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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Girl's Own Paper, Vol. VIII: No. 353,
+October 2, 1886., 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 Girl's Own Paper, Vol. VIII: No. 353, October 2, 1886.
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: Charles Peters
+
+Release Date: April 17, 2006 [EBook #18195]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GIRL'S OWN PAPER ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Susan Skinner and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE GIRL'S OWN PAPER
+
+VOL. VIII.--NO. 353.
+
+OCTOBER 2, 1886.
+
+Price One Penny.
+
+
+
+
+
+MERLE'S CRUSADE.
+
+BY ROSA NOUCHETTE CAREY, Author of "Aunt Diana," "For Lilias," etc.
+
+[Illustration: "'WHAT A PITY YOU STOPPED ME JUST THEN.'"]
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE VALLEY OF HUMILIATION.
+
+"Merle, I may be a little old-fashioned in my notions; middle-aged
+people never adjust their ideas quite in harmony with you young folk,
+but in my day we never paused to count fifty at a full stop."
+
+Aunt Agatha's voice startled me with its reproachful irritability. Well,
+I had deserved that little sarcasm for I must confess that I had been
+reading very carelessly. My favourite motto was ringing in my ears,
+"_Laborare est orare_."
+
+Somehow the words had set themselves to resonant music in my brain; it
+seemed as though I were chanting them inwardly all the time I was
+climbing down the steep hill with Christiana and her boys. _Laborare est
+orare._ And this is what I was reading on that still, snowy Sunday
+afternoon: "But we will come again to this Valley of Humiliation. It is
+the best and most fruitful piece of ground in all these parts. It is a
+fat ground, and, as you see, consisteth much in meadows, and if a man
+was to come here in the summertime as we do now, if he knew not anything
+before thereof, and if he delighted himself in the sight of his eyes, he
+might see that which would be delightful to him. Behold how green this
+valley is, also how beautiful with lilies! I have known many labouring
+men that have got good estates in this Valley of Humiliation."
+
+"Merle," observed Aunt Agatha, a little dryly, "we may as well leave off
+there, for it seems that you and I are to have our estate among the
+labouring men in this very valley."
+
+Aunt Agatha was a clever woman, and could say shrewd things sometimes,
+but she never spoke a truer word than this; but my wits were no longer
+wool-gathering.
+
+"What a pity you stopped me just then," I remarked, somewhat
+sententiously; "we have missed the purest gem of the allegory. 'He that
+is down need fear no fall; he that is low no pride.'" But here a hand
+was lifted in protesting fashion.
+
+"Put the marker in the page, child, and spare me the rest; that is in
+favour of your argument, not mine," for a weary discussion had been
+waged between us for two whole hours--a discussion that had driven Aunt
+Agatha exhausted to the couch, but which had only given me a tingling
+feeling of excitement, such as a raw recruit might experience at the
+sight of a battlefield. Aunt Agatha's ladylike ideas lay dead and
+wounded round her while I had made that last impetuous charge.
+
+"I am of age, a free Englishwoman, living in a free country, and not all
+the nineteenth century prejudices, though they are thick as dragons'
+teeth, shall prevent me, Merle Fenton, of sane mind and healthy body,
+from doing what I believe to be my duty."
+
+"Humph, I am rather doubtful of the sanity; I always told you that you
+were too independent and strong-minded for a girl; but what is the use
+of preaching to deaf ears?" continued Aunt Agatha, in a decidedly cross
+voice, as she arranged the cushions comfortably.
+
+It was true that I was getting the best of the argument, and yet I was
+sorry for Aunt Agatha. I felt how I was shocking all her notions of
+decorum and propriety, and giving pain to the kindest and gentlest heart
+in the world; but one cannot lead a new crusade without trampling on
+some prejudices. I knew all my little world would shriek "fie," and "for
+shame" into my ears, and all because I was bent on working out a new
+theory. The argument had grown out of such a little thing. I had shown
+Aunt Agatha an advertisement in the _Morning Post_, and announced my
+intention of answering it in person the following morning.
+
+"NURSE.--Can any lady recommend a thoroughly conscientious superior
+person to take charge of two children, baby eighteen months old?
+Assistance given in the nursery. Must be a good, plain needlewoman.
+Prince's Gate, S.W."
+
+To the last day of my life I do not think that I shall ever forget Aunt
+Agatha's face when she read that advertisement.
+
+"You intend to offer yourself for this situation, Merle--to lose caste,
+and take your place among menials? It is enough to make my poor brother
+rise in his grave, and your poor, dear mother too, to think of a Fenton
+stooping to such degradation." But I will forbear to transcribe all the
+wordy avalanche of lady-like invective that was hurled at me,
+accompanied by much wringing of hands.
+
+And yet the whole thing lay in a nut-shell. I, Merle Fenton, sound,
+healthy, and aged two-and-twenty, being orphaned, penniless, and only
+possessing one near relative in the world--Aunt Agatha--declined utterly
+to be dependent for my daily bread and the clothes I wore on the
+goodwill of her husband and my uncle by marriage, Ezra Keith.
+
+No, I was not good. I daresay I was self-willed, contradictory, and as
+obstinate as a mule that will go every way but the right way, but, all
+the same, I loved Aunt Agatha, my dead father's only sister, and I
+detested Uncle Keith with a perfectly unreasonable detestation.
+
+Aunt Agatha had been a governess all her life. Certainly the Fenton
+family had not much to boast of in the way of wealth. Pedigree and
+poverty are not altogether pleasant yoke fellows. It may be comfortable
+to one's feelings to know that a certain progenitor of ours made boots
+at the time of the Conquest, though I am never quite sure in my mind
+that they had bootmakers then; but my historical knowledge was always
+defective. But a little money is also pleasant; indeed, if the pedigree
+and the money came wooing to me, and I had to choose between them--well,
+perhaps I had better hold my tongue on that subject; for what is the
+good of shocking people unless one has a very good reason for doing so?
+
+My father's pedigree did not help him into good practice, and he died
+young--a grave mistake, people tell me, for a professional man to
+commit. My mother was very pretty and very helpless, but then she had a
+pedigree, too, and, probably, that forbade her to soil her white hands.
+She was a fine lady, with more heart than head, which she had lost most
+unwisely to the handsome young doctor. After his death, she made futile
+efforts for her child's sake, but the grinding wheel of poverty caught
+the poor butterfly and crushed her to death.
+
+My poor, tender-hearted, unhappy mother! Well, the world is a cruel
+place to these soft, unprotected natures.
+
+I should have fared badly but for Aunt Agatha; her hardly-earned savings
+were all spent on my education. She was a clever, highly-educated woman,
+and commanded good salaries, and out of this she contrived to board and
+maintain me at a school until she married, and Uncle Keith promised that
+I should share their home.
+
+I never could understand why Aunt Agatha married him. Perhaps she was
+tired of the drudgery of teaching; at forty-five one may grow a little
+weary of one's work. Perhaps she wanted a home for her old age, and was
+tired of warming herself at other people's fires, and preferred a
+chimney corner of her own; but, strange to say, she always scouted these
+two notions with the utmost indignation.
