence of his success, we name a
+ few out of his large list: 'Miss Yonge's Histories;' 'Spare Minute Series,' most
+ carefully edited from Gladstone, George MacDonald, Dean Stanley, Thomas Hughes,
+ Charles Kingsley; 'Stories of American History;'' Lothrop's Library of Entertaining
+ History,' edited by Arthur Gilman, containing Professor Harrison's 'Spain,' Mrs.
+ Clement's 'Egypt,' 'Switzerland,' 'India,' etc.; 'Library of famous Americans, 1st
+ and 2d series; George MacDonald's novels&mdash;Mr. Lothrop, while on a visit to
+ Europe, having secured the latest novels by this author in manuscript, thus
+ bringing them out in advance of any other publisher in this country or abroad, now
+ issues his entire works in uniform style: 'Miss Yonge's Historical Stories;'
+ 'Illustrated Wonders;' The Pansy Books,' of world-wide circulation;' 'Natural
+ History Stories;' 'Poet's Homes Series;' S.G.W. Benjamin's 'American Artists;' 'The
+ Reading Union Library,' 'Business Boy's Library,' library edition of 'The Odyssey,'
+ done in prose by Butcher and Lang; 'Jowett's Thucydides;' 'Rosetti's Shakspeare,'
+ on which nothing has been spared to make it the most complete for students and
+ family use, and many others.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Lothrop is constantly broadening his field in many directions, gathering the
+ rich thought of many men of letters, science and theology among his publications.
+ Such writers as Professor James H. Harrison, Arthur Gilman, and Rev. E.E. Hale are
+ allies of the house, constantly working with it to the development of pure
+ literature; the list of the authors and contributors being so long as to include
+ representatives of all the finest thinkers of the day. Elegant art gift books of
+ poem, classic and romance, have been added with wise discrimination, until the list
+ embraces sixteen hundred books, out of which last year were printed and sold
+ 1,500,000 volumes.</p>
+ <p>The great fire of 1872 brought loss to Mr. Lothrop among the many who suffered.
+ Much of the hard-won earnings of years of toil was swept away in that terrible
+ night. About two weeks later, a large quantity of paper which had been destroyed
+ during the great fire had been replaced, and the printing of the same was in
+ process at the printing house of Rand, Avery &amp; Co., when a fire broke out
+ there, destroying this second lot of paper, intended for the first edition of
+ sixteen volumes of the celebrated $1,000 prize books. A third lot of paper was
+ purchased for these books and sent to the Riverside Press without delay. The books
+ were at last printed, as many thousand readers can testify, an enterprise that
+ called out from the Boston papers much commendation, adding, in one instance: 'Mr.
+ Lothrop seems <i>warmed</i> up to his work.'</p>
+ <p>When the time was ripe, another form of Mr. Lothrop's plans for the creation of
+ a great popular literature was inaugurated. We refer to the projection of his now
+ famous 'Wide Awake,' a magazine into which he has thrown a large amount of money.
+ Thrown it, expecting to wait for results. And they have begun to come. 'Wide Awake'
+ now stands abreast with the finest periodicals in our country, or abroad. In
+ speaking of 'Wide Awake' the Boston Herald says: 'No such marvel of excellence
+ could be reached unless there were something beyond the strict calculations of
+ money-making to push those engaged upon it to such magnificent results.' Nothing
+ that money can do is spared for its improvement. Withal, it is the most carefully
+ edited of all magazines; Mr. Lothrop's strict determination to that effect, having
+ placed wise hands at the helm to co-operate with him. Our best people have found
+ this out. The finest writers in this country and in Europe are giving of their best
+ thought to filling its pages, the most celebrated artists are glad to work for it.
+ Scientific men, professors, clergymen, and all heads of households give in their
+ testimony of its merits as a family magazine, while the young folks are delighted
+ with it. The fortune of 'Wide Awake' is sure. Next Mr. Lothrop proceeded to supply
+ the babies with their own especial magazine. Hence came bright, winsome, sparkling
+ 'Babyland.' The mothers caught at the idea. 'Babyland' jumped into success in an
+ incredibly short space of time. The editors of 'Wide Awake,' Mr. and Mrs. Pratt,
+ edit this also, which ensures it as safe, wholesome and sweet to put into baby's
+ hands. The intervening spaces between 'Babyland' and 'Wide <a name="page128"
+ id="page128"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 128]</span> Awake' Mr. Lothrop soon
+ filled with 'Our Little Men and Women,' and 'The Pansy.' Urgent solicitations from
+ parents and teachers who need a magazine for those little folks, either at home or
+ at school, who were beginning to read and spell, brought out the first, and Mrs.
+ G.R. Alden (Pansy) taking charge of a weekly pictorial paper of that name, was the
+ reason for the beginning and growth of the second. The 'Boston Book Bulletin,' a
+ quarterly, is a medium for acquaintance with the best literature, its prices, and
+ all news current pertaining to it.</p>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="images/image2_full.png"><img src="images/image2_thumbnail.png"
+ alt="Exterior View Of D. Lothrop &amp; Co.'s Publishing House." /></a>
+ <p>Exterior View Of D. Lothrop &amp; Co.'s Publishing House.</p>
+ </div>
+ <a name="page129" id="page129"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 129]</span>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="images/image3_full.png"><img src="images/image3_thumbnail.png"
+ alt="Interior View Of D. Lothrop &amp; Co.'s Publishing House." /></a>
+ <p>Interior View Of D. Lothrop &amp; Co.'s Publishing House.</p>
+ </div>
+ <a name="page130" id="page130"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 130]</span>
+ <p>'The Chatauqua Young Folk's Journal' is the latest addition to the sparkling
+ list. This periodical was a natural growth of the modern liking for clubs, circles,
+ societies, reading unions, home studies, and reading courses. It is the official
+ voice of the Chatauqua Young Folks Reading Union, and furnishes each year a
+ valuable and vivacious course of readings on topics of interest to youth. It is
+ used largely in schools. Its contributors are among our leading clergymen, lawyers,
+ university professors, critics, historians and scientists, but all its literature
+ is of a popular character, suited to the family circle rather than the study. Mr.
+ Lothrop now has the remarkable success of seeing six flourishing periodicals going
+ forth from his house.</p>
+ <p>In 1875, Mr. Lothrop, finding his Cornhill quarters inaquate [sic], leased the
+ elegant building corner Franklin and Hawley streets, belonging to Harvard College,
+ for a term of years. The building is 120 feet long by 40 broad, making the
+ salesroom, which is on the first floor, one of the most elegant in the country. On
+ the second floor are Mr. Lothrop's offices, also the editorial offices of 'Wide
+ Awake,' etc. On the third floor are the composing rooms and mailing rooms of the
+ different periodicals, while the bindery fills the fourth floor.</p>
+ <p>This building also was found small; it could accommodate only one-fourth of the
+ work done, and accordingly a warehouse on Purchase street was leased for storing
+ and manufacturing purposes.</p>
+ <p>In 1879 Mr. Lothrop called to his assistance a younger brother, Mr. M.H.
+ Lothrop, who had already made a brilliant business record in Dover, N.H., to whom
+ he gives an interest in the business. All who care for the circulation of the best
+ literature will be glad to know that everything indicates the work to be steadily
+ increasing toward complete development of Mr. Lothrop's life-long purpose."<a
+ id="footnotetag6" name="footnotetag6"></a> <a
+ href="#footnote6"><sup>6</sup></a></p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>This man of large purposes and large measures has, of course, his sturdy friends,
+ his foes as sturdy. He has, without doubt, an iron will. He is, without doubt, a good
+ fighter&mdash;a wise counselor. Approached by fraud he presents a front of granite;
+ he cuts through intrigue with sudden, forceful blows. It is true that the sharp
+ bargainer, the overreaching buyer he worsts and puts to confusion and loss without
+ mercy. But, no less, candor and honor meet with frankness and generous dealing. He is
+ as loyal to a friend as to a purpose. His interest in one befriended and taken into
+ trust is for life. It has been more than once said of this immovable business man
+ that he has the simple heart of a boy.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Lothrop's summer home is in Concord, Mass. His house, known to literary
+ pilgrims of both continents as "The Wayside," is a unique, many gabled old mansion,
+ situated near the road at the base of a pine-covered hill, facing broad, level
+ fields, and commanding a view of charming rural scenery. Its dozen green acres are
+ laid out in rustic paths; but with the exception of the removal of unsightly
+ underbrush, the landscape is left in a wild and picturesque state. Immediately in the
+ rear of the house, however, A. Bronson Alcott, a former occupant, planned a series of
+ terraces, and thereon is a system of trees. The house was commenced in the
+ seventeenth century and has been added to at different periods, and withal is quaint
+ enough to satisfy the most exacting antiquarian. At the back rise the more modern
+ portions, and the tower, wherein was woven the most delightful of American romances,
+ and about which cluster tender memories of the immortal Hawthorne. The boughs of the
+ whispering pines almost touch the lofty windows.</p>
+ <p>The interior of the dwelling is seemly. <a name="page131" id="page131"></a><span
+ class="pagenum">[pg 131]</span> It corresponds with the various eras of its
+ construction. The ancient low-posted rooms with their large open fire-places, in
+ which the genial hickory crackles and glows as in the olden time, have furnishings
+ and appointments in harmony. The more modern apartments are charming, the whole
+ combination making a most delightful country house.</p>
+ <p>Mr. Lothrop's enjoyment of art and his critical appreciation is illustrated here
+ as throughout his publications, his house being adorned with many exquisite and
+ valuable original paintings from the studios of modern artists; and there is, too, a
+ certain literary fitness that his home should be in this most classic spot, and that
+ the mistress of this home should be a lady of distinguished rank in literature, and
+ that the fair baby daughter of the house should wear for her own the name her mother
+ has made beloved in thousands of American and English households.</p>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="images/image4_full.png"><img src="images/image4_thumbnail.png"
+ alt="&quot;The Wayside.&quot;" /></a>
+ <p>"The Wayside."</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+ <a name="page132" id="page132"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 132]</span>
+ <h2>New England Conservatory of Music.</h2>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="images/image5_full.png"><img src="images/image5_thumbnail.png"
+ alt="New England CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC Franklin Square Boston" /></a>
+ <p>New England CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC Franklin Square Boston</p>
+ </div>
+ <center>
+ By MRS. M.J. DAVIS.
+ </center>
+ <p>One of the most important questions now occupying the minds of the world's deepest
+ and best thinkers, is the intellectual, physical, moral, and political position of
+ woman.</p>
+ <p>Men are beginning to realize a fact that has been evident enough for ages: that
+ the current of civilization can never rise higher than the springs of motherhood.
+ Given the ignorant, debased mothers of the Turkish harem, and the inevitable result
+ is a nation destitute of truth, honor or political position. All the power of the
+ Roman legions, all the wealth of the imperial empire, could not save the throne of
+ the C&aelig;sars when the Roman matron was shorn of her honor, and womanhood became
+ only the slave or the toy of its citizens. Men have been slow to grasp the fact that
+ women are a "true constituent of the bone and sinew of society," and as such should
+ be trained to bear the part of "bone and sinew." It has been finely said, "that as
+ times have altered and conditions varied, the respect has varied <a name="page133"
+ id="page133"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 133]</span> in which woman has been held.
+ At one time condemned to the field and counted with the cattle, at another time
+ condemned to the drawing-room and inventoried with marbles, oils and water-colors;
+ but only in instances comparatively rare, acknowledged and recognized in the fullness
+ of her moral and intellectual possibilities, and in the beauteous completeness of her
+ personal dignity, prowess and obligation."</p>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="images/image6_full.png"><img src="images/image6_thumbnail.png"
+ alt="The Library Reading Room" /></a>
+ <p>The Library Reading Room</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="images/image7_full.png"><img src="images/image7_thumbnail.png"
+ alt="Art Department Painting" /></a>
+ <p>Art Department Painting</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>Various and widely divergent as opinions are in regard to woman's place in the
+ political sphere, there is fast coming to be unanimity of thought in regard to her
+ intellectual development. Even in Turkey, fathers are beginning to see that their
+ daughters are better, not worse, for being able to read and, write, and civilization
+ is about ready to concede that the intellectual, physical and moral possibilities of
+ woman are to <a name="page134" id="page134"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 134]</span>
+ be the only limits to her attainment. Vast strides in the direction of the higher and
+ broader education of women have been made in the quarter of a century since John
+ Vassar founded on the banks of the Hudson the noble college for women that bears his
+ name; and others have been found who have lent willing hands to making broad the
+ highway that leads to an ideal womanhood. Wellesley and Smith, as well as Vassar find
+ their limits all too small for the throngs of eager girlhood that are pressing toward
+ them. The Boston University, honored in being first to open professional courses to
+ women, Michigan University, the New England Conservatory, the North Western
+ University of Illinois, the Wesleyan Universities, both of Connecticut and Ohio, with
+ others of the colleges of the country, have opened their doors and welcomed women to
+ an equal share with men, in their advantages. And in the shadow of Oxford, on the
+ Thames, and of Harvard, on the Charles, womanly <a name="page135"
+ id="page135"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 135]</span> minds are growing, womanly
+ lives are shaping, and womanly patience is waiting until every barrier shall be
+ removed, and all the green fields of learning shall be so free that whosoever will
+ may enter.</p>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="images/image8_full.png"><img src="images/image8_thumbnail.png"
+ alt="Art Department Modeling" /></a>
+ <p>Art Department Modeling</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="images/image9_full.png"><img src="images/image9_thumbnail.png"
+ alt="Tuning Department" /></a>
+ <p>Tuning Department</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>Among the foremost of the great educational institutions of the day, the New
+ England Conservatory of Music takes rank, and its remarkable development and
+ wonderful growth tends to prove that the youth of the land desire the highest
+ advantages that can be offered them. More than thirty years ago the germ of the idea
+ that is now embodied in this great institution, found lodgment in the brain of the
+ man who has devoted his life to its development. Believing that music had a positive
+ influence <a name="page136" id="page136"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 136]</span>
+ upon the elevation of the world hardly dreamed of as yet even by its most devoted
+ students, Eben Tourjee returned to America from years of musical study in the great
+ Conservatories of Europe. Knowing from personal observation the difficulties that lie
+ in the way of American students, especially of young and inexperienced girls who seek
+ to obtain a musical education abroad, battling as they must, not only with foreign
+ customs and a foreign language, but exposed to dangers, temptations and
+ disappointments, he determined to found in America a music school that should be
+ unsurpassed in the world. Accepting <a name="page137" id="page137"></a><span
+ class="pagenum">[pg 137]</span> the judgment of the great masters, Mendelsshon,
+ David, and Joachim, that the conservatory system was the best possible system of
+ musical instruction, doing for music what a college of liberal arts does for
+ education in general, Dr. Tourjee in 1853, with what seems to have been large and
+ earnest faith, and most entire devotion, took the first public steps towards the
+ accomplishment of his purpose. During the long years his plan developed step by step.
+ In 1870 the institution was chartered under its present name in Boston. In 1881 its
+ founder deeded to it his entire personal property, and by a deed of trust gave the
+ institution into the hands of a Board of Trustees to be perpetuated forever as a
+ Christian Music School.</p>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="images/image10_full.png"><img src="images/image10_thumbnail.png"
+ alt="The Dining Hall." /></a>
+ <p>The Dining Hall.</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>In the carrying out of his plan to establish and equip an institution that should
+ give the highest musical culture, Dr. Tourjee has been compelled, in order that
+ musicians educated here <a name="page138" id="page138"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg
+ 138]</span> should not be narrow, one-sided specialists only, but that they should be
+ cultured men and women, to add department after department, until to-day under the
+ same roof and management there are well equipped schools of Music, Art, Elocution,
+ Literature, Languages, Tuning, Physical Culture, and a home with the safeguards of a
+ Christian family life for young women students.</p>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="images/image11_full.png"><img src="images/image11_thumbnail.png"
+ alt="&lt;i&gt;The Cabinet&lt;/i&gt;" /></a>
+ <p><i>The Cabinet</i></p>
+ </div>
+ <p>When, in 1882, the institution moved from Music Hall to its present quarters in
+ Franklin Square, in what was the St. James Hotel, it became possessed of the largest
+ and best equipped conservatory buildings in the world. It has upon its staff of
+ seventy-five teachers, masters from the best schools of Europe. During the school
+ year ending June 29, 1884, students coming from forty-one states and territories of
+ the Union, from the British Provinces, from England and from the Sandwich Islands,
+ have received instruction there. The growth <a name="page139" id="page139"></a><span
+ class="pagenum">[pg 139]</span> of this institution, due in such large measure to the
+ courage and faith of one man, has been remarkable, and it stands to-day
+ self-supporting, without one dollar of endowment, carrying on alone its noble work,
+ an institution of which Boston, Massachusetts and America may well be proud. From the
+ first its invitation has been without limitation. It began with a firm belief that
+ "what it is in the nature of a man or woman to become, is a Providential indication
+ of what God wants it to become, by improvement and development," and it offered to
+ men and women alike the same advantages, the same labor, and the same honor. It is
+ working out for itself the problem of co-education, and it has never had occasion to
+ take one backward step in the part it has chosen. Money by the millions has been
+ poured out upon the schools and colleges of the land, and not one dollar too much has
+ been given, for the money that educates is the money that saves the nation.</p>
+ <p>Among those who have been made stewards of great wealth some liberal benefactor
+ should come forward in behalf of this great school, that, by eighteen years of
+ faithful living, has proved its right to live. Its founder says of it: "The
+ institution has not yet compassed my thought of it." Certainly it has not reached its
+ possibilities of doing good. It needs a hall in which its concerts and lectures can
+ be given, and in which the great organ of Music Hall, may be placed. It needs that
+ its chapel, library, studios, gymnasium and recitation rooms should be greatly
+ enlarged to meet the actual demands now made upon them. It needs what other
+ institutions have needed and received, a liberal endowment, to enable it, with them,
+ to meet and solve the great question of the day, the education of the people.</p>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="images/image12_full.png"><img src="images/image12_thumbnail.png"
+ alt="New England Conservatory of Music Boston" /></a>
+ <p>New England Conservatory of Music Boston</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+ <a name="page140" id="page140"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 140]</span>
+ <h2>SKETCH OF SAUGUS.</h2>
+ <center>
+ By E.P. ROBINSON.
+ </center>
+ <p>Saugus lies about eight miles northeast of Boston. It was incorporated as an
+ independent town February 17, 1815, and was formerly a part of Lynn, which once bore
+ the name of Saugus, being an Indian name, and signifies great or extended. It has a
+ taxable area of 5,880 acres, and its present population may be estimated at about
+ 2,800, living in 535 houses. The former boundary between Lynn and Suffolk County ran
+ through the centre of the "Boardman House," in what is now Saugus, and standing near
+ the line between Melrose and Saugus, and is one of the oldest houses in the town. It
+ has forty miles of accepted streets and roads, which are proverbial as being kept in
+ the very best condition. Its public buildings are a Town Hall, a wooden structure, of
+ Gothic architecture, with granite steps and underpining, and has a seating capacity
+ of seven hundred and eighty persons. It is considered to be the handsomest wooden
+ building in Essex County, and cost $48,000. The High School is accommodated within
+ its walls, and beside offices for the various boards of town officers; on the lower
+ floor it has a room for a library. The upper flight has an auditorium with ante-rooms
+ at the front and rear, a balcony at the front, seats one hundred and eighty persons,
+ and a platform on the stage at the rear. It was built in 1874-5. The building
+ committee were E.P. Robinson, Gilbert Waldron, J.W. Thomas, H.B. Newhall, Wilbur F.
+ Newhall, Augustus B. Davis, George N. Miller, George H. Hull, Louis P. Hawkes,
+ William F. Hitchings, E.E. Wilson, Warren P. Copp, David Knox, A. Brad. Edmunds and
+ Henry Sprague. E.P. Robinson was chosen chairman and David Knox secretary. The
+ architects were Lord &amp; Fuller of Boston, and the work of building was put under
+ contract to J.H. Kibby &amp; Son of Chelsea.</p>
+ <p>The town also owns seven commodious schoolhouses, in which are maintained thirteen
+ schools&mdash;one High, three Grammar, three Intermediate, three Primaries, one
+ sub-Primary and two mixed schools, the town appropriating the sum of six thousand
+ dollars therefor. There are five Churches&mdash;Congregational, Universalist, and
+ three Methodist, besides two societies worshiping in halls (the St. John's Episcopal
+ Mission and the Union at North Saugus). After the schism in the old Third Parish
+ about 1809, the religious feud between the Trinitarians and the Unitarians became so
+ intense that a lawsuit was had to obtain the fund, the Universalists retaining
+ possession. The Trinitarians then built the old stone Church, under the direction of
+ Squire Joseph Eames, which, as a piece of architecture, did not reflect much credit
+ on builder or architect. It is now used as a grocery and post office; their present
+ place of worship was built in 1852. The Church edifice of the old Third was erected
+ in 1738, and was occupied without change until 1859, when it was sold and moved off
+ the spot, and the site is now marked by a flag staff and band stand, known as Central
+ Square. The old Church was moved a short distance and converted into tenements, with
+ a store underneath. The Universalist society built their present Church <a
+ name="page141" id="page141"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 141]</span> in 1860. The
+ town farm consists of some 280 acres, and has a fine wood lot of 240 acres, the
+ remainder being valuable tillage, costing in 1823 $4,625.</p>
+ <p>The town is rich in local history and has either produced or been the residence of
+ a number of notable men and women.</p>
+ <div class="figleft">
+ <a href="images/image13_full.png"><img src="images/image13_thumbnail.png"
+ alt="M.E. CHURCH, CLIFTONDALE." /></a>
+ <p>M.E. CHURCH, CLIFTONDALE.</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>Judge William Tudor, the father of the ice business, now so colossal in its
+ proportions, started the trade here, living on what is now the poor farm. The Saugus
+ Female Seminary once held quite a place in literary circles, Cornelius C. Felton,
+ afterward president of Harvard College, being its "chore boy" (the remains of his
+ parents lie in the cemetery near by). Fanny Fern, the sister of N.P. Willis, the wife
+ of James Parton, the celebrated biographer, as well as two sisters of Dr. Alexander
+ Vinton, pursued their studies here, together with Miss Flint, who married Honorable
+ Daniel P. King, member of Congress for the Essex District, and Miss Dustin, who
+ became the wife of Eben Sutton, and who has been so devoted and interested in the
+ library of the Peabody Institute. Mr. Emerson, the preceptor, was for a time the
+ pastor of the Third Parish of Lynn (now Saugus Universalist society), where Parson
+ Roby preached for a period of fifty-three years&mdash;more than half a century, with
+ a devotion and fidelity that greatly endeared him to his people. In passing we give
+ the items of his salary as voted him in 1747, taken from the records of the Parish,
+ being kindly furnished by the Clerk, Mr. W.F. Hitchings: "A suitable house and barn,
+ standing in a suitable place; pasturing and sufficient warter meet for two Cows and
+ one horse&mdash;the winter meet put in his barn; the improvement of two acres of land
+ suitable to plant and to be kept well fenced; sixty pounds in lawful silver money, at
+ six shillings and eight pence per ounce; twenty cords of wood at his Dore, and the
+ Loose Contributions; and also the following artikles, or so much money as will
+ purchase them, viz: Sixty Bushels Indian Corn, forty-one Bushels of Rye, Six <a
+ name="page142" id="page142"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 142]</span> hundred pounds
+ wait of Pork and Eight Hundred and Eighty Eight pounds wait of Beefe."</p>
+ <p>This would be considered a pretty liberal salary even now for a suburban people to
+ pay. From the records of his parish it would seem he always enjoyed the love and
+ confidence of his people, and was sincerely mourned by them at his death, which
+ occurred January 31, 1803, at the advanced age of eighty years, and as stated above
+ in the fifty-third year of his ministry. Among other good works and mementoes which
+ he left behind him was the "Roby Elm," set out with his own hand, and which is now
+ more than one hundred and twenty-five years old. It is in an excellent state of
+ preservation, and with its perfectly conical shape at the top, attracts marked
+ attention from all lovers and observers of trees. Among the names of worthy citizens
+ who have impressed themselves upon the memory of their survivors, either as business
+ men of rare executive ability, or as merchants of strict integrity, or scholars and
+ men of literary genius, lawyers, artists, writers, poets, and men of inventive
+ genius, we will first mention as eldest on the list "Landlord" Jacob Newhall, who
+ used to keep a tavern in the east part of the town and gave "entertainment to man and
+ beast" passing between Boston and Salem, notably so to General Washington on his
+ journey from Boston to Salem in 1797, and later to the Marquis De Lafayette in 1824,
+ when making a similar journey. We also mention Zaccheus Stocker, Jonathan Makepeace,
+ Charles Sweetser, Dr. Abijah Cheever, Benjamin F. Newhall and Benjamin Hitchings.
+ These last all held town office with great credit to themselves and their
+ constituents.</p>
+ <p>Benjamin F. Newhall was a man of versatile parts. Beside writing rhymes he
+ preached the Gospel, and was at one time County Commissioner for Essex County.</p>
+ <p>To these may be added Salmon Snow, who held the office of Selectman for several
+ years, and also kept the poor of Saugus for many years with great acceptance. He was
+ a man of good judgment, strong in his likes and dislikes, and bitter in his
+ resentments. George Henry Sweetser was also a Selectman for years, and was elected to
+ the Legislature for both branches, being Senator for two terms. Frederick Stocker,
+ noted as a manufacturer of brick, was also a man of sterling qualities, and shared in
+ the confidence and esteem of his fellow citizens. Joseph Stocker Newhall, a
+ manufacturer of roundings in sole leather, was a just man, of positive views, and
+ although interesting himself in the political issues of the day would not take
+ office. Eminently social he was at times somewhat abrupt and laconic in denouncing
+ what he conceived to be shams. As a manufacturer his motto was, "the laborer is
+ worthy of his hire." He died in 1875, aged 67 years. George Pearson was Treasurer of
+ the town and one of the Selectmen, and also Treasurer and Deacon of the Orthodox
+ parish for twenty-five years, living to the advanced age of eighty-seven years. He
+ died in 1883.</p>
+ <p>Later, about 1837, Edward Pranker, an Englishman, and Francis Scott, a Scotchman,
+ became noted for their woollen factories, which they built in Saugus, and also became
+ residents here for the rest of their lives. Enoch Train, too, a Boston ship merchant
+ and founder of the famous line of packets between Boston and Liverpool for the
+ transportation of emigrants, passed the last ten years of his life here, marrying
+ Mrs. Almira Cheever. He was the father of Mrs. A.D.T. Whitney, the <a name="page143"
+ id="page143"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 143]</span> author of many works of
+ fiction, which have been widely read; among them "Faith Gartney's Girlhood," "Odd or
+ Even," "Sights and Insights," etc. In this connection we point to a living novelist
+ of Saugus, Miss Ella Thayer, whose "Wired Lore" has been through several editions.
+ George William Phillips, brother of Wendell, a lawyer of some note, also lived many
+ years at Saugus and died in 1878. Joseph Ames, the artist, celebrated for his
+ portraits, who was commissioned by the Catholics to visit Rome and paint Pope Pius
+ IX., and who executed in a masterly manner other commissions, such as Rufus Choate,
+ Daniel Webster, Abraham Lincoln, Madames Rachael and Ristori, learned the art in
+ Saugus, though born in Roxbury, N.H. He died at New York while temporarily painting
+ there, but was buried in Saugus in 1874. His brother Nathan was a patent solicitor,
+ and considered an expert in such matters, and invented several useful machines. He
+ was also a writer of both prose and poetry, writing among other books "Pirate's
+ Glen," "Dungeon Rock" and "Childe Harold." He died in 1860.</p>
+ <p>Rev. Fales H. Newhall, D.D., who was Professor of Languages at Middletown College,
+ and who, as a writer, speaker or preacher, won merited distinction, died in 1882,
+ lamented that his light should go prematurely out at the early age of 56 years.</p>
+ <p>Henry Newhall, who went from Saugus to San Francisco, and there became a
+ millionaire, may be spoken of as a succesful business man and merchant. The greatest
+ instance of longevity since the incorporation of the town was that of Joseph Cheever,
+ who was born February 22, 1772, and died June 19, 1872, aged 100 years, 4 months, 27
+ days. He was a farmer of great energy, industry and will power, and was given to much
+ litigation. He, too, represented the town in 1817-18, 1820-21, 1831-32, and again in
+ 1835.</p>
+ <p>Saugus, too, was the scene of the early labors of Rev. Edward T. Taylor,
+ familiarly known as Father Taylor. Here he learned to read, and preached his first
+ sermon at what was then known as the "Rock Schoolhouse," at East Saugus, though
+ converted at North Saugus. Mrs. Sally Sweetser, a pious lady, taught him his letters,
+ and Mrs. Jonathan Newhall used to read to him the chapter in the Bible from which he
+ was to preach until he had committed it to memory.</p>
+ <p>North Saugus is a fine agricultural section with table land, pleasant and well
+ watered, well adapted to farming purposes, and it was here that Adam Hawkes, the
+ first of this name in this county, settled with his five sons in 1630, and took up a
+ large tract of land. He built his house on a rocky knoll, the spot being at the
+ intersection of the road leading from Saugus to Lynnfield with the Newburyport
+ turnpike, known as Hawkes' Corner. This house being burned the bricks of the old
+ chimney were put into another, and when again this chimney was taken down a few years
+ ago there were found bricks with the date of 1601 upon them. This shows, evidently,
+ that the bricks were brought from England. This property is now in the hands of one
+ of his lineal descendants, Louis P. Hawkes, having been handed down from sire to son
+ for more than 250 years. On the 28th and 29th of July, 1880, a family reunion of the
+ descendents of Adam Hawkes was held to celebrate the 250th anniversary of his advent
+ to the soil of Saugus. It was a notable meeting, and brought together the members of
+ this respected and respectable <a name="page144" id="page144"></a><span
+ class="pagenum">[pg 144]</span> family from Maine to California. Two large tents were
+ spread and the trees and buildings were decorated with flags and mottoes in an
+ appropriate and tasteful manner. Judges, Generals, artists, poets, clergymen,
+ lawyers, farmers and mechanics were present to participate in the re-union. Addresses
+ were made, poems suitable to the occasion rendered, and all passed off in a most
+ creditable manner. Among the antique and curious documents in the possession of
+ Samuel Hawkes was the "division of the estate of Adam Hawkes, made March 27,
+ 1672."</p>
+ <p>Mrs. Dinsmore resided in this part of the town. A most amiable woman, a good
+ nurse, kind in sickness, and it was in this way that she discovered a most valuable
+ medicine. Her specific is claimed to be very efficacious in cases of croup and
+ kindred diseases, and its use in such cases has become very general, as well as for
+ headache. She is almost as widely known as Lydia Pinkham. She died in 1881.</p>
+ <div class="figleft">
+ <a href="images/image14_full.png"><img src="images/image14_thumbnail.png"
+ alt="MRS. DINSMORE." /></a>
+ <p>MRS. DINSMORE.</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>Saugus nobly responded to the call for troops to put down the rebellion,
+ furnishing a large contingent for Company K, Seventeenth Massachusetts Volunteers,
+ which was recruited almost wholly from Malden and Saugus, under command of Captain
+ Simonds of Malden. Thirty-six Saugus men also enlisted in Company A, Fortieth
+ Massachusetts Volunteers, while quite a number joined the gallant Nineteenth
+ Regiment, Col. E.W. Hinks, whose name Post 95, G.A.R., of Saugus bears, which is a
+ large and flourishing organization. There were many others who enlisted in various
+ other regiments, beside those who served in the navy.</p>
+ <br clear="all" />
+ <div class="figleft">
+ <img src="images/image15_full.png" alt="NINETEENTH REGIMENT BADGE." />
+ <p>NINETEENTH REGIMENT BADGE.</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>Charles A. Newhall of this town is secretary and treasurer of the Nineteenth
+ Regiment association, whose survivors still number nearly one hundred members.</p>
+ <h3>THE OLD IRON WORKS.</h3>
+ <p>These justly celebrated works, the first of their kind in this country, were
+ situated on the west bank of the Saugus river, about one-fourth of a mile north of
+ the Town Hall, on the road leading to Lynnfield, and almost immediately opposite the
+ mansion of A.A. Scott, Esq., the present proprietor of the woolen mills which are
+ located just above, the site of the old works being still marked by a mound of scoria
+ and <a name="page145" id="page145"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 145]</span> debris,
+ the locality being familiarly known as the "Cinder Banks." Iron ore was discovered in
+ the vicinity of these works at an early period, but no attempt was made to work it
+ until 1643. The Braintree iron works, for which some have claimed precedence, were
+ not commenced until 1647, in that part of the town known as Quincy.</p>
+ <p>Among the artisans who found employment and scope for their mechanical skill at
+ these works was Mr. Joseph Jenks who, when the colonial mint was started to coin the
+ "Pine Tree Shilling," made the die for the first impressions at the Iron works at
+ Saugus.</p>
+ <p>The old house, formerly belonging to the Thomas Hudson estate of sixty-nine acres
+ first purchased by the Iron Works, is still standing, and is probably one of the
+ oldest in Essex County, although it has undergone so many repairs that it is
+ something like the boy's jack-knife, which belonged to his grandfather and had
+ received three new blades and two new handles since he had known it. One of the
+ fire-places, with all its modernizing, a few years ago measured about thirteen feet
+ front, and its whole contour is yet unique. It is now owned by A.A. Scott and John B.