+
+"I married your uncle, Merle," she would say, with great dignity,
+"because he convinced me that he was the right person for me to marry. I
+have no more idea than you how he contrived to instil this notion into
+my head, for though I am a plain body and never had any beauty, I must
+own I liked tall, good-looking men. But there, my dear, I lived
+forty-five years in the world without three things very common in
+women's lives--without beauty, without love, and without discontent."
+And in this last clause she was certainly right. Aunt Agatha was the
+most contented creature in the world.
+
+If Uncle Keith--for never, never would I call him Uncle Ezra, even had
+he asked me as a personal favour to do so--if Uncle Keith had been rich
+I could have understood the marriage better, being rather a mercenary
+and far-sighted young person, but he had only a very small income. He
+was managing clerk in some mercantile house, and, being a thrifty soul,
+invested all his spare cash instead of spending it.
+
+Aunt Agatha had lived in grand houses all her life, but she was quite
+content with the little cottage at Putney to which her husband took her.
+They only kept one servant; but Aunt Agatha proved herself to be a
+notable housekeeper. She arranged and rearranged the old-fashioned
+furniture that had belonged to Uncle Keith's mother until she had made
+quite a charming drawing-room; but that was just her way; she had clever
+brains, and clever fingers, and to manipulate old materials into new
+fashions was just play work to her.
+
+But for me, I am perfectly convinced that Aunt Agatha would have called
+herself the happiest woman in the world, but my discontent leavened the
+household. If three people elect to live together, the success of the
+scheme demands that one of the three should not smile sourly on all
+occasions.
+
+For two whole years I tried to be amiable when Uncle Keith was in the
+room, and at last gave up the attempt in despair, baffled by my own evil
+tempers, and yet I will say I was not a bad-tempered girl. I must have
+had good in me or Aunt Agatha would not have been so fond of me. I call
+that a real crucial test--other people's fondness for us.
+
+Why is it so difficult to get on with some folk, very worthy people in
+their way?
+
+Why do some people invariably rub up one's fur until it bristles with
+discomfort? Why do these same thoroughly estimable creatures bring a
+sort of moral east wind with them, scarifying one's nerves? Surely it is
+beneath the dignity of a human being to be rasped by a harsh, drawling
+voice, or offended by trifling mannerisms. Uncle Keith was just like one
+of my sums--you might add him up, subtract from him, divide or multiply
+him, but he would never come right in the end; one always reckoned that
+he was more or less than he was. He was a little, pale, washed-out
+looking man, with sandy hair and prominent brown eyes. Being an old
+bachelor when he married Aunt Agatha, he had very precise, formal ways,
+and was methodical and punctual to a fault. Next to Uncle Keith, I hated
+that white-faced watch of his. I hated the slow, ponderous way in which
+he drew it from his pocket, and produced it for my special benefit.
+
+I have said that my detestation of Uncle Keith was somewhat
+unreasonable. I must own I had no grave reasons for my dislike. Uncle
+Keith had a good moral character; he was a steady church-goer, was
+painstaking and abstemious; never put himself in a passion, or, indeed,
+lost his temper for a minute; but how was a girl to tolerate a man who
+spent five minutes scraping his boots before he entered his own door,
+whatever the weather might be; who said, "Hir-rumph" (humph was what he
+meant) before every sentence, booming at one like a great bee; who
+always prefaced a lecture with a "my dear;" who would not read a paper
+until it was warmed; who would burn every cinder before fresh coals were
+allowed on the fire; who looked reproachfully at my crumbs (I crumbled
+my bread purposely at last), and scooped them carefully in his hand for
+the benefit of the birds, with the invariable remark, "Waste not, want
+not," a saying I learnt to detest?
+
+I suppose if we are ever admitted into heaven we shall find very odd
+people there; but perhaps they will have dropped their trying ways and
+peculiarities, as the chrysalis drops its case, and may develop all
+sorts of new prismatic glories. I once heard a lady say that she was
+afraid the society there would be rather mixed; she was a very exclusive
+person; but Solomon tells us that there is nothing new under the sun, so
+I suppose we shall never be without our modern Pharisees and Sadducees.
+The grand idea to me is that there will be room for all. I do not know
+when the idea first came to me that it was a mean thing to live under a
+man's roof, eating his bread and warming oneself at his fire, and all
+the time despising him in one's heart. I only know that one day the idea
+took possession of me, and, like an Eastern mustard seed, grew and
+flourished. Soon after that Uncle Keith had rather a serious loss--some
+mercantile venture in which he was interested had come to grief. I began
+to notice small retrenchments in the household; certain little luxuries
+were given up. Now and then Aunt Agatha grew a little grave as she
+balanced her weekly accounts. One night I took myself to task.
+
+"What business have you, a strong, healthy, young woman," I observed to
+myself, severely, "to be a burthen on these good folk? What is enough
+for two may be a tight fit for three; it was that new mantle of yours,
+Miss Merle, that has put out the drawing-room fire for three weeks, and
+has shut up the sherry in the sideboard. Is it fair or right that Aunt
+Agatha and Uncle Keith should forego their little comforts just because
+an idle girl is on their hands?"
+
+I pondered this question heavily before I summoned courage to speak to
+Aunt Agatha. To my surprise she listened to me very quietly, though her
+soft brown eyes grew a little misty--I did so love Aunt Agatha's eyes.
+
+"Dear," she said, very gently, "I wish this could have been prevented;
+but, for my husband's sake, I dare not throw cold water on your plan. I
+cannot deny that he has had a heavy loss, and that we have to be very
+careful. I would keep you with me if I could, Merle, for you are just
+like my own child, but Ezra is not young;" and here Aunt Agatha's
+forehead grew puckered with anxiety.
+
+"Oh, Aunt Agatha," I exclaimed, quite forgetting the gravity of my
+proposition in sudden, childish annoyance, "how can you call Uncle
+Keith, Ezra? It is such a hideous name."
+
+"Not to my ears," she answered, quite calmly; "a wife never thinks her
+husband's name hideous. He loves to hear me say it, and I love to please
+him, for though you may not believe it, Merle, I think there are very
+few men to compare with your uncle."
+
+She could actually say this to my face, looking at me all the time with
+those honest eyes! I could not forbear a little shrug at this, but she
+turned the subject, placidly, but with much dignity.
+
+"I have been a working bee all my life, and have been quite contented
+with my lot; if you could only follow my example, I should be perfectly
+willing to let you go. I have thought once or twice lately that if
+anything were to happen to me, you and your uncle would hardly be
+comfortable together; you do not study him sufficiently; you have no
+idea what he really is."
+
+I thought it better to remain silent.
+
+Aunt Agatha sighed a little as she went on.
+
+"I am not afraid of work for you, Merle, there is no life without
+activity. 'The idle man,' as someone observes, 'spins on his own axis in
+the dark.' 'A man of mere capacity undeveloped,' as Emerson says, 'is
+only an organised daydream with a skin on it.' Just listen to this,"
+opening a book that lay near her. "'Action and enjoyment are contingent
+upon each other. When we are unfit for work we are always incapable of
+pleasure; work is the wooing by which happiness is won.'"
+
+"Yes, yes," I returned, rather impatiently, for Aunt Agatha, with all
+her perfections, was too much given to proverbial and discursive
+philosophy; "but to reduce this to practice, what work can I do in this
+weary world?"
+
+"You cannot be a governess, not even a nursery governess, Merle," and
+here Aunt Agatha looked at me very gently, as though she knew her words
+must give me pain, and suddenly my cheeks grew hot and my eyelids
+drooped. Alas! I knew too well what Aunt Agatha meant; this was a sore
+point, the great difficulty and stumbling block of my young life.
+
+I had been well taught in a good school; I had had unusual advantages,
+for Aunt Agatha was an accomplished and clever woman, and spared no
+pains with me in her leisure hours; but by some freak of Nature, not
+such an unusual thing as people would have us believe, from some want of
+power in the brain--at least, so a clever man has since told me--I was
+unable to master more than the rudiments of spelling.
+
+I know some people would laugh incredulously at this, but the fact will
+remain.
+
+As a child I have lain sobbing on my bed, beaten down by a very anguish
+of humiliation at being unable to commit the column of double syllables
+to memory, and have only been comforted by Aunt Agatha's patience and
+gentleness.
+
+At school I had a severer ordeal. For a long time my teachers refused to
+admit my incapacity; they preferred attributing it to idleness,
+stubbornness, and want of attention; even Aunt Agatha was puzzled by it,
+for I was a quick child in other things, could draw very well for my
+age, and could accomplish wonders in needlework, was a fair scholar in
+history and geography, soon acquired a good French accent, and did some
+of my lessons most creditably.
+
+But the construction of words baffle me to this day. I should be
+unwilling to write the simplest letter without a dictionary lying
+snugly near my hand. I have learned to look my misfortune in the face,
+and to bear it with tolerable grace. With my acquaintances it is a
+standing joke, with my nearest and dearest friends it is merely an
+opportunity for kindly service and offers to write from my dictation,
+but when I was growing into womanhood it was a bitter and most shameful
+trial to me, one secretly lamented with hot tears and with a most
+grievous sense of humiliation.
+
+"No," Aunt Agatha repeated, in the old pitying voice I knew so well,
+"you cannot be even a nursery governess, Merle."
+
+"Nor a companion either," I exclaimed bitterly. "Old ladies want letters
+written for them."
+
+"That is very true," she replied, shaking her head.
+
+"I could be a nurse in a hospital--in fact, that is what I should like,
+but the training could not be afforded, it would be a pound a week, Aunt
+Agatha, and there would be my uniform and other expenses, and I should
+not get the smallest salary for at least two or three years."
+
+"I am afraid we must not think of that, Merle," and then I relapsed into
+silence from sheer sadness of heart. I had always so longed to be
+trained in a hospital, and then I could nurse wounded soldiers or little
+children. I always loved little children.
+
+But this idea must be given up, and yet it would not have mattered in a
+hospital if I had spelt "all-right" with one "l." I am quite sure my
+bandages would have been considered perfect, and that would have been
+more to the point.
+
+(_To be continued._)
+
+
+
+
+THE AMATEUR CHURCH ORGANIST.
+
+BY THE HON. VICTORIA GROSVENOR.
+
+
+We believe that young people generally have a desire to be useful.
+Sometimes not an actually formulated desire, but a vague intention which
+they mean some day shall have a practical issue, when and how they do
+not quite know, or in what way. It is proposed in this article to point
+out one means of eminent usefulness--_i.e._, that of amateur organ
+playing in our churches. It is scarcely necessary to show what a large
+field of good useful work is open to amateurs in this direction. We all
+know that on the one hand parishes wholly agricultural--the other
+suburban parishes in large towns--are utterly unable to pay for the
+services of a professional player; while there is nothing so calculated
+to lift up the heart of the congregations such as these are likely to
+obtain, as good music. Would it not therefore be a pleasant duty for
+anyone gifted with musical talent and leisure to qualify in the best
+manner possible for this ennobling and helpful occupation?
+
+The intending organ-player must ascertain that he or she has a gift for
+music, and this need not be of the highest order, as even a small
+portion of the gift can be improved with care, and fostered into
+usefulness. A first rate ear can be a snare to those who trust to it too
+much--although it is undoubtedly the best of servants, if kept in its
+proper sphere of work. A very ordinary measure of talent, supplemented
+by calm and good sense, clear power of thought, and determined
+perseverance, will be a good foundation to start with. Good sense and
+attention have more to do with the good music of ordinary persons (as
+opposed, we mean, to remarkably clever ones) than people are apt to
+think. It was said of Mendelssohn that music was the _accident_ of his
+being; and there are many of whom the same could be said, with this
+meaning--_i.e._, that the powers which make them succeed in music would
+enable them to succeed in other great things if attempted.
+
+We will therefore suppose the case of a young lady possessing a moderate
+gift for music, desiring to improve it and herself, and to take up
+organ playing with a view to real usefulness. She should first find out
+whether her playing on the piano is perfectly correct, taking the
+easiest possible music to exercise herself upon, and trying whether her
+musical ear is competent to be her teacher in the matter of correctness.
+If neither steady attention nor ear enable her to discover mistakes, she
+had better consider that music is not the talent God has given her to
+use to His glory. A musical ear may, however, be much improved by its
+possessor. With even the smallest of voices she should join a choir or
+madrigal society and learn to sing at sight. She should, when listening
+to a musical performance, try to guess its key. She should endeavour to
+know, without seeing, the sound and name of single notes on the piano,
+practising herself with her eyes shut. It is good practice, also, to
+take an easy chant or hymn tune, hitherto unknown, and try to get some
+idea of its melody and harmony without playing it. When all this is
+done, one of the most important tasks remains: that of mastering time in
+all its branches. Slovenliness in this particular is fatal to all music,
+above all to that for the organ, which is meant to guide and control. A
+feeling for rhythm and a quick-sighted accurate knowledge of time, may
+be much improved by playing with others, either duets on the piano, or
+accompaniments to voice or instrument. The player should compel herself
+to account for the time reason of every passage slowly, until she is
+able to do so with rapidity and precision at sight. At this point it may
+be well to begin lessons on the organ, taking great pains to become
+familiar with the technical part of the instrument, the names of stops
+and meaning of these names, mechanism and its use. Then will come the
+careful practice of pedals, which are at first so absolutely bewildering
+that amateurs are filled with despair at the apparent impossibilities
+they are asked to face with hope.
+
+Into the teacher's work it is not our province to go; but we would ask
+the learner to be armed with courage and perseverance, and to practise
+patiently. Success is more than likely.
+
+We now proceed with advice to one possessed of some knowledge of
+organ-playing and some acquaintance with its technical capabilities.