+ Walton.</p>
+ <p>Near Pranker's Pond, on Appleton street, is a singular rock resembling a pulpit.
+ This portion of the town is known as the Calemount.</p>
+ <p>There is a legend of the Colonial period that a man by the name of Appleton
+ harangued or preached to the people of the vicinity, urging them to stand by the
+ Republican cause, hence the name of "Pulpit Rock." The name "Calemount" also comes,
+ according to tradition, from the fact that one of the people named Caleb Appleton,
+ who had become obnoxious to the party, had agreed upon a signal with his wife and
+ intimate friends, that, when in danger, they should notify him by this expressive
+ warning, "Cale, mount!" upon which he would take refuge in the rocky mountain, which,
+ being then densely wooded, afforded a secure hiding place. Several members of this
+ family of Appletons have since, during successive generations, been distinguished and
+ well known citizens of Boston, one of whom, William Appleton, was elected to Congress
+ over Anson Burlingame, in 1860.</p>
+ <p>Recently, one of the descendants of this family has had a tablet of copper
+ securely bolted to the rock with the following inscription:&mdash;</p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"APPLETOX'S PULPIT!</p>
+ <p>In September, 1687, from this rock tradition asserts that resisting the tyranny
+ of Sir Edmond Andros, Major Samuel Appleton of Ipswich spake to the people in
+ behalf of those principles which later were embodied in the declaration of
+ Independence."</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>This tablet was formally presented to the town by letter from the late Thomas
+ Appleton, at the annual March meeting in 1882, and its care assumed by the town of
+ Saugus.</p>
+ <p>Among the present industries of Saugus are Pranker's Mills, a joint stock
+ corporation, doing business under the style of Edward Pranker &amp; Co., for the
+ manufacture of woollen goods, employing about one hundred operatives, and producing
+ about 1,800,000 yards of cloth annually&mdash;red, white and yellow flannel. The mill
+ of A.A. Scott is just below on the same stream, making the same class of goods, with
+ a much smaller production, both companies being noted for the standard quality of
+ their fabrics. The spice and coffee mills of Herbert B. Newhall at East Saugus do a
+ large business in their line, and his goods go all over New England and the West.</p>
+ <p>Charles S. Hitchings, at Saugus, turns <a name="page146" id="page146"></a><span
+ class="pagenum">[pg 146]</span> out some 1,500 cases of hand-made slippers of fine
+ quality for the New York and New England trade. Otis M. Burrill, in the same line, is
+ making the same kind of work, some 150 cases, Hiram Grover runs a stitching factory
+ with steam power, and employs a large number of employees, mostly females.</p>
+ <p>Win. E. Shaw also makes paper boxes and cartoons, and does quite a business for
+ Lynn manufacturers.</p>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="images/image16_full.png"><img src="images/image16_thumbnail.png"
+ alt="RESIDENCE OF RUFUS A. JOHNSON." /></a>
+ <p>RESIDENCE OF RUFUS A. JOHNSON.</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>Enoch T. Kent at Saugus and his brother, Edward S. Kent, at Cliftondale, are
+ engaged in washing crude hair and preparing it for plastering and other purposes,
+ such as curled hair, hair cloth, blankets, etc. They each give employment to quite a
+ number of men. Albert H. Sweetser makes snuff, succeeding to the firm of Sweetser
+ Bros., who did an extensive business until after the war. The demand for this kind of
+ goods is more limited than formerly. Joseph. A. Raddin, manufactures the crude
+ tobacco from the leaf into chewing and smoking tobacco. Edward O. Copp, Martha Fiske,
+ William Parker and a few others still manufacture cigars.</p>
+ <p>Quite an, extensive ice business is done at Saugus by Solon V. Edmunds and Stephen
+ Stackpole. A few years ago Eben Edmunds shipped by the Eastern Railroad some 1,200
+ tons to Gloucester, but the shrinkage and wastage of the ice by delays on the train
+ did not render it a profitable operation.</p>
+ <p>The strawberry culture has recently become quite a feature in the producing
+ industry of Saugus. In 1884 <a name="page147" id="page147"></a><span
+ class="pagenum">[pg 147]</span> Elbridge S. Upham marketed 3,600 boxes, Charles S.
+ Hitchings 1,200, Warren P. Copp 400, and others, Martin Carnes, Calvin Locke, Edward
+ Saunders and Lorenzo Mansfield, more or less.</p>
+ <p>John W. Blodgett and the Hatch Bros. do a large business in early and late
+ vegetables for Boston and Lynn markets, such as asparagus, spinach, etc., and employ
+ quite a number of men.</p>
+ <p>Nor must we forget to mention the milk business. Louis P. Hawkes has a herd of
+ some forty cows and has a milk route at Lynn. J.W. Blodgett keeps twenty-five cows,
+ and takes his milk to market. Geo. N. Miller and T.O.W. Houghton also keep cows and
+ have a route. Joshua Kingsbury, George H. Pearson and George Ames have a route,
+ buying their milk. Byron Hone keeps fifty cows. Dudley Fiske has twenty-five, selling
+ their milk. O.M. Hitchings, H. Burns, A.B. Davis, Lewis Austin, Richard Hawkes and
+ others keep from seven to twelve cows for dairy purposes.</p>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="images/image17_full.png"><img src="images/image17_thumbnail.png"
+ alt="RESIDENCE OF CHARLES H. BOND." /></a>
+ <p>RESIDENCE OF CHARLES H. BOND.</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>Having somewhat minutely noticed the industries we will speak briefly of some of
+ the dwellings. The elegant mansion and gardens of Brainard and Henry George, Harmon
+ Hall and Rufus A. Johnson of East Saugus, and Eli Barrett, A.A. Scott and E.E. Wilson
+ of Saugus, C.A. Sweetser, C.H. Bond and Pliny Nickerson at Cliftondale, with their
+ handsome lawns, rich and rare flowers and noble shade trees attract general
+ attention. The last mentioned estate was formerly owned by a brother of Governor
+ William Eustis, where his Excellency used to spend a portion of his time each
+ year.</p>
+ <p>At the south-westerly part of the town, not far from the old Eustis estate, the
+ boundaries of three counties and four towns intersect with each other, viz: Suffolk,
+ Essex and Middlesex counties, and the towns of Revere, Saugus, Melrose and Maiden.
+ Near by, too, is the old Boynton estate, and the Franklin Trotting park, where some
+ <a name="page148" id="page148"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 148]</span> famous
+ trotting was had, when Dr. Smith managed it in 1866-7, Flora Temple, Fashion, Lady
+ Patchen and other noted horses contending. After a few years of use it was abandoned,
+ but it has recently been fitted up by Marshall Abbott of Lynn, and several trots have
+ taken place the present summer.</p>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="images/image18_full.png"><img src="images/image18_thumbnail.png"
+ alt="TOWN HALL." /></a>
+ <p>TOWN HALL.</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>The Boynton estate above referred to is divided by a small brook, known as
+ "Bride's Brook," which is also the dividing line between Saugus and Revere, <a
+ name="page149" id="page149"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 149]</span> and the
+ counties of Suffolk and Essex. Tradition asserts that many years ago a couple were
+ married here, the groom standing on one side and the bride on the other; hence the
+ name "Bride's Brook."</p>
+ <p>The existence of iron ore used for the manufacturing at the old Iron Works was
+ well known, and there have been many who have believed that antimony also exists in
+ large quantities in Saugus, but its precise location has as yet not become known to
+ the public.</p>
+ <p>As early as the year 1848, a man by the name of Holden, who was given to field
+ searching and prospecting, frequently brought specimens to the late Benjamin F.
+ Newhall and solemnly affirmed that he obtained them from the earth and soil within
+ the limits of Saugus. Every means was used to induce him to divulge the secret of its
+ locality. But Holden was wary and stolidly refused to disclose or share the knowledge
+ of the place of the lode with anyone. He averred that he was going to make his
+ fortune by it. Detectives were put upon his trail in his roaming about the fields,
+ but he managed to elude all efforts at discovery. Being an intemperate man, one cold
+ night after indulging in his cups, he was found by the roadside stark and stiff. Many
+ rude attempts and imperfect searches have been made upon the assurances of Holden to
+ discover the existence of antimony, but thus far in vain, and the supposed suppressed
+ secret of the existence of it in Saugus died with him.</p>
+ <p>"Pirate's Glen" is also within the territory of Saugus, while "Dungeon Rock,"
+ another romantic locality, described by Alonzo Lewis in his history of Lynn, is just
+ over the line in that city. There is a popular tradition that the pirates buried
+ their treasure at the foot of a certain hemlock tree in the glen, also the body of a
+ beautiful female. The rotten stump of a tree may still be seen, and a hollow beside
+ it, where people have dug in searching for human bones and treasure. This glen is
+ highly romantic and is one of the places of interest to which all strangers visiting
+ Saugus are conducted, and is invested with somewhat of the supernatural tales of
+ Captain Kid and treasure trove.</p>
+ <p>There is a fine quarry or ledge of jasper located in the easterly part of the
+ town, near Saugus River, just at the foot of the conical-shaped elevation known as
+ "Round Hill." which Professor Hitchcock, in his last geological survey, pronounced to
+ be the best specimen in the state. Mrs. Hitchcock, an artist, who accompanied her
+ husband in his surveying tour, delineated from this eminence, looking toward Nahant
+ and Egg Rock, which is full in view, and from which steamers may be seen with a glass
+ plainly passing in and out of Boston harbor. The scenery and drives about Saugus are
+ delightful, especially beautiful is the view and landscape looking from the "Cinder
+ Banks," so-called, down Saugus river toward Lynn.</p>
+ <h3>REPRESENTATIVES FROM SAUGUS SINCE THE TOWN WAS INCORPORATED.</h3>
+ <p>Saugus, (formerly the West Parish of Lynn), was formed in the year 1815, and the
+ town was first represented by Mr. Robert Emes in 1816. Mr. Emes carried on morocco
+ dressing, his business being located on Saugus river, on the spot now occupied by
+ Scott's Flannel Mills.</p>
+ <p>In 1817-18 Mr. Joseph Cheever represented the town, and again in 1820-21; also, in
+ 1831-32, and again, for the last time, in 1835. After having served the town seven
+ times in the legislature, <a name="page150" id="page150"></a><span
+ class="pagenum">[pg 150]</span> he seems to have quietly retired from political
+ affairs.</p>
+ <p>In 1822 Dr. Abijah Cheever was the Representative, and again in 1829-30. The
+ doctor held a commission as surgeon in the army at the time of our last war with
+ Great Britain. He was a man very decided in his manners, had a will of his own, and
+ liked to have people respect it.</p>
+ <p>In 1823 Mr. Jonathan Makepeace was elected. His business was the manufacture of
+ snuff, at the old mills in the eastern part of the town, now owned by Sweetser
+ Brothers, and known as the Sweetser Mills.</p>
+ <p>In 1826-28 Mr. John Shaw was the Representative.</p>
+ <p>In 1827 Mr. William Jackson was elected.</p>
+ <p>In 1833-34 Mr. Zaccheus N. Stocker represented the town. Mr. Stocker held various
+ offices, and looked very closely after the interests of the town.</p>
+ <p>In 1837-38 Mr. William W. Boardman was the Representative. He has filled a great
+ many offices in the town.</p>
+ <p>In 1839 Mr. Charles Sweetser was elected, and again in 1851. Mr. Sweetser was
+ largely engaged in the manufacture of snuff and cigars. He was a gentleman very
+ decided in his opinions, and enjoyed the confidence of the people to a large
+ degree.</p>
+ <p>In 1840, the year of the great log cabin campaign, Mr. Francis Dizer was
+ elected.</p>
+ <p>In 1841 Mr. Benjamin Hitchings, Jr., was elected, and in 1842 the town was
+ represented by Mr. Stephen E. Hawkes.</p>
+ <p>In 1843-44 Benjamin F. Newhall, Esq., was the Representative, Mr. Newhall was a
+ man of large and varied experience, and held various offices, always looking sharply
+ after the real interests of the town. He also held the office of County
+ Commissioner.</p>
+ <p>In 1845 Mr. Pickmore Jackson was the Representative. He has also held various
+ offices in the town, and has since served on the school committee with good
+ acceptance.</p>
+ <p>In 1846-47 Mr. Sewall Boardman represented the town.</p>
+ <p>In 1852 Mr. George H. Sweetser was the Representative. Mr. Sweetser has also held
+ a seat in our State Senate two years, and filled various town offices. He was a
+ prompt and energetic business man, engaged in connection with his brother, Mr.
+ Charles A. Sweetser, in the manufacture of snuff and cigars.</p>
+ <p>In 1853 Mr. John B. Hitching was elected. He has held various offices in the
+ town.</p>
+ <p>In 1854 the town was represented by Mr. Samuel Hawkes, who has also served in
+ several other positions, proving himself a very straightforward and reliable man.</p>
+ <p>In 1855 Mr. Richard Mansfield was elected. He was for many years Tax Collector and
+ Constable, and when he laid his hand on a man's shoulder, in the name of the law, the
+ duty was performed in such a good-natured manner that it really did not seem so very
+ bad, after all.</p>
+ <p>In 1856 Mr. William H. Newhall represented the town. He has held the offices of
+ Town Clerk and Selectman longer than any other person in town, and is still in
+ office.</p>
+ <p>In 1857 Mr. Jacob B. Calley was elected.</p>
+ <p>In 1858 the district system was adopted, and Mr. Jonathan Newhall was elected to
+ represent the twenty-fourth Essex District, comprising the towns of Saugus, Lynnfield
+ and Middleton.</p>
+ <a name="page151" id="page151"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 151]</span>
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="images/image19_full.png"><img src="images/image19_thumbnail.png"
+ alt="&lt;i&gt;Sketch of Saugus.&lt;/i&gt;" /></a>
+ <p><i>Sketch of Saugus.</i></p>
+ </div>
+ <p>In 1861 Mr. Harmon Hall represented the District. Mr. Hall is a very energetic
+ business man, and has accumulated a very handsome property by <a name="page152"
+ id="page152"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 152]</span> the manufacture of boots and
+ shoes. He has held various other important positions, and has been standing Moderator
+ in all town meetings, always putting business through by daylight.</p>
+ <p>In 1863 Mr. John Hewlett was elected. He resides in that part of the town called
+ North Saugus, and was for a long series of years a manufacturer of snuff and
+ cigars.</p>
+ <p>In 1864 Mr. Charles W. Newhall was the Representative.</p>
+ <p>In 1867 Mr. Sebastian S. Dunn represented the District. Mr. Dunn was a dealer in
+ snuff, cigars and spices, and is now engaged in farming in Dakota.</p>
+ <p>In 1870 Mr. John Armitage represented the District&mdash;the twentieth
+ Essex&mdash;comprising the towns of Saugus, Lynnfield, Middleton and Topsfield. He
+ has been engaged in the woollen business most of his life; formerly a partner with
+ Pranker &amp; Co. He has also held other town offices with great acceptance.</p>
+ <p>J.B. Calley succeeded Mr. Armitage, it being the second time he had been elected.
+ Otis M. Hitchings was the next Representative, a shoe manufacturer, being elected
+ over A.A. Scott, Esq., the republican candidate.</p>
+ <p>Joseph Whitehead was the next Representative from Saugus, a grocer in business. He
+ was then and still is Town Treasurer, repeatedly having received every vote cast. J.
+ Allston Newhall was elected in 1878 and for several years was selectman.</p>
+ <p>Albert H. Sweetser was our last Representative, elected in 1882-3, by one of the
+ largest majorities ever given in the District. He is a snuff manufacturer, doing
+ business at Cliftondale, under the firm of Sweetser Bros., whom he succeeds in
+ business. Saugus is entitled to the next Representative in 1885-6. The womb of the
+ future will alone reveal his name.</p>
+ <p>The future of Saugus would seem to be well assured, having frequent trains to and
+ from Boston and Lynn, with enlarged facilities for building purposes, especially at
+ Cliftondale, where a syndicate has recently been formed, composed of Charles H. Bond,
+ Edward S. Kent, and Henry Waite, who have purchased thirty-four acres of land,
+ formerly belonging to the Anthony Hatch estate, which, with other adjoining lands are
+ to be laid out into streets and lots presenting such opportunities and facilities for
+ building as cannot fail to attract all who are desirious of obtaining suburban
+ residences, and thus largely add to the taxable property of Saugus and to the
+ prosperity of this interesting locality.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <a name="page153" id="page153"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 153]</span>
+ <h2>THE BARTHOLDI COLOSSUS.</h2>
+ <center>
+ By WILLIAM HOWE DOWNES.
+ </center>
+ <p>The project of erecting a colossal statue of Liberty, which shall at once serve as
+ a lighthouse and as a symbolic work of art, may be discussed from several different
+ points of view. The abstract idea, as it occurred to the sculptor, Mr. Bartholdi, was
+ noble. The colossus was to symbolize the historic friendship of the two great
+ republics, the United States and France; it was to further symbolize the idea of
+ freedom and fraternity which underlies the republican form of government. Lafayette
+ and Jefferson would have been touched by the project. If we are not touched by it, it
+ proves that we have forgotten much which it would become us to recall. Before our
+ nation was, the democratic idea had been for many years existing and expanding among
+ the French people; crushed again and again by tyrants, it ever rose, renewed and
+ fresh for the irrepressible conflict. Through all their vicissitudes the people of
+ France have upheld, unfaltering, their ideal&mdash;liberty, equality and fraternity.
+ Our own republic exists to-day because France helped us when England sought to crush
+ us. It is never amiss to freshen our memories as to these historic facts. The
+ symbolism of the colossus would therefore be very fine; it would have a meaning which
+ every one could understand. It would signify not only the amity of France and the
+ United States, and the republican idea of brotherhood and freedom, as I have said;
+ but it would also stand for American hospitality to the European emigrant, and Emma
+ Lazarus has thus imagined the colossus endowed with speech:</p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="line">
+ "Keep, ancient lands, your storied pomp!" cries she.
+ </div>
+ <div class="line">
+ With silent lips. "Give me your tired, your poor,
+ </div>
+ <div class="line">
+ Your huddled masses, yearning to breathe free;
+ </div>
+ <div class="line">
+ The wretched refuse of your teeming shore&mdash;
+ </div>
+ <div class="line">
+ Send these, the homeless, temptest-tost to me&mdash;
+ </div>
+ <div class="line">
+ I lift my lamp beside the golden door!"
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>Now, there can be no two ways of thinking among patriotic Americans as to this
+ aspect of the Bartholdi colossus question. It must be agreed that the motive of the
+ work is extremely grand, and that its significance would be glorious. The sculptor's
+ project was a generous inspiration, for which he must be cordially remembered. To be
+ sure, it may be said he is getting well advertised; that is very true, but it would
+ be mean in us to begrudge him what personal fame he may derive from the work. To
+ assume that the whole affair is a "job," or that it is entirely the outcome of one
+ man's scheming egotism and desire for notoriety, is to take a deplorably low view of
+ it; to draw unwarranted conclusions and to wrong ourselves. The money to pay for the
+ statue&mdash;about $250,000&mdash;was raised by popular subscription in France, under
+ the auspices of the Franco-American Union, an association of gentlemen whose
+ membership includes such names as Laboulaye, de Lafayette, de Rochambeau, de
+ Noailles, de Toqueville, de Witt, Martin, de Remusat. The identification of these
+ excellent men with the project should be a sufficient guarantee of its disinterested
+ character. The efforts made in this country to raise the
+ money&mdash;$250,000&mdash;required to build a suitable pedestal for the statue, are
+ a subject of every day comment, and the failure to obtain the whole amount is a
+ matter for no small degree of chagrin.</p>
+ <a name="page154" id="page154"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 154]</span>
+ <p>Who and what is Mr. Bartholdi? He is a native of Colmar, in Alsace, and comes of a
+ good stock; a pupil of the Lycee Louis-le-Grand, and of Ary Scheffer, he studied
+ first painting then sculpture, and after a journey in the East with Gerome,
+ established his atelier in Paris. He served in the irregular corps of Garibaldi
+ during the war of 1870, and the following year visited the United States. It is
+ admitted that he is a man of talent, but that he is not considered a great sculptor
+ in his own country is equally beyond doubt. He would not be compared, for instance,
+ with such men as Chapu, Dubois, Falguiere, Clesinger, Mercie, Fremiet, men who stand
+ in the front rank of their profession. The list of his works is not long. It includes
+ statues of General Rapp, Vercingetorix, Vauban, Champollion, Lafayette and Rouget de
+ l'Isle; ideal groups entitled "Genius in the Grasp of Misery," and "the Malediction
+ of Alsace;" busts of Messrs. Erckmann and Chatrain; single figures called "Le
+ Vigneron," "Genie Funebre" and "Peace;" and a monument to Martin Schoengauer in the
+ form of a fountain for the courtyard of the Colmar Museum. There may be a few others.
+ Last, but by no means least, there is the great Lion of Belfort, his best work. This
+ is about 91 by 52 feet in dimensions, and is carved from a block of reddish Vosges
+ stone. It is intended to commemorate the defence of Belfort against the German army
+ in 1870, an episode of heroic interest. The immense animal is represented as wounded
+ but still capable of fighting, half lying, half standing, with an expression of rage
+ and mighty defiance. It is not too much to say that Mr. Bartholdi in this case has
+ shown a fine appreciation of the requirements of colossal sculpture. He has
+ sacrificed all unnecessary details, and, taking a lesson from the old Egyptian
+ stone-cutters, has presented an impressive arrangement of simple masses and unvexed
+ surfaces which give to the composition a marvellous breadth of effect. The lion is
+ placed in a sort of rude niche on the side of a rocky hill, which is the foundation
+ of the fortress of Belfort. It is visible at a great distance, and is said to be
+ strikingly noble from every point of view. The idea is not original, however well it
+ may have been carried out, for the Lion of Lucerne by Thorwaldsen is its prototype on
+ a smaller scale and commemorates an event of somewhat similar character. The bronze
+ equestrian statue of Vercingetorix, the fiery Gallic chieftain, in the Clermont
+ museum, is full of violent action. The horse is flying along with his legs in
+ positions which set all the science of Mr. Muybridge at defiance; the man is
+ brandishing his sword and half-turning in his saddle to shout encouragement to his
+ followers. The whole is supported by a bit of artificial rock-work under the horse,
+ and the body of a dead Gaul lies close beside it. In the statue of Rouget de l'Isle
+ we see a young man striking an orator's attitude, with his right arm raised in a
+ gesture which seems to say:</p>
+ <p>"<i>Aux armes, citoyens / Formes vos bataillons!</i>"</p>
+ <p>The Lafayette, in New York, is perhaps a mediocre statue, but even so, it is
+ better than most of our statues. A Frenchman has said of it that the figure
+ "resembles rather a young tenor hurling out his C sharp, than a hero offering his
+ heart and sword to liberty." It represents our ancient ally extending his left hand
+ in a gesture of greeting, while his right hand, which holds his sword, is pressed
+ against his breast in a somewhat theatrical movement. It will be inferred that the
+ general criticism to <a name="page155" id="page155"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg
+ 155]</span> be made upon Mr. Bartholdi's statues is that they are violent and want
+ repose. The Vercingetorix, the Rouget de l'Isle, the Lafayette, all have this
+ exaggerated stress of action. They have counterbalancing features of merit, no doubt,
+ but none of so transcendent weight that we can afford to overlook this grave
+ defect.</p>
+ <p>Coming now to the main question, which it is the design of this paper to discuss,
+ the inquiry arises: What of the colossal statue of Liberty as a work of art? For, no
+ matter how noble the motive may be, or how generous the givers, it must after all be
+ subjected to this test. If it is not a work of art, the larger it is, the more
+ offensive it must be. There are not wanting critics who maintain that colossal
+ figures cannot be works of art; they claim that such representations of the human
+ form are unnatural and monstrous, and it is true that they are able to point out some
+ "terrible examples" of modern failures, such, for instance, as the "Bavaria" statue
+ at Munich. But these writers appear to forget that the "Minerva" of the Parthenon and
+ the Olympian Jupiter were the works of the greatest sculptor of ancient times, and
+ that no less a man than Michael Angelo was the author of the "David" and "Moses." It
+ is therefore apparent that those who deny the legitimacy of colossal sculptures <i>in
+ toto</i> go too far; but it is quite true that colossal works have their own laws and
+ are subject to peculiar conditions. Mr. Lesbazeilles<a id="footnotetag7"
+ name="footnotetag7"></a><a href="#footnote7"><sup>7</sup></a> says that "colossal
+ statuary is in its proper place when it expresses power, majesty, the qualities that
+ inspire respect and fear; but it would be out of place if it sought to please us by
+ the expression of grace.... Its function is to set forth the sublime and the
+ grandiose." The colossi found among the ruins of Egyptian Temples and Palaces cannot
+ be seen without emotion, for if many of them are admirable only because of their
+ great size, still no observer can avoid a feeling of astonishment on account of the
+ vast energy, courage and industry of the men of old who could vanquish such gigantic
+ difficulties. At the same time it will not do to assume that the Egyptian stone
+ cutters were not artists. The great Sphinx of Giseh, huge as it is, is far from being
+ a primitive and vulgar creation. "The portions of the head which have been
+ preserved," says Mr. Charles Blanc, "the brow, the eyebrows, the corners of the eyes,
+ the passage from the temples to the cheek-bones, and from the cheek-bones to the
+ cheek, the remains of the mouth and chin,&mdash;all this testifies to an
+ extraordinary fineness of chiselling. The entire face has a solemn serenity and a
+ sovereign goodness." Leaving aside all consideration of the artistic merits of other
+ Egyptian colossi,&mdash;those at Memphis, Thebes, Karnac and Luxor, with the twin
+ marvels of Amenophis-Memnon&mdash;we turn to the most famous colossus of antiquity,
+ that at Rhodes, only to find that we have even less evidence on which to base an
+ opinion as to its quality than is available in the case of the numerous primitive
+ works of Egypt and of India. We know its approximate dimensions, the material of
+ which it was made, and that it was overthrown by an earthquake, but there seems to be
+ reason to doubt its traditional attitude, and nothing is known as to what it amounted
+ to as a work of art, though it may be presumed that, being the creation of a Greek,
+ it had the merits of its classic age and school. Of the masterpieces of Phidias it
+ may be said that they were designed for the interiors <a name="page156"
+ id="page156"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 156]</span> of Temples and were adopted
+ with consummate art to the places they occupied; they have been reconstructed for us
+ from authentic descriptions, and we are enabled to judge concerning that majestic and
+ ponderous beauty which made them the fit presentments of the greatest pagan deities.
+ I need say nothing of the immortal statues by Michael Angelo, and will therefore
+ hasten to consider the modern outdoor colossi which now exist in Europe&mdash;the St.
+ Charles Borromeo at Arona, Italy, the Bavaria at Munich, the Arminius in Westphalia,
+ Our Lady of Puy in France. The St. Charles Borromeo, near the shore of Lake Maggiore,
+ dates from 1697, and is the work of a sculptor known as Il Cerano. Its height is 76
+ feet, or with its pedestal, 114 feet. The arm is over 29 feet long, the nose 33
+ inches, and the forefinger 6 feet 4 inches. The statue is entirely of hammered copper
+ plates riveted together, supported by means of clamps and bands of iron on an
+ interior mass of masonry. The effect of the work is far from being artistic. It is in
+ a retired spot on a hill, a mile or two from the little village of Arona. The
+ Bavaria, near Munich, erected in 1850, is 51 feet high, on a pedestal about 26 feet
+ high, and is the work of Schwanthaler. It is of bronze and weighs about 78 tons. The
+ location of this monstrous lump of metal directly in front of a building emphasizes
+ its total want of sculptural merit, and makes it a doubly lamentable example of bad
+ taste and bombast. The Arminius colossal, on a height near Detmold in Westphalia, was
+ erected in 1875, is 65 feet high, and weighs 18 tons. The name of the sculptor is not
+ given by any of the authorities consulted, which is perhaps just as well. This statue
+ rests on "a dome-like summit of a monumental structure," and brandishes a sword 24
+ feet long in one hand. The Virgin of Puy is by Bonassieux, was set up in 1860, is 52
+ feet high, weighs 110 tons, and stands on a cliff some 400 feet above the town. It
+ is, like the Bavaria, of bronze, cast in sections, and made from cannons taken in
+ warfare. The Virgin's head is surmounted by a crown of stars, and she carries the
+ infant Christ on her left arm. The location of this statue is felicitous, but it has
+ no intrinsic value as an art work. It will be seen, then, that these outdoor colossi
+ of to-day do not afford us much encouragement to believe that Mr. Bartholdi will be
+ able to surmount the difficulties which have vanquished one sculptor after another in
+ their endeavors to perform similar prodigies. Sculpture is perhaps the most difficult
+ of the arts of design. There is an antique statue in the Louvre which displays such
+ wonderful anatomical knowledge, that Reynolds is said to have remarked, "to learn
+ that alone might consume the labor of a whole life." And it is an undeniable fact
+ that enlarging the scale of a statue adds in more than a corresponding degree to the
+ difficulties of the undertaking. The colossi of the ancients were to a great extent
+ designed for either the interiors or the exteriors of religious temples, where they
+ were artfully adapted to be seen in connection with architectural effects. Concerning
+ the sole prominent exception to this rule, the statue of Apollo at Rhodes, we have
+ such scant information that even its position is a subject of dispute. It has been
+ pointed out how the four modern outdoor colossi of Europe each and all fail to attain
+ the requirements of a work of art. All our inquiries, it appears then, lead to the
+ conclusion that Mr. Bartholdi has many chances against him, so far as we are able to
+ learn from <a name="page157" id="page157"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 157]</span>
+ an examination of the precedents, and in view of these facts it would be a matter for
+ surprise if the "Liberty" statue should prove to possess any title to the name of a
+ work of art. We reserve a final decision, however, as to this most important phase of
+ the affair, until the statue is in place.</p>
+ <p>The idea that great size in statues is necessarily vulgar, does not seem
+ admissible. It would be quite as just to condemn the paintings on a colossal scale in
+ which Tintoretto and Veronese so nobly manifested their exceptional powers. The size
+ of a work of art <i>per se</i> is an indifferent matter. Mere bigness or mere
+ littleness decides nothing. But a colossal work has its conditions of being: it must
+ conform to certain laws. It must be executed in a large style; it must represent a
+ grand idea; it must possess dignity and strength; it must convey the idea of power
+ and majesty; it must be located in a place where its surroundings shall augment
+ instead of detracting from its aspect of grandeur; it must be magnificent, for if not
+ it will be ridiculous. The engravings of Mr. Bartholdi's statue represent a woman
+ clad in a peplum and tunic which fall in ample folds from waist and shoulder to her
+ feet. The left foot, a trifle advanced supports the main weight of the body. The
+ right arm is uplifted in a vigorous movement and holds aloft a blazing torch. The
+ left hand grasps a tablet on which the date of the Declaration of Independence
+ appears; this is held rather close to the body and at a slight angle from it. The
+ head is that of a handsome, proud and brave woman. It is crowned by a diadem. The
+ arrangement of the draperies is, if one may judge from the pictures, a feature of
+ especial excellence in the design. There is merit in the disposition of the peplum or
+ that portion of the draperies flung back over the left shoulder, the folds of which
+ hang obliquely (from the left shoulder to the right side of the waist and thence
+ downward almost to the right knee,) thus breaking up the monotony of the
+ perpendicular lines formed by the folds of the tunic beneath. The movement of the
+ uplifted right arm is characterized by a certain <i>elan</i> which, however, does not
+ suggest violence; the carriage of the head is dignified, and so far as one may judge
+ from a variety of prints, the face is fine in its proportions and expression. I do
+ not find the movement of the uplifted arm violent, and, on the whole, am inclined to
+ believe the composition a very good one in its main features. There will be an
+ undeniable heaviness in the great masses of drapery, especially as seen from behind,
+ but the illusion as to the size of the figure created by its elevation on a pedestal
+ and foundation nearly twice as high as itself may do much towards obviating this
+ objection. The background of the figure will be the</p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="line">
+ ... Spacious firmament on high,
+ </div>
+ <div class="line">
+ With all the blue etherial sky,
+ </div>
+ <div class="line">
+ And spangled heavens ...