+First, we should say--Play on all available instruments, as no two are
+alike, and the stops are called by many different names, which must be
+identified quickly as emergencies arise. Then acquire a knowledge of
+harmony, specially useful in accompanying church music with dignity, and
+enabling the player to fill in chords which the vocal score (or voice
+parts) have left thin and ineffective. Volumes might be written on
+accompaniments; but on this subject we would advise amateurs to consult
+heart, head, and common sense, and we would recommend them to read Dr.
+Bridge's "Organ Accompaniment," one of Novello's music primers, which
+will open out to them many possibilities, on the use of which they must
+decide for themselves according to their technical ability and the
+effect they aim at. It may be they can only try to pull a few weak
+voices through the singing allotted to them--in which case a strong,
+steady accompaniment of the simplest description is the best.
+
+One word on voluntaries. These should be chosen with great care and the
+deepest respect for the church and the instrument, and kept well within
+the powers of the player. Amateurs do not as a rule obtain much control
+of their nerves, and the greatest help in the world is given by the
+knowledge that there is not a "difficult bit" coming. Voluntary books
+are not quite to be trusted, as their selection often contains operatic
+music very unfit for organ or church; but they generally contain some
+pieces of a sacred and dignified character, which may be useful. It is
+also dangerous for the inexperienced to plunge into easy arrangements of
+unknown music, taking perhaps wrong views of the time, and sometimes
+making the more experienced listener smile, if nothing worse, at the
+curious rendering of some well-known air, jumbled up with its obbligato
+accompaniment, the existence of which was entirely unknown to the poor
+player. Every organist should possess a metronome, and carefully
+ascertain with it the correct time of any music intended for use in
+public.
+
+Finally, if every small action is to be done to the glory of God, how
+much more the playing in His church! Let none take this noble work in
+hand without a desire to give, in its degree, the best work that can be
+given in absolute self-renunciation, humility, and reverence.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+EVERY GIRL A BUSINESS WOMAN.
+
+A PRACTICAL GUIDE TO THE WORLD OF INDUSTRY AND THRIFT.
+
+BY JAMES MASON.
+
+PART I.
+
+
+Every girl who is guided by common sense will aim at becoming a business
+woman. That is to say, she will try to cultivate habits of order,
+industry, perseverance, method, and punctuality, and will do her best to
+learn how to conduct formal correspondence, how to keep accounts, how to
+manage money, and what to do with savings. Besides this, she will make a
+point of knowing something about the laws relating to domestic life--the
+renting of houses and the employment of servants, for example--and she
+will push her inquiries in every direction, so as to acquire not only
+the right way of doing things, but the right way of forming a judgment
+upon them.
+
+A wise girl will thus greatly increase her usefulness in the world. She
+will be able to take part in the affairs of life with pleasure to
+herself and without being a trouble and hindrance to her neighbours.
+
+Another advantage may be pointed out. There are always people trying to
+get the better of those who know nothing, and their victims more often
+than not are ladies. It is easy to fall a prey to rogues and sharpers if
+one is ignorant of business, especially when nature has made women
+kind-hearted and experience has not rendered them suspicious. As a
+protection, there is nothing like being a business woman.
+
+Perhaps someone may say that "business woman" has a hard sound, and
+stands for a character precise, selfish, and uninteresting. That is not
+what we intend by it at all. Is a girl to be less loveable, less gentle,
+less charming, whenever we cease to say of her, That girl, in regard to
+all the ways of business, is a perfect simpleton? On the contrary,
+business is a fine training-school for many virtues; and of all good
+women, a good business woman may be reckoned the very best.
+
+Our articles are intended to be of use to two classes of girls. The
+first consists of those who either have or are likely to have a little
+money of their own, and need to know how to manage it and how to
+regulate those affairs which money always brings in its train. By
+ignorance of business many a useful life of this class as been marred.
+
+The second is made up of girls who have to earn their own living and
+make their own way in the world. These have a special need to know
+something about business. People as a rule are valuable in proportion to
+their knowledge--those who know nothing being simply worth nothing.
+
+One great reason for the work of girls and women being poorly paid, is
+that few know anything about either the principles or the practice of
+the most ordinary business affairs. We shall try in these articles to
+put girls in future on a better footing, and to make them in business
+equal, at any rate, to any average men. In this way there is a good
+chance of doubling their usefulness and value, and of more than doubling
+their independence.
+
+Nothing is done all at once, and in business, as in everything else, if
+you mean to build high you must begin low. A girl who wishes to be a
+business woman must start with accumulating the same sort of knowledge
+as an office-boy. We shall therefore try to deal with the subject simply
+and from the very beginning. You may sometimes be tempted to say, "Oh,
+we knew that before," but another girl may not have been so fortunate,
+and her ignorance must be taken as our reason for pointing out what
+appears to be familiar facts.
+
+We begin with the subject of business letters, and the first thing we
+shall say about them is--Be very particular about their appearance.
+There is a proverb, to be sure, warning us that appearances are
+deceitful, but that proverb is only true occasionally; in general we may
+safely draw an inference as to the writer from the look of her letter.
+An ill-folded, clumsy, up-and-down-hill, blotted, greasy-looking letter
+almost certainly comes from an untidy house and a stupid girl, whereas a
+neat, carefully-written epistle suggests just as surely the opposite.
+
+In friendly letters our correspondents know something about us
+beforehand, but in business we may be writing to perfect strangers, who
+can only judge of us by the figure we cut on a sheet of note-paper. To
+secure prompt attention and a polite reply, no plan works so well as
+putting good taste into the appearance of letters. They are really a
+part of ourselves, and a girl should as soon think of sending them
+marked with carelessness to either a friend or a stranger as of going to
+make a call in a patched frock, a faded hat, and gloves with holes.
+
+An indispensable point in a business letter is to have the meaning quite
+clear. It must say exactly what the writer intends, leaving nothing to
+be guessed at.
+
+And after clearness the next point is shortness. A brief letter makes
+far more impression than a long one, besides which it usually gets
+attended to at once. We have known a man open a lady's letter on a
+matter of business, and, seeing it a long rigmarole, put it at once in
+his pocket and let it lie there forgotten for a week.
+
+That long letters receive most notice is a mistake into which girls fall
+very often, but she who aspires to be a real business woman must give
+herself to the study of such short epistles as that of the officer who
+sent in as his official report, "Sir,--I have the honour to inform you
+that I have just shot a man who came to kill me.--Your obedient servant,
+----."
+
+All letters should be headed with the address from which they were
+written, the day of the month, and the year; in this way:--
+
+ 2, Ireland Avenue,
+ Stratford-on-Avon, 9th October, 1886.
+
+It is an irritating peculiarity with many people unaccustomed to
+business to be careless on this point. Common sense suggests that they
+should mend their ways, and by putting the date and a full address on
+every letter, save their correspondents sometimes a good deal of
+trouble.
+
+There is a short way, occasionally employed, of writing the date; for
+example, 4 / 7 / 86; meaning the 4th day of the 7th month (July, that
+is) of 1886. This contraction--which is improved by having the month put
+in Roman figures (as, 4 / vii. / 86)--is handy now and again, but it
+does not strike one as looking particularly well at the head of a
+letter.
+
+Put the name of the person to whom the letter is written at the
+beginning or the end. Long ago, when envelopes were not in use, this did
+not matter so much, because the name of the person addressed could be
+seen by turning to the postal direction; but nowadays the envelope
+bearing the address is dropped into the waste-paper basket, and a second
+address is required to give the letter completeness, and enable third
+parties, perhaps, to understand it.
+
+As to how to begin, whether "Sir" or "Madam," or "Dear Sir" or "Dear
+Madam," everyone may please herself, only taking note that the "Dear"
+should be omitted when any special reason exists for being distant and
+formal. Not, however, that the word when used in a business letter has
+anything of an affectionate meaning. It is just one of the drops of oil
+used to keep the machinery of human intercourse working smoothly.
+Perhaps it originally crept in to soften the sharp effect of "Sir,"
+which sounds for all the world as if it would snap a correspondent's
+head off.
+
+"Dear Sir" and "Dear Sirs" are both right, but "Dear Gentlemen" is not,
+though there seems no reason against it. If you begin "Sir" you must not
+end "I remain, dear sir." The beginning and the end should be all of a
+piece, and in both places the same form of address should be used.
+
+In concluding a business letter you may say "yours respectfully," or
+"your obedient servant," or "yours truly," or "yours faithfully,"
+according to the degree of intimacy existing between you and your
+correspondent. But really there are no very nice distinctions to be
+observed between such phrases, and their use may safely be left to every
+girl's common sense and discretion.
+
+Take pains to sign your name always so that people can read it. Some,
+out of pure affectation, conceal what they call themselves under a
+scribble which none can read--"a hopeless puzzle of intemperate
+scratches." How is a stranger, getting a letter signed in this way, to
+know to whom to send a reply, unless, as is sometimes done, he cuts out
+the signature, pastes it on the envelope, and adds the address? But
+illegible signatures, it must be confessed, are more often a man's folly
+than a woman's.
+
+Always, too, sign your name the same way: get into the habit of it.
+Don't let it be to-day "Mary G. Snodham," and to-morrow "Mary Snodham,"
+and the day after "M. G. Snodham." If character comes out anywhere in
+writing, it is in the signature, and it ought to be every day the same,
+the same in words, the same in writing, and the same in flourishes--that
+is to say, if there are any flourishes.
+
+When you send a Post Office order to anyone, however, you may make an
+exception to this rule. It is a good plan to sign a letter accompanying
+such an order with initials only. When this is done, should the letter
+fall into the hands of dishonest people, the chances are considerably
+reduced of their knowing the name of the sender so as to get payment of
+the order. In getting the money for a Post Office order it is always
+necessary, as perhaps you know, to tell at the post-office who sent it.
+
+When you (we shall call you Elizabeth Fisher) are asked to write a
+letter in the name of another person (call her Janet Constable), how
+should you sign it? Not, certainly, by just writing Janet Constable;
+that would be highly improper. To put another person's name to any
+letter or document whatever, even in fun, is not even to be dreamt
+about. You must sign--
+
+ Yours truly,
+ _for_ JANET CONSTABLE,
+ ELIZABETH FISHER.
+
+Or, if you like it better--
+
+ Yours respectfully,
+ JANET CONSTABLE,
+ _p._ ELIZABETH FISHER.
+
+In this case the _p._ stands for _per_, and means that Janet Constable
+signs the letter _by_ or _through_ you. You may write _per_ in full, if
+you like.
+
+Sometimes you may have to write inquiring about the character of people
+or their standing from a money point of view. In doing so, put the name
+or names on a slip of paper and gum it at the foot of your letter, so
+that it can be easily torn off. Your correspondent can then at once
+destroy the slip, and should your letter or her reply afterwards be read
+by other people, they will probably be none the wiser, for they will
+only see in your letter an inquiry regarding the person or persons
+"noted at foot," and in hers an answer about the person or persons
+"about whom you inquire."
+
+All enclosures sent in a letter should be mentioned in a note in the
+left-hand bottom corner after signing one's name. Thus:--
+
+ Enclosed:
+ Postal Order, 10s. 6d.
+ Recipe for cooking rattlesnakes.
+ Pattern: the Tullochgorum mantle.
+
+We have spoken about the clearness and brevity required in business
+letters, but to the subject of style a few lines more may be devoted.
+Business letters are of necessity dry and matter-of-fact, and in writing
+them no time should be lost in hunting for fine expressions. They should
+contain politeness, but light and airy sentences are worse than thrown
+away.
+
+"Accuracy of expression," says Mr. George Seton, in his pleasant "Gossip
+about Letters and Letter-writers," "as distinguished from looseness and
+slovenliness of statement, is of the utmost consequence--not only with
+the view of saving the time of one's correspondent, but also to prevent
+what may prove a very serious misunderstanding. I have known many cases
+of prolonged litigation which were chiefly owing to some doubtful or
+equivocal expressions in the course of a business correspondence."
+
+There are many phrases peculiar to business letters--formal beginnings,
+for example, such as--
+
+"I am favoured with yours of 14th curt."
+
+"I duly received your favour of 19th inst."
+
+"I am in receipt of your lines of y'day, and note that, &c."
+
+"I beg to confirm my last respects of 25th ult."
+
+"I beg to confirm my letter of yesterday."
+
+These phrases and many others which will appear in the course of these
+articles may seem formal enough, but we must not expect in business to
+meet with the language of story-books.
+
+A common business term is "advice," used to mean information sent by
+letter. For example: "I wait your advice as to the despatch of the
+parcel." A funny misunderstanding of the word occurred recently, when a
+provincial postmaster, new to his duties, in the United States, sent the
+following communication to the Postmaster-General:--
+
+"Seeing by the regulations that I am required to send you a letter of
+advice, I must plead in excuse that I have been postmaster but a short
+time; but I will say, if your office pays no better than mine, I advise
+you to give it up."
+
+Every subject mentioned in a letter should have a separate paragraph.
+Very formal, you may say. Perhaps; but it is also very clear.
+
+Always acknowledge receipt of business letters at the earliest possible
+opportunity. If they come with money, an acknowledgment ought to be sent
+by return of post, that is to say, by the first post after they arrive.
+The same rule may safely be applied to letters coming with any enclosure
+whatever. Sometimes delay may be of no consequence, but to answer at
+once will at any rate get you the credit of courtesy.
+
+Of all business letters a copy should be kept. If you write few they may
+be copied by hand into a book kept for the purpose, but if many the use
+of a copying-press saves a great deal of monotonous labour, and secures
+absolute accuracy besides.
+
+The way to use a copying-press is this. Write the letter with
+copying-ink. Then put a sheet of oiled paper under the leaf of the
+letter-book on which you wish to take the copy. Letter-books of thin
+paper are sold for the purpose. Wet the leaf with a brush or soft
+sponge. On the top of the wet leaf put a sheet of blotting paper, and on
+the top of that another sheet of oiled paper. Then shut the book, put it
+in the press, and give it a squeeze for a second to take off the
+superfluous moisture. Take out the book, remove the blotting-paper and
+the top sheet of oiled paper, and in their place put your letter face
+downwards on the damp page. Shut the book, put it back into the
+copying-press, give it a hard squeeze by means of the lever or screw,
+leave it in from half a minute to a minute, and the whole thing is done;
+an exact copy of the letter will be left in your letter-book.