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>The island is far enough removed from the city so that no direct comparisons can
+ be made between the statue and any buildings. Seen from the deck of a steamer at a
+ distance say of a quarter of a mile, the horizon, formed by the roofs, towers, spires
+ and chimneys of three cities, will not appear higher than the lower half of the
+ pedestal. In other words the statue will neither be dwarfed nor magnified by the
+ contiguity of any discordant objects. It will stand alone. The abstract idea, as has
+ been said, is noble. The plan of utilizing the statue as a lighthouse at night does
+ not detract from its worth in this respect; it may be said to even emphasize the
+ allegorial sense of the work. <a name="page158" id="page158"></a><span
+ class="pagenum">[pg 158]</span> "Liberty enlightening the world," lights the way of
+ the sailor in the crowded harbor of the second commercial city of the world. The very
+ magnitude of the work typifies, after a manner, the vast extent of our country, and
+ the audacity of the scheme is not inappropriate in the place where it is to stand. It
+ may be, indeed, that when the statue is set up, we shall find it awkward and
+ offensive, as some critics have already prophecied: but that it must be so inevitably
+ does not appear to me to be a logical deduction from the information we have at hand
+ as to the artist and his plans. It is freely admitted that no modern work of this
+ nature has been successful, but that does not prove that this must absolutely be a
+ failure. The project ought not to be condemned in advance because of the great
+ difficulties surrounding it, its unequalled scope and its novelty. Mr. Bartholdi is
+ above all ingenious, bold, and fertile in resources; it would be a great pity not to
+ have him allowed every opportunity to carry out a design in which, as we have seen,
+ there are so many elements of interest and even of grandeur. It has been said that
+ "there does not exist on French soil such a bombastic work as this will be." Very
+ well; admitting for the sake of argument that it will be bombastic, shall we reject
+ and condemn a colossal statue before having seen it, because there is nothing like it
+ in France? And is it true that it will be bomastic? That is by no means demonstrated.
+ On the contrary an impartial examination of the design would show that the work has
+ been seriously conceived and thought out; that it does not lack dignity; that it is
+ intended to be full of spirit and significance. It would be the part of wisdom at
+ least to avoid dogmatism in an advance judgment as to its worth as a work of art, and
+ to wait awhile before pronouncing a final verdict.</p>
+ <p>Hazlitt tells of a conceited English painter who went to Rome, and when he got
+ into the Sistine Chapel, turning to his companion, said, "Egad, George, we're bit!"
+ Our own tendency is, because of our ignorance, to be sceptical and suspicious as to
+ foreign works of art, especially of a kind that are novel and daring. No one is so
+ hard to please as a simpleton. We are so afraid of being taken in, that we are
+ reluctant to commit ourselves in favor of any new thing until we have heard from
+ headquarters; but it appears to be considered a sign of knowledge to vituperate
+ pictures and statues which do not conform to some undefinable ideal standard of our
+ own invention. There is, of course, a class of indulgent critics who are pernicious
+ enough in their way; but the savage and destructive criticism of which I speak is
+ quite as ignorant and far more harmful. It assumes an air of authority based on a
+ superficial knowledge of art, and beguiles the public into a belief in its
+ infallibility by means of a smooth style and an occasional epigram the smartness of
+ which may and often does conceal a rank injustice. The expression of a hope that the
+ result of Mr. Bartholdi's labors "will be something better than another gigantic
+ asparagus stalk added to those that already give so comical a look to our sky-line,"
+ is truly an encouraging and generous utterance at this particular stage of the
+ enterprise, and equals in moderation the courteous remark that the statue "could not
+ fail to be ridiculous in the expanse of New York Bay."<a id="footnotetag8"
+ name="footnotetag8"></a><a href="#footnote8"><sup>8</sup></a> It is not necessary to
+ touch upon the question of courtesy at <a name="page159" id="page159"></a><span
+ class="pagenum">[pg 159]</span> all, but it is possible that one of our critics may
+ live to regret his vegetable metaphor, and the other to revise his prematurely
+ positive censure. There is a sketch in charcoal which represents the Bartholdi
+ colossus as the artist has seen it in his mind's eye, standing high above the waters
+ of the beautiful harbor at twilight, when the lights are just beginning to twinkle in
+ the distant cities and when darkness is softly stealing over the service of the busy
+ earth and sea. The mystery of evening enwraps the huge form of the statue, which
+ looms vaster than by day, and takes on an aspect of strange majesty, augmented by the
+ background of hurrying clouds which fill the upper portion of the sky. So seen, the
+ immense Liberty appears what the sculptor wishes and intends it to be, what we
+ Americans sincerely hope it may be,&mdash;a fitting memorial of an inspiring episode
+ in history, and a great work of modern art.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <h2>ELIZABETH.<a id="footnotetag9" name="footnotetag9"></a><a
+ href="#footnote9"><sup>9</sup></a></h2>
+ <h3>A ROMANCE OF COLONIAL DAYS.</h3>
+ <center>
+ BY FRANCES C. SPARHAWK, Author of "A Lazy Man's Work."
+ </center>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <h3>CHAPTER III.</h3>
+ <h4>IDLESSE.</h4>
+ <p>"Don't move your head, Elizabeth, keep it in that position a little longer," said
+ Katie Archdale, as she and her friend sat together the morning after the sail. "I
+ wish an artist were here to paint you so; you've no idea how striking you are."</p>
+ <p>"No, I have not," laughed the other, forgetting to keep still as she spoke, and
+ turning the face that had been toward the window full upon her companion. The scene
+ that Elizabeth's eyes had been dwelling upon was worthy of admiration; her enthusiasm
+ had not escaped her in any word, but her eyes were enraptured with it, and her whole
+ face, warmed with faint reflection of the inward glow, was beautiful with youth, and
+ thought, and feeling.</p>
+ <p>"Now you've spoilt it," cried Katie, "now you are merely a nice-looking young
+ lady; you were beautiful before, perfectly beautiful, like a picture that one can
+ look at, and look at, and go away filled with, and come back to, and never tire of.
+ The people that see you so worship you, but then, nobody has a chance to do it. You
+ just sit and don't say much except once in a while when you wake up, then you are
+ brilliant, but never tender, as you know how to be. You give people an impression
+ that you are hard. Sometimes I should like to shake you."</p>
+ <p>Elizabeth laughed.</p>
+ <p>"That's the way you worship me," she answered. "I suspected it was a strange kind
+ of adoration, largely made up of snubbing."</p>
+ <p>"It's not snubbing," retorted Katie, "it is trying to rouse you to what you you
+ might be. But I am wasting my breath; you don't believe a word I say."</p>
+ <p>"I should like to believe it," returned the girl, smiling a little sadly. "But
+ even if I did believe every word of it, it would seem to me a great deal nicer to be
+ like you, beautiful all the time, <a name="page160" id="page160"></a><span
+ class="pagenum">[pg 160]</span> and one whom everybody loves. But there's one thing
+ to be said, if it were I who were beautiful, I could'nt have the pleasure I do in
+ looking at you, and perhaps, after all, I shouldn't get any more enjoyment out of
+ it."</p>
+ <p>"Oh, yes, you would," retorted the other, then bit her lips angrily at her
+ inadvertence. A shrewd smile flitted over Elizabeth's face, but she made no comment,
+ and Katie went on hurriedly to ask, "What shall we do to amuse ourselves to-day,
+ Betsey?" Another slight movement of the hearer's lips responded. This name was
+ Katie's special term of endearment, and never used except when they were alone; no
+ one else ever called her by it.</p>
+ <p>"I don't know," she said. "Let us sit here as we are doing now. Move your chair
+ nearer the window and look down on the river. See the blue-black shadows on it. And
+ look at the forests, how they stretch away with a few clearings here and there. A
+ city behind us, to be sure, a little city, but before us the forests, and the
+ Indians. I wonder what it all means for us."</p>
+ <p>"The axe for one, the gun for the other," retorted Katie with a hardness which
+ belief in the savageness and treachery of the red man had instilled into the age.
+ "The forests mean fortune to some of us," she added.</p>
+ <p>"Yes," answered Elizabeth slowly, finding an unsatisfactory element in her
+ companion's summary.</p>
+ <p>"Do you mean that we shall have to shoot down a whole race? That is dreadful," she
+ added after a pause.</p>
+ <p>"You and I have nothing to do with all that," returned Katie.</p>
+ <p>Elizabeth waited in despair of putting the case as she felt it.</p>
+ <p>"I was thinking," she said at last, "that if we have a whole land of forests to
+ cut down and of cities to build up, somehow, everything will be different here from
+ the Old England. I often wonder what it is to be in this New World. It must be unlike
+ the Old," she repeated.</p>
+ <p>"I don't wonder," returned Katie, "and that's just what you shouldn't do. Wonder
+ what you're going to wear to-morrow when we dine at Aunt Faith's, or whether Master
+ Harwin will call this morning, or Master Waldo, or wonder about something
+ sensible."</p>
+ <p>"Which means, 'or if it's to be Master Archdale,'" retorted Elizabeth, smiling
+ into the laughing eyes fixed upon her face, and making them fall at the keenness of
+ her glance, while a brighter rose than Katie cared to show tinted the creamy skin and
+ made her bend a moment to arrange the rosette of her slipper. The movement showed her
+ hair in all its perfection, for at this early hour it had not been tortured into
+ elaborateness, but as she sat in her bedroom talking with her guest, was loosely
+ coiled to be out of the way, and thus drawn back in its wavy abundance showed now
+ burnished, and now a darker brown, as the sunlight or the shadow fell upon it.</p>
+ <p>"He's not always sensible," she answered, lifting her head again with a half
+ defiant gesture, and smiling. Katie's smile was irresistible, it won her admirers by
+ the score, not altogether because it gave a glimpse of beautiful teeth, or because
+ her mouth was at its perfection then, but that it was an expression of childlike
+ abandonment to the spirit of the moment, which charmed the gay because they
+ sympathized with it and the serious because it was a mood of mind into which they
+ would be glad to enter. "Stephen has not been quite himself lately, rather stupid,"
+ and she looked as if she were not unsuspicious of the reason.</p>
+ <a name="page161" id="page161"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 161]</span>
+ <p>"Too many of us admirers, he thinks?" laughed Elizabeth. "For he is bright enough
+ when he takes the trouble to speak, but generally he doesn't seem to consider any one
+ of sufficient importance to amuse."</p>
+ <p>"That is not so," cried Katie, "you are mistaken. But you don't know Stephen very
+ well," she added. "What a pity that you are not living here, then you would, and then
+ we should have known each other all our lives, instead of only since we went to
+ school together. What good times we had at Madam Flamingo's. There you sit, now, and
+ look as meekly reproving as if you had'nt invented that name for her yourself. It was
+ so good, it has stood by her ever since."</p>
+ <p>"Did I? I had forgotten it."</p>
+ <p>"Perhaps, at least, you remember the red shawl that got her the nickname? It was
+ really something nice,&mdash;the shawl, I mean, but the old dame was so ridiculously
+ proud of it and so perpetually flaunting it, she must have thought it very becoming.
+ We girls were tired of the sight of it. And one day, when you were provoked with her
+ about something and left her and came into the schoolroom after hours, you walked up
+ to a knot of us, and with your air of scorn said something about Madam Flamingo.
+ Didn't it spread like wildfire? Our set will call that venerable dame 'Flamingo' to
+ the end of her days."</p>
+ <p>"I suppose we shall, but I had no recollection that it was I who gave her the
+ name."</p>
+ <p>"Yes, you gave it to her," repeated Katie. "You may be very sure I should not have
+ forgotten it if I had been so clever. Those were happy days for all their petty
+ tribulations," she added after a pause.</p>
+ <p>Elizabeth looked at her sitting there meditative.</p>
+ <p>"I should think these were happy days for you, Katie. What more can you want than
+ you have now?"</p>
+ <p>"Oh, the roc's eggs, I suppose," answered the girl. "No, seriously, I am pretty
+ likely to get what I want most. I am happy enough, only not absolutely happy quite
+ yet."</p>
+ <p>"Why not?"</p>
+ <p>"Our good minister would say it was not intended for mortals."</p>
+ <p>"If I felt like being quite content I should not give it up because somebody else
+ said it was too much for me."</p>
+ <p>"Oh, well," said Katie, laughing, "it has nothing to do with our good Parson
+ Shurtleff, anyway."</p>
+ <p>"I thought not. What, then?"</p>
+ <p>The other did not answer, but sat looking out of the window with eyes that were
+ not studying the landscape. Whether her little troubles dissolved into the cloudless
+ sky, like mist too thin to take shape, or whether she preferred to keep her
+ perplexities to herself is uncertain, but when she spoke it was about another
+ reminiscence of school days.</p>
+ <p>"Do you remember that morning Stephen came to see me?" she began. "Madam thought
+ at first that Master Archdale must be my father, and she gave a most gracious assent
+ to my request to go to walk with him. I was dying of fun all the time, I could
+ scarcely keep my face straight; then, when she caught a glimpse of him as we were
+ going out of the hall, she said in a dubious tone, 'Your brother, I presume, Mistress
+ Archdale?' But I never heard a word. I was near the street door and I put myself the
+ other side of it without much delay. So did Stephen. And we went off laughing. He
+ said I was a wicked little cousin, and he spelled it 'cozen;' but he didn't seem to
+ mind my wickedness at all." There was a <a name="page162" id="page162"></a><span
+ class="pagenum">[pg 162]</span> pause, during which Katie looked at her smiling
+ friend, and her own face dimpled bewitchingly. "This is exactly what you would have
+ done, Elizabeth," she said. "You would have heard that tentative remark of Madam's,
+ of course you would, and you would have stood still in the hall and explained that
+ Stephen was your cousin, instead of your brother, and have lost your walk beyond a
+ doubt, you know the Flamingo. Now, I was just as good as you would have been, only, I
+ was wiser. I, too, told Madam that he was my cousin, but I waited until I came home
+ to do it. The poor old lady could not help herself then; it was impossible to take
+ back my fun, and she could not punish me, because she had given me permission to go,
+ nor could she affirm that I heard her remark, for it was made in an undertone. There
+ was nothing left for her but to wrap her illustrious shawl about her and look
+ dignified." "Do you think Master Harwin will come to-day?" Katie asked a few moments
+ later, "and Master Waldo? I hope they will all three be here together; it will be
+ fun, they can entertain each other, they are so fond of one another."</p>
+ <p>"Katie! Katie!"</p>
+ <p>The girl broke into a laugh.</p>
+ <p>"Oh, yes, I remember," she said, "Stephen is your property."</p>
+ <p>"Don't," cried Elizabeth, with sudden gravity and paleness in her face. "I think
+ it was wicked in me to jest about such a sacred thing. Let me forget it."</p>
+ <p>"I wont tease you if you really care. But if it was wicked, it was a great deal
+ more my doing, and Master Waldo's, than your's or Stephen's. We wanted to see the
+ fun. Your great fault, Elizabeth, is that you vex yourself too much about little
+ things. Do you know it will make you have wrinkles?"</p>
+ <p>This question was put with so much earnestness that Elizabeth laughed
+ heartily.</p>
+ <p>"One thing is sure," she said, "I shall not remain ignorant of my failings through
+ want of being told them while I'm here. It would be better to go home."</p>
+ <p>"Only try it!" cried Katie, going to her and kissing her. "But now, Elizabeth, I
+ want to tell you something in all seriousness. Just listen to me, and profit by it,
+ if you can. I've found it out for myself. The more you laugh at other people's
+ absurdities the fewer of your own will be noticed, because, you see, it implies that
+ you are on the right standpoint to get a review of other people."</p>
+ <p>"That sounds more like eighty than eighteen."</p>
+ <p>"Elizabeth, it is the greatest mistake in the world, I mean just that, to keep
+ back all your wisdom until you get to be eighty. What use will it be to you then? All
+ you can do with it will be to see how much more sensibly you might have acted. That's
+ what will happen to you, my dear, if you don't look out. But at eighteen&mdash;I am
+ nineteen&mdash;everything is before you, and you want to know how to guide your life
+ to get all the best things you can out of it without being wickedly selfish&mdash;at
+ least I do. Your aspirations, I suppose, are fixed upon the forests and the Indian,
+ and problems concerning the future of the American Colonies. But I'm more reverent
+ than you, I think the Lord is able to take care of those."</p>
+ <p>Elizabeth looked vaguely troubled by the fallacy which she felt in this speech
+ without being quite willing or able to bring it to light.</p>
+ <p>"But, remember, I was twenty-one my last birthday," she answered. "I ought to take
+ a broader view of things."</p>
+ <a name="page163" id="page163"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 163]</span>
+ <p>"On the contrary, you're getting to be an old maid. You should consider which of
+ your suitors you want, and say 'yes' to him on the spot. By the way, what has become
+ of your friend, the handsome Master Edmonson?"</p>
+ <p>Elizabeth colored.</p>
+ <p>"I don't know," she answered. "Father has heard from him since he went away, so I
+ suppose that he is well."</p>
+ <p>"And he has not written to you?"</p>
+ <p>"No, he has only sent a message." Then, after a pause, "He said that he was coming
+ back in the autumn."</p>
+ <p>"I hope so," cried Katie, "he is a most fascinating man, and of such family!
+ Stephen was speaking of him the other day. He was very attentive, was he not,
+ Betsey?"</p>
+ <p>"Ye-es, I suppose so. But there was something that I fancied papa did not
+ like."</p>
+ <p>"I'm so sorry," cried Katie. She rose, and crossing the little space between
+ herself and her friend, dropped upon the footstool at Elizabeth's feet, and laying
+ her arms in the girl's lap and resting her chin upon them, looked up and added, "Tell
+ me all about it, my dear."</p>
+ <p>"There is nothing to tell," answered Elizabeth, caressing the beautiful hair and
+ looking into the eyes that had tears of sympathy in them.</p>
+ <p>"I was afraid something had gone wrong, afraid that you would care."</p>
+ <p>Elizabeth sat thinking.</p>
+ <p>"I don't know," she said slowly at last, "I don't know whether I should really
+ care or not if I never saw him again."</p>
+ <p>Her companion looked at her a moment in silence, and when she began to speak it
+ was about something else.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <h3>CHAPTER IV.</h3>
+ <h4>GIRDING ON THE HARNESS.</h4>
+ <p>Later that same morning a gentleman calling upon Mistress Katie Archdale was told
+ that he would find her with friends in the garden. Walking through the paths with a
+ leisurely step which the impatience of his mood chafed against, he came upon a
+ picture that he never forgot.</p>
+ <p>Great stretches of sunshine lay on the garden and in it brilliant beds of flowers
+ glowed with their richest lights, poppies folded their gorgeous robes closely about
+ them, Arab fashion, to keep out the heat; hollyhocks stood in their stateliness
+ flecked with changing shadows from the aspen tree near by. Beds of tiger lilies,
+ pinks, larkspur, sweetwilliams, canterbury bells, primroses, gillyflowers, lobelia,
+ bloomed in a luxuriance that the methodical box which bordered them could not
+ restrain. But the garden was by no means a blaze of sunshine, for ash trees, maples,
+ elms, and varieties of the pine were there. Trumpet-vines climbed on the wall, and
+ overtopping that, caught at trellises prepared to receive them, and formed screens of
+ shadows that flickered in every breeze and changed their places with the changing
+ sun. But it was only with a passing glance that the visitor saw these things, his
+ eyes were fixed upon an arbor at the end of the garden; it was covered with clematis,
+ while two great elms met overhead at its entrance and shaded the path to it for a
+ little distance. Under these elms stood a group of young people. He was unannounced,
+ and had opportunity without being himself perceived, to scan this little group as he
+ went forward. His expression varied with each member of it, but showed an interest of
+ some sort in each. Now it was full of <a name="page164" id="page164"></a><span
+ class="pagenum">[pg 164]</span> passionate delight; then it changed as his look fell
+ upon a tall young man with dark eyes and a bearing that in its most gracious moments
+ seemed unable to lose a touch of haughtiness, but whose face now was alive with a
+ restful joy. The gazer, as he perceived this happiness, so wanting in himself,
+ scowled with a bitter hate and looked instantly toward another of the party, this
+ time with an expression of triumph. At the fourth and last member of the group his
+ glance though scowling, was contemptuous; but the receiver was as unconscious of
+ contempt as he felt undeserving of it. From him the gazer's eyes returned to the
+ person at whom he had first looked. She was standing on the step of the arbor, an end
+ of the clematis vine swaying lightly back and forth over her head, and almost
+ touching her bright hair which was now towered high in the fashion of the day. She
+ was holding a spray of the vine in her hand. She had fastened one end in the hair of
+ a young lady who stood beside her, and was now bringing the other about her neck,
+ arranging the leaves and flowers with skilful touches. Three men, including the
+ new-comer, watched her pretty air of absorption, and the deftness of her taper
+ fingers, the sweep of her dark lashes on her cheek as from the height of her step she
+ looked down at her companion, the curves of her beautiful mouth that at the moment
+ was daintly holding a pin with which the end of the spray was to be fastened upon the
+ front of the other's white dress. It was certainly effective there. Yet none of the
+ three men noticed this, or saw that between the two girls the question as to beauty
+ was a question of time, that while the one face was blooming now in the perfection of
+ its charm, the charm of the other was still in its calyx. The adorner intuitively
+ felt something of this. Perhaps she was not the less fond of her friend that the
+ charms she saw in her were not patent to everybody. Bring her forward as much as she
+ might, Katie felt that Elizabeth Royal would never be a rival. She even shrank from
+ this kind of prominence into which Katie's play was bringing her now. She had been
+ taken in hand at unawares and showed an impatience that if the other were not quick,
+ would oblige her to leave the work unfinished.</p>
+ <p>"There," cried Katie, at last giving the leaves a final pat of arrangement, "that
+ looks well, don't you think so, Master Waldo?"</p>
+ <p>"Good morning, Mistress Archdale," broke in a voice before Waldo could answer.
+ "And you, Mistress Royal," bowing low to her. "After our late hours last night,
+ permit me to felicitate you upon your good health this morning, and&mdash;" he was
+ about to add, "your charming appearance," but something in the girl's eyes as she
+ looked full at him held back the words, and for a moment ruffled his smooth
+ assurance. But as he recovered himself and turned to salute the gentlemen, the smile
+ on his lips had triumph through its vexation.</p>
+ <p>"My proud lady, keep your pride a little longer," he said to himself. And as he
+ bowed to Stephen Archdale with a dignity as great as Stephen's own, he was thinking:
+ "My morning in that hot office has not been in vain. I know your weak point now, my
+ lofty fellow, and it is there that I will undermine you. You detest business, indeed!
+ John Archdale feels that with his only son in England studying for the ministry he
+ needs a son-in-law in partnership with him. The thousands which I have been putting
+ into his business this morning are well spent, they make me welcome here. Yes, your
+ uncle needs me, <a name="page165" id="page165"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg
+ 165]</span> Stephen Archdale, for your clever papa is not always brotherly in his
+ treatment, he has more than once brought heavy losses upon the younger firm. It's a
+ part of my pleasure in prospect that now I shall be able to checkmate him in such
+ schemes, perhaps to bring back a little of the loss upon the shoulders of his heir.
+ Ah, I am safer from you than you dream." He turned to Waldo, and as the two men
+ bowed, they looked at one another steadily. Each was remembering their conversation
+ the night before over some Bordeaux in Waldo's room, for they were staying at the
+ same inn and often spent an hour together. They had drunk sparingly, but, just
+ returned from their sail, each was filled with Katie Archdale's beauty, and each had
+ spoken out his purpose plainly, Waldo with an assurance that, if it savored a little
+ of conceit, was full of manliness, the other with a half-smothered fierceness of
+ passion that argued danger to every obstacle in its way.</p>
+ <p>"You've come at the very right moment, Master Harwin," broke in Katie's
+ unconscious voice, and she smiled graciously, as she had a habit of doing at
+ everybody; "We were talking about you not two minutes ago."</p>
+ <p>"Then I am just in time to save my character."</p>
+ <p>"Don't be too sure about that," returned Miss Royal.</p>
+ <p>Waldo laughed, and Katie exchanged glances with him, and smiled mischievously.</p>
+ <p>"No, don't be too sure; it will depend upon whether you say 'yes,' or 'no,' to my
+ question. We were wondering something about you."</p>
+ <p>Harwin's heart sank, though he returned her smile and her glance with interest.
+ For there were questions she might ask which would inconvenience him, but they should
+ not embarrass him.</p>
+ <p>"We were wondering," pursued Katie, "if you had ever been presented. Have
+ you?"</p>
+ <p>As the sun breaks out from a heavy cloud, the light returned to Harwin's blue
+ eyes.</p>
+ <p>"Yes," he said, "four years ago. I went to court with my uncle, Sir Rydal Harwin,
+ and his majesty was gracious enough to nod in answer to my profound reverence."</p>
+ <p>"It was a very brilliant scene, I am sure, and very interesting."</p>
+ <p>"Deeply interesting," returned Harwin with all the traditional respect of an
+ Englishman for his sovereign. Archdale's lip curled a trifle at what seemed to him
+ obsequiousness, but Harwin was not looking at him.</p>
+ <p>"Stephen has been," pursued Katie, "and he says it was very fine, but for all that
+ he does not seem to care at all about it. He says he would rather go off for a day's
+ hunting any time. The ladies looked charming, he said, and the gentlemen magnificent;
+ but he was bored to death, for all that."</p>
+ <p>"In order to appreciate it fully," returned Archdale, "it would be necessary that
+ one should be majesty." He straightened himself as he spoke, and looked at Harwin
+ with such gravity that the latter, meeting the light of his eyes, was puzzled whether
+ this was jest or earnest, until Miss Royal's laugh relieved his uncertainty. Katie
+ laid her hand on the speaker's arm and shook it lightly.</p>
+ <p>"You told me I should be sure to enjoy it," she said. "Now, what do you mean?"</p>
+ <p>"Ah! but you would be queen," said Harwin, "queen in your own right, a divine
+ right of beauty that no one can resist."</p>
+ <p>Katie looked at him, disposed for a moment to be angry, but her love of admiration
+ <a name="page166" id="page166"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 166]</span> could not
+ resist the worship of his eyes, and the lips prepared to pout curved into a smile not
+ less bewitching that the brightness of anger was still in her cheeks. Archdale and
+ Waldo turned indignant glances on the speaker, but it was manifestly absurd to resent
+ a speech that pleased the object of it, and that each secretly felt would not have
+ sounded ill if he had made it himself. Elizabeth looked from Katie to Harwin with
+ eyes that endorsed his assertion, and as the latter read her expression his scornful
+ wonder in the boat returned.</p>
+ <p>"Why are we all standing outside in the heat?" cried the hostess. "Let us go into
+ the arbor, there is plenty of room to move about there, we have had a dozen together
+ in it many a time." She passed in under the arch as she spoke, and the others
+ followed her. There in her own way which was not so very witty or wise, and yet was
+ very charming, she held her little court, and the three men who had been in love with
+ her at the beginning of the hour were still more in love at the end of it. And
+ Elizabeth who watched her with an admiration as deep as their's, if more tranquil,
+ did not wonder that it was so. Katie did not forget her, nor did the gentlemen, or at
+ least two of them, forget to be courteous, but if she had known what became of the
+ spray of clematis which being in the way as she turned her head, she had soon
+ unfastened and let slip to the ground, she would not have wondered, nor would she
+ have cared. If she had seen Archdale's heel crush it unheedingly as he passed out of
+ the arbor, the beat of her pulses would never have varied.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <h3>CHAPTER V.</h3>
+ <h4>ANTICIPATIONS.</h4>
+ <p>It was early in December. The months had brought serious changes to all but one of
+ the group that the August morning had found in Mr. Archdale's garden. Two had
+ disappeared from the scene of their defeat, and to two of them the future seemed
+ opening up vistas of happiness as deep as the present joy. Elizabeth Royal alone was
+ a spectator in the events of the past months, and even in her mind was a questioning
+ that was at least wonderment, if not pain.</p>
+ <p>Kenelm Waldo was in the West Indies, trying to escape from his pain at Katie
+ Archdale's refusal, but carrying it everywhere with him, as he did recollections of
+ her; to have lost them would have been to have lost his memory altogether.</p>
+ <p>Ralph Harwin also had gone. His money was still in the firm of John Archdale &amp;
+ Co., which it had made one of the richest in the Colonies; its withdrawal was now to
+ be expected at any moment, for Harwin did not mean to return, and Archdale, while
+ endeavoring to be ready for this, saw that it would cripple him. Harwin had been
+ right in believing that he should make himself very useful and very acceptable to
+ Katie's father. For Archdale who was more desious of his daughter's happiness than of
+ anything else in the world, was disappointed that this did not lie in the direction
+ which, on the whole, would have been for his greatest advantage. Harwin and he could
+ have done better for Katie in the way of fortune than Stephen Archdale with his
+ distaste for business would do. The Archdale connection had always been a dream of
+ his, until lately when this new possibility had superseded his nephew's interest in
+ his thoughts. There was an address and business keenness about Harwin that, if
+ Stephen possessed at all, was latent in him. The Colonel was wealthy enough to afford
+ <a name="page167" id="page167"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 167]</span> the luxury
+ of a son who was only a fine gentleman. Stephen was a good fellow, he was sure, and
+ Katie would be happy with him. And yet&mdash;but even these thoughts left him as he
+ leaned back in his chair that day, sitting alone after dinner, and a mist came over
+ his eyes as he thought that in less than a fortnight his home would no longer be his
+ little daughter's.</p>
+ <p>"It will be all right," he said to himself with that sigh of resignation with
+ which we yield to the inevitable, as if there were a certain choice and merit in
+ doing it. "It is well that the affairs of men are in higher hands than ours." John
+ Archdale's piety was of the kind that utters itself in solitude, or under the
+ breath.</p>
+ <p>Katie at the moment was upstairs with her mother examining a package of wedding
+ gear that had arrived that day. She had no hesitation as to whom her choice should
+ have been. Yet, as she stood holding a pair of gloves, measuring the long wrists on
+ her arm and then drawing out the fingers musingly, it was not of Stephen that she was
+ thinking, or of him that she spoke at last, as she turned away to lay down the gloves
+ and take up a piece of lace.</p>
+ <p>"Mother," she said, "I do sometimes feel badly for Master Harwin; he is the only
+ man in all the world that I ever had anything like fear of, and now and then I did of
+ him, such a fierceness would come over him once in a while, not to me, but about me,
+ I know, about losing me. He was terribly in earnest. Stephen never gets into these
+ moods, he is always kind and lovable, just as he has been to me as far back as I can
+ remember, only, of course more so now."</p>
+ <p>"But things have gone differently with him and with poor Master Harwin," answered
+ Mrs. Archdale. "If you had said 'no' to Stephen, you would have seen the dark moods
+ in him, too."</p>
+ <p>The young girl looked at her mother and smiled, and blushed a little in a charming
+ acknowledgment of feminine power to sway the minds of the sterner half of humanity.
+ Then she grew thoughtful again, not even flattery diverting her long from her
+ subject.</p>
+ <p>"But Stephen never could be like that," she said. "Stephen couldn't be dark in
+ that desperate sort of way. I can't describe it in Master Harwin, but I feel it.
+ Somehow, he would rather Stephen would die, or I should, than have us marry."</p>
+ <p>"Did he ever say so?"</p>
+ <p>"Why, no, but you can feel things that nobody says. And, then, there is something
+ else, too. I am quite sure that sometime in his life he did something, well, perhaps
+ something wicked, I don't know what, but I do know that a load lies on his
+ conscience; for one day he told me as much. It was just as he was going away, the day
+ after I had refused him and he knew of my engagement. He asked permission to come and
+ bid me goodby. Don't you remember?"</p>
+ <p>"Yes," said Mrs. Archdale.</p>
+ <p>"He looked at me and sighed. 'I've paid a heavy price,' he said half to himself,
+ 'to lose.' Then he added, 'Mistress Archdale, will you always believe that I loved
+ you devotedly, and always have loved you from the hour I first saw you? If I could
+ undo'&mdash;then he waited a moment and grew dreadfully pale, and I think he finished
+ differently from his first intention&mdash;'If I could undo something in the past,'
+ he said, 'I would give my life to do it, but my life would be of no use.'"</p>
+ <p>"That looks as if it was something against you, Katie."</p>
+ <p>"Oh, no, I don't think so. Besides, he wouldn't have given his life at all; <a
+ name="page168" id="page168"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 168]</span> that's only the
+ way men talk, you know, when they want to make an impression of their earnestness on
+ women and they always think they do it that way. But the men that are the readiest to
+ give up their lives don't say anything about it beforehand. Stephen would die for me,
+ I'm sure, but he never told me so in his life. He don't make many protestations; he
+ takes a great deal for granted. Why shouldn't he; we've known one another from
+ babyhood? But Master Harwin knew, somehow, the minute after he spoke, if he didn't at
+ the time, that he wouldn't die for his fault at all, whatever it was. And then, after
+ he spoke it seemed to me as if he had changed his mind and didn't care about it in
+ any way, he only cared that I had refused him, and that he was not going to see me
+ any more. I am sorry for a man like that, and if he were going to stay here I should
+ be afraid of him, afraid for Stephen. But he sails in a few days. I don't wonder he
+ couldn't wait here for the next ship, wait over the wedding, and whatever danger from
+ him there may have been sails with him. Poor man, I don't see what he liked me for."