+
+A letter being written and copied, has to be posted; but before being
+posted it must be addressed. The address should be written neatly and
+plainly, neither too high up nor too low down.
+
+To say, Be sure to put the direction on your letters is not unnecessary
+advice. Thousands of letters are posted every year without any address
+whatever. In the year ending 31st March, 1886, there were no fewer than
+26,228 of them, and of this large number 1,620 contained cash and
+cheques to the amount, in all, of £3,733 17s. 5d.
+
+Be sure, too, that your letters are properly fastened. On this subject,
+hear Mr. George Seton. "There is," he says, "no real security in wafers,
+and probably still less in adhesive envelopes, which are now in almost
+universal use. Both may easily be loosened by the application of either
+water or steam. The best mode of securing a letter is first to wafer it
+and then seal it with wax. When, however, an adhesive envelope is used,
+the proper course is to _damp_, rather than wet, _both_ sides of the
+flap before pressing it down; and if the paper is very thick, the upper
+side should be again damped after being pressed down."
+
+Insufficient and wrong addresses occasion a great deal of trouble to the
+Post Office officials, and this trouble one of the present
+Postmaster-General's predecessors remarks, with some pathos, "ought
+scarcely to be given to make up for what generally arises from the
+carelessness of the writers, without an additional charge." Last year,
+through some fault in the addresses, no fewer than 12,822,067 letters,
+postcards, newspapers, and parcels were received in the returned letter
+offices.
+
+As an example of an insufficiently-addressed letter, we may mention one
+the subject of a complaint made by a Mrs. Jones of Newmarket. She stated
+that a letter had been posted to her, but had not reached her. It
+appeared, however, on inquiry, that there were twenty-nine Mrs. Joneses
+at the place, and that there was nothing in the address to help the
+postman to decide between their several claims.
+
+When money or anything of value is sent through the post, the letter in
+which it goes should be registered. By this means we can be almost
+absolutely sure of its travelling safely. The fee for a registered
+letter was at one time half-a-crown, and not so long ago was a shilling.
+In 1878 it was reduced from 4d. to 2d. Not only has the fee been reduced
+to what may be thought the lowest possible point, but registered letter
+envelopes are now sold in different and convenient sizes. The Post
+Office also undertakes to make good, under certain reasonable
+conditions, up to £2 the value of any registered letter which it loses.
+
+If people who have these facilities for sending letters securely
+provided for them choose to run the risk of loss, they deserve very
+little sympathy if the chance goes against them. Last year an
+unregistered letter containing a cheque was alleged to have been stolen
+in the post. It was found, however, to have been duly delivered by being
+pushed under the front door, and afterwards to have been torn in pieces
+by some puppies inside the house. The fragments were in the end
+discovered in the straw of the dog-kennel. Now, had the sender only
+spent 2d. in registering this letter, a receipt would have been taken on
+its delivery, and all chance of its falling into the paws of the
+puppies would have been prevented.
+
+But it is wonderful what people, penny-wise and pound foolish, will
+sometimes do to save 2d. A few years back the sealing-wax on a letter
+was found to contain £1 10s. in gold coins. There could hardly be a more
+stupid way of sending money.
+
+If coin, or watches, or jewellery are posted in letters or packets
+without registration, and the fact is discovered, the Post Office people
+bring into force a system of registration by compulsion, and on delivery
+charge a fee of 8d. in addition to the ordinary postage.
+
+When coins are sent in a letter they should on no account be put in
+loose, but should be packed so as to move about as little as possible.
+The best way is to take a card, and, cutting quite through to the other
+side, make a cross on it for each coin; then slip the coin into the
+cross, so that it is held in its place by the tongues of cardboard, two
+on each side.
+
+Who owns letters whilst they are in the post? In Great Britain the
+ownership of a letter whilst it is in the post lies in the Queen, as
+represented by her Postmaster-General and her Secretary of State.
+"Neither the sender nor the person to whom it is sent can claim to
+interfere with a letter whilst it is in the Post Office. Only the
+warrant of a Secretary of State can stay its delivery." Once a letter is
+dropped into a letter-box it is like a spoken word, it cannot be
+recalled.
+
+After letters come postcards, which were introduced into this country in
+October, 1870, and have proved a great convenience to many people,
+saving them both time and money. By means of reply postcards you can
+make sure of an answer from a correspondent without putting her to any
+expense or to any trouble worth mentioning.
+
+The back of the postcard is for the message; nothing must be put on the
+front except the address. This limitation of space is useful for the
+cultivation of brevity; but those who have a great deal to say may
+derive consolation from the fact that on the back of a postcard you can,
+by writing small, easily put at least four hundred and sixty words! We
+do not, however, say that such a performance, good enough for amusement,
+would be like that of a woman of business.
+
+All business letters ought to be preserved. They should be folded neatly
+longways and all of a size, and docketed, as it is called--that is to
+say, the date and the name of the sender and his (or her) address, and
+the subject, should be put on the back thus:
+
+ 6th September, 1886.
+ MARTIN ROSE AND CO.,
+ Liverpool.
+ Remittance, £10 19s. 2d.
+
+Do not, however, crowd these particulars together, as has been done here
+for convenience in printing; leave a considerable space between the
+first and second, and the third and fourth lines. When letters are
+folded and docketed they should be tied up in the order of their dates,
+or put away in pigeon holes under the different letters of the alphabet.
+One can never tell when it may be necessary to refer to old letters on
+matters of business, so it is prudent to keep them all. Doing so and
+turning them over occasionally is also useful for giving us a humble
+opinion of ourselves; we see by the light of additional experience how
+we might often have managed things much better than we did.
+
+Besides letters and postcards, telegrams furnish another means of
+communication. For a telegram sent to any place in the United Kingdom,
+the charge is sixpence for the first twelve words, and a halfpenny for
+every word after the first twelve. Addresses are charged for, so a
+sixpennyworth of telegraphing does not represent a long message, but by
+ingenuity--and a business woman is nothing without ingenuity--a few
+words may be made to mean a great deal. The cost of a reply to a
+telegram may be prepaid.
+
+About the newspaper post, the book post, and the parcel post, not much
+need be said. Always be careful about wrappers. A great many newspapers
+and books escape from their wrappers every day, and land in the returned
+letter office. In sending parcels the packing is often a weak point; it
+is not so much that people are either handless or stupid, they are just
+thoughtless. "It must be borne in mind," says the Postmaster-General,
+"although, of course, every care will be taken by the officers, that a
+parcel with fragile or perishable contents must be several times handled
+before it reaches its destination, and will probably have to be packed
+with many others of a different kind and shape, or more weighty and
+bulky. Eggs, butter, and fruit, especially delicate fruit, such as
+grapes and peaches, should be placed in strong boxes and so placed as
+not to shift. Fresh flowers should be carefully packed in strong boxes;
+but cardboard boxes should not be used for the purpose, as they are
+often reduced to pulp by the moisture which exudes from the contents.