+ And with a sigh, Katie dismissed the thought of him and his grief and evil together,
+ and turned her attention again to the wedding finery.</p>
+ <p>"Only see what exquisite lace," she cried, throwing it out on the table to examine
+ the web. "Where did Elizabeth get it, I wonder? She begged to be allowed to give me
+ my bridal veil, and she has certainly done it handsomely, just as she always does
+ everything, dear child. I suppose it came out in one of her father's ships."</p>
+ <p>"Everything Master Royal touches turns into gold," said Mrs. Archdale, after a
+ critical examination of the lace had called forth her admiration. "It's Mechlin,
+ Katie. There is nobody in the Colonies richer than he," she went on, "unless,
+ possibly, the Colonel."</p>
+ <p>"I dare say I ought to pretend not to care that Stephen will have ever so much
+ money," returned the girl, taking up a broad band of India muslin wrought with gold,
+ and laying it over her sleeve to examine the pattern, at which she smiled
+ approvingly. "But then I do care. Stephen is a great deal more interesting rich than
+ he would be poor; he is not made for a grub, neither am I, and living is much better
+ fun when one has laces like cobwebs, and velvets and paduasoys, and diamonds, mother,
+ to fill one's heart's desire."</p>
+ <p>As she spoke she looked an embodiment of fair youth and innocent pleasure, and her
+ mother, with a mother's admiration and sympathy in her heart, gave her a lingering
+ glance before she put on a little sternness, and said, "My child, I don't like to
+ hear you talk in that light way. Your heart's desires, I trust, are set upon better
+ things, those of another world."</p>
+ <p>"Yes, mother, of course. But, then you know, we are to give our mind faithfully to
+ the things next to us, in order to get to those beyond them, and that's what I am
+ doing now, don't you see? O, mother, dear, how I shall miss you, and all your dear,
+ solemn talks, and your dear, smiling looks." And winding her arms about her mother,
+ Katie kissed her so affectionately that Mrs. Archdale felt quite sure that the laces
+ and paduasoys had not yet spoilt her little daughter.</p>
+ <p>"Now, for my part," she said a few minutes later as she laid down a pair of dainty
+ white kid shoes, glittering with spangles from the tip of their peaked toes to their
+ very heels,&mdash;high enough for modern days,&mdash;"These fit you to perfection, my
+ dear. For my part," she repeated, "you know that I have <a name="page169"
+ id="page169"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 169]</span> always hoped you would marry
+ Stephen, yet my sympathies go with Master Waldo in his loss, instead of with the
+ other one, whom I think your father at last grew to like best of the three; it was
+ strange that such a man could have gotten such an influence, but then, they were in
+ business together, and there is always something mysterious about business. Master
+ Waldo is a fine, open-hearted young man, and he was very fond of you."</p>
+ <p>"Yes, I suppose so," answered the girl, with an effort to merge a smile into the
+ expression accompanying a sympathetic sigh. "It's too bad. But, then, men must look
+ out for themselves, women have to, and Kenelm Waldo probably thinks he is worth any
+ woman's heart."</p>
+ <p>"So he is, Katie."</p>
+ <p>"Um!" said the girl. "Well, he'd be wiser to be a little humble about it. It takes
+ better."</p>
+ <p>"Do you call Stephen humble?"</p>
+ <p>Katie laughed merrily. "But," she said, at last, "Stephen is Stephen, and humility
+ wouldn't suit him. He would look as badly without his pride as without his lace
+ ruffles."</p>
+ <p>"Is it his lace ruffles you're in love with, my child?"</p>
+ <p>"I don't know, mother," and she laughed again. "When should a young girl laugh if
+ not on the eve of her marriage with the man of her choice, when friends and wealth
+ conspire to make the event auspicious?"</p>
+ <p>"I shall not write to thank Elizabeth for her gift," she said, "for she will be
+ here before a letter can reach her. She leaves Boston to-morrow, that's Tuesday, and
+ she must be here by Friday, perhaps Thursday night, if they start very early."</p>
+ <p>"I thought Master Royal's letter said Monday?"</p>
+ <p>"Tuesday," repeated Katie, "if the weather be suitable for his daughter. Look at
+ this letter and you'll see; his world hinges on his daughter's comfort, he is father
+ and mother both to her. Elizabeth needs it, too; she can't take care of herself well.
+ Perhaps she could wake up and do it for somebody else. But I am not sure. She's a
+ dear child, though she seems to me younger than I am. Isn't it funny, mother, for she
+ knows a good deal more, and she's very bright sometimes? But she never makes the best
+ of anything, especially of herself."</p>
+ <p>It was the day before the wedding. The great old house was full of bustle from its
+ gambrel roof to its very cellar in which wines were decanted to be in readiness, and
+ into which pastries and sweetmeats were carried from the pantry shelves overloaded
+ with preparations for the next day's festivities. Servants ran hither and thither,
+ full of excitement and pleasant anticipations. They all loved Katie who had grown up
+ among them. And, besides, the morrow's pleasures were not to be enjoyed by them
+ wholly by proxy, for if there was to be only wedding enough for one pair, at least
+ the remains of the feast would go round handsomely. Two or three black faces were
+ seen among the English ones, but though they were owned by Mr. Archdale, the disgrace
+ and the badge of servitude had fallen upon them lightly, and the shining of merry
+ eyes and the gleam of white teeth relieved a darkness that nature, and not despair,
+ had made. In New England, masters were always finding reasons why their slaves should
+ be manumitted. How could slavery flourish in a land where the wind of freedom was so
+ strong that it could blow a whole cargo of tea into the ocean?</p>
+ <p>But there were not only servants going <a name="page170" id="page170"></a><span
+ class="pagenum">[pg 170]</span> back and forth through the house, for it was full of
+ guests. The Colonel's family living so near, would not come until the morning of the
+ ceremony, but other relatives were there in force. Mrs. Archdale's brother,&mdash;a
+ little patronizing but very rich and gracious, and his family who having been well
+ patronized, were disposed to be humble and admiring, and her sister who not having
+ fed on the roses of life, had a good deal of wholesome strength about her, together
+ with a touch of something which, if it were wholesome, was not exactly grateful.
+ Cousins of Mr. Archdale were there also. Elizabeth Royal, at Katie's special request,
+ had been her guest for the last ten days. Her father had gone home again the day he
+ brought her and was unable to return for the wedding and to take his daughter home
+ afterward, as he had intended; but he had sent Mrs. Eveleigh, his cousin and
+ housekeeper. It seemed strange that the father and daughter were so companionable,
+ for superficially they were entirely unlike. Mr. Royal was considered stern and
+ shrewd, and, though a well-read man, eminently practical, more inclined to business
+ than scholarship, while Elizabeth was dreamy, generous, wholly unacquainted with
+ business of any kind, and it seemed too much uninterested in it ever to be
+ acquainted. To most people the affection between them seemed only that of nature and
+ circumstances, Elizabeth being an only child, and her mother having died while she
+ was very young. It is the last analysis of character that discovers the same trait
+ under different forms. None of her friends carried analysis so far, and it was
+ possible that no effort could have discovered subtle likeness then. Perhaps it was
+ still latent and would only hereafter find some outward expression for itself. It
+ sometimes happens that physical likeness comes out only after death, mental not until
+ late in life, and likeness of character in the midst of unlikeness is revealed
+ usually only in the crucible of events.</p>
+ <p>That day, Elizabeth, from her window overlooking the garden, had seen a picture
+ that she never forgot. It was about noon, all the warmth that was in the December sun
+ filled the garden (which the leafless trees no longer shaded). There was no snow on
+ the ground, for the few stray flakes premonitory of winter which had fallen from time
+ to time in the month had melted almost as soon as they had touched the ground. The
+ air was like an Indian summer's day; it seemed impossible that winter could be round
+ the corner waiting only for a change of wind. The tracery of the boughs of the trees
+ and of all their little twigs against the blue sky was exquisite, the stalks of the
+ dead flowers warmed into a livelier brown in the sunlight. Yet it may have been
+ partly the figures in the foreground that made the whole picture so bright to
+ Elizabeth, for to her the place was filled with the lovers who were walking there and
+ talking, probably saying those nothings, so far as practical matters go, which they
+ may indulge in freely only before the thousand cares of life interfere with their
+ utterances. Stephen had come to the house, and Katie and he were taking what they
+ were sure would prove to be their last opportunity for quiet talk before the wedding.
+ They went slowly down the long path to the clematis arbor, and then turned back
+ again, for it was not warm enough to sit down out of doors. Elizabeth watched them as
+ they walked toward the house, and a warmth came into her own face in her pleasure.
+ "Dear Katie," she said to herself, "she is sure to be so happy." The young <a
+ name="page171" id="page171"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 171]</span> girl's hand lay
+ on Archdale's arm, and she was looking up at him with a smile full of joyousness.
+ Archdale's head was bent and the watcher could not see his eyes, but his attitude of
+ devotion, his smile, and Katie's face told the story.</p>
+ <p>[TO BE CONTINUED.]</p>
+ <hr />
+ <h2>GLORIFYING TRIAL BY JURY.</h2>
+ <center>
+ By CHARLES COWLEY, LL.D.
+ </center>
+ <p>Twice within two years representatives of the highest courts of Massachusetts have
+ published in the North American Review, panegyrics of jurics and jury trials. The
+ late Judge Foster and Judge Pitman both concede&mdash;what indeed is too notorious to
+ be denied&mdash;that there are frequent and gross miscarriages of justice; but they
+ touch lightly on this aspect of the question. Being personally identified with the
+ institution which they extol, their self-complacency is neither unnatural nor
+ unpardonable. It seems not to have occurred to them, that if a reform of our
+ judiciary is really needed, they are "a part of the thing to be reformed." But in
+ weighing their testimony to the advantages of trial by jury, allowance must be made
+ for the bias of office and for the bias of interest. In the idolatrous throng which
+ drowned the voice of St. Paul with their halcyon and vociferous shouts, "Great is
+ Diana of the Ephesians!" there was no one who shouted louder than the thrifty
+ silversmith, Demetrius, who added the naive remark, "By this craft we live."</p>
+ <p>In the outset of his presentation of the beauties of jury trials, Judge Pitman
+ says that "certain elementary rules of law are so closely associated with this system
+ that change in one would require alteration of the other." Now, these rules of law
+ are either good or bad. If they are bad, they should be revised; and the fact that
+ they are so closely associated with trial by jury, that they can not be amended
+ without injury thereto, adds little lustre to that time-honored institution. One the
+ other hand, if these "elementary rules of law" are good, it is presumed that courts
+ will be able to appreciate and apply them quite as well as juries.</p>
+ <p>Judge Pitman then proceeds to argue that criminal trials without juries would be
+ attended with disadvantages, because he thinks that judges would have, oftener than
+ juries, that "reasonable doubt" which by law entitles the accused to an acquittal.
+ This warrants one of two inferences: either the writer would have men convicted whose
+ guilt is involved in "reasonable doubt," or he fears that the learning and experience
+ of the bar and the bench tend to unfit the mind to weigh the evidence of guilt or
+ innocence. It is curious that in a former number of the same Review, another learned
+ writer expressed exactly the contrary opinion.<a id="footnotetag10"
+ name="footnotetag10"></a><a href="#footnote10"><sup>10</sup></a> Mr. Edward A. Thomas
+ thinks that "judges are too much inclined to convict persons charged with criminal
+ offences," and that juries are too much inclined to acquit them. And Judge Foster
+ seemingly agrees with Mr. Thomas upon this point.</p>
+ <p>Again: Judge Pitman argues that a jury is better qualified than a judge to
+ determine what is "due care." And Judge Foster, going still further, says, "common
+ men belonging to various walks in life, are, in most cases, better <a name="page172"
+ id="page172"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 172]</span> fitted to decide correctly
+ ordinary questions of fact than any single judge or bench of judges." There are,
+ unquestionably, many cases in which the main questions are so entirely within the
+ scope of ordinary men's observation and experience that no special knowledge is
+ required to decide them. With respect to such cases, it is true that</p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="line">
+ "A few strong instincts and a few plain rules
+ </div>
+ <div class="line">
+ Are worthy all the learning of the schools."
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>But where the questions involved are many in number, intricate and complicated in
+ character, and enveloped in a mass of conflicting testimony requiring many days to
+ hear it, is it not manifest that a jury,&mdash;not one of whom has taken a note
+ during the trial, some of whose members have heard as though hearing not, and seen as
+ though seeing not, the testimony and the witnesses,&mdash;deals with such a case at a
+ great disadvantage, as compared with a judge whose notes contain all the material
+ testimony, and who has all the opportunity for rest and relaxation that he may
+ require before filing the finding which is his verdict? With respect to such cases,
+ it is clear that, as a learned English judge has said, "the securities which can be
+ taken for justice in the case of a trial by a judge without a jury, are infinitely
+ greater than those which can be taken for trial by a judge and jury."<a
+ id="footnotetag11" name="footnotetag11"></a><a href="#footnote11"><sup>11</sup></a> A
+ judge may be required to state what facts he finds, as well as the general conclusion
+ at which he has arrived, and to state upon what views of the legal questions he has
+ acted.</p>
+ <p>Judge Foster most justly remarks: "There can be no such thing as a good jury trial
+ without the co-operation of a learned, upright, conscientious and efficient presiding
+ judge, ... holding firmly and steadily the reins, and guiding the entire
+ proceedings." This is what Judge Foster was, and what Judge Pitman is, accustomed to
+ do. But if the jury requires such "guiding" from the court, and if the court is
+ competent thus to guide them, it is clear that the court must know the way and must
+ be able to follow it; otherwise it could not so guide the jury.</p>
+ <p>Judge Pitman also argues that the jury can eliminate "the personal equation"
+ better than the judge. But is this so? Does education count for nothing in producing
+ that calm, firm, passionless state of mind which is essential in those who determine
+ causes between party and party?</p>
+ <p>Are not juries quite as often as judges swayed by popular clamor, by prejudice, by
+ appeals to their passions, and by considerations foreign to the merits of the case?
+ As Mr. Thomas asks in the article before quoted: "How many juries are strictly
+ impartial? How many remain entirely uninfluenced by preference for one or the other
+ of the parties, one or the other counsel, or the leaning of some friend to either, or
+ by political affiliations, or church connections, or relations to secret societies,
+ or by what they have heard, or by what they have read? Can they be as discerning and
+ impartial as a bench of judges, or if inclined to some bias or prejudice, can they as
+ readily as a judge divest their minds of such an impression?" If it be true that
+ juries composed of such material as Judge Pitman shows our juries to be largely
+ composed of, are as capable of mastering and determining intricate questions of fact
+ as judges trained to that duty, then we may truly say&mdash;</p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="line">
+ "Thinking is but an idle waste of thought,
+ </div>
+ <div class="line">
+ And naught is everything, and everything is naught."
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>According to Judge Pitman, the system which prevails in some of the states, of
+ trials by the court without juries <a name="page173" id="page173"></a><span
+ class="pagenum">[pg 173]</span> (with the provision that the trial shall be by jury
+ if either party demand it), "works satisfactorily." The testimony of lawyers and
+ litigants in Massachusetts, Connecticut and other states where this system prevails,
+ is to the same effect. For ourselves, while far from desiring the abolition of trial
+ by jury, whether in civil or in criminal causes, we are by no means disposed to
+ "throw glamour" (as the Scotch say), over an instrumentality for ascertaining legal
+ truth, which is so cumbersome in its operation, and so uncertain in its results. A
+ jury is, at best, a means, and not an end; and although much may be said about the
+ incidental usefulness of jury service on account of its tendency to enlarge the
+ intellectual horizon of jurors, all that is beside the main question.</p>
+ <p>Whether a particular occurrence took place or not, is a question which, whether it
+ be tried by a judge or by a jury, must be decided upon evidence; which consists, in
+ part, of circumstances, and, in part, of acts, but in part also, and very largely, of
+ the sworn statements of individuals. While falsehood and corruption prevail among all
+ classes of the community so extensively as they now do, it is useless to claim that
+ decisions based upon human testimony are always or generally correct. Perjury is as
+ rife as ever, and works as much wrong as ever. To a conscientious judge, like Judge
+ Pitman, "the investigation of a mass of tangled facts and conflicting testimony"
+ cannot but be wearisome, as he says it is; and, in many cases, the sense of
+ responsibility "cannot but be oppressive;" but he has so often repeated a
+ <i>dictum</i> of Lord Redesdale that he must be presumed to have found solace in
+ it&mdash;"it is more important that an end be put to litigation, than that justice
+ should be done in every case." There is truth in that <i>dictum</i>; but, like other
+ truths, it has often been abused, especially by incompetent or lazy or drowsy judges.
+ More unfortunate suitors have suffered as martyrs to that truth than the judges who
+ jauntily "cast" them would admit.</p>
+ <p>Judges may do their best; juries may do their best; they will often fall into
+ error; and instead of glorifying themselves or the system of which they are a part,
+ it would be more modest in them to say, "We are unprofitable servants." Not many
+ judges have been great enough to say, "I know I sometimes err," but some have said
+ it. The lamented Judge Colt said it publicly more than once, and the admission
+ raised, rather than lowered, him in the general esteem. When he died the voice of the
+ bar and of the people said, "Other judges have been revered, but we loved Judge
+ Colt."</p>
+ <p>Massachusetts gives her litigants the choice of a forum. All trials in civil
+ causes are by the courts alone, unless one party or the other claims a jury. If the
+ reader has a case of much complexity, either with respect to the facts, or with
+ respect to the law, perhaps he would like to have our opinion as to which is the
+ better forum. The answer is the same that was given by one who lived at the parting
+ of the ways, to a weary traveller who inquired which fork of the road he should take:
+ "Both are full of snags, quagmires and pitfalls. No matter which you take, before you
+ reach the end of your journey you will wish you had taken the other." In the trial by
+ jury, and in the trial by the court, just as in the trial by ordeal, and in the trial
+ by battle in the days of old, the element of chance is of the first magnitude</p>
+ <a name="page174" id="page174"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 174]</span>
+ <hr />
+ <h2>PUBLISHERS' DEPARTMENT.</h2>
+ <center>
+ SENEFELDER, THE INVENTOR OF LITHOGRAPHY AND CHROMO-LITHOGRAPHY.&mdash;HIS ART IN
+ BOSTON DEVELOPED BY L. PRANG &amp; CO.&mdash;COLOR-PRINTING ON SATIN, ETC.
+ </center>
+ <p>A century ago the world knew nothing of the art of lithography; color-printing was
+ confined to comparatively crude products from wooden blocks, most of which were
+ hardly equal to the Japanese fan pictures now familiar to all of us. The year 1799
+ gave us a new invention which was destined to revolutionize reproductive art and add
+ immensely to the means for education, culture and enjoyment.</p>
+ <p>Alois Senefelder, born 1771, at Prague (Austria), started life with writing plays,
+ and too poor to pay a printer, he determined to invent a process of his own which
+ should serve to print his manuscript without dependence upon the (to him) too costly
+ types.</p>
+ <p>A born inventor, this Alois Senefelder, a genius, supported by boundless hope,
+ immense capability for hard, laborious work, and an indomitable energy; he started
+ with the plan of etching his writings in relief on metal plates, to take impressions
+ therefrom by means of rollers. He found the metal too costly for his experiments; and
+ limestone slabs from the neighboring quarries&mdash;he living then in
+ Munich&mdash;were tried as a substitute. Although partly successful in this
+ direction, he continued through years of hard, and often disappointing trials, to
+ find something more complete. He hit upon the discovery that a printed sheet of paper
+ (new or old) moistened with a thin solution of gum Arabic would, when dabbled over
+ printers' ink, accept the ink from the dabbler only on its printed parts and remain
+ perfectly clean in the blank spaces, so that a facsimile impression could be taken
+ from this inked-in sheet. He found that this operation might be repeated until the
+ original print gave out by wear. Here was a new discovery, based on the properties of
+ attraction and repulsion between fatty matters (printers ink), and the watery
+ solution of gum Arabic. The extremely delicate nature of the paper matrix was a
+ serious drawback, and had to be overcome. The slabs of limestone which served
+ Senefelder in a previous emergency were now recurred to by him as an absorbent
+ material similar to paper, and a trial by making an impression from his
+ above-mentioned paper matrix on the stone, and subsequent gumming, convinced him that
+ he was correct in his surmise. By this act lithography became an established
+ fact.</p>
+ <p>A few short years of intelligent experimenting revealed to him all the
+ possibilities of this new discovery. Inventions of processes followed each other
+ closely until in 1818 he disclosed to the world in a volume of immortal interest not
+ only a complete history of his invention and his processes, but also a reliable
+ description of the same for others to follow. Nothing really new except
+ photo-lithography has been added to this charming art since that time; improvement
+ only by manual skill and by chemical progress, can be claimed by others.</p>
+ <p>Chromo-lithography (printing in colors from stone) was experimented on by <a
+ name="page175" id="page175"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 175]</span> the great
+ inventor. He outlined its possibilities by saying, that he verily believed that
+ printed pictures like paintings would sometimes be made thereby, and whoever has seen
+ the productions of our Boston firm, L. Prang &amp; Co., will bear him out in the
+ verity of his prediction.</p>
+ <p>When Prang touched this art in 1856 it was in its infancy in this country. Stray
+ specimens of more or less merit had been produced, especially by Martin Thurwanger
+ (pen work) and Fabronius (crayon work), but much was left to be perfected. A little
+ bunch of roses to embellish a ladies' magazine just starting in Boston, was the first
+ work with which the firm occupied its single press. Crude enough it was, but
+ diligence and energy soon developed therefrom the works which have astonished not
+ only this country but even Europe, and the firm, which took thereby the lead in their
+ speciality of art reproduction in color, has succeeded in keeping it ever since from
+ year to year without one faltering step, until there is no single competitor in the
+ civilized world to dispute its mastery. This is something to be proud of, not only
+ for the firm in question, but even for the country at large, and to crown its
+ achievements, the firm of L. Prang &amp; Co. have this year made, apart from their
+ usual wonderful variety of original Christmas cards and other holiday art prints, a
+ reproduction of a flower piece of the celebrated Belgian flower painter, Jean Robie,
+ and printed it on satin by a process invented and patented by Mr. Prang. For
+ truthfulness as a copy this print challenges the admiration of our best artists and
+ connoisseurs. The gorgeous work as it lies before our eyes seems to us to be as
+ perfect as if it left the very brush of the master, and even in close comparison with
+ the original it does not lose an iota of its charms.</p>
+ <p>Of the marvellous excellence of this, the latest achievement of this remarkable
+ house, thousands who visited the late exhibition of the Massachusetts Charitable
+ Mechanic's Association and saw Messrs. L. Prang &amp; Co.'s, extensive exhibit, can
+ bear witness. Everybody who looked at the two pictures, the original masterpiece by
+ Robie and its reproduction by Prang, side by side, was puzzled to distinguish which
+ was which, many pointing to the reproduction as the better, and in their eyes,
+ therefore as the original picture. The same was true with regard to many more of this
+ justly celebrated firm's reproductions, which they did not hesitate to exhibit,
+ alongside of the original paintings. Altogether, their exhibit with its large
+ collection of elegant satin prints, its studies for artists, its historical feature,
+ showing the enormous development of the firm's work since 1856, its interesting
+ illustration by successive printings of how their pictures are made, and its
+ instructive and artistic arrangement of their collection, made it one of the most
+ attractive features of the fair.</p>
+ <p>What more can we say but that we are proud ourselves of this achievement within
+ our city limits; it cannot fail to increase the fame our beloved Boston as a town of
+ masters in thought and art. Honor to the firm of L. Prang &amp; Co.</p>
+ <a name="page176" id="page176"></a><span class="pagenum">[pg 176]</span>
+ <hr />
+ <h2>NOTICES OF NEW BOOKS.</h2>
+ <p>THE VOYAGE OF THE "VIVIAN" to the North Pole and Beyond, or Adventures of Two
+ Youths in the Open Polar sea. By COLONEL THOMAS W. KNOX, the author of "The Boy
+ Travellers in the Far East," "The Young Nimrods," etc. Illustrated; 8vo.; cloth, $3.
+ Harper &amp; Brothers, New York.</p>
+ <p>A fascinating story for boys, into which is woven by the graceful pen of the
+ author the history of Arctic exploration for centuries past. The young readers who
+ have followed the "Boy Travellers in the Far East" will welcome this addition to the
+ literature of adventure and travel.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <p>LITTLE PEOPLE OF THE AIR, By the authors of "Little Playfellows." Illustrated;
+ 8vo., $1. D. Lothrop &amp; Co., Boston.</p>
+ <p>A series of pretty stories of feathered songsters, for little men and women, alike
+ interesting to the young and children of an older growth.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <p>POLITICS FOR YOUNG AMERICANS. By CHARLES NORDHOFF, author of "The Communistic
+ Societies of the United States," etc. Popular edition; paper, 12mo., 400. Harper and
+ Brothers, New York.</p>
+ <p>A series of essays in the form of letters, calculated to instruct the youth of
+ this country in their duty as American citizens.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <p>A PERILOUS SECRET. By CHARLES READE. Cloth, 12mo.; 75 cents. Harper and Brothers,
+ New York.</p>
+ <p>This volume forms one of Harper's Household editions of the works of this popular
+ novelist.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <p>THE ICE QUEEN. By ERNEST INGERSOLL, author of "Friends Worth Knowing," "Knocking
+ Around the Rockies," etc. Illustrated; Cloth, 16mo., $1. Harper and Brothers, New
+ York.</p>
+ <p>A story for boys and girls of the adventures of a small party storm-bound in
+ winter, on a desolate island in Lake Erie.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <p>GOD AND THE FUTURE LIFE; or the Reasonableness of Christianity. By CHARLES
+ NORDHOFF, author of "Politics for Young Americans," etc. 16mo., cloth, $1. Harper and
+ Brothers, New York.</p>
+ <p>Paley's "Natural Theology," familiar to students, is supplemented by this volume,
+ which brings the argument down to the present developement of science. It is a book
+ for thoughtful men and women, whose faith in the immortality of the soul needs
+ strengthening.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <p>MOTHERS IN COUNCIL. 16mo., cloth, $1. Harper and Brothers, New York.</p>
+ <p>A series of essays and discussions of value to the family circle, teaching how
+ sons can be brought up to be good husbands, and daughters to be contented and useful
+ old maids, and many other valuable lessons.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <p>GOOD STORIES. By CHARLES READE, 16mo., cloth, $1. Harper and Brothers, New
+ York.</p>
+ <p>These short stories by Mr. Reade, some of which have appeared from time to time in
+ the Bazar, are here gathered in one volume. They are "The History of an Acre," "The
+ Knightsbridge Mystery," "Single Heart and Double Face," and many others.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <p>I SAY NO; or, the Love Letter Answered. By WILKIE COLLINS; 16mo., cloth,$1. Harper
+ and Brothers, New York.</p>
+ <p>The announcement that a new novel from the pen of Mr. Collins has appeared is
+ enough to insure a large and steady demand for it.</p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1" name="footnote1"></a> <b>Footnote 1</b>: (<a
+ href="#footnotetag1">return</a>)
+ <p><i>The Churchman</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote2" name="footnote2"></a> <b>Footnote 2</b>: (<a
+ href="#footnotetag2">return</a>)
+ <p>From a genealogical memoir of the Lo-Lathrop family, by Rev. E.B. Huntington,
+ 1884.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote3" name="footnote3"></a> <b>Footnote 3</b>: (<a
+ href="#footnotetag3">return</a>)
+ <p>Rec. Alonzo H. Quint, D.D. in <i>Granite Monthly</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote4" name="footnote4"></a> <b>Footnote 4</b>: (<a
+ href="#footnotetag4">return</a>)
+ <p>Rev. Dr. Quint.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote5" name="footnote5"></a> <b>Footnote 5</b>: (<a
+ href="#footnotetag5">return</a>)
+ <p>Rev. Dr. Quint.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote6" name="footnote6"></a> <b>Footnote 6</b>: (<a
+ href="#footnotetag6">return</a>)
+ <p><i>The Paper World</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote7" name="footnote7"></a> <b>Footnote 7</b>: (<a
+ href="#footnotetag7">return</a>)
+ <p>"Les Colosses anciens et moderns," par E. Lesbazeilles; Paris: 1881.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote8" name="footnote8"></a> <b>Footnote 8</b>: (<a
+ href="#footnotetag8">return</a>)
+ <p><i>Vide</i> papers by Clarence Cook in The Studio, and by Professor D. Cady
+ Eaton of Yale College in the New York Tribune.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote9" name="footnote9"></a> <b>Footnote 9</b>: (<a
+ href="#footnotetag9">return</a>)
+ <p>Copyright, 1884, by Frances C. Sparhawk. All rights reserved.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote10" name="footnote10"></a> <b>Footnote 10</b>: (<a
+ href="#footnotetag10">return</a>)
+ <p>N.A. Review, No. CCCIV, March, 1882.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote11" name="footnote11"></a> <b>Footnote 11</b>: (<a
+ href="#footnotetag11">return</a>)
+ <p>Stephen's History of the Criminal Law, 568.</p>
+ </div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Bay State Monthly - Volume 2,
+Issue 3, December, 1884, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BAY STATE MONTHLY ***
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+</pre>
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+ </body>
+</html>
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Bay State Monthly - Volume 2, Issue 3,
+December, 1884, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Bay State Monthly - Volume 2, Issue 3, December, 1884
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: October 25, 2004 [EBook #13864]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BAY STATE MONTHLY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Cornell University, Joshua Hutchinson, Josephine Paolucci
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: Daniel Lothrop]
+
+
+
+
+THE
+
+BAY STATE MONTHLY.
+
+_A Massachusetts Magazine_.
+
+VOL. II.
+
+DECEMBER, 1884.
+
+No. 3.
+
+Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1884, by John N.
+McClintock and Company, in the office of the Librarian of Congress at
+Washington.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DANIEL LOTHROP.
+
+By JOHN N. MCCLINTOCK, A.M.
+
+
+The fame, character and prosperity of a city have often depended upon
+its merchants,--burghers they were once called to distinguish them from
+haughty princes and nobles. Through the enterprise of the common
+citizens, Venice, Genoa, Antwerp, and London have become famous, and
+have controlled the destinies of nations. New England, originally
+settled by sturdy and liberty-loving yeomen and free citizens of free
+English cities, was never a congenial home for the patrician, with
+inherited feudal privileges, but has welcomed the thrifty Pilgrim, the
+Puritan, the Scotch Covenanter, the French Huguenot, the Ironsides
+soldiers of the great Cromwell. The men and women of this fusion have
+shaped our civilization. New England gave its distinctive character to
+the American colonies, and finally to the nation. New England influences
+still breathe from the Atlantic to the Pacific, and from the great lakes
+to Mexico; and Boston, still the focus of the New England idea, leads
+national movement and progress.
+
+Perhaps one of the broadest of these influences--broadest inasmuch as it
+interpenetrates the life of our whole people--proceeds from the lifework
+of one of the merchants of Boston, known by his name and his work to the
+entire English speaking world: Daniel Lothrop, of the famous firm of D.
+Lothrop & Co., publishers--the people's publishing house. Mr. Lothrop is
+a good representative of this early New England fusion of race,
+temperament, fibre, conscience and brain. He is a direct descendant of
+John Lowthroppe, who, in the thirty-seventh year of Henry VIII. (1545),
+was a gentleman of quite extensive landed estates, both in Cherry Burton
+(four miles removed from Lowthorpe), and in various other parts of the
+country.
+
+Lowthorpe is a small parish in the Wapentake of Dickering, in the East
+Riding of York, four and a half miles northeast from Great Driffield. It
+is a perpetual curacy in the archdeaconry of York. This parish gave name
+to the family of Lowthrop, Lothrop, or Lathrop. The Church, which was
+dedicated to St. Martin, and had for one of its chaplains, in the reign
+of Richard II., Robert de Louthorp, is now partly ruinated, the tower
+and chancel being almost entirely overgrown with ivy. It was a
+collegiate Church from 1333, and from the style of its architecture must
+have been built about the time of Edward III.
+
+From this English John Lowthroppe the New England Lothrops have their
+origin:--
+
+ "It is one of the most ancient of all the famous New England
+ families, whose blood in so many cases is better and purer than
+ that of the so-called noble families in England. The family roll
+ certainly shows a great deal of talent, and includes men who have
+ proved widely influential and useful, both in the early and later
+ periods. The pulpit has a strong representation. Educators are
+ prominent. Soldiers prove that the family has never been wanting in
+ courage. Lothrop missionaries have gone forth into foreign lands.
+ The bankers are in the forefront. The publishers are represented.
+ Art engraving has its exponent, and history has found at least one
+ eminent student, while law and medicine are likewise indebted to
+ this family, whose talent has been applied in every department of
+ useful industry,"[A]
+
+[Footnote A: _The Churchman_.]
+
+
+GENEALOGY.[B]
+
+[Footnote B: From a genealogical memoir of the Lo-Lathrop family, by
+Rev. E.B. Huntington, 1884.]
+
+I. Mark Lothrop, the pioneer, the grandson of John Lowthroppe and a
+relative of Rev. John Lothrop, settled in Salem, Mass., where he was
+received as an inhabitant January 11, 1643-4. He was living there in
+1652. In 1656 he was living in Bridgewater, Mass., of which town he was
+one of the proprietors, and in which he was prominent for about
+twenty-five years. He died October 25, 1685.
+
+II. Samuel Lothrop, born before 1660, married Sarah Downer, and lived in
+Bridgewater. His will was dated April 11, 1724.
+
+III. Mark Lothrop, born in Bridgewater September 9, 1689; married March
+29, 1722, Hannah Alden [Born February 1, 1696; died 1777]. She was the
+daughter of Deacon Joseph Alden of Bridgewater, and great grand-daughter
+of Honorable John and Priscilla (Mullins) Alden of Duxbury, of Mayflower
+fame. He settled in Easton, of which town he was one of the original
+proprietors. He was prominent in Church and town affairs.
+
+IV. Jonathan Lothrop, born March 11, 1722-3; married April 13, 1746,
+Susannah, daughter of Solomon and Susannah (Edson) Johnson of
+Bridgewater. She was born in 1723. He was a Deacon of the Church, and a
+prominent man in the town. He died in 1771.
+
+V. Solomon Lothrop, born February 9, 1761; married Mehitable, daughter
+of Cornelius White of Taunlon; settled in Easton, and later in Norton,
+where he died October 19, 1843. She died September 14, 1832, aged 73.
+
+VI. Daniel Lothrop, born in Easton, January 9, 1801; married October 16,
+1825, Sophia, daughter of Deacon Jeremiah Horne of Rochester, N.H. She
+died September 23, 1848, and he married (2) Mary E. Chamberlain. He
+settled in Rochester, N.H., and was one of the public men of the town.
+Of the strictest integrity, and possessing sterling qualities of mind
+and heart Mr. Lothrop was chosen to fill important offices of public
+trust in his town and state. He repeatedly represented his town in the
+Legislature, where his sound practical sense and clear wisdom were of
+much service, particularly in the formation of the Free Soil party, in
+which he was a bold defender of the rights of liberty to all men. He
+died May 31, 1870.
+
+VII. Daniel Lothrop, son of Daniel and Sophia (Horne) Lothrop, was born
+in Rochester, N.H., August 11, 1831.
+
+ "On the maternal side Mr. Lothrop is descended from William Horne,
+ of Horne's Hill, in Dover, who held his exposed position in the
+ Indian wars, and whose estate has been in the family name from 1662
+ until the present generation; but he was killed in the massacre of
+ June 28, 1689. Through the Horne line, also, came descent from Rev.
+ Joseph Hull, minister at Durham in 1662, a graduate at the
+ University at Cambridge, England; from John Ham, of Dover; from the
+ emigrant John Heard, and others of like vigorous stock. It was his
+ ancestress, Elizabeth (Hull) Heard, whom the old historians call a
+ "brave gentlewoman," who held her garrison house, the frontier fort
+ in Dover in the Indian wars, and successfully defended it in the
+ massacre of 1689. The father of the subject of this sketch was a
+ man of sterling qualities, strong in mind and will, but commanding
+ love as well as respect. The mother was a woman of outward beauty
+ and beauty of soul alike; with high ideals and reverent
+ conscientiousness. Her influence over her boys was life-long. The
+ home was a centre of intelligent intercourse, a sample of the
+ simplicity but earnestness of many of the best New Hampshire
+ homesteads."[A]
+
+[Footnote A: Rec. Alonzo H. Quint, D.D. in _Granite Monthly_.]
+
+Descended, as is here evident, from men and women accustomed to govern,
+legislate, protect, guide and represent the people, it is not surprising
+to find the Lothrops of the present day of this branch standing in high
+places, shaping affairs, and devising fresh and far-reaching measures
+for the general good.
+
+Daniel Lothrop was the youngest of the three sons of Daniel and Sophia
+Home Lothrop. The family residence was on Haven's Hill, in Rochester,
+and it was an ideal home in its laws, influences and pleasures. Under
+the guidance of the wise and gentle mother young Daniel developed in a
+sound body a mind intent on lofty aims, even in childhood, and a
+character early distinguished for sturdy uprightness. Here, too, on the
+farm was instilled into him the faith of his fathers, brought through
+many generations, and he openly acknowledged his allegiance to an
+Evangelical Church at the age of eleven.
+
+As a boy Daniel is remembered as possessing a retentive and singularly
+accurate memory; as very studious, seeking eagerly for knowledge, and
+rapidly absorbing it. His intuitive mastery of the relations of numbers,
+his grasp of the values and mysteries of the higher mathematics, was
+early remarkable. It might be reasonably expected of the child of seven
+who was brought down from the primary benches and lifted up to the
+blackboard to demonstrate a difficult problem in cube root to the big
+boys and girls of the upper class that he should make rapid and
+masterful business combinations in later life.
+
+At the age of fourteen he was sufficiently advanced in his studies to
+enter college, but judicious friends restrained him in order that his
+physique might be brought up to his intellectual growth, and presently
+circumstances diverted the boy from his immediate educational
+aspirations and thrust him into the arena of business:--the world may
+have lost a lawyer, a clergyman, a physician, or an engineer, but by
+this change in his youthful plans it certainly has gained a great
+publisher--a man whose influence in literature is extended, and who, by
+his powerful individuality, his executive force, and his originating
+brain has accomplished a literary revolution.
+
+To understand the business career of Daniel Lothrop it will be necessary
+to trace the origin and progress of the firm of D. Lothrop and Company.
+On reaching his decision to remain out of college for a year he assumed
+charge of the drug store, then recently opened by his eldest brother,
+James E. Lothrop, who, desiring to attend medical lectures in
+Philadelphia, confidently invited his brother Daniel to carry on the
+business during his absence.
+
+ "He urged the young boy to take charge of the store, promising as
+ an extra inducement an equal division as to profits, and that the
+ firm should read 'D. Lothrop & Co.' This last was too much for our
+ ambitious lad. When five years of age he had scratched on a piece
+ of tin these magic words, opening to fame and honor, 'D. Lothrop &
+ Co.,' nailing the embryo sign against the door of his play house.
+ How then could he resist, now, at fourteen? And why not spend the
+ vacation in this manner? And so the sign was made and put up, and
+ thus began the house of 'D. Lothrop & Co.,' the name of which is
+ spoken as a household word wherever the English language is used,
+ and whose publications are loved in more than one of the royal
+ families of Europe."[A]
+
+[Footnote A: Rev. Dr. Quint]
+
+The drug store became very lucrative. The classical drill which had
+been received by the young druggist was of great advantage to him, his
+thorough knowledge of Latin was of immediate service, and his skill and
+care and knowledge was widely recognized and respected. The store became
+his college, where his affection for books soon led him to introduce
+them as an adjunct to his business.
+
+Thus was he when a mere boy launched on a successful business career.
+His energy, since proved inexhaustible, soon began to open outward. When
+about seventeen his attention was attracted to the village of Newmarket
+as a desirable location for a drug store, and he seized an opportunity
+to hire a store and stock it. His executive and financial ability were
+strikingly honored in this venture. Having it in successful operation,
+he called the second brother, John C. Lothrop, who about this time was
+admitted to the firm, and left him in charge of the new establishment,
+while he started a similar store at Meredith Bridge, now called Laconia.
+The firm now consisted of the three brothers.
+
+ "These three brothers have presented a most remarkable spirit of
+ family union. Remarkable in that there was none of the drifting
+ away from each other into perilous friendships and moneyed
+ ventures. They held firmly to each other with a trust beyond words.
+ The simple word of each was as good as a bond. And as early as
+ possible they entered into an agreement that all three should
+ combine fortunes, and, though keeping distinct kinds of business,
+ should share equal profits under the firm name of 'D. Lothrop &
+ Co.' For thirty-six years, through all the stress and strain of
+ business life in this rushing age, their loyalty has been preserved
+ strong and pure. Without a question or a doubt, there has been an
+ absolute unity of interests, although James E., President of the
+ Cocheco Bank, and Mayor of the city of Dover, is in one city, John
+ C. in another, and Daniel in still another, and each having the
+ particular direction of the business which his enterprise and
+ sagacity has made extensive and profitable."[A]
+
+[Footnote A: Rev. Dr. Quint.]
+
+In 1850 occurred a point of fresh and important departure. The stock of
+books held by Elijah Wadleigh, who had conducted a large and flourishing
+book store in Dover, N.H., was purchased. Mr. Lothrop enlarged the
+business, built up a good jobbing trade, and also quietly experimented
+in publishing. The bookstore under his management also became something
+more than a commercial success: it grew to be the centre for the bright
+and educated people of the town, a favorite meeting place of men and
+women alive to the questions of the day.
+
+Now, arrived at the vigor of young manhood, Mr. Lothrop's aims and high
+reaches began their more open unfoldment. He rapidly extended the
+business into new and wide fields. He established branch stores at
+Berwick, Portsmouth, Amesbury, and other places. In each of these
+establishments books were prominently handled. While thus immediately
+busy, Mr. Lothrop began his "studies" for his ultimate work. He did not
+enter the publishing field without long surveys of investigation,
+comparison and reflection. In need of that kind of vacation we call
+"change of work and scene," Mr. Lothrop planned a western trip. The
+bookstores in the various large cities on the route were sedulously
+visited, and the tastes and the demands of the book trade were carefully
+studied from many standpoints.
+
+The vast possibilities of the Great West caught his attention and he
+hastened to grasp his opportunities. At St. Peter, in Minnesota, he was
+welcomed and resolved to locate. They needed such men as Mr. Lothrop to
+help build the new town into a city. The opening of the St. Peter store
+was characteristic of its young proprietor.
+
+The extreme cold of October and November, 1856, prevented, by the early
+freezing of the Upper Mississippi, the arrival of his goods. Having
+contracted with the St. Peter company to erect a building, and open his
+store on the first day of December, Mr. Lothrop, thinking that the goods
+might have come as far as some landing place below St. Paul, went down
+several hundred miles along the shore visiting the different landing
+places. Failing to find them he bought the entire closing-out stock of a
+drug store at St. Paul, and other goods necessary to a complete fitting
+of his store, had them loaded, and with several large teams started for
+St. Peter. The same day a blinding snow storm set in, making it
+extremely difficult to find the right road, or indeed any road at all,
+so that five days were spent in making a journey that in good weather
+could have been accomplished in two. When within a mile of St. Peter the
+Minnesota river was to be crossed, and it was feared the ice would not
+bear the heavy teams; all was unloaded and moved on small sledges across
+the river, and the drug store _was opened on the day agreed upon_. The
+papers of that section made special mention of this achievement, saying
+that it deserved honorable record, and that with such business
+enterprise the prosperity of Minnesota Valley was assured.
+
+He afterwards opened a banking house in St. Peter, of which his uncle,
+Dr. Jeremiah Horne, was cashier; and in the book and drug store he
+placed one of his clerks from the East, Mr. B.F. Paul, who is now one of
+the wealthiest men of the Minnesota Valley. He also established two
+other stores in the same section of country.
+
+Various elements of good generalship came into play during Mr. Lothrop's
+occupancy of this new field, not only in directing his extensive
+business combinations in prosperous times, but in guiding all his
+interests through the financial panic of 1857 and 1858. By the failure
+of other houses and the change of capital from St. Peter to St. Paul,
+Mr. Lothrop was a heavy loser, but by incessant labor and foresight he
+squarely met each complication, promptly paid each liability in full.
+But now he broke in health. The strain upon him had been intense, and
+when all was well the tension relaxed, and making his accustomed visit
+East to attend to his business interests in New England, without
+allowing himself the required rest, the change of climate, together with
+heavy colds taken on the journey, resulted in congestion of the lungs,
+and prostration. Dr. Bowditch, after examination, said that the young
+merchant had been doing the work of twenty years in ten. Under his
+treatment Mr. Lothrop so far recovered that he was able to take a trip
+to Florida, where the needed rest restored his health.
+
+For the next five years our future publisher directed the lucrative
+business enterprises which he had inaugurated, from the quiet book store
+in Dover, N. H., while he carefully matured his plans for his life's
+campaign--the publication, in many lines, of wholesome books for the
+people. Soon after the close of the Civil war the time arrived for the
+accomplishment of his designs, and he began by closing up advantageously
+his various enterprises in order to concentrate his forces. His was no
+ordinary equipment. Together with well-laid plans and inspirations, for
+some of which the time is not yet due, and a rich birthright of
+sagacity, insight and leadership, he possessed also a practical
+experience of American book markets and the tastes of the people,
+trained financial ability, practiced judgment, literary taste, and
+literary conscience; and last, but not least, he had traversed and
+mapped out the special field he proposed to occupy,--a field from which
+he has never been diverted.
+
+ "The foundations were solid. On these points Mr. Lothrop has had
+ but one mind from the first: 'Never to publish a work purely
+ sensational, no matter what chances of money it has in it;' 'to
+ publish books that will make true, steadfast growth in right
+ living.' Not alone right thinking, but right living. These were his
+ two determinations, rigidly adhered to, notwithstanding constant
+ advice, appeals, and temptations. His thoughts had naturally turned
+ to the young people, knowing from his own self-made fortunes, how
+ young men and women need help, encouragement and stimulus. He had
+ determined to throw all his time, strength and money into making
+ good books for the young people, who, with keen imaginations and
+ active minds, were searching in all directions for mental food.
+ 'The best way to fight the evil in the world,' reasoned Mr.
+ Lothrop, 'is to crowd it out with the good.' And therefore he bent
+ the energies of his mind to maturing plans toward this object,--the
+ putting good, helpful literature into their hands.
+
+ His first care was to determine the channels through which he could
+ address the largest audiences. The Sunday School library was one.
+ In it he hoped to turn a strong current of pure, healthful
+ literature for those young people who, dieting on the existing
+ library books, were rendered miserable on closing their covers,
+ either to find them dry or obsolete, or so sentimentally religious
+ as to have nothing in their own practical lives corresponding to
+ the situations of the pictured heroes and heroines.
+
+ The family library was another channel. To make evident to the
+ heads of households the paramount importance of creating a home
+ library, Mr. Lothrop set himself to work with a will. In the spring
+ of 1868 he invited to meet him a council of three gentlemen,
+ eminent in scholarship, sound of judgment, and of large experience:
+ the Reverend George T. Day, D. D., of Dover, N.H., Professor Heman
+ Lincoln, D.D., of Newton Seminary, the Rev. J.E. Rankin, D.D., of
+ Washington, D.C. Before them he laid his plans, matured and ready
+ for their acceptance: to publish good, strong, attractive
+ literature for the Sunday School, the home, the town, and school
+ library, and that nothing should be published save of that
+ character, asking their co-operation as readers of the several
+ manuscripts to be presented for acceptance. The gentlemen, one and
+ all, gave him their heartiest God-speed, but they frankly confessed
+ it a most difficult undertaking, and that the step must be taken
+ with the strong chance of failure. Mr. Lothrop had counted that
+ chance and reaffirmed his purpose to become a publisher of just
+ such literature, and imparted to them so much of his own courage
+ that before they left the room, all stood engaged as salaried
+ readers of the manuscripts to come in to the new publishing house
+ of D. Lothrop & Co., and during all these years no manuscripts have
+ been accepted without the sanction of one or more of these readers.
+
+ The store, Nos. 38 and 40 Cornhill, Boston, was taken, and a
+ complete refitting and stocking made it one of the finest
+ bookstores of the city. The first book published was 'Andy
+ Luttrell.' How many recall that first book! 'Andy Luttrell' was a
+ great success, the press saying that 'the series of which this is
+ the initiatory volume, marks a new era in Sunday School
+ literature.' Large editions were called for, and it is popular
+ still. In beginning any new business there are many difficulties to
+ face, old established houses to compete with, and new ones to
+ contest every inch of success. But tides turn, and patience and
+ pluck won the day, until from being steady, sure and reliable, Mr.
+ Lothrop's publishing business was increasing with such rapidity as
+ to soon make it one of the solid houses of Boston. Mr. Lothrop had
+ a remarkable instinct as regarded the discovering of new talent,
+ and many now famous writers owe their popularity with the public to
+ his kindness and courage in standing by them. He had great
+ enthusiasm and success in introducing this new element, encouraging
+ young writers, and creating a fresh atmosphere very stimulating and
+ enjoyable to their audience. To all who applied for work or brought
+ manuscript for examination, he had a hopeful word, and in rapid,
+ clear expression smoothed the difficulty out of their path if
+ possible, or pointed to future success as the result of patient
+ toil. He always brought out the best that was in a person, having
+ the rare quality of the union of perfect honesty with kind
+ consideration. This new blood in the old veins of literary life,
+ soon wrought a marvelous change in this class of literature. Mr.
+ Lothrop had been wise enough to see that such would be the case,
+ and he kept constantly on the lookout for all means that might
+ foster ambition and bring to the surface latent talent. For this
+ purpose he offered prizes of $1,000 and $500 for the best
+ manuscripts on certain subjects. Such a thing had scarcely been
+ heard of before and manuscripts flowed in, showing this to have
+ been a happy thought. It is interesting to look back and find many
+ of those young authors to be identical with names that are now
+ famous in art and literature, then presenting with much fear and
+ trembling, their first efforts.
+
+ Mr. Lothrop considered no time, money, or strength ill-spent by
+ which he could secure the wisest choice of manuscripts. As an
+ evidence of his success, we name a few out of his large list: 'Miss
+ Yonge's Histories;' 'Spare Minute Series,' most carefully edited
+ from Gladstone, George MacDonald, Dean Stanley, Thomas Hughes,
+ Charles Kingsley; 'Stories of American History;'' Lothrop's Library
+ of Entertaining History,' edited by Arthur Gilman, containing
+ Professor Harrison's 'Spain,' Mrs. Clement's 'Egypt,'
+ 'Switzerland,' 'India,' etc.; 'Library of famous Americans, 1st and
+ 2d series; George MacDonald's novels--Mr. Lothrop, while on a visit
+ to Europe, having secured the latest novels by this author in
+ manuscript, thus bringing them out in advance of any other
+ publisher in this country or abroad, now issues his entire works in
+ uniform style: 'Miss Yonge's Historical Stories;' 'Illustrated
+ Wonders;' The Pansy Books,' of world-wide circulation;' 'Natural
+ History Stories;' 'Poet's Homes Series;' S.G.W. Benjamin's
+ 'American Artists;' 'The Reading Union Library,' 'Business Boy's
+ Library,' library edition of 'The Odyssey,' done in prose by
+ Butcher and Lang; 'Jowett's Thucydides;' 'Rosetti's Shakspeare,' on
+ which nothing has been spared to make it the most complete for
+ students and family use, and many others.
+
+ Mr. Lothrop is constantly broadening his field in many directions,
+ gathering the rich thought of many men of letters, science and
+ theology among his publications. Such writers as Professor James H.
+ Harrison, Arthur Gilman, and Rev. E.E. Hale are allies of the
+ house, constantly working with it to the development of pure
+ literature; the list of the authors and contributors being so long
+ as to include representatives of all the finest thinkers of the
+ day. Elegant art gift books of poem, classic and romance, have been
+ added with wise discrimination, until the list embraces sixteen
+ hundred books, out of which last year were printed and sold
+ 1,500,000 volumes.
+
+ The great fire of 1872 brought loss to Mr. Lothrop among the many
+ who suffered. Much of the hard-won earnings of years of toil was
+ swept away in that terrible night. About two weeks later, a large
+ quantity of paper which had been destroyed during the great fire
+ had been replaced, and the printing of the same was in process at
+ the printing house of Rand, Avery & Co., when a fire broke out
+ there, destroying this second lot of paper, intended for the first
+ edition of sixteen volumes of the celebrated $1,000 prize books. A
+ third lot of paper was purchased for these books and sent to the
+ Riverside Press without delay. The books were at last printed, as
+ many thousand readers can testify, an enterprise that called out
+ from the Boston papers much commendation, adding, in one instance:
+ 'Mr. Lothrop seems _warmed_ up to his work.'
+
+ When the time was ripe, another form of Mr. Lothrop's plans for the
+ creation of a great popular literature was inaugurated. We refer to
+ the projection of his now famous 'Wide Awake,' a magazine into
+ which he has thrown a large amount of money. Thrown it, expecting
+ to wait for results. And they have begun to come. 'Wide Awake' now
+ stands abreast with the finest periodicals in our country, or
+ abroad. In speaking of 'Wide Awake' the Boston Herald says: 'No
+ such marvel of excellence could be reached unless there were
+ something beyond the strict calculations of money-making to push
+ those engaged upon it to such magnificent results.' Nothing that
+ money can do is spared for its improvement. Withal, it is the most
+ carefully edited of all magazines; Mr. Lothrop's strict
+ determination to that effect, having placed wise hands at the helm
+ to co-operate with him. Our best people have found this out. The
+ finest writers in this country and in Europe are giving of their
+ best thought to filling its pages, the most celebrated artists are
+ glad to work for it. Scientific men, professors, clergymen, and all
+ heads of households give in their testimony of its merits as a
+ family magazine, while the young folks are delighted with it. The
+ fortune of 'Wide Awake' is sure. Next Mr. Lothrop proceeded to
+ supply the babies with their own especial magazine. Hence came
+ bright, winsome, sparkling 'Babyland.' The mothers caught at the
+ idea. 'Babyland' jumped into success in an incredibly short space
+ of time. The editors of 'Wide Awake,' Mr. and Mrs. Pratt, edit this
+ also, which ensures it as safe, wholesome and sweet to put into
+ baby's hands. The intervening spaces between 'Babyland' and 'Wide
+ Awake' Mr. Lothrop soon filled with 'Our Little Men and Women,' and
+ 'The Pansy.' Urgent solicitations from parents and teachers who
+ need a magazine for those little folks, either at home or at
+ school, who were beginning to read and spell, brought out the
+ first, and Mrs. G.R. Alden (Pansy) taking charge of a weekly
+ pictorial paper of that name, was the reason for the beginning and
+ growth of the second. The 'Boston Book Bulletin,' a quarterly, is a
+ medium for acquaintance with the best literature, its prices, and
+ all news current pertaining to it.
+
+ [Illustration: Exterior View Of D. Lothrop & Co.'s Publishing
+ House.]
+
+ [Illustration: Interior View Of D. Lothrop & Co.'s Publishing
+ House]
+
+ 'The Chatauqua Young Folk's Journal' is the latest addition to the
+ sparkling list. This periodical was a natural growth of the modern
+ liking for clubs, circles, societies, reading unions, home studies,
+ and reading courses. It is the official voice of the Chatauqua
+ Young Folks Reading Union, and furnishes each year a valuable and
+ vivacious course of readings on topics of interest to youth. It is
+ used largely in schools. Its contributors are among our leading
+ clergymen, lawyers, university professors, critics, historians and
+ scientists, but all its literature is of a popular character,
+ suited to the family circle rather than the study. Mr. Lothrop now
+ has the remarkable success of seeing six flourishing periodicals
+ going forth from his house.
+
+ In 1875, Mr. Lothrop, finding his Cornhill quarters inaquate [sic],
+ leased the elegant building corner Franklin and Hawley streets,
+ belonging to Harvard College, for a term of years. The building is
+ 120 feet long by 40 broad, making the salesroom, which is on the
+ first floor, one of the most elegant in the country. On the second
+ floor are Mr. Lothrop's offices, also the editorial offices of
+ 'Wide Awake,' etc. On the third floor are the composing rooms and
+ mailing rooms of the different periodicals, while the bindery fills
+ the fourth floor.
+
+ This building also was found small; it could accommodate only
+ one-fourth of the work done, and accordingly a warehouse on
+ Purchase street was leased for storing and manufacturing purposes.
+
+ In 1879 Mr. Lothrop called to his assistance a younger brother, Mr.
+ M.H. Lothrop, who had already made a brilliant business record in
+ Dover, N.H., to whom he gives an interest in the business. All who
+ care for the circulation of the best literature will be glad to
+ know that everything indicates the work to be steadily increasing
+ toward complete development of Mr. Lothrop's life-long purpose."[A]
+
+[Footnote A: _The Paper World_.]
+
+This man of large purposes and large measures has, of course, his sturdy
+friends, his foes as sturdy. He has, without doubt, an iron will. He is,
+without doubt, a good fighter--a wise counselor. Approached by fraud he
+presents a front of granite; he cuts through intrigue with sudden,
+forceful blows. It is true that the sharp bargainer, the overreaching
+buyer he worsts and puts to confusion and loss without mercy. But, no
+less, candor and honor meet with frankness and generous dealing. He is
+as loyal to a friend as to a purpose. His interest in one befriended and
+taken into trust is for life. It has been more than once said of this
+immovable business man that he has the simple heart of a boy.
+
+Mr. Lothrop's summer home is in Concord, Mass. His house, known to
+literary pilgrims of both continents as "The Wayside," is a unique, many
+gabled old mansion, situated near the road at the base of a pine-covered
+hill, facing broad, level fields, and commanding a view of charming
+rural scenery. Its dozen green acres are laid out in rustic paths; but
+with the exception of the removal of unsightly underbrush, the landscape
+is left in a wild and picturesque state. Immediately in the rear of the
+house, however, A. Bronson Alcott, a former occupant, planned a series
+of terraces, and thereon is a system of trees. The house was commenced
+in the seventeenth century and has been added to at different periods,
+and withal is quaint enough to satisfy the most exacting antiquarian. At
+the back rise the more modern portions, and the tower, wherein was woven
+the most delightful of American romances, and about which cluster tender
+memories of the immortal Hawthorne. The boughs of the whispering pines
+almost touch the lofty windows.
+
+The interior of the dwelling is seemly. It corresponds with the various
+eras of its construction. The ancient low-posted rooms with their large
+open fire-places, in which the genial hickory crackles and glows as in
+the olden time, have furnishings and appointments in harmony. The more
+modern apartments are charming, the whole combination making a most
+delightful country house.
+
+Mr. Lothrop's enjoyment of art and his critical appreciation is
+illustrated here as throughout his publications, his house being adorned
+with many exquisite and valuable original paintings from the studios of
+modern artists; and there is, too, a certain literary fitness that his
+home should be in this most classic spot, and that the mistress of this
+home should be a lady of distinguished rank in literature, and that the
+fair baby daughter of the house should wear for her own the name her
+mother has made beloved in thousands of American and English households.
+
+[Illustration: "The Wayside."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+New England Conservatory of Music.
+
+[Illustration: New England CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC Franklin Square Boston]
+
+By MRS. M.J. DAVIS.
+
+
+One of the most important questions now occupying the minds of the
+world's deepest and best thinkers, is the intellectual, physical, moral,
+and political position of woman.
+
+Men are beginning to realize a fact that has been evident enough for
+ages: that the current of civilization can never rise higher than the
+springs of motherhood. Given the ignorant, debased mothers of the
+Turkish harem, and the inevitable result is a nation destitute of truth,
+honor or political position. All the power of the Roman legions, all the
+wealth of the imperial empire, could not save the throne of the Cæsars
+when the Roman matron was shorn of her honor, and womanhood became only
+the slave or the toy of its citizens. Men have been slow to grasp the
+fact that women are a "true constituent of the bone and sinew of
+society," and as such should be trained to bear the part of "bone and
+sinew." It has been finely said, "that as times have altered and
+conditions varied, the respect has varied in which woman has been held.
+At one time condemned to the field and counted with the cattle, at
+another time condemned to the drawing-room and inventoried with marbles,
+oils and water-colors; but only in instances comparatively rare,
+acknowledged and recognized in the fullness of her moral and
+intellectual possibilities, and in the beauteous completeness of her
+personal dignity, prowess and obligation."
+
+[Illustration: The Library Reading Room]
+
+[Illustration: Art Department Painting]
+
+Various and widely divergent as opinions are in regard to woman's place
+in the political sphere, there is fast coming to be unanimity of thought
+in regard to her intellectual development. Even in Turkey, fathers are
+beginning to see that their daughters are better, not worse, for being
+able to read and, write, and civilization is about ready to concede that
+the intellectual, physical and moral possibilities of woman are to be
+the only limits to her attainment. Vast strides in the direction of the
+higher and broader education of women have been made in the quarter of a
+century since John Vassar founded on the banks of the Hudson the noble
+college for women that bears his name; and others have been found who
+have lent willing hands to making broad the highway that leads to an
+ideal womanhood. Wellesley and Smith, as well as Vassar find their
+limits all too small for the throngs of eager girlhood that are pressing
+toward them. The Boston University, honored in being first to open
+professional courses to women, Michigan University, the New England
+Conservatory, the North Western University of Illinois, the Wesleyan
+Universities, both of Connecticut and Ohio, with others of the colleges
+of the country, have opened their doors and welcomed women to an equal
+share with men, in their advantages. And in the shadow of Oxford, on the
+Thames, and of Harvard, on the Charles, womanly minds are growing,
+womanly lives are shaping, and womanly patience is waiting until every
+barrier shall be removed, and all the green fields of learning shall be
+so free that whosoever will may enter.
+
+[Illustration: Art Department Modeling]
+
+[Illustration: Tuning Department]
+
+Among the foremost of the great educational institutions of the day, the
+New England Conservatory of Music takes rank, and its remarkable
+development and wonderful growth tends to prove that the youth of the
+land desire the highest advantages that can be offered them. More than
+thirty years ago the germ of the idea that is now embodied in this great
+institution, found lodgment in the brain of the man who has devoted his
+life to its development. Believing that music had a positive influence
+upon the elevation of the world hardly dreamed of as yet even by its
+most devoted students, Eben Tourjee returned to America from years of
+musical study in the great Conservatories of Europe. Knowing from
+personal observation the difficulties that lie in the way of American
+students, especially of young and inexperienced girls who seek to obtain
+a musical education abroad, battling as they must, not only with foreign
+customs and a foreign language, but exposed to dangers, temptations and
+disappointments, he determined to found in America a music school that
+should be unsurpassed in the world. Accepting the judgment of the great
+masters, Mendelsshon, David, and Joachim, that the conservatory system
+was the best possible system of musical instruction, doing for music
+what a college of liberal arts does for education in general, Dr.
+Tourjee in 1853, with what seems to have been large and earnest faith,
+and most entire devotion, took the first public steps towards the
+accomplishment of his purpose. During the long years his plan developed
+step by step. In 1870 the institution was chartered under its present
+name in Boston. In 1881 its founder deeded to it his entire personal
+property, and by a deed of trust gave the institution into the hands of
+a Board of Trustees to be perpetuated forever as a Christian Music
+School.
+
+[Illustration: The Dining Hall]
+
+In the carrying out of his plan to establish and equip an institution
+that should give the highest musical culture, Dr. Tourjee has been
+compelled, in order that musicians educated here should not be narrow,
+one-sided specialists only, but that they should be cultured men and
+women, to add department after department, until to-day under the same
+roof and management there are well equipped schools of Music, Art,
+Elocution, Literature, Languages, Tuning, Physical Culture, and a home
+with the safeguards of a Christian family life for young women students.
+
+[Illustration: _The Cabinet_]
+
+When, in 1882, the institution moved from Music Hall to its present
+quarters in Franklin Square, in what was the St. James Hotel, it became
+possessed of the largest and best equipped conservatory buildings in the
+world. It has upon its staff of seventy-five teachers, masters from the
+best schools of Europe. During the school year ending June 29, 1884,
+students coming from forty-one states and territories of the Union, from
+the British Provinces, from England and from the Sandwich Islands, have
+received instruction there. The growth of this institution, due in such
+large measure to the courage and faith of one man, has been remarkable,
+and it stands to-day self-supporting, without one dollar of endowment,
+carrying on alone its noble work, an institution of which Boston,
+Massachusetts and America may well be proud. From the first its
+invitation has been without limitation. It began with a firm belief that
+"what it is in the nature of a man or woman to become, is a Providential
+indication of what God wants it to become, by improvement and
+development," and it offered to men and women alike the same advantages,
+the same labor, and the same honor. It is working out for itself the
+problem of co-education, and it has never had occasion to take one
+backward step in the part it has chosen. Money by the millions has been
+poured out upon the schools and colleges of the land, and not one dollar
+too much has been given, for the money that educates is the money that
+saves the nation.
+
+Among those who have been made stewards of great wealth some liberal
+benefactor should come forward in behalf of this great school, that, by
+eighteen years of faithful living, has proved its right to live. Its
+founder says of it: "The institution has not yet compassed my thought of
+it." Certainly it has not reached its possibilities of doing good. It
+needs a hall in which its concerts and lectures can be given, and in
+which the great organ of Music Hall, may be placed. It needs that its
+chapel, library, studios, gymnasium and recitation rooms should be
+greatly enlarged to meet the actual demands now made upon them. It needs
+what other institutions have needed and received, a liberal endowment,
+to enable it, with them, to meet and solve the great question of the
+day, the education of the people.