+Fish or game should be carefully packed in strong boxes, or hampers, or
+in perforated boxes."
+
+Remember that some things are forbidden to be sent by post--live
+animals, for instance. This prohibition is very little regarded by some
+people. Last year, in Dublin alone, two hens, eight mice, and two
+hedgehogs were stopped on their way through the post. One of the hens
+which was addressed to a veterinary surgeon in London, was in bad
+health, and though carefully attended to, died in the office. The rest
+of the animals were given up alive to the senders.
+
+Certificates of the posting of parcels can be got at all post offices.
+If you have any doubt about the trustworthiness of the person entrusted
+with the posting of a parcel, instructions should be given to bring back
+a receipt. A few months ago the Post Office was charged at Liverpool
+with the non-delivery of a bottle of wine and a box of figs. It turned
+out, however, that the missing goods had never come under its charge,
+the person to whom the packet had been given to post having eaten the
+figs and drunk the wine.
+
+Parcels can also be insured against loss and damage by the payment of a
+small sum. Paying a penny insures to the extent of £5 and twopence to
+the amount of £10.
+
+In order to understand the outs and ins of the Post Office--and it is a
+subject with which every sensible person should be familiar--let a girl
+invest sixpence in a copy of the Post Office Guide, a publication of
+which an edition is issued every quarter. She will there find everything
+necessary to be known about the posting of letters, postcards,
+newspapers, book packets, and parcels to places in the United Kingdom,
+or abroad, the sending of telegrams, the rates for money and postal
+orders, and the regulations of the Savings Bank. To turn over its 300
+pages or so is decidedly interesting. One sees what a complicated
+machinery is now employed for the convenience of the public, what
+wonders--to speak of letters alone--can be done for a penny, and how
+thousands of miles can be reduced to insignificance by the magic of
+twopence-halfpenny.
+
+In the twelve months from the 31st of March, 1885, to the same day of
+this year, the number of letters delivered in the United Kingdom was
+1,403,547,900, giving an average of 38.6 to each person in the kingdom.
+The total number of postcards was 171,290,000. Adding to the letters and
+postcards the book-packets, newspapers, and parcels which passed through
+the Post Office during the twelve months, we have a grand total of
+2,091,183,822, which shows an average to each person of 57.5.
+
+
+
+
+VARIETIES.
+
+
+THE "WOMAN OF STENAY."
+
+"And so you have not heard the story of the 'Woman of Stenay'?" said a
+Lorraine peasant. "It was in war-time, and she offered a barrel of wine
+to a detachment of Austrians, saying--
+
+"'You are thirsty, friends. Drink. You are welcome to all my store.' And
+as she spoke she drank a cupful in their honour.
+
+"The soldiers accepted with pleasure, and in a few minutes four hundred
+men were writhing on the ground in agony.
+
+"Then the 'Woman of Stenay' rose, and with her dying breath shrieked
+out--
+
+"'You are all poisoned! _Vive la France!_'
+
+"She then fell back a corpse."
+
+This is the legend of Lorraine, and the memory of its heroine is revered
+by the peasantry as highly as that of Charlotte Corday.
+
+
+SINGING SERVANTS.
+
+Tusser, in his "Points of Huswifry united to the Comforts of Husbandry,"
+published in 1570, recommends the country housewife to select servants
+who sing at their work as being usually the most painstaking and the
+best. He says--
+
+ "Such servants are oftenest painful and good
+ That sing in their labour, as birds in the wood."
+
+
+A HINT FOR WORKERS.--St. Bernard has said that the more he prayed and
+read his Bible the better he did his ordinary work and the more clearly
+and regularly did he conduct his correspondence. An increase of private
+devotion will be found not to lessen one's power of work or one's
+efficiency in ordinary duties.
+
+
+OUR OWN SELVES.--How can you learn self-knowledge? Never by meditation,
+but best by action. Try to do your duty, and you will soon find what you
+are worth. What is your duty? The exigency of the day.--_Goethe._
+
+
+USELESS ANXIETY.--I shall add to my list as the eighth deadly sin that
+of anxiety of mind, and resolve not to be pining and miserable when I
+ought to be grateful and happy.--_Sir Thomas Barnard._
+
+
+THE MOONLIGHT SONATA.--The "Moonlight Sonata" is an absurd title which
+has for years been attached, both in Germany and England, to one of
+Beethoven's sonatas. It is said to have been derived from the expression
+of a German critic comparing the first movement to a boat wandering by
+moonlight on the Lake of Lucerne.
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: THE SHEPHERD'S FAIRY]
+
+THE SHEPHERD'S FAIRY
+
+A PASTORALE.
+
+BY DARLEY DALE, Author of "Fair Katherine," etc.
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE FAIRY'S ORIGIN.
+
+"Die Eifersucht ist eine Leidenschaft der mit Eifer sucht muss Leiden
+schaffen."--_German Proverb._
+
+
+Very many years ago, in a valley a few miles from the coast, there stood
+a French château, beautifully situated in a handsome park near the
+Norman village of Carolles. The rich woodland scenery, the green
+pastures with their large wild fences now laden with wild roses; the
+shady lanes, whose banks will soon be covered with the long, bright
+green fronds of the hartstongue, and the delicate drooping trichomanes;
+the fine timber, and the picturesque farmhouses with their thatched
+roofs nestling in the valleys--all tend to give a home-like English air
+to the scenery of Normandy. And the district in which the Château de
+Thorens stands possesses all these attractions for an English eye. Not
+that any English people lived in the château; the De Thorens were
+French, or rather Norman, to the backbone, descended from the great
+duke, and proud as Lucifer of their birth. Pride and poverty are
+generally supposed to go together; and though poor is perhaps hardly the
+word to apply to people who could afford to live in the ease and luxury
+which prevailed at Château de Thorens, yet for their rank the De Thorens
+were not rich, and, consequently, after the fashion of many French
+families, there were three generations of them now all living under the
+ancestral roof.
+
+First there was the old baroness, a picturesque old lady with very white
+hair and piercing black eyes, with whom we have very little to do; then
+there was her eldest son, the present baron, for his father had been
+dead some years, and his beautiful young wife, whom he was so
+passionately fond of that he was jealous--dreadfully jealous--of her
+love for her baby, a little girl a few months old; and, lastly, there
+were the baron's three younger brothers, who with Père Yvon, the
+chaplain, made up the family party. The two younger brothers were mere
+boys, still under Père Yvon's charge, for he acted as tutor to them as
+well as chaplain; but Léon de Thorens was a young man of
+five-and-twenty, only a year or two younger than the baron. He was a
+fine, handsome man, tall and thin, with his mother's fine black eyes and
+small well-cut nose and mouth. He was of a bold, reckless nature, full
+of animal spirits, the very life of the house when he was at home, which
+was seldom, as he owned a yacht, in which he spent a great deal of his
+time. He was his mother's favourite son, and both he and she had often
+privately regretted that he was not the eldest.