+
+[Illustration: New England Conservatory of Music Boston]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SKETCH OF SAUGUS.
+
+By E.P. ROBINSON.
+
+
+Saugus lies about eight miles northeast of Boston. It was incorporated
+as an independent town February 17, 1815, and was formerly a part of
+Lynn, which once bore the name of Saugus, being an Indian name, and
+signifies great or extended. It has a taxable area of 5,880 acres, and
+its present population may be estimated at about 2,800, living in 535
+houses. The former boundary between Lynn and Suffolk County ran through
+the centre of the "Boardman House," in what is now Saugus, and standing
+near the line between Melrose and Saugus, and is one of the oldest
+houses in the town. It has forty miles of accepted streets and roads,
+which are proverbial as being kept in the very best condition. Its
+public buildings are a Town Hall, a wooden structure, of Gothic
+architecture, with granite steps and underpining, and has a seating
+capacity of seven hundred and eighty persons. It is considered to be the
+handsomest wooden building in Essex County, and cost $48,000. The High
+School is accommodated within its walls, and beside offices for the
+various boards of town officers; on the lower floor it has a room for a
+library. The upper flight has an auditorium with ante-rooms at the front
+and rear, a balcony at the front, seats one hundred and eighty persons,
+and a platform on the stage at the rear. It was built in 1874-5. The
+building committee were E.P. Robinson, Gilbert Waldron, J.W. Thomas,
+H.B. Newhall, Wilbur F. Newhall, Augustus B. Davis, George N. Miller,
+George H. Hull, Louis P. Hawkes, William F. Hitchings, E.E. Wilson,
+Warren P. Copp, David Knox, A. Brad. Edmunds and Henry Sprague. E.P.
+Robinson was chosen chairman and David Knox secretary. The architects
+were Lord & Fuller of Boston, and the work of building was put under
+contract to J.H. Kibby & Son of Chelsea.
+
+The town also owns seven commodious schoolhouses, in which are
+maintained thirteen schools--one High, three Grammar, three
+Intermediate, three Primaries, one sub-Primary and two mixed schools,
+the town appropriating the sum of six thousand dollars therefor. There
+are five Churches--Congregational, Universalist, and three Methodist,
+besides two societies worshiping in halls (the St. John's Episcopal
+Mission and the Union at North Saugus). After the schism in the old
+Third Parish about 1809, the religious feud between the Trinitarians and
+the Unitarians became so intense that a lawsuit was had to obtain the
+fund, the Universalists retaining possession. The Trinitarians then
+built the old stone Church, under the direction of Squire Joseph Eames,
+which, as a piece of architecture, did not reflect much credit on
+builder or architect. It is now used as a grocery and post office; their
+present place of worship was built in 1852. The Church edifice of the
+old Third was erected in 1738, and was occupied without change until
+1859, when it was sold and moved off the spot, and the site is now
+marked by a flag staff and band stand, known as Central Square. The old
+Church was moved a short distance and converted into tenements, with a
+store underneath. The Universalist society built their present Church
+in 1860. The town farm consists of some 280 acres, and has a fine wood
+lot of 240 acres, the remainder being valuable tillage, costing in 1823
+$4,625.
+
+The town is rich in local history and has either produced or been the
+residence of a number of notable men and women.
+
+[Illustration: M.E. CHURCH, CLIFTONDALE.]
+
+Judge William Tudor, the father of the ice business, now so colossal in
+its proportions, started the trade here, living on what is now the poor
+farm. The Saugus Female Seminary once held quite a place in literary
+circles, Cornelius C. Felton, afterward president of Harvard College,
+being its "chore boy" (the remains of his parents lie in the cemetery
+near by). Fanny Fern, the sister of N.P. Willis, the wife of James
+Parton, the celebrated biographer, as well as two sisters of Dr.
+Alexander Vinton, pursued their studies here, together with Miss Flint,
+who married Honorable Daniel P. King, member of Congress for the Essex
+District, and Miss Dustin, who became the wife of Eben Sutton, and who
+has been so devoted and interested in the library of the Peabody
+Institute. Mr. Emerson, the preceptor, was for a time the pastor of the
+Third Parish of Lynn (now Saugus Universalist society), where Parson
+Roby preached for a period of fifty-three years--more than half a
+century, with a devotion and fidelity that greatly endeared him to his
+people. In passing we give the items of his salary as voted him in 1747,
+taken from the records of the Parish, being kindly furnished by the
+Clerk, Mr. W.F. Hitchings: "A suitable house and barn, standing in a
+suitable place; pasturing and sufficient warter meet for two Cows and
+one horse--the winter meet put in his barn; the improvement of two acres
+of land suitable to plant and to be kept well fenced; sixty pounds in
+lawful silver money, at six shillings and eight pence per ounce; twenty
+cords of wood at his Dore, and the Loose Contributions; and also the
+following artikles, or so much money as will purchase them, viz: Sixty
+Bushels Indian Corn, forty-one Bushels of Rye, Six hundred pounds wait
+of Pork and Eight Hundred and Eighty Eight pounds wait of Beefe."
+
+This would be considered a pretty liberal salary even now for a suburban
+people to pay. From the records of his parish it would seem he always
+enjoyed the love and confidence of his people, and was sincerely mourned
+by them at his death, which occurred January 31, 1803, at the advanced
+age of eighty years, and as stated above in the fifty-third year of his
+ministry. Among other good works and mementoes which he left behind him
+was the "Roby Elm," set out with his own hand, and which is now more
+than one hundred and twenty-five years old. It is in an excellent state
+of preservation, and with its perfectly conical shape at the top,
+attracts marked attention from all lovers and observers of trees. Among
+the names of worthy citizens who have impressed themselves upon the
+memory of their survivors, either as business men of rare executive
+ability, or as merchants of strict integrity, or scholars and men of
+literary genius, lawyers, artists, writers, poets, and men of inventive
+genius, we will first mention as eldest on the list "Landlord" Jacob
+Newhall, who used to keep a tavern in the east part of the town and gave
+"entertainment to man and beast" passing between Boston and Salem,
+notably so to General Washington on his journey from Boston to Salem in
+1797, and later to the Marquis De Lafayette in 1824, when making a
+similar journey. We also mention Zaccheus Stocker, Jonathan Makepeace,
+Charles Sweetser, Dr. Abijah Cheever, Benjamin F. Newhall and Benjamin
+Hitchings. These last all held town office with great credit to
+themselves and their constituents.
+
+Benjamin F. Newhall was a man of versatile parts. Beside writing rhymes
+he preached the Gospel, and was at one time County Commissioner for
+Essex County.
+
+To these may be added Salmon Snow, who held the office of Selectman for
+several years, and also kept the poor of Saugus for many years with
+great acceptance. He was a man of good judgment, strong in his likes and
+dislikes, and bitter in his resentments. George Henry Sweetser was also
+a Selectman for years, and was elected to the Legislature for both
+branches, being Senator for two terms. Frederick Stocker, noted as a
+manufacturer of brick, was also a man of sterling qualities, and shared
+in the confidence and esteem of his fellow citizens. Joseph Stocker
+Newhall, a manufacturer of roundings in sole leather, was a just man, of
+positive views, and although interesting himself in the political issues
+of the day would not take office. Eminently social he was at times
+somewhat abrupt and laconic in denouncing what he conceived to be shams.
+As a manufacturer his motto was, "the laborer is worthy of his hire." He
+died in 1875, aged 67 years. George Pearson was Treasurer of the town
+and one of the Selectmen, and also Treasurer and Deacon of the Orthodox
+parish for twenty-five years, living to the advanced age of eighty-seven
+years. He died in 1883.
+
+Later, about 1837, Edward Pranker, an Englishman, and Francis Scott, a
+Scotchman, became noted for their woollen factories, which they built in
+Saugus, and also became residents here for the rest of their lives.
+Enoch Train, too, a Boston ship merchant and founder of the famous line
+of packets between Boston and Liverpool for the transportation of
+emigrants, passed the last ten years of his life here, marrying Mrs.
+Almira Cheever. He was the father of Mrs. A.D.T. Whitney, the author of
+many works of fiction, which have been widely read; among them "Faith
+Gartney's Girlhood," "Odd or Even," "Sights and Insights," etc. In this
+connection we point to a living novelist of Saugus, Miss Ella Thayer,
+whose "Wired Lore" has been through several editions. George William
+Phillips, brother of Wendell, a lawyer of some note, also lived many
+years at Saugus and died in 1878. Joseph Ames, the artist, celebrated
+for his portraits, who was commissioned by the Catholics to visit Rome
+and paint Pope Pius IX., and who executed in a masterly manner other
+commissions, such as Rufus Choate, Daniel Webster, Abraham Lincoln,
+Madames Rachael and Ristori, learned the art in Saugus, though born in
+Roxbury, N.H. He died at New York while temporarily painting there, but
+was buried in Saugus in 1874. His brother Nathan was a patent solicitor,
+and considered an expert in such matters, and invented several useful
+machines. He was also a writer of both prose and poetry, writing among
+other books "Pirate's Glen," "Dungeon Rock" and "Childe Harold." He died
+in 1860.
+
+Rev. Fales H. Newhall, D.D., who was Professor of Languages at
+Middletown College, and who, as a writer, speaker or preacher, won
+merited distinction, died in 1882, lamented that his light should go
+prematurely out at the early age of 56 years.
+
+Henry Newhall, who went from Saugus to San Francisco, and there became a
+millionaire, may be spoken of as a succesful business man and merchant.
+The greatest instance of longevity since the incorporation of the town
+was that of Joseph Cheever, who was born February 22, 1772, and died
+June 19, 1872, aged 100 years, 4 months, 27 days. He was a farmer of
+great energy, industry and will power, and was given to much litigation.
+He, too, represented the town in 1817-18, 1820-21, 1831-32, and again in
+1835.
+
+Saugus, too, was the scene of the early labors of Rev. Edward T. Taylor,
+familiarly known as Father Taylor. Here he learned to read, and preached
+his first sermon at what was then known as the "Rock Schoolhouse," at
+East Saugus, though converted at North Saugus. Mrs. Sally Sweetser, a
+pious lady, taught him his letters, and Mrs. Jonathan Newhall used to
+read to him the chapter in the Bible from which he was to preach until
+he had committed it to memory.
+
+North Saugus is a fine agricultural section with table land, pleasant
+and well watered, well adapted to farming purposes, and it was here that
+Adam Hawkes, the first of this name in this county, settled with his
+five sons in 1630, and took up a large tract of land. He built his house
+on a rocky knoll, the spot being at the intersection of the road leading
+from Saugus to Lynnfield with the Newburyport turnpike, known as Hawkes'
+Corner. This house being burned the bricks of the old chimney were put
+into another, and when again this chimney was taken down a few years ago
+there were found bricks with the date of 1601 upon them. This shows,
+evidently, that the bricks were brought from England. This property is
+now in the hands of one of his lineal descendants, Louis P. Hawkes,
+having been handed down from sire to son for more than 250 years. On the
+28th and 29th of July, 1880, a family reunion of the descendents of Adam
+Hawkes was held to celebrate the 250th anniversary of his advent to the
+soil of Saugus. It was a notable meeting, and brought together the
+members of this respected and respectable family from Maine to
+California. Two large tents were spread and the trees and buildings were
+decorated with flags and mottoes in an appropriate and tasteful manner.
+Judges, Generals, artists, poets, clergymen, lawyers, farmers and
+mechanics were present to participate in the re-union. Addresses were
+made, poems suitable to the occasion rendered, and all passed off in a
+most creditable manner. Among the antique and curious documents in the
+possession of Samuel Hawkes was the "division of the estate of Adam
+Hawkes, made March 27, 1672."
+
+Mrs. Dinsmore resided in this part of the town. A most amiable woman, a
+good nurse, kind in sickness, and it was in this way that she discovered
+a most valuable medicine. Her specific is claimed to be very efficacious
+in cases of croup and kindred diseases, and its use in such cases has
+become very general, as well as for headache. She is almost as widely
+known as Lydia Pinkham. She died in 1881.
+
+[Illustration: MRS. DINSMORE.]
+
+Saugus nobly responded to the call for troops to put down the rebellion,
+furnishing a large contingent for Company K, Seventeenth Massachusetts
+Volunteers, which was recruited almost wholly from Malden and Saugus,
+under command of Captain Simonds of Malden. Thirty-six Saugus men also
+enlisted in Company A, Fortieth Massachusetts Volunteers, while quite a
+number joined the gallant Nineteenth Regiment, Col. E.W. Hinks, whose
+name Post 95, G.A.R., of Saugus bears, which is a large and flourishing
+organization. There were many others who enlisted in various other
+regiments, beside those who served in the navy.
+
+[Illustration: NINETEENTH REGIMENT BADGE.]
+
+Charles A. Newhall of this town is secretary and treasurer of the
+Nineteenth Regiment association, whose survivors still number nearly one
+hundred members.
+
+
+THE OLD IRON WORKS.
+
+These justly celebrated works, the first of their kind in this country,
+were situated on the west bank of the Saugus river, about one-fourth of
+a mile north of the Town Hall, on the road leading to Lynnfield, and
+almost immediately opposite the mansion of A.A. Scott, Esq., the present
+proprietor of the woolen mills which are located just above, the site of
+the old works being still marked by a mound of scoria and debris, the
+locality being familiarly known as the "Cinder Banks." Iron ore was
+discovered in the vicinity of these works at an early period, but no
+attempt was made to work it until 1643. The Braintree iron works, for
+which some have claimed precedence, were not commenced until 1647, in
+that part of the town known as Quincy.
+
+Among the artisans who found employment and scope for their mechanical
+skill at these works was Mr. Joseph Jenks who, when the colonial mint
+was started to coin the "Pine Tree Shilling," made the die for the first
+impressions at the Iron works at Saugus.
+
+The old house, formerly belonging to the Thomas Hudson estate of
+sixty-nine acres first purchased by the Iron Works, is still standing,
+and is probably one of the oldest in Essex County, although it has
+undergone so many repairs that it is something like the boy's
+jack-knife, which belonged to his grandfather and had received three new
+blades and two new handles since he had known it. One of the
+fire-places, with all its modernizing, a few years ago measured about
+thirteen feet front, and its whole contour is yet unique. It is now
+owned by A.A. Scott and John B. Walton.
+
+Near Pranker's Pond, on Appleton street, is a singular rock resembling a
+pulpit. This portion of the town is known as the Calemount.
+
+There is a legend of the Colonial period that a man by the name of
+Appleton harangued or preached to the people of the vicinity, urging
+them to stand by the Republican cause, hence the name of "Pulpit Rock."
+The name "Calemount" also comes, according to tradition, from the fact
+that one of the people named Caleb Appleton, who had become obnoxious to
+the party, had agreed upon a signal with his wife and intimate friends,
+that, when in danger, they should notify him by this expressive warning,
+"Cale, mount!" upon which he would take refuge in the rocky mountain,
+which, being then densely wooded, afforded a secure hiding place.
+Several members of this family of Appletons have since, during
+successive generations, been distinguished and well known citizens of
+Boston, one of whom, William Appleton, was elected to Congress over
+Anson Burlingame, in 1860.
+
+Recently, one of the descendants of this family has had a tablet of
+copper securely bolted to the rock with the following inscription:--
+
+ "APPLETON'S PULPIT!
+
+ In September, 1687, from this rock tradition asserts that resisting
+ the tyranny of Sir Edmond Andros, Major Samuel Appleton of Ipswich
+ spake to the people in behalf of those principles which later were
+ embodied in the declaration of Independence."
+
+This tablet was formally presented to the town by letter from the late
+Thomas Appleton, at the annual March meeting in 1882, and its care
+assumed by the town of Saugus.
+
+Among the present industries of Saugus are Pranker's Mills, a joint
+stock corporation, doing business under the style of Edward Pranker &
+Co., for the manufacture of woollen goods, employing about one hundred
+operatives, and producing about 1,800,000 yards of cloth annually--red,
+white and yellow flannel. The mill of A.A. Scott is just below on the
+same stream, making the same class of goods, with a much smaller
+production, both companies being noted for the standard quality of their
+fabrics. The spice and coffee mills of Herbert B. Newhall at East Saugus
+do a large business in their line, and his goods go all over New England
+and the West.
+
+Charles S. Hitchings, at Saugus, turns out some 1,500 cases of
+hand-made slippers of fine quality for the New York and New England
+trade. Otis M. Burrill, in the same line, is making the same kind of
+work, some 150 cases, Hiram Grover runs a stitching factory with steam
+power, and employs a large number of employees, mostly females.
+
+Win. E. Shaw also makes paper boxes and cartoons, and does quite a
+business for Lynn manufacturers.
+
+[Illustration: RESIDENCE OF RUFUS A. JOHNSON.]
+
+Enoch T. Kent at Saugus and his brother, Edward S. Kent, at Cliftondale,
+are engaged in washing crude hair and preparing it for plastering and
+other purposes, such as curled hair, hair cloth, blankets, etc. They
+each give employment to quite a number of men. Albert H. Sweetser makes
+snuff, succeeding to the firm of Sweetser Bros., who did an extensive
+business until after the war. The demand for this kind of goods is more
+limited than formerly. Joseph. A. Raddin, manufactures the crude tobacco
+from the leaf into chewing and smoking tobacco. Edward O. Copp, Martha
+Fiske, William Parker and a few others still manufacture cigars.
+
+Quite an, extensive ice business is done at Saugus by Solon V. Edmunds
+and Stephen Stackpole. A few years ago Eben Edmunds shipped by the
+Eastern Railroad some 1,200 tons to Gloucester, but the shrinkage and
+wastage of the ice by delays on the train did not render it a profitable
+operation.
+
+The strawberry culture has recently become quite a feature in the
+producing industry of Saugus. In 1884 Elbridge S. Upham marketed 3,600
+boxes, Charles S. Hitchings 1,200, Warren P. Copp 400, and others,
+Martin Carnes, Calvin Locke, Edward Saunders and Lorenzo Mansfield, more
+or less.
+
+John W. Blodgett and the Hatch Bros. do a large business in early and
+late vegetables for Boston and Lynn markets, such as asparagus, spinach,
+etc., and employ quite a number of men.
+
+Nor must we forget to mention the milk business. Louis P. Hawkes has a
+herd of some forty cows and has a milk route at Lynn. J.W. Blodgett
+keeps twenty-five cows, and takes his milk to market. Geo. N. Miller and
+T.O.W. Houghton also keep cows and have a route. Joshua Kingsbury,
+George H. Pearson and George Ames have a route, buying their milk. Byron
+Hone keeps fifty cows. Dudley Fiske has twenty-five, selling their milk.
+O.M. Hitchings, H. Burns, A.B. Davis, Lewis Austin, Richard Hawkes and
+others keep from seven to twelve cows for dairy purposes.
+
+[Illustration: RESIDENCE OF CHARLES H. BOND.]
+
+Having somewhat minutely noticed the industries we will speak briefly of
+some of the dwellings. The elegant mansion and gardens of Brainard and
+Henry George, Harmon Hall and Rufus A. Johnson of East Saugus, and Eli
+Barrett, A.A. Scott and E.E. Wilson of Saugus, C.A. Sweetser, C.H. Bond
+and Pliny Nickerson at Cliftondale, with their handsome lawns, rich and
+rare flowers and noble shade trees attract general attention. The last
+mentioned estate was formerly owned by a brother of Governor William
+Eustis, where his Excellency used to spend a portion of his time each
+year.
+
+At the south-westerly part of the town, not far from the old Eustis
+estate, the boundaries of three counties and four towns intersect with
+each other, viz: Suffolk, Essex and Middlesex counties, and the towns of
+Revere, Saugus, Melrose and Maiden. Near by, too, is the old Boynton
+estate, and the Franklin Trotting park, where some famous trotting was
+had, when Dr. Smith managed it in 1866-7, Flora Temple, Fashion, Lady
+Patchen and other noted horses contending. After a few years of use it
+was abandoned, but it has recently been fitted up by Marshall Abbott of
+Lynn, and several trots have taken place the present summer.
+
+[Illustration: TOWN HALL.]
+
+The Boynton estate above referred to is divided by a small brook, known
+as "Bride's Brook," which is also the dividing line between Saugus and
+Revere, and the counties of Suffolk and Essex. Tradition asserts that
+many years ago a couple were married here, the groom standing on one
+side and the bride on the other; hence the name "Bride's Brook."
+
+The existence of iron ore used for the manufacturing at the old Iron
+Works was well known, and there have been many who have believed that
+antimony also exists in large quantities in Saugus, but its precise
+location has as yet not become known to the public.
+
+As early as the year 1848, a man by the name of Holden, who was given to
+field searching and prospecting, frequently brought specimens to the
+late Benjamin F. Newhall and solemnly affirmed that he obtained them
+from the earth and soil within the limits of Saugus. Every means was
+used to induce him to divulge the secret of its locality. But Holden was
+wary and stolidly refused to disclose or share the knowledge of the
+place of the lode with anyone. He averred that he was going to make his
+fortune by it. Detectives were put upon his trail in his roaming about
+the fields, but he managed to elude all efforts at discovery. Being an
+intemperate man, one cold night after indulging in his cups, he was
+found by the roadside stark and stiff. Many rude attempts and imperfect
+searches have been made upon the assurances of Holden to discover the
+existence of antimony, but thus far in vain, and the supposed suppressed
+secret of the existence of it in Saugus died with him.
+
+"Pirate's Glen" is also within the territory of Saugus, while "Dungeon
+Rock," another romantic locality, described by Alonzo Lewis in his
+history of Lynn, is just over the line in that city. There is a popular
+tradition that the pirates buried their treasure at the foot of a
+certain hemlock tree in the glen, also the body of a beautiful female.
+The rotten stump of a tree may still be seen, and a hollow beside it,
+where people have dug in searching for human bones and treasure. This
+glen is highly romantic and is one of the places of interest to which
+all strangers visiting Saugus are conducted, and is invested with
+somewhat of the supernatural tales of Captain Kid and treasure trove.
+
+There is a fine quarry or ledge of jasper located in the easterly part
+of the town, near Saugus River, just at the foot of the conical-shaped
+elevation known as "Round Hill." which Professor Hitchcock, in his last
+geological survey, pronounced to be the best specimen in the state. Mrs.
+Hitchcock, an artist, who accompanied her husband in his surveying tour,
+delineated from this eminence, looking toward Nahant and Egg Rock, which
+is full in view, and from which steamers may be seen with a glass
+plainly passing in and out of Boston harbor. The scenery and drives
+about Saugus are delightful, especially beautiful is the view and
+landscape looking from the "Cinder Banks," so-called, down Saugus river
+toward Lynn.
+
+
+REPRESENTATIVES FROM SAUGUS SINCE THE TOWN WAS INCORPORATED.
+
+Saugus, (formerly the West Parish of Lynn), was formed in the year 1815,
+and the town was first represented by Mr. Robert Emes in 1816. Mr. Emes
+carried on morocco dressing, his business being located on Saugus river,
+on the spot now occupied by Scott's Flannel Mills.
+
+In 1817-18 Mr. Joseph Cheever represented the town, and again in
+1820-21; also, in 1831-32, and again, for the last time, in 1835. After
+having served the town seven times in the legislature, he seems to have
+quietly retired from political affairs.
+
+In 1822 Dr. Abijah Cheever was the Representative, and again in 1829-30.
+The doctor held a commission as surgeon in the army at the time of our
+last war with Great Britain. He was a man very decided in his manners,
+had a will of his own, and liked to have people respect it.
+
+In 1823 Mr. Jonathan Makepeace was elected. His business was the
+manufacture of snuff, at the old mills in the eastern part of the town,
+now owned by Sweetser Brothers, and known as the Sweetser Mills.
+
+In 1826-28 Mr. John Shaw was the Representative.
+
+In 1827 Mr. William Jackson was elected.
+
+In 1833-34 Mr. Zaccheus N. Stocker represented the town. Mr. Stocker
+held various offices, and looked very closely after the interests of the
+town.
+
+In 1837-38 Mr. William W. Boardman was the Representative. He has filled
+a great many offices in the town.
+
+In 1839 Mr. Charles Sweetser was elected, and again in 1851. Mr.
+Sweetser was largely engaged in the manufacture of snuff and cigars. He
+was a gentleman very decided in his opinions, and enjoyed the confidence
+of the people to a large degree.
+
+In 1840, the year of the great log cabin campaign, Mr. Francis Dizer was
+elected.
+
+In 1841 Mr. Benjamin Hitchings, Jr., was elected, and in 1842 the town
+was represented by Mr. Stephen E. Hawkes.
+
+In 1843-44 Benjamin F. Newhall, Esq., was the Representative, Mr.
+Newhall was a man of large and varied experience, and held various
+offices, always looking sharply after the real interests of the town. He
+also held the office of County Commissioner.
+
+In 1845 Mr. Pickmore Jackson was the Representative. He has also held
+various offices in the town, and has since served on the school
+committee with good acceptance.
+
+In 1846-47 Mr. Sewall Boardman represented the town.
+
+In 1852 Mr. George H. Sweetser was the Representative. Mr. Sweetser has
+also held a seat in our State Senate two years, and filled various town
+offices. He was a prompt and energetic business man, engaged in
+connection with his brother, Mr. Charles A. Sweetser, in the manufacture
+of snuff and cigars.
+
+In 1853 Mr. John B. Hitching was elected. He has held various offices in
+the town.
+
+In 1854 the town was represented by Mr. Samuel Hawkes, who has also
+served in several other positions, proving himself a very
+straightforward and reliable man.
+
+In 1855 Mr. Richard Mansfield was elected. He was for many years Tax
+Collector and Constable, and when he laid his hand on a man's shoulder,
+in the name of the law, the duty was performed in such a good-natured
+manner that it really did not seem so very bad, after all.
+
+In 1856 Mr. William H. Newhall represented the town. He has held the
+offices of Town Clerk and Selectman longer than any other person in
+town, and is still in office.
+
+In 1857 Mr. Jacob B. Calley was elected.
+
+In 1858 the district system was adopted, and Mr. Jonathan Newhall was
+elected to represent the twenty-fourth Essex District, comprising the
+towns of Saugus, Lynnfield and Middleton.
+
+[Illustration: _Sketch of Saugus._]
+
+In 1861 Mr. Harmon Hall represented the District. Mr. Hall is a very
+energetic business man, and has accumulated a very handsome property by
+the manufacture of boots and shoes. He has held various other important
+positions, and has been standing Moderator in all town meetings, always
+putting business through by daylight.
+
+In 1863 Mr. John Hewlett was elected. He resides in that part of the
+town called North Saugus, and was for a long series of years a
+manufacturer of snuff and cigars.
+
+In 1864 Mr. Charles W. Newhall was the Representative.
+
+In 1867 Mr. Sebastian S. Dunn represented the District. Mr. Dunn was a
+dealer in snuff, cigars and spices, and is now engaged in farming in
+Dakota.
+
+In 1870 Mr. John Armitage represented the District--the twentieth
+Essex--comprising the towns of Saugus, Lynnfield, Middleton and
+Topsfield. He has been engaged in the woollen business most of his life;
+formerly a partner with Pranker & Co. He has also held other town
+offices with great acceptance.
+
+J.B. Calley succeeded Mr. Armitage, it being the second time he had been
+elected. Otis M. Hitchings was the next Representative, a shoe
+manufacturer, being elected over A.A. Scott, Esq., the republican
+candidate.
+
+Joseph Whitehead was the next Representative from Saugus, a grocer in
+business. He was then and still is Town Treasurer, repeatedly having
+received every vote cast. J. Allston Newhall was elected in 1878 and for
+several years was selectman.
+
+Albert H. Sweetser was our last Representative, elected in 1882-3, by
+one of the largest majorities ever given in the District. He is a snuff
+manufacturer, doing business at Cliftondale, under the firm of Sweetser
+Bros., whom he succeeds in business. Saugus is entitled to the next
+Representative in 1885-6. The womb of the future will alone reveal his
+name.
+
+The future of Saugus would seem to be well assured, having frequent
+trains to and from Boston and Lynn, with enlarged facilities for
+building purposes, especially at Cliftondale, where a syndicate has
+recently been formed, composed of Charles H. Bond, Edward S. Kent, and
+Henry Waite, who have purchased thirty-four acres of land, formerly
+belonging to the Anthony Hatch estate, which, with other adjoining lands
+are to be laid out into streets and lots presenting such opportunities
+and facilities for building as cannot fail to attract all who are
+desirious of obtaining suburban residences, and thus largely add to the
+taxable property of Saugus and to the prosperity of this interesting
+locality.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE BARTHOLDI COLOSSUS.
+
+By WILLIAM HOWE DOWNES.
+
+
+The project of erecting a colossal statue of Liberty, which shall at
+once serve as a lighthouse and as a symbolic work of art, may be
+discussed from several different points of view. The abstract idea, as
+it occurred to the sculptor, Mr. Bartholdi, was noble. The colossus was
+to symbolize the historic friendship of the two great republics, the
+United States and France; it was to further symbolize the idea of
+freedom and fraternity which underlies the republican form of
+government. Lafayette and Jefferson would have been touched by the
+project. If we are not touched by it, it proves that we have forgotten
+much which it would become us to recall. Before our nation was, the
+democratic idea had been for many years existing and expanding among the
+French people; crushed again and again by tyrants, it ever rose, renewed
+and fresh for the irrepressible conflict. Through all their vicissitudes
+the people of France have upheld, unfaltering, their ideal--liberty,
+equality and fraternity. Our own republic exists to-day because France
+helped us when England sought to crush us. It is never amiss to freshen
+our memories as to these historic facts. The symbolism of the colossus
+would therefore be very fine; it would have a meaning which every one
+could understand. It would signify not only the amity of France and the
+United States, and the republican idea of brotherhood and freedom, as I
+have said; but it would also stand for American hospitality to the
+European emigrant, and Emma Lazarus has thus imagined the colossus
+endowed with speech:
+
+ "Keep, ancient lands, your storied pomp!" cries she.
+ With silent lips. "Give me your tired, your poor,
+ Your huddled masses, yearning to breathe free;
+ The wretched refuse of your teeming shore--
+ Send these, the homeless, temptest-tost to me--
+ I lift my lamp beside the golden door!"
+
+Now, there can be no two ways of thinking among patriotic Americans as
+to this aspect of the Bartholdi colossus question. It must be agreed
+that the motive of the work is extremely grand, and that its
+significance would be glorious. The sculptor's project was a generous
+inspiration, for which he must be cordially remembered. To be sure, it
+may be said he is getting well advertised; that is very true, but it
+would be mean in us to begrudge him what personal fame he may derive
+from the work. To assume that the whole affair is a "job," or that it is
+entirely the outcome of one man's scheming egotism and desire for
+notoriety, is to take a deplorably low view of it; to draw unwarranted
+conclusions and to wrong ourselves. The money to pay for the
+statue--about $250,000--was raised by popular subscription in France,
+under the auspices of the Franco-American Union, an association of
+gentlemen whose membership includes such names as Laboulaye, de
+Lafayette, de Rochambeau, de Noailles, de Toqueville, de Witt, Martin,
+de Remusat. The identification of these excellent men with the project
+should be a sufficient guarantee of its disinterested character. The
+efforts made in this country to raise the money--$250,000--required to
+build a suitable pedestal for the statue, are a subject of every day
+comment, and the failure to obtain the whole amount is a matter for no
+small degree of chagrin.
+
+Who and what is Mr. Bartholdi? He is a native of Colmar, in Alsace, and
+comes of a good stock; a pupil of the Lycee Louis-le-Grand, and of Ary
+Scheffer, he studied first painting then sculpture, and after a journey
+in the East with Gerome, established his atelier in Paris. He served in
+the irregular corps of Garibaldi during the war of 1870, and the
+following year visited the United States. It is admitted that he is a
+man of talent, but that he is not considered a great sculptor in his own
+country is equally beyond doubt. He would not be compared, for instance,
+with such men as Chapu, Dubois, Falguiere, Clesinger, Mercie, Fremiet,
+men who stand in the front rank of their profession. The list of his
+works is not long. It includes statues of General Rapp, Vercingetorix,
+Vauban, Champollion, Lafayette and Rouget de l'Isle; ideal groups
+entitled "Genius in the Grasp of Misery," and "the Malediction of
+Alsace;" busts of Messrs. Erckmann and Chatrain; single figures called
+"Le Vigneron," "Genie Funebre" and "Peace;" and a monument to Martin
+Schoengauer in the form of a fountain for the courtyard of the Colmar
+Museum. There may be a few others. Last, but by no means least, there is
+the great Lion of Belfort, his best work. This is about 91 by 52 feet in
+dimensions, and is carved from a block of reddish Vosges stone. It is
+intended to commemorate the defence of Belfort against the German army
+in 1870, an episode of heroic interest. The immense animal is
+represented as wounded but still capable of fighting, half lying, half
+standing, with an expression of rage and mighty defiance. It is not too
+much to say that Mr. Bartholdi in this case has shown a fine
+appreciation of the requirements of colossal sculpture. He has
+sacrificed all unnecessary details, and, taking a lesson from the old
+Egyptian stone-cutters, has presented an impressive arrangement of
+simple masses and unvexed surfaces which give to the composition a
+marvellous breadth of effect. The lion is placed in a sort of rude niche
+on the side of a rocky hill, which is the foundation of the fortress of
+Belfort. It is visible at a great distance, and is said to be strikingly
+noble from every point of view. The idea is not original, however well
+it may have been carried out, for the Lion of Lucerne by Thorwaldsen is
+its prototype on a smaller scale and commemorates an event of somewhat
+similar character. The bronze equestrian statue of Vercingetorix, the
+fiery Gallic chieftain, in the Clermont museum, is full of violent
+action. The horse is flying along with his legs in positions which set
+all the science of Mr. Muybridge at defiance; the man is brandishing his
+sword and half-turning in his saddle to shout encouragement to his
+followers. The whole is supported by a bit of artificial rock-work under
+the horse, and the body of a dead Gaul lies close beside it. In the
+statue of Rouget de l'Isle we see a young man striking an orator's
+attitude, with his right arm raised in a gesture which seems to say:
+
+"_Aux armes, citoyens / Formes vos bataillons!_"
+
+The Lafayette, in New York, is perhaps a mediocre statue, but even so,
+it is better than most of our statues. A Frenchman has said of it that
+the figure "resembles rather a young tenor hurling out his C sharp, than
+a hero offering his heart and sword to liberty." It represents our
+ancient ally extending his left hand in a gesture of greeting, while his
+right hand, which holds his sword, is pressed against his breast in a
+somewhat theatrical movement. It will be inferred that the general
+criticism to be made upon Mr. Bartholdi's statues is that they are
+violent and want repose. The Vercingetorix, the Rouget de l'Isle, the
+Lafayette, all have this exaggerated stress of action. They have
+counterbalancing features of merit, no doubt, but none of so
+transcendent weight that we can afford to overlook this grave defect.
+
+Coming now to the main question, which it is the design of this paper to
+discuss, the inquiry arises: What of the colossal statue of Liberty as a
+work of art? For, no matter how noble the motive may be, or how generous
+the givers, it must after all be subjected to this test. If it is not a
+work of art, the larger it is, the more offensive it must be. There are
+not wanting critics who maintain that colossal figures cannot be works
+of art; they claim that such representations of the human form are
+unnatural and monstrous, and it is true that they are able to point out
+some "terrible examples" of modern failures, such, for instance, as the
+"Bavaria" statue at Munich. But these writers appear to forget that the
+"Minerva" of the Parthenon and the Olympian Jupiter were the works of
+the greatest sculptor of ancient times, and that no less a man than
+Michael Angelo was the author of the "David" and "Moses." It is
+therefore apparent that those who deny the legitimacy of colossal
+sculptures _in toto_ go too far; but it is quite true that colossal
+works have their own laws and are subject to peculiar conditions. Mr.
+Lesbazeilles[A] says that "colossal statuary is in its proper place when
+it expresses power, majesty, the qualities that inspire respect and
+fear; but it would be out of place if it sought to please us by the
+expression of grace.... Its function is to set forth the sublime and the
+grandiose." The colossi found among the ruins of Egyptian Temples and
+Palaces cannot be seen without emotion, for if many of them are
+admirable only because of their great size, still no observer can avoid
+a feeling of astonishment on account of the vast energy, courage and
+industry of the men of old who could vanquish such gigantic
+difficulties. At the same time it will not do to assume that the
+Egyptian stone cutters were not artists. The great Sphinx of Giseh, huge
+as it is, is far from being a primitive and vulgar creation. "The
+portions of the head which have been preserved," says Mr. Charles Blanc,
+"the brow, the eyebrows, the corners of the eyes, the passage from the
+temples to the cheek-bones, and from the cheek-bones to the cheek, the
+remains of the mouth and chin,--all this testifies to an extraordinary
+fineness of chiselling. The entire face has a solemn serenity and a
+sovereign goodness." Leaving aside all consideration of the artistic
+merits of other Egyptian colossi,--those at Memphis, Thebes, Karnac and
+Luxor, with the twin marvels of Amenophis-Memnon--we turn to the most
+famous colossus of antiquity, that at Rhodes, only to find that we have
+even less evidence on which to base an opinion as to its quality than is
+available in the case of the numerous primitive works of Egypt and of
+India. We know its approximate dimensions, the material of which it was
+made, and that it was overthrown by an earthquake, but there seems to be
+reason to doubt its traditional attitude, and nothing is known as to
+what it amounted to as a work of art, though it may be presumed that,
+being the creation of a Greek, it had the merits of its classic age and
+school. Of the masterpieces of Phidias it may be said that they were
+designed for the interiors of Temples and were adopted with consummate
+art to the places they occupied; they have been reconstructed for us
+from authentic descriptions, and we are enabled to judge concerning that
+majestic and ponderous beauty which made them the fit presentments of
+the greatest pagan deities. I need say nothing of the immortal statues
+by Michael Angelo, and will therefore hasten to consider the modern
+outdoor colossi which now exist in Europe--the St. Charles Borromeo at
+Arona, Italy, the Bavaria at Munich, the Arminius in Westphalia, Our
+Lady of Puy in France. The St. Charles Borromeo, near the shore of Lake
+Maggiore, dates from 1697, and is the work of a sculptor known as Il
+Cerano. Its height is 76 feet, or with its pedestal, 114 feet. The arm
+is over 29 feet long, the nose 33 inches, and the forefinger 6 feet 4
+inches. The statue is entirely of hammered copper plates riveted
+together, supported by means of clamps and bands of iron on an interior
+mass of masonry. The effect of the work is far from being artistic. It
+is in a retired spot on a hill, a mile or two from the little village of
+Arona. The Bavaria, near Munich, erected in 1850, is 51 feet high, on a
+pedestal about 26 feet high, and is the work of Schwanthaler. It is of
+bronze and weighs about 78 tons. The location of this monstrous lump of
+metal directly in front of a building emphasizes its total want of
+sculptural merit, and makes it a doubly lamentable example of bad taste
+and bombast. The Arminius colossal, on a height near Detmold in
+Westphalia, was erected in 1875, is 65 feet high, and weighs 18 tons.
+The name of the sculptor is not given by any of the authorities
+consulted, which is perhaps just as well. This statue rests on "a
+dome-like summit of a monumental structure," and brandishes a sword 24
+feet long in one hand. The Virgin of Puy is by Bonassieux, was set up in
+1860, is 52 feet high, weighs 110 tons, and stands on a cliff some 400
+feet above the town. It is, like the Bavaria, of bronze, cast in
+sections, and made from cannons taken in warfare. The Virgin's head is
+surmounted by a crown of stars, and she carries the infant Christ on her
+left arm. The location of this statue is felicitous, but it has no
+intrinsic value as an art work. It will be seen, then, that these
+outdoor colossi of to-day do not afford us much encouragement to believe
+that Mr. Bartholdi will be able to surmount the difficulties which have
+vanquished one sculptor after another in their endeavors to perform
+similar prodigies. Sculpture is perhaps the most difficult of the arts
+of design. There is an antique statue in the Louvre which displays such
+wonderful anatomical knowledge, that Reynolds is said to have remarked,
+"to learn that alone might consume the labor of a whole life." And it is
+an undeniable fact that enlarging the scale of a statue adds in more
+than a corresponding degree to the difficulties of the undertaking. The
+colossi of the ancients were to a great extent designed for either the
+interiors or the exteriors of religious temples, where they were
+artfully adapted to be seen in connection with architectural effects.
+Concerning the sole prominent exception to this rule, the statue of
+Apollo at Rhodes, we have such scant information that even its position
+is a subject of dispute. It has been pointed out how the four modern
+outdoor colossi of Europe each and all fail to attain the requirements
+of a work of art. All our inquiries, it appears then, lead to the
+conclusion that Mr. Bartholdi has many chances against him, so far as we
+are able to learn from an examination of the precedents, and in view of
+these facts it would be a matter for surprise if the "Liberty" statue
+should prove to possess any title to the name of a work of art. We
+reserve a final decision, however, as to this most important phase of
+the affair, until the statue is in place.
+
+[Footnote A: "Les Colosses anciens et moderns," par E. Lesbazeilles;
+Paris: 1881.]
+
+The idea that great size in statues is necessarily vulgar, does not seem
+admissible. It would be quite as just to condemn the paintings on a
+colossal scale in which Tintoretto and Veronese so nobly manifested
+their exceptional powers. The size of a work of art _per se_ is an
+indifferent matter. Mere bigness or mere littleness decides nothing. But
+a colossal work has its conditions of being: it must conform to certain
+laws. It must be executed in a large style; it must represent a grand
+idea; it must possess dignity and strength; it must convey the idea of
+power and majesty; it must be located in a place where its surroundings
+shall augment instead of detracting from its aspect of grandeur; it must
+be magnificent, for if not it will be ridiculous. The engravings of Mr.
+Bartholdi's statue represent a woman clad in a peplum and tunic which
+fall in ample folds from waist and shoulder to her feet. The left foot,
+a trifle advanced supports the main weight of the body. The right arm is
+uplifted in a vigorous movement and holds aloft a blazing torch. The
+left hand grasps a tablet on which the date of the Declaration of
+Independence appears; this is held rather close to the body and at a
+slight angle from it. The head is that of a handsome, proud and brave
+woman. It is crowned by a diadem. The arrangement of the draperies is,
+if one may judge from the pictures, a feature of especial excellence in
+the design. There is merit in the disposition of the peplum or that
+portion of the draperies flung back over the left shoulder, the folds of
+which hang obliquely (from the left shoulder to the right side of the
+waist and thence downward almost to the right knee,) thus breaking up
+the monotony of the perpendicular lines formed by the folds of the tunic
+beneath. The movement of the uplifted right arm is characterized by a
+certain _elan_ which, however, does not suggest violence; the carriage
+of the head is dignified, and so far as one may judge from a variety of
+prints, the face is fine in its proportions and expression. I do not
+find the movement of the uplifted arm violent, and, on the whole, am
+inclined to believe the composition a very good one in its main
+features. There will be an undeniable heaviness in the great masses of
+drapery, especially as seen from behind, but the illusion as to the size
+of the figure created by its elevation on a pedestal and foundation
+nearly twice as high as itself may do much towards obviating this
+objection. The background of the figure will be the
+
+ ... Spacious firmament on high,
+ With all the blue etherial sky,
+ And spangled heavens ...
+
+The island is far enough removed from the city so that no direct
+comparisons can be made between the statue and any buildings. Seen from
+the deck of a steamer at a distance say of a quarter of a mile, the
+horizon, formed by the roofs, towers, spires and chimneys of three
+cities, will not appear higher than the lower half of the pedestal. In
+other words the statue will neither be dwarfed nor magnified by the
+contiguity of any discordant objects. It will stand alone. The abstract
+idea, as has been said, is noble. The plan of utilizing the statue as a
+lighthouse at night does not detract from its worth in this respect; it
+may be said to even emphasize the allegorial sense of the work.
+"Liberty enlightening the world," lights the way of the sailor in the
+crowded harbor of the second commercial city of the world. The very
+magnitude of the work typifies, after a manner, the vast extent of our
+country, and the audacity of the scheme is not inappropriate in the
+place where it is to stand. It may be, indeed, that when the statue is
+set up, we shall find it awkward and offensive, as some critics have
+already prophecied: but that it must be so inevitably does not appear to
+me to be a logical deduction from the information we have at hand as to
+the artist and his plans. It is freely admitted that no modern work of
+this nature has been successful, but that does not prove that this must
+absolutely be a failure. The project ought not to be condemned in
+advance because of the great difficulties surrounding it, its unequalled
+scope and its novelty. Mr. Bartholdi is above all ingenious, bold, and
+fertile in resources; it would be a great pity not to have him allowed
+every opportunity to carry out a design in which, as we have seen, there
+are so many elements of interest and even of grandeur. It has been said
+that "there does not exist on French soil such a bombastic work as this
+will be." Very well; admitting for the sake of argument that it will be
+bombastic, shall we reject and condemn a colossal statue before having
+seen it, because there is nothing like it in France? And is it true that
+it will be bomastic? That is by no means demonstrated. On the contrary
+an impartial examination of the design would show that the work has been
+seriously conceived and thought out; that it does not lack dignity; that
+it is intended to be full of spirit and significance. It would be the
+part of wisdom at least to avoid dogmatism in an advance judgment as to
+its worth as a work of art, and to wait awhile before pronouncing a
+final verdict.
+
+Hazlitt tells of a conceited English painter who went to Rome, and when
+he got into the Sistine Chapel, turning to his companion, said, "Egad,
+George, we're bit!" Our own tendency is, because of our ignorance, to be
+sceptical and suspicious as to foreign works of art, especially of a
+kind that are novel and daring. No one is so hard to please as a
+simpleton. We are so afraid of being taken in, that we are reluctant to
+commit ourselves in favor of any new thing until we have heard from
+headquarters; but it appears to be considered a sign of knowledge to
+vituperate pictures and statues which do not conform to some undefinable
+ideal standard of our own invention. There is, of course, a class of
+indulgent critics who are pernicious enough in their way; but the savage
+and destructive criticism of which I speak is quite as ignorant and far
+more harmful. It assumes an air of authority based on a superficial
+knowledge of art, and beguiles the public into a belief in its
+infallibility by means of a smooth style and an occasional epigram the
+smartness of which may and often does conceal a rank injustice. The
+expression of a hope that the result of Mr. Bartholdi's labors "will be
+something better than another gigantic asparagus stalk added to those
+that already give so comical a look to our sky-line," is truly an
+encouraging and generous utterance at this particular stage of the
+enterprise, and equals in moderation the courteous remark that the
+statue "could not fail to be ridiculous in the expanse of New York
+Bay."[A] It is not necessary to touch upon the question of courtesy at
+all, but it is possible that one of our critics may live to regret his
+vegetable metaphor, and the other to revise his prematurely positive
+censure. There is a sketch in charcoal which represents the Bartholdi
+colossus as the artist has seen it in his mind's eye, standing high
+above the waters of the beautiful harbor at twilight, when the lights
+are just beginning to twinkle in the distant cities and when darkness is
+softly stealing over the service of the busy earth and sea. The mystery
+of evening enwraps the huge form of the statue, which looms vaster than
+by day, and takes on an aspect of strange majesty, augmented by the
+background of hurrying clouds which fill the upper portion of the sky.
+So seen, the immense Liberty appears what the sculptor wishes and
+intends it to be, what we Americans sincerely hope it may be,--a fitting
+memorial of an inspiring episode in history, and a great work of modern
+art.
+
+[Footnote A: _Vide_ papers by Clarence Cook in The Studio, and by
+Professor D. Cady Eaton of Yale College in the New York Tribune.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ELIZABETH.[A]
+
+A ROMANCE OF COLONIAL DAYS.
+
+BY FRANCES C. SPARHAWK, Author of "A Lazy Man's Work."
+
+[Footnote A: Copyright, 1884, by Frances C. Sparhawk. All rights
+reserved.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+IDLESSE.
+
+
+"Don't move your head, Elizabeth, keep it in that position a little
+longer," said Katie Archdale, as she and her friend sat together the
+morning after the sail. "I wish an artist were here to paint you so;
+you've no idea how striking you are."
+
+"No, I have not," laughed the other, forgetting to keep still as she
+spoke, and turning the face that had been toward the window full upon
+her companion. The scene that Elizabeth's eyes had been dwelling upon
+was worthy of admiration; her enthusiasm had not escaped her in any
+word, but her eyes were enraptured with it, and her whole face, warmed
+with faint reflection of the inward glow, was beautiful with youth, and
+thought, and feeling.
+
+"Now you've spoilt it," cried Katie, "now you are merely a nice-looking
+young lady; you were beautiful before, perfectly beautiful, like a
+picture that one can look at, and look at, and go away filled with, and
+come back to, and never tire of. The people that see you so worship you,
+but then, nobody has a chance to do it. You just sit and don't say much
+except once in a while when you wake up, then you are brilliant, but
+never tender, as you know how to be. You give people an impression that
+you are hard. Sometimes I should like to shake you."
+
+Elizabeth laughed.
+
+"That's the way you worship me," she answered. "I suspected it was a
+strange kind of adoration, largely made up of snubbing."
+
+"It's not snubbing," retorted Katie, "it is trying to rouse you to what
+you you might be. But I am wasting my breath; you don't believe a word I
+say."
+
+"I should like to believe it," returned the girl, smiling a little
+sadly. "But even if I did believe every word of it, it would seem to me
+a great deal nicer to be like you, beautiful all the time, and one whom
+everybody loves. But there's one thing to be said, if it were I who were
+beautiful, I could'nt have the pleasure I do in looking at you, and
+perhaps, after all, I shouldn't get any more enjoyment out of it."
+
+"Oh, yes, you would," retorted the other, then bit her lips angrily at
+her inadvertence. A shrewd smile flitted over Elizabeth's face, but she
+made no comment, and Katie went on hurriedly to ask, "What shall we do
+to amuse ourselves to-day, Betsey?" Another slight movement of the
+hearer's lips responded. This name was Katie's special term of
+endearment, and never used except when they were alone; no one else ever
+called her by it.
+
+"I don't know," she said. "Let us sit here as we are doing now. Move
+your chair nearer the window and look down on the river. See the
+blue-black shadows on it. And look at the forests, how they stretch away
+with a few clearings here and there. A city behind us, to be sure, a
+little city, but before us the forests, and the Indians. I wonder what
+it all means for us."
+
+"The axe for one, the gun for the other," retorted Katie with a hardness
+which belief in the savageness and treachery of the red man had
+instilled into the age. "The forests mean fortune to some of us," she
+added.
+
+"Yes," answered Elizabeth slowly, finding an unsatisfactory element in
+her companion's summary.
+
+"Do you mean that we shall have to shoot down a whole race? That is
+dreadful," she added after a pause.
+
+"You and I have nothing to do with all that," returned Katie.
+
+Elizabeth waited in despair of putting the case as she felt it.
+
+"I was thinking," she said at last, "that if we have a whole land of
+forests to cut down and of cities to build up, somehow, everything will
+be different here from the Old England. I often wonder what it is to be
+in this New World. It must be unlike the Old," she repeated.
+
+"I don't wonder," returned Katie, "and that's just what you shouldn't
+do. Wonder what you're going to wear to-morrow when we dine at Aunt
+Faith's, or whether Master Harwin will call this morning, or Master
+Waldo, or wonder about something sensible."
+
+"Which means, 'or if it's to be Master Archdale,'" retorted Elizabeth,
+smiling into the laughing eyes fixed upon her face, and making them fall
+at the keenness of her glance, while a brighter rose than Katie cared to
+show tinted the creamy skin and made her bend a moment to arrange the
+rosette of her slipper. The movement showed her hair in all its
+perfection, for at this early hour it had not been tortured into
+elaborateness, but as she sat in her bedroom talking with her guest, was
+loosely coiled to be out of the way, and thus drawn back in its wavy
+abundance showed now burnished, and now a darker brown, as the sunlight
+or the shadow fell upon it.
+
+"He's not always sensible," she answered, lifting her head again with a
+half defiant gesture, and smiling. Katie's smile was irresistible, it
+won her admirers by the score, not altogether because it gave a glimpse
+of beautiful teeth, or because her mouth was at its perfection then, but
+that it was an expression of childlike abandonment to the spirit of the
+moment, which charmed the gay because they sympathized with it and the
+serious because it was a mood of mind into which they would be glad to
+enter. "Stephen has not been quite himself lately, rather stupid," and
+she looked as if she were not unsuspicious of the reason.
+
+"Too many of us admirers, he thinks?" laughed Elizabeth. "For he is
+bright enough when he takes the trouble to speak, but generally he
+doesn't seem to consider any one of sufficient importance to amuse."
+
+"That is not so," cried Katie, "you are mistaken. But you don't know
+Stephen very well," she added. "What a pity that you are not living
+here, then you would, and then we should have known each other all our
+lives, instead of only since we went to school together. What good times
+we had at Madam Flamingo's. There you sit, now, and look as meekly
+reproving as if you had'nt invented that name for her yourself. It was
+so good, it has stood by her ever since."
+
+"Did I? I had forgotten it."
+
+"Perhaps, at least, you remember the red shawl that got her the
+nickname? It was really something nice,--the shawl, I mean, but the old
+dame was so ridiculously proud of it and so perpetually flaunting it,
+she must have thought it very becoming. We girls were tired of the sight
+of it. And one day, when you were provoked with her about something and
+left her and came into the schoolroom after hours, you walked up to a
+knot of us, and with your air of scorn said something about Madam
+Flamingo. Didn't it spread like wildfire? Our set will call that
+venerable dame 'Flamingo' to the end of her days."
+
+"I suppose we shall, but I had no recollection that it was I who gave
+her the name."
+
+"Yes, you gave it to her," repeated Katie. "You may be very sure I
+should not have forgotten it if I had been so clever. Those were happy
+days for all their petty tribulations," she added after a pause.
+
+Elizabeth looked at her sitting there meditative.
+
+"I should think these were happy days for you, Katie. What more can you
+want than you have now?"
+
+"Oh, the roc's eggs, I suppose," answered the girl. "No, seriously, I am
+pretty likely to get what I want most. I am happy enough, only not
+absolutely happy quite yet."
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"Our good minister would say it was not intended for mortals."
+
+"If I felt like being quite content I should not give it up because
+somebody else said it was too much for me."
+
+"Oh, well," said Katie, laughing, "it has nothing to do with our good
+Parson Shurtleff, anyway."
+
+"I thought not. What, then?"
+
+The other did not answer, but sat looking out of the window with eyes
+that were not studying the landscape. Whether her little troubles
+dissolved into the cloudless sky, like mist too thin to take shape, or
+whether she preferred to keep her perplexities to herself is uncertain,
+but when she spoke it was about another reminiscence of school days.
+
+"Do you remember that morning Stephen came to see me?" she began. "Madam
+thought at first that Master Archdale must be my father, and she gave a
+most gracious assent to my request to go to walk with him. I was dying
+of fun all the time, I could scarcely keep my face straight; then, when
+she caught a glimpse of him as we were going out of the hall, she said
+in a dubious tone, 'Your brother, I presume, Mistress Archdale?' But I
+never heard a word. I was near the street door and I put myself the
+other side of it without much delay. So did Stephen. And we went off
+laughing. He said I was a wicked little cousin, and he spelled it
+'cozen;' but he didn't seem to mind my wickedness at all." There was a
+pause, during which Katie looked at her smiling friend, and her own
+face dimpled bewitchingly. "This is exactly what you would have done,
+Elizabeth," she said. "You would have heard that tentative remark of
+Madam's, of course you would, and you would have stood still in the hall
+and explained that Stephen was your cousin, instead of your brother, and
+have lost your walk beyond a doubt, you know the Flamingo. Now, I was
+just as good as you would have been, only, I was wiser. I, too, told
+Madam that he was my cousin, but I waited until I came home to do it.
+The poor old lady could not help herself then; it was impossible to take
+back my fun, and she could not punish me, because she had given me
+permission to go, nor could she affirm that I heard her remark, for it
+was made in an undertone. There was nothing left for her but to wrap her
+illustrious shawl about her and look dignified." "Do you think Master
+Harwin will come to-day?" Katie asked a few moments later, "and Master
+Waldo? I hope they will all three be here together; it will be fun, they
+can entertain each other, they are so fond of one another."
+
+"Katie! Katie!"
+
+The girl broke into a laugh.
+
+"Oh, yes, I remember," she said, "Stephen is your property."
+
+"Don't," cried Elizabeth, with sudden gravity and paleness in her face.
+"I think it was wicked in me to jest about such a sacred thing. Let me
+forget it."
+
+"I wont tease you if you really care. But if it was wicked, it was a
+great deal more my doing, and Master Waldo's, than your's or Stephen's.
+We wanted to see the fun. Your great fault, Elizabeth, is that you vex
+yourself too much about little things. Do you know it will make you have
+wrinkles?"
+
+This question was put with so much earnestness that Elizabeth laughed
+heartily.
+
+"One thing is sure," she said, "I shall not remain ignorant of my
+failings through want of being told them while I'm here. It would be
+better to go home."
+
+"Only try it!" cried Katie, going to her and kissing her. "But now,
+Elizabeth, I want to tell you something in all seriousness. Just listen
+to me, and profit by it, if you can. I've found it out for myself. The
+more you laugh at other people's absurdities the fewer of your own will
+be noticed, because, you see, it implies that you are on the right
+standpoint to get a review of other people."
+
+"That sounds more like eighty than eighteen."
+
+"Elizabeth, it is the greatest mistake in the world, I mean just that,
+to keep back all your wisdom until you get to be eighty. What use will
+it be to you then? All you can do with it will be to see how much more
+sensibly you might have acted. That's what will happen to you, my dear,
+if you don't look out. But at eighteen--I am nineteen--everything is
+before you, and you want to know how to guide your life to get all the
+best things you can out of it without being wickedly selfish--at least I
+do. Your aspirations, I suppose, are fixed upon the forests and the
+Indian, and problems concerning the future of the American Colonies. But
+I'm more reverent than you, I think the Lord is able to take care of
+those."
+
+Elizabeth looked vaguely troubled by the fallacy which she felt in this
+speech without being quite willing or able to bring it to light.
+
+"But, remember, I was twenty-one my last birthday," she answered. "I
+ought to take a broader view of things."
+
+"On the contrary, you're getting to be an old maid. You should consider
+which of your suitors you want, and say 'yes' to him on the spot. By the
+way, what has become of your friend, the handsome Master Edmonson?"
+
+Elizabeth colored.
+
+"I don't know," she answered. "Father has heard from him since he went
+away, so I suppose that he is well."
+
+"And he has not written to you?"
+
+"No, he has only sent a message." Then, after a pause, "He said that he
+was coming back in the autumn."
+
+"I hope so," cried Katie, "he is a most fascinating man, and of such
+family! Stephen was speaking of him the other day. He was very
+attentive, was he not, Betsey?"
+
+"Ye-es, I suppose so. But there was something that I fancied papa did
+not like."
+
+"I'm so sorry," cried Katie. She rose, and crossing the little space
+between herself and her friend, dropped upon the footstool at
+Elizabeth's feet, and laying her arms in the girl's lap and resting her
+chin upon them, looked up and added, "Tell me all about it, my dear."
+
+"There is nothing to tell," answered Elizabeth, caressing the beautiful
+hair and looking into the eyes that had tears of sympathy in them.
+
+"I was afraid something had gone wrong, afraid that you would care."
+
+Elizabeth sat thinking.
+
+"I don't know," she said slowly at last, "I don't know whether I should
+really care or not if I never saw him again."
+
+Her companion looked at her a moment in silence, and when she began to
+speak it was about something else.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+GIRDING ON THE HARNESS.
+
+
+Later that same morning a gentleman calling upon Mistress Katie Archdale
+was told that he would find her with friends in the garden. Walking
+through the paths with a leisurely step which the impatience of his mood
+chafed against, he came upon a picture that he never forgot.
+
+Great stretches of sunshine lay on the garden and in it brilliant beds
+of flowers glowed with their richest lights, poppies folded their
+gorgeous robes closely about them, Arab fashion, to keep out the heat;
+hollyhocks stood in their stateliness flecked with changing shadows from
+the aspen tree near by. Beds of tiger lilies, pinks, larkspur,
+sweetwilliams, canterbury bells, primroses, gillyflowers, lobelia,
+bloomed in a luxuriance that the methodical box which bordered them
+could not restrain. But the garden was by no means a blaze of sunshine,
+for ash trees, maples, elms, and varieties of the pine were there.
+Trumpet-vines climbed on the wall, and overtopping that, caught at
+trellises prepared to receive them, and formed screens of shadows that
+flickered in every breeze and changed their places with the changing
+sun. But it was only with a passing glance that the visitor saw these
+things, his eyes were fixed upon an arbor at the end of the garden; it
+was covered with clematis, while two great elms met overhead at its
+entrance and shaded the path to it for a little distance. Under these
+elms stood a group of young people. He was unannounced, and had
+opportunity without being himself perceived, to scan this little group
+as he went forward. His expression varied with each member of it, but
+showed an interest of some sort in each. Now it was full of passionate
+delight; then it changed as his look fell upon a tall young man with
+dark eyes and a bearing that in its most gracious moments seemed unable
+to lose a touch of haughtiness, but whose face now was alive with a
+restful joy. The gazer, as he perceived this happiness, so wanting in
+himself, scowled with a bitter hate and looked instantly toward another
+of the party, this time with an expression of triumph. At the fourth and
+last member of the group his glance though scowling, was contemptuous;
+but the receiver was as unconscious of contempt as he felt undeserving
+of it. From him the gazer's eyes returned to the person at whom he had
+first looked. She was standing on the step of the arbor, an end of the
+clematis vine swaying lightly back and forth over her head, and almost
+touching her bright hair which was now towered high in the fashion of
+the day. She was holding a spray of the vine in her hand. She had
+fastened one end in the hair of a young lady who stood beside her, and
+was now bringing the other about her neck, arranging the leaves and
+flowers with skilful touches. Three men, including the new-comer,
+watched her pretty air of absorption, and the deftness of her taper
+fingers, the sweep of her dark lashes on her cheek as from the height of
+her step she looked down at her companion, the curves of her beautiful
+mouth that at the moment was daintly holding a pin with which the end of
+the spray was to be fastened upon the front of the other's white dress.
+It was certainly effective there. Yet none of the three men noticed
+this, or saw that between the two girls the question as to beauty was a
+question of time, that while the one face was blooming now in the
+perfection of its charm, the charm of the other was still in its calyx.
+The adorner intuitively felt something of this. Perhaps she was not the
+less fond of her friend that the charms she saw in her were not patent
+to everybody. Bring her forward as much as she might, Katie felt that
+Elizabeth Royal would never be a rival. She even shrank from this kind
+of prominence into which Katie's play was bringing her now. She had been
+taken in hand at unawares and showed an impatience that if the other
+were not quick, would oblige her to leave the work unfinished.
+
+"There," cried Katie, at last giving the leaves a final pat of
+arrangement, "that looks well, don't you think so, Master Waldo?"
+
+"Good morning, Mistress Archdale," broke in a voice before Waldo could
+answer. "And you, Mistress Royal," bowing low to her. "After our late
+hours last night, permit me to felicitate you upon your good health this
+morning, and--" he was about to add, "your charming appearance," but
+something in the girl's eyes as she looked full at him held back the
+words, and for a moment ruffled his smooth assurance. But as he
+recovered himself and turned to salute the gentlemen, the smile on his
+lips had triumph through its vexation.
+
+"My proud lady, keep your pride a little longer," he said to himself.
+And as he bowed to Stephen Archdale with a dignity as great as Stephen's
+own, he was thinking: "My morning in that hot office has not been in
+vain. I know your weak point now, my lofty fellow, and it is there that
+I will undermine you. You detest business, indeed! John Archdale feels
+that with his only son in England studying for the ministry he needs a
+son-in-law in partnership with him. The thousands which I have been
+putting into his business this morning are well spent, they make me
+welcome here. Yes, your uncle needs me, Stephen Archdale, for your
+clever papa is not always brotherly in his treatment, he has more than
+once brought heavy losses upon the younger firm. It's a part of my
+pleasure in prospect that now I shall be able to checkmate him in such
+schemes, perhaps to bring back a little of the loss upon the shoulders
+of his heir. Ah, I am safer from you than you dream." He turned to
+Waldo, and as the two men bowed, they looked at one another steadily.
+Each was remembering their conversation the night before over some
+Bordeaux in Waldo's room, for they were staying at the same inn and
+often spent an hour together. They had drunk sparingly, but, just
+returned from their sail, each was filled with Katie Archdale's beauty,
+and each had spoken out his purpose plainly, Waldo with an assurance
+that, if it savored a little of conceit, was full of manliness, the
+other with a half-smothered fierceness of passion that argued danger to
+every obstacle in its way.
+
+"You've come at the very right moment, Master Harwin," broke in Katie's
+unconscious voice, and she smiled graciously, as she had a habit of
+doing at everybody; "We were talking about you not two minutes ago."
+
+"Then I am just in time to save my character."
+
+"Don't be too sure about that," returned Miss Royal.
+
+Waldo laughed, and Katie exchanged glances with him, and smiled
+mischievously.
+
+"No, don't be too sure; it will depend upon whether you say 'yes,' or
+'no,' to my question. We were wondering something about you."
+
+Harwin's heart sank, though he returned her smile and her glance with
+interest. For there were questions she might ask which would
+inconvenience him, but they should not embarrass him.
+
+"We were wondering," pursued Katie, "if you had ever been presented.
+Have you?"
+
+As the sun breaks out from a heavy cloud, the light returned to Harwin's
+blue eyes.
+
+"Yes," he said, "four years ago. I went to court with my uncle, Sir
+Rydal Harwin, and his majesty was gracious enough to nod in answer to my
+profound reverence."
+
+"It was a very brilliant scene, I am sure, and very interesting."
+
+"Deeply interesting," returned Harwin with all the traditional respect
+of an Englishman for his sovereign. Archdale's lip curled a trifle at
+what seemed to him obsequiousness, but Harwin was not looking at him.
+
+"Stephen has been," pursued Katie, "and he says it was very fine, but
+for all that he does not seem to care at all about it. He says he would
+rather go off for a day's hunting any time. The ladies looked charming,
+he said, and the gentlemen magnificent; but he was bored to death, for
+all that."
+
+"In order to appreciate it fully," returned Archdale, "it would be
+necessary that one should be majesty." He straightened himself as he
+spoke, and looked at Harwin with such gravity that the latter, meeting
+the light of his eyes, was puzzled whether this was jest or earnest,
+until Miss Royal's laugh relieved his uncertainty. Katie laid her hand
+on the speaker's arm and shook it lightly.
+
+"You told me I should be sure to enjoy it," she said. "Now, what do you
+mean?"
+
+"Ah! but you would be queen," said Harwin, "queen in your own right, a
+divine right of beauty that no one can resist."
+
+Katie looked at him, disposed for a moment to be angry, but her love of
+admiration could not resist the worship of his eyes, and the lips
+prepared to pout curved into a smile not less bewitching that the
+brightness of anger was still in her cheeks. Archdale and Waldo turned
+indignant glances on the speaker, but it was manifestly absurd to resent
+a speech that pleased the object of it, and that each secretly felt
+would not have sounded ill if he had made it himself. Elizabeth looked
+from Katie to Harwin with eyes that endorsed his assertion, and as the
+latter read her expression his scornful wonder in the boat returned.
+
+"Why are we all standing outside in the heat?" cried the hostess. "Let
+us go into the arbor, there is plenty of room to move about there, we
+have had a dozen together in it many a time." She passed in under the
+arch as she spoke, and the others followed her. There in her own way
+which was not so very witty or wise, and yet was very charming, she held
+her little court, and the three men who had been in love with her at the
+beginning of the hour were still more in love at the end of it. And
+Elizabeth who watched her with an admiration as deep as their's, if more
+tranquil, did not wonder that it was so. Katie did not forget her, nor
+did the gentlemen, or at least two of them, forget to be courteous, but
+if she had known what became of the spray of clematis which being in the
+way as she turned her head, she had soon unfastened and let slip to the
+ground, she would not have wondered, nor would she have cared. If she
+had seen Archdale's heel crush it unheedingly as he passed out of the
+arbor, the beat of her pulses would never have varied.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+ANTICIPATIONS.
+
+
+It was early in December. The months had brought serious changes to all
+but one of the group that the August morning had found in Mr. Archdale's
+garden. Two had disappeared from the scene of their defeat, and to two
+of them the future seemed opening up vistas of happiness as deep as the
+present joy. Elizabeth Royal alone was a spectator in the events of the
+past months, and even in her mind was a questioning that was at least
+wonderment, if not pain.
+
+Kenelm Waldo was in the West Indies, trying to escape from his pain at
+Katie Archdale's refusal, but carrying it everywhere with him, as he did
+recollections of her; to have lost them would have been to have lost his
+memory altogether.
+
+Ralph Harwin also had gone. His money was still in the firm of John
+Archdale & Co., which it had made one of the richest in the Colonies;
+its withdrawal was now to be expected at any moment, for Harwin did not
+mean to return, and Archdale, while endeavoring to be ready for this,
+saw that it would cripple him. Harwin had been right in believing that
+he should make himself very useful and very acceptable to Katie's
+father. For Archdale who was more desious of his daughter's happiness
+than of anything else in the world, was disappointed that this did not
+lie in the direction which, on the whole, would have been for his
+greatest advantage. Harwin and he could have done better for Katie in
+the way of fortune than Stephen Archdale with his distaste for business
+would do. The Archdale connection had always been a dream of his, until
+lately when this new possibility had superseded his nephew's interest in
+his thoughts. There was an address and business keenness about Harwin
+that, if Stephen possessed at all, was latent in him. The Colonel was
+wealthy enough to afford the luxury of a son who was only a fine
+gentleman. Stephen was a good fellow, he was sure, and Katie would be
+happy with him. And yet--but even these thoughts left him as he leaned
+back in his chair that day, sitting alone after dinner, and a mist came
+over his eyes as he thought that in less than a fortnight his home would
+no longer be his little daughter's.
+
+"It will be all right," he said to himself with that sigh of resignation
+with which we yield to the inevitable, as if there were a certain choice
+and merit in doing it. "It is well that the affairs of men are in higher
+hands than ours." John Archdale's piety was of the kind that utters
+itself in solitude, or under the breath.
+
+Katie at the moment was upstairs with her mother examining a package of
+wedding gear that had arrived that day. She had no hesitation as to whom
+her choice should have been. Yet, as she stood holding a pair of gloves,
+measuring the long wrists on her arm and then drawing out the fingers
+musingly, it was not of Stephen that she was thinking, or of him that
+she spoke at last, as she turned away to lay down the gloves and take up
+a piece of lace.
+
+"Mother," she said, "I do sometimes feel badly for Master Harwin; he is
+the only man in all the world that I ever had anything like fear of, and
+now and then I did of him, such a fierceness would come over him once in
+a while, not to me, but about me, I know, about losing me. He was
+terribly in earnest. Stephen never gets into these moods, he is always
+kind and lovable, just as he has been to me as far back as I can
+remember, only, of course more so now."
+
+"But things have gone differently with him and with poor Master Harwin,"
+answered Mrs. Archdale. "If you had said 'no' to Stephen, you would have
+seen the dark moods in him, too."
+
+The young girl looked at her mother and smiled, and blushed a little in
+a charming acknowledgment of feminine power to sway the minds of the
+sterner half of humanity. Then she grew thoughtful again, not even
+flattery diverting her long from her subject.
+
+"But Stephen never could be like that," she said. "Stephen couldn't be
+dark in that desperate sort of way. I can't describe it in Master
+Harwin, but I feel it. Somehow, he would rather Stephen would die, or I
+should, than have us marry."
+
+"Did he ever say so?"
+
+"Why, no, but you can feel things that nobody says. And, then, there is
+something else, too. I am quite sure that sometime in his life he did
+something, well, perhaps something wicked, I don't know what, but I do
+know that a load lies on his conscience; for one day he told me as much.
+It was just as he was going away, the day after I had refused him and he
+knew of my engagement. He asked permission to come and bid me goodby.
+Don't you remember?"
+
+"Yes," said Mrs. Archdale.
+
+"He looked at me and sighed. 'I've paid a heavy price,' he said half to
+himself, 'to lose.' Then he added, 'Mistress Archdale, will you always
+believe that I loved you devotedly, and always have loved you from the
+hour I first saw you? If I could undo'--then he waited a moment and grew
+dreadfully pale, and I think he finished differently from his first
+intention--'If I could undo something in the past,' he said, 'I would
+give my life to do it, but my life would be of no use.'"
+
+"That looks as if it was something against you, Katie."
+
+"Oh, no, I don't think so. Besides, he wouldn't have given his life at
+all; that's only the way men talk, you know, when they want to make an
+impression of their earnestness on women and they always think they do
+it that way. But the men that are the readiest to give up their lives
+don't say anything about it beforehand. Stephen would die for me, I'm
+sure, but he never told me so in his life. He don't make many
+protestations; he takes a great deal for granted. Why shouldn't he;
+we've known one another from babyhood? But Master Harwin knew, somehow,
+the minute after he spoke, if he didn't at the time, that he wouldn't
+die for his fault at all, whatever it was. And then, after he spoke it
+seemed to me as if he had changed his mind and didn't care about it in
+any way, he only cared that I had refused him, and that he was not going
+to see me any more. I am sorry for a man like that, and if he were going
+to stay here I should be afraid of him, afraid for Stephen. But he sails
+in a few days. I don't wonder he couldn't wait here for the next ship,
+wait over the wedding, and whatever danger from him there may have been
+sails with him. Poor man, I don't see what he liked me for." And with a
+sigh, Katie dismissed the thought of him and his grief and evil
+together, and turned her attention again to the wedding finery.
+
+"Only see what exquisite lace," she cried, throwing it out on the table
+to examine the web. "Where did Elizabeth get it, I wonder? She begged to
+be allowed to give me my bridal veil, and she has certainly done it
+handsomely, just as she always does everything, dear child. I suppose it
+came out in one of her father's ships."
+
+"Everything Master Royal touches turns into gold," said Mrs. Archdale,
+after a critical examination of the lace had called forth her
+admiration. "It's Mechlin, Katie. There is nobody in the Colonies richer
+than he," she went on, "unless, possibly, the Colonel."
+
+"I dare say I ought to pretend not to care that Stephen will have ever
+so much money," returned the girl, taking up a broad band of India
+muslin wrought with gold, and laying it over her sleeve to examine the
+pattern, at which she smiled approvingly. "But then I do care. Stephen
+is a great deal more interesting rich than he would be poor; he is not
+made for a grub, neither am I, and living is much better fun when one
+has laces like cobwebs, and velvets and paduasoys, and diamonds, mother,
+to fill one's heart's desire."
+
+As she spoke she looked an embodiment of fair youth and innocent
+pleasure, and her mother, with a mother's admiration and sympathy in her
+heart, gave her a lingering glance before she put on a little sternness,
+and said, "My child, I don't like to hear you talk in that light way.
+Your heart's desires, I trust, are set upon better things, those of
+another world."
+
+"Yes, mother, of course. But, then you know, we are to give our mind
+faithfully to the things next to us, in order to get to those beyond
+them, and that's what I am doing now, don't you see? O, mother, dear,
+how I shall miss you, and all your dear, solemn talks, and your dear,
+smiling looks." And winding her arms about her mother, Katie kissed her
+so affectionately that Mrs. Archdale felt quite sure that the laces and
+paduasoys had not yet spoilt her little daughter.
+
+"Now, for my part," she said a few minutes later as she laid down a pair
+of dainty white kid shoes, glittering with spangles from the tip of
+their peaked toes to their very heels,--high enough for modern
+days,--"These fit you to perfection, my dear. For my part," she
+repeated, "you know that I have always hoped you would marry Stephen,
+yet my sympathies go with Master Waldo in his loss, instead of with the
+other one, whom I think your father at last grew to like best of the
+three; it was strange that such a man could have gotten such an
+influence, but then, they were in business together, and there is always
+something mysterious about business. Master Waldo is a fine,
+open-hearted young man, and he was very fond of you."
+
+"Yes, I suppose so," answered the girl, with an effort to merge a smile
+into the expression accompanying a sympathetic sigh. "It's too bad. But,
+then, men must look out for themselves, women have to, and Kenelm Waldo
+probably thinks he is worth any woman's heart."
+
+"So he is, Katie."
+
+"Um!" said the girl. "Well, he'd be wiser to be a little humble about
+it. It takes better."
+
+"Do you call Stephen humble?"
+
+Katie laughed merrily. "But," she said, at last, "Stephen is Stephen,
+and humility wouldn't suit him. He would look as badly without his pride
+as without his lace ruffles."
+
+"Is it his lace ruffles you're in love with, my child?"
+
+"I don't know, mother," and she laughed again. "When should a young girl
+laugh if not on the eve of her marriage with the man of her choice, when
+friends and wealth conspire to make the event auspicious?"
+
+"I shall not write to thank Elizabeth for her gift," she said, "for she
+will be here before a letter can reach her. She leaves Boston to-morrow,
+that's Tuesday, and she must be here by Friday, perhaps Thursday night,
+if they start very early."
+
+"I thought Master Royal's letter said Monday?"
+
+"Tuesday," repeated Katie, "if the weather be suitable for his daughter.
+Look at this letter and you'll see; his world hinges on his daughter's
+comfort, he is father and mother both to her. Elizabeth needs it, too;
+she can't take care of herself well. Perhaps she could wake up and do it
+for somebody else. But I am not sure. She's a dear child, though she
+seems to me younger than I am. Isn't it funny, mother, for she knows a
+good deal more, and she's very bright sometimes? But she never makes the
+best of anything, especially of herself."
+
+It was the day before the wedding. The great old house was full of
+bustle from its gambrel roof to its very cellar in which wines were
+decanted to be in readiness, and into which pastries and sweetmeats were
+carried from the pantry shelves overloaded with preparations for the
+next day's festivities. Servants ran hither and thither, full of
+excitement and pleasant anticipations. They all loved Katie who had
+grown up among them. And, besides, the morrow's pleasures were not to be
+enjoyed by them wholly by proxy, for if there was to be only wedding
+enough for one pair, at least the remains of the feast would go round
+handsomely. Two or three black faces were seen among the English ones,
+but though they were owned by Mr. Archdale, the disgrace and the badge
+of servitude had fallen upon them lightly, and the shining of merry eyes
+and the gleam of white teeth relieved a darkness that nature, and not
+despair, had made. In New England, masters were always finding reasons
+why their slaves should be manumitted. How could slavery flourish in a
+land where the wind of freedom was so strong that it could blow a whole
+cargo of tea into the ocean?
+
+But there were not only servants going back and forth through the
+house, for it was full of guests. The Colonel's family living so near,
+would not come until the morning of the ceremony, but other relatives
+were there in force. Mrs. Archdale's brother,--a little patronizing but
+very rich and gracious, and his family who having been well patronized,
+were disposed to be humble and admiring, and her sister who not having
+fed on the roses of life, had a good deal of wholesome strength about
+her, together with a touch of something which, if it were wholesome, was
+not exactly grateful. Cousins of Mr. Archdale were there also. Elizabeth
+Royal, at Katie's special request, had been her guest for the last ten
+days. Her father had gone home again the day he brought her and was
+unable to return for the wedding and to take his daughter home
+afterward, as he had intended; but he had sent Mrs. Eveleigh, his cousin
+and housekeeper. It seemed strange that the father and daughter were so
+companionable, for superficially they were entirely unlike. Mr. Royal
+was considered stern and shrewd, and, though a well-read man, eminently
+practical, more inclined to business than scholarship, while Elizabeth
+was dreamy, generous, wholly unacquainted with business of any kind, and
+it seemed too much uninterested in it ever to be acquainted. To most
+people the affection between them seemed only that of nature and
+circumstances, Elizabeth being an only child, and her mother having died
+while she was very young. It is the last analysis of character that
+discovers the same trait under different forms. None of her friends
+carried analysis so far, and it was possible that no effort could have
+discovered subtle likeness then. Perhaps it was still latent and would
+only hereafter find some outward expression for itself. It sometimes
+happens that physical likeness comes out only after death, mental not
+until late in life, and likeness of character in the midst of unlikeness
+is revealed usually only in the crucible of events.
+
+That day, Elizabeth, from her window overlooking the garden, had seen a
+picture that she never forgot. It was about noon, all the warmth that
+was in the December sun filled the garden (which the leafless trees no
+longer shaded). There was no snow on the ground, for the few stray
+flakes premonitory of winter which had fallen from time to time in the
+month had melted almost as soon as they had touched the ground. The air
+was like an Indian summer's day; it seemed impossible that winter could
+be round the corner waiting only for a change of wind. The tracery of
+the boughs of the trees and of all their little twigs against the blue
+sky was exquisite, the stalks of the dead flowers warmed into a livelier
+brown in the sunlight. Yet it may have been partly the figures in the
+foreground that made the whole picture so bright to Elizabeth, for to
+her the place was filled with the lovers who were walking there and
+talking, probably saying those nothings, so far as practical matters go,
+which they may indulge in freely only before the thousand cares of life
+interfere with their utterances. Stephen had come to the house, and
+Katie and he were taking what they were sure would prove to be their
+last opportunity for quiet talk before the wedding. They went slowly
+down the long path to the clematis arbor, and then turned back again,
+for it was not warm enough to sit down out of doors. Elizabeth watched
+them as they walked toward the house, and a warmth came into her own
+face in her pleasure. "Dear Katie," she said to herself, "she is sure to
+be so happy." The young girl's hand lay on Archdale's arm, and she was
+looking up at him with a smile full of joyousness. Archdale's head was
+bent and the watcher could not see his eyes, but his attitude of
+devotion, his smile, and Katie's face told the story.
+
+[TO BE CONTINUED.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+GLORIFYING TRIAL BY JURY.
+
+By CHARLES COWLEY, LL.D.
+
+
+Twice within two years representatives of the highest courts of
+Massachusetts have published in the North American Review, panegyrics of
+jurics and jury trials. The late Judge Foster and Judge Pitman both
+concede--what indeed is too notorious to be denied--that there are
+frequent and gross miscarriages of justice; but they touch lightly on
+this aspect of the question. Being personally identified with the
+institution which they extol, their self-complacency is neither
+unnatural nor unpardonable. It seems not to have occurred to them, that
+if a reform of our judiciary is really needed, they are "a part of the
+thing to be reformed." But in weighing their testimony to the advantages
+of trial by jury, allowance must be made for the bias of office and for
+the bias of interest. In the idolatrous throng which drowned the voice
+of St. Paul with their halcyon and vociferous shouts, "Great is Diana of
+the Ephesians!" there was no one who shouted louder than the thrifty
+silversmith, Demetrius, who added the naive remark, "By this craft we
+live."
+
+In the outset of his presentation of the beauties of jury trials, Judge
+Pitman says that "certain elementary rules of law are so closely
+associated with this system that change in one would require alteration
+of the other." Now, these rules of law are either good or bad. If they
+are bad, they should be revised; and the fact that they are so closely
+associated with trial by jury, that they can not be amended without
+injury thereto, adds little lustre to that time-honored institution. One
+the other hand, if these "elementary rules of law" are good, it is
+presumed that courts will be able to appreciate and apply them quite as
+well as juries.
+
+Judge Pitman then proceeds to argue that criminal trials without juries
+would be attended with disadvantages, because he thinks that judges
+would have, oftener than juries, that "reasonable doubt" which by law
+entitles the accused to an acquittal. This warrants one of two
+inferences: either the writer would have men convicted whose guilt is
+involved in "reasonable doubt," or he fears that the learning and
+experience of the bar and the bench tend to unfit the mind to weigh the
+evidence of guilt or innocence. It is curious that in a former number of
+the same Review, another learned writer expressed exactly the contrary
+opinion.[A] Mr. Edward A. Thomas thinks that "judges are too much
+inclined to convict persons charged with criminal offences," and that
+juries are too much inclined to acquit them. And Judge Foster seemingly
+agrees with Mr. Thomas upon this point.
+
+[Footnote A: N.A. Review, No. CCCIV, March, 1882.]
+
+Again: Judge Pitman argues that a jury is better qualified than a judge
+to determine what is "due care." And Judge Foster, going still further,
+says, "common men belonging to various walks in life, are, in most
+cases, better fitted to decide correctly ordinary questions of fact
+than any single judge or bench of judges." There are, unquestionably,
+many cases in which the main questions are so entirely within the scope
+of ordinary men's observation and experience that no special knowledge
+is required to decide them. With respect to such cases, it is true that
+
+ "A few strong instincts and a few plain rules
+ Are worthy all the learning of the schools."
+
+But where the questions involved are many in number, intricate and
+complicated in character, and enveloped in a mass of conflicting
+testimony requiring many days to hear it, is it not manifest that a
+jury,--not one of whom has taken a note during the trial, some of whose
+members have heard as though hearing not, and seen as though seeing not,
+the testimony and the witnesses,--deals with such a case at a great
+disadvantage, as compared with a judge whose notes contain all the
+material testimony, and who has all the opportunity for rest and
+relaxation that he may require before filing the finding which is his
+verdict? With respect to such cases, it is clear that, as a learned
+English judge has said, "the securities which can be taken for justice
+in the case of a trial by a judge without a jury, are infinitely greater
+than those which can be taken for trial by a judge and jury."[A] A judge
+may be required to state what facts he finds, as well as the general
+conclusion at which he has arrived, and to state upon what views of the
+legal questions he has acted.
+
+[Footnote A: Stephen's History of the Criminal Law, 568.]
+
+Judge Foster most justly remarks: "There can be no such thing as a good
+jury trial without the co-operation of a learned, upright, conscientious
+and efficient presiding judge, ... holding firmly and steadily the
+reins, and guiding the entire proceedings." This is what Judge Foster
+was, and what Judge Pitman is, accustomed to do. But if the jury
+requires such "guiding" from the court, and if the court is competent
+thus to guide them, it is clear that the court must know the way and
+must be able to follow it; otherwise it could not so guide the jury.
+
+Judge Pitman also argues that the jury can eliminate "the personal
+equation" better than the judge. But is this so? Does education count
+for nothing in producing that calm, firm, passionless state of mind
+which is essential in those who determine causes between party and
+party?
+
+Are not juries quite as often as judges swayed by popular clamor, by
+prejudice, by appeals to their passions, and by considerations foreign
+to the merits of the case? As Mr. Thomas asks in the article before
+quoted: "How many juries are strictly impartial? How many remain
+entirely uninfluenced by preference for one or the other of the parties,
+one or the other counsel, or the leaning of some friend to either, or by
+political affiliations, or church connections, or relations to secret
+societies, or by what they have heard, or by what they have read? Can
+they be as discerning and impartial as a bench of judges, or if inclined
+to some bias or prejudice, can they as readily as a judge divest their
+minds of such an impression?" If it be true that juries composed of such
+material as Judge Pitman shows our juries to be largely composed of, are
+as capable of mastering and determining intricate questions of fact as
+judges trained to that duty, then we may truly say--
+
+ "Thinking is but an idle waste of thought,
+ And naught is everything, and everything is naught."
+
+According to Judge Pitman, the system which prevails in some of the
+states, of trials by the court without juries (with the provision that
+the trial shall be by jury if either party demand it), "works
+satisfactorily." The testimony of lawyers and litigants in
+Massachusetts, Connecticut and other states where this system prevails,
+is to the same effect. For ourselves, while far from desiring the
+abolition of trial by jury, whether in civil or in criminal causes, we
+are by no means disposed to "throw glamour" (as the Scotch say), over an
+instrumentality for ascertaining legal truth, which is so cumbersome in
+its operation, and so uncertain in its results. A jury is, at best, a
+means, and not an end; and although much may be said about the
+incidental usefulness of jury service on account of its tendency to
+enlarge the intellectual horizon of jurors, all that is beside the main
+question.
+
+Whether a particular occurrence took place or not, is a question which,
+whether it be tried by a judge or by a jury, must be decided upon
+evidence; which consists, in part, of circumstances, and, in part, of
+acts, but in part also, and very largely, of the sworn statements of
+individuals. While falsehood and corruption prevail among all classes of
+the community so extensively as they now do, it is useless to claim that
+decisions based upon human testimony are always or generally correct.
+Perjury is as rife as ever, and works as much wrong as ever. To a
+conscientious judge, like Judge Pitman, "the investigation of a mass of
+tangled facts and conflicting testimony" cannot but be wearisome, as he
+says it is; and, in many cases, the sense of responsibility "cannot but
+be oppressive;" but he has so often repeated a _dictum_ of Lord
+Redesdale that he must be presumed to have found solace in it--"it is
+more important that an end be put to litigation, than that justice
+should be done in every case." There is truth in that _dictum_; but,
+like other truths, it has often been abused, especially by incompetent
+or lazy or drowsy judges. More unfortunate suitors have suffered as
+martyrs to that truth than the judges who jauntily "cast" them would
+admit.
+
+Judges may do their best; juries may do their best; they will often fall
+into error; and instead of glorifying themselves or the system of which
+they are a part, it would be more modest in them to say, "We are
+unprofitable servants." Not many judges have been great enough to say,
+"I know I sometimes err," but some have said it. The lamented Judge Colt
+said it publicly more than once, and the admission raised, rather than
+lowered, him in the general esteem. When he died the voice of the bar
+and of the people said, "Other judges have been revered, but we loved
+Judge Colt."
+
+Massachusetts gives her litigants the choice of a forum. All trials in
+civil causes are by the courts alone, unless one party or the other
+claims a jury. If the reader has a case of much complexity, either with
+respect to the facts, or with respect to the law, perhaps he would like
+to have our opinion as to which is the better forum. The answer is the
+same that was given by one who lived at the parting of the ways, to a
+weary traveller who inquired which fork of the road he should take:
+"Both are full of snags, quagmires and pitfalls. No matter which you
+take, before you reach the end of your journey you will wish you had
+taken the other." In the trial by jury, and in the trial by the court,
+just as in the trial by ordeal, and in the trial by battle in the days
+of old, the element of chance is of the first magnitude.
+
+
+
+
+PUBLISHERS' DEPARTMENT.
+
+SENEFELDER, THE INVENTOR OF LITHOGRAPHY AND CHROMO-LITHOGRAPHY.--HIS ART
+IN BOSTON DEVELOPED BY L. PRANG & CO.--COLOR-PRINTING ON SATIN, ETC.
+
+
+A century ago the world knew nothing of the art of lithography;
+color-printing was confined to comparatively crude products from wooden
+blocks, most of which were hardly equal to the Japanese fan pictures now
+familiar to all of us. The year 1799 gave us a new invention which was
+destined to revolutionize reproductive art and add immensely to the
+means for education, culture and enjoyment.
+
+Alois Senefelder, born 1771, at Prague (Austria), started life with
+writing plays, and too poor to pay a printer, he determined to invent a
+process of his own which should serve to print his manuscript without
+dependence upon the (to him) too costly types.
+
+A born inventor, this Alois Senefelder, a genius, supported by boundless
+hope, immense capability for hard, laborious work, and an indomitable
+energy; he started with the plan of etching his writings in relief on
+metal plates, to take impressions therefrom by means of rollers. He
+found the metal too costly for his experiments; and limestone slabs from
+the neighboring quarries--he living then in Munich--were tried as a
+substitute. Although partly successful in this direction, he continued
+through years of hard, and often disappointing trials, to find something
+more complete. He hit upon the discovery that a printed sheet of paper
+(new or old) moistened with a thin solution of gum Arabic would, when
+dabbled over printers' ink, accept the ink from the dabbler only on its
+printed parts and remain perfectly clean in the blank spaces, so that a
+facsimile impression could be taken from this inked-in sheet. He found
+that this operation might be repeated until the original print gave out
+by wear. Here was a new discovery, based on the properties of attraction
+and repulsion between fatty matters (printers ink), and the watery
+solution of gum Arabic. The extremely delicate nature of the paper
+matrix was a serious drawback, and had to be overcome. The slabs of
+limestone which served Senefelder in a previous emergency were now
+recurred to by him as an absorbent material similar to paper, and a
+trial by making an impression from his above-mentioned paper matrix on
+the stone, and subsequent gumming, convinced him that he was correct in
+his surmise. By this act lithography became an established fact.
+
+A few short years of intelligent experimenting revealed to him all the
+possibilities of this new discovery. Inventions of processes followed
+each other closely until in 1818 he disclosed to the world in a volume
+of immortal interest not only a complete history of his invention and
+his processes, but also a reliable description of the same for others to
+follow. Nothing really new except photo-lithography has been added to
+this charming art since that time; improvement only by manual skill and
+by chemical progress, can be claimed by others.
+
+Chromo-lithography (printing in colors from stone) was experimented on
+by the great inventor. He outlined its possibilities by saying, that he
+verily believed that printed pictures like paintings would sometimes be
+made thereby, and whoever has seen the productions of our Boston firm,
+L. Prang & Co., will bear him out in the verity of his prediction.
+
+When Prang touched this art in 1856 it was in its infancy in this
+country. Stray specimens of more or less merit had been produced,
+especially by Martin Thurwanger (pen work) and Fabronius (crayon work),
+but much was left to be perfected. A little bunch of roses to embellish
+a ladies' magazine just starting in Boston, was the first work with
+which the firm occupied its single press. Crude enough it was, but
+diligence and energy soon developed therefrom the works which have
+astonished not only this country but even Europe, and the firm, which
+took thereby the lead in their speciality of art reproduction in color,
+has succeeded in keeping it ever since from year to year without one
+faltering step, until there is no single competitor in the civilized
+world to dispute its mastery. This is something to be proud of, not only
+for the firm in question, but even for the country at large, and to
+crown its achievements, the firm of L. Prang & Co. have this year made,
+apart from their usual wonderful variety of original Christmas cards and
+other holiday art prints, a reproduction of a flower piece of the
+celebrated Belgian flower painter, Jean Robie, and printed it on satin
+by a process invented and patented by Mr. Prang. For truthfulness as a
+copy this print challenges the admiration of our best artists and
+connoisseurs. The gorgeous work as it lies before our eyes seems to us
+to be as perfect as if it left the very brush of the master, and even in
+close comparison with the original it does not lose an iota of its
+charms.
+
+Of the marvellous excellence of this, the latest achievement of this
+remarkable house, thousands who visited the late exhibition of the
+Massachusetts Charitable Mechanic's Association and saw Messrs. L. Prang
+& Co.'s, extensive exhibit, can bear witness. Everybody who looked at
+the two pictures, the original masterpiece by Robie and its reproduction
+by Prang, side by side, was puzzled to distinguish which was which, many
+pointing to the reproduction as the better, and in their eyes, therefore
+as the original picture. The same was true with regard to many more of
+this justly celebrated firm's reproductions, which they did not hesitate
+to exhibit, alongside of the original paintings. Altogether, their
+exhibit with its large collection of elegant satin prints, its studies
+for artists, its historical feature, showing the enormous development of
+the firm's work since 1856, its interesting illustration by successive
+printings of how their pictures are made, and its instructive and
+artistic arrangement of their collection, made it one of the most
+attractive features of the fair.
+
+What more can we say but that we are proud ourselves of this achievement
+within our city limits; it cannot fail to increase the fame our beloved
+Boston as a town of masters in thought and art. Honor to the firm of L.
+Prang & Co.
+
+
+
+
+NOTICES OF NEW BOOKS.
+
+
+THE VOYAGE OF THE "VIVIAN" to the North Pole and Beyond, or Adventures
+of Two Youths in the Open Polar sea. By COLONEL THOMAS W. KNOX, the
+author of "The Boy Travellers in the Far East," "The Young Nimrods,"
+etc. Illustrated; 8vo.; cloth, $3. Harper & Brothers, New York.
+
+A fascinating story for boys, into which is woven by the graceful pen of
+the author the history of Arctic exploration for centuries past. The
+young readers who have followed the "Boy Travellers in the Far East"
+will welcome this addition to the literature of adventure and travel.
+
+
+LITTLE PEOPLE OF THE AIR, By the authors of "Little Playfellows."
+Illustrated; 8vo., $1. D. Lothrop & Co., Boston.
+
+A series of pretty stories of feathered songsters, for little men and
+women, alike interesting to the young and children of an older growth.
+
+
+POLITICS FOR YOUNG AMERICANS. By CHARLES NORDHOFF, author of "The
+Communistic Societies of the United States," etc. Popular edition;
+paper, 12mo., 400. Harper and Brothers, New York.
+
+A series of essays in the form of letters, calculated to instruct the
+youth of this country in their duty as American citizens.
+
+
+A PERILOUS SECRET. By CHARLES READE. Cloth, 12mo.; 75 cents. Harper and
+Brothers, New York.
+
+This volume forms one of Harper's Household editions of the works of
+this popular novelist.
+
+
+THE ICE QUEEN. By ERNEST INGERSOLL, author of "Friends Worth Knowing,"
+"Knocking Around the Rockies," etc. Illustrated; Cloth, 16mo., $1.
+Harper and Brothers, New York.
+
+A story for boys and girls of the adventures of a small party
+storm-bound in winter, on a desolate island in Lake Erie.
+
+
+GOD AND THE FUTURE LIFE; or the Reasonableness of Christianity. By
+CHARLES NORDHOFF, author of "Politics for Young Americans," etc. 16mo.,
+cloth, $1. Harper and Brothers, New York.
+
+Paley's "Natural Theology," familiar to students, is supplemented by
+this volume, which brings the argument down to the present developement
+of science. It is a book for thoughtful men and women, whose faith in
+the immortality of the soul needs strengthening.
+
+
+MOTHERS IN COUNCIL. 16mo., cloth, $1. Harper and Brothers, New York.
+
+A series of essays and discussions of value to the family circle,
+teaching how sons can be brought up to be good husbands, and daughters
+to be contented and useful old maids, and many other valuable lessons.
+
+
+GOOD STORIES. By CHARLES READE, 16mo., cloth, $1. Harper and Brothers,
+New York.
+
+These short stories by Mr. Reade, some of which have appeared from time
+to time in the Bazar, are here gathered in one volume. They are "The
+History of an Acre," "The Knightsbridge Mystery," "Single Heart and
+Double Face," and many others.
+
+
+I SAY NO; or, the Love Letter Answered. By WILKIE COLLINS; 16mo.,
+cloth,$1. Harper and Brothers, New York.
+
+The announcement that a new novel from the pen of Mr. Collins has
+appeared is enough to insure a large and steady demand for it.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Bay State Monthly - Volume 2,
+Issue 3, December, 1884, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BAY STATE MONTHLY ***
+
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