+
+The baron was smaller and fairer than Léon, and not so handsome, though
+there was a strong family likeness between the brothers. He was of a
+quieter disposition, and his restlessness took an intellectual rather
+than a physical form, his wanderings being confined to the shelves of
+the valuable library which the château boasted, instead of extending
+over the seas on which Léon spent so much of his time. The baron's
+studious nature had endeared him very much to Père Yvon, with whom he
+was a prime favourite, and who had never shown him any of the severity
+of which the other brothers often complained, but, on the contrary, had
+erred on the opposite side with the baron, whose wishes had never been
+crossed in any way, and who had grown up to think himself the one
+important person in the world to whom the convenience of everyone else
+must be sacrificed.
+
+For the first year of their married life the pretty baroness had
+contributed as much as Père Yvon to spoil her husband, whose every whim
+she had humoured until her baby was born, and then, much to his
+astonishment, the baron found that his beautiful, gentle wife had a will
+of her own, and, what was still worse in his eyes, a large place in her
+heart for someone else besides himself, and although that someone else
+was only his infant daughter, the baron was jealous.
+
+In vain had he urged that the baby should be sent away to some peasant
+to nurse until it was a year or two old, as he and all his brothers had
+been, after a very common custom in French families. No, the baroness
+would not hear of such a thing; she could not live without her baby, and
+every moment she could spare she spent by its cradle. Indeed, so
+infatuated was she with her new possession, whose every movement was a
+delight to her, that she did not notice the baron became daily more and
+more morose, and that an ominous frown had settled on his fine forehead,
+while his mouth was closed with a determination that boded ill for his
+wife and daughter. But the baroness lived so much in her child that she
+did not observe the change in her husband; and as he never allowed the
+baby to be brought into his presence, the baroness saw but little of him
+except at meals, when all the others were present, and Léon's wild
+spirits covered his brother's depression and silence.
+
+At last, one fine June morning, matters reached a climax, when the
+family sat down to their one o'clock _déjeuner_. The baroness was late;
+the first course was finished, and still she did not appear.
+
+"Where is Mathilde, Arnaut?" asked the old baroness.
+
+"I don't know," said the baron, sulkily.
+
+"I do," said Léon; "she is worshipping at the shrine of that precious
+baby of yours, Arnaut. Why on earth don't you send it away till it is
+old enough to amuse us?"
+
+"Go and tell Madame la Baronne the soup is already finished," said the
+baron to a servant at his elbow; but he vouchsafed no further answer.
+
+"I think Arnaut has suggested that the baby should be sent away, but
+Mathilde objects," remarked the old baroness.
+
+"Send it away without asking her, then. Give her a pug instead; it will
+be much more amusing, and not half the trouble the baby is," said Léon.
+
+Here the servant returned to say madame would take her _déjeuner_ in the
+nursery, as the nurse was out and she could not leave the baby.
+
+"Really, Mathilde is too absurd, when there are at least three or four
+other servants in the house who could look after the baby as well as the
+nurse," said the old baroness, helping herself to some omelette.
+
+"She is mad," muttered the baron, angrily.
+
+"Quite, all women are; there can be no doubt about that. Look here,
+Arnaut, it is quite clear if you don't send that infant away, you might
+just as well live _en garçon_, like me, as I foresee you won't have much
+of Mathilde's society now," said Léon.
+
+"It does not require much foresight to predict that," said the baron,
+bitterly.
+
+"Well, if Mathilde won't send it away, just hand it over to me the next
+time I take a cruise, which will be as soon as ever there is wind enough
+to fill my sails, and I'll place the child somewhere where there is no
+fear of Mathilde getting it again till it is of a reasonable age," said
+Léon.
+
+The idea of handing the baby over to the tender mercies of Léon struck
+them all as so comic that a general laugh, in which all but the baron
+joined, greeted this speech, which was forgotten as soon as it was
+uttered by the speaker.
+
+A few days after Léon announced that he was going on board his yacht
+that evening; a south wind was blowing, and he should take a cruise up
+the Channel. Would the baron go with him? They were sure to have fine
+weather, and it would be delightful at sea in this heat. The baron
+declined the invitation, as he was a wretched sailor; but that evening,
+when he and Léon were smoking after dinner, he said, suddenly, "Where
+are you going, Léon?"
+
+"I don't know; it depends on the wind. I may run over to England, or I
+may only go to the Channel Isles. I shall see."
+
+"Shall you touch anywhere?"
+
+"Oh, yes, I shall go ashore; I shan't take provisions for more than a
+week. Why?"
+
+The baron looked round the verandah in which they were sitting to make
+sure that they were alone, and having satisfied himself of this he leant
+forward and said, in a half-whisper, "Tiens, Léon! Will you help me? I
+am determined to stand it no longer; it is wearing my life out; I have
+not a moment's peace. If I don't get rid of it I believe I shall go
+mad."
+
+"What is it you are talking of? I'll help you if I can, but what is
+wearing your life out?" said Léon.
+
+[Illustration: THE BARONESS.]
+
+"The baby, of course," said the baron.
+
+"The baby! Well, but what do you want me to do with that! I can't kill
+it, you know."
+
+"Of course not, but you said in joke the other day you would take it
+with you on one of your trips, and put it out to nurse. I wish to
+heaven, Léon, you'd do it in reality. It is no use my sending it to
+anyone near here; Mathilde would go after it the next day. My only
+chance is to send it somewhere where it will be safe, of course, and
+well looked after, but where Mathilde can't go after it, and as she
+would go to the end of the world for it if she knew where it was, it
+must go where she can't find it; she must not know where it is. No one,
+indeed, need know but you, for as far as I am concerned the less I know
+about it at present the better; it has spoilt all my happiness. Mathilde
+is so wrapped up in that child she does not care a fig for me now; in
+fact, I rarely see her. If you can only put that infant safely out of
+our way for a year or two, I'll never forget it, Léon."
+
+"Are you in real sober earnest, Arnaut?" asked Léon, who, in his
+astonishment, had risen to his feet, and was puffing away vigorously at
+his cigar.
+
+"Of course I am. I am willing to pay handsomely for it, and I shall
+depend upon you putting it where it will be well taken care of. As for
+all the rest, I leave it to you to take it where you like--Australia if
+you wish, only don't tell me where it is, or I might cut my own throat
+by telling Mathilde if she makes a great scene, as she will when it is
+gone. Will you do it, Léon?"
+
+"Whew!" whistled Léon. "I don't care for the work, for if anything
+should happen to the child Mathilde would never forgive me nor you
+either. However, if you insist, I think I could manage it, but as I am
+going to start in two or three hours, there is not much time. I must go
+down to the yacht and speak to my men first. If I may tell them I am
+taking the child by your express wish I could manage it, I think. The
+next difficulty is where to take it, but I have an idea about that, so
+I'll be off now, and see what I can arrange. I shall ride, so I shall be
+back in an hour."
+
+"Tell them anything you like, except not to let anyone know where you
+leave the child," replied the baron, as Léon started on an errand which,
+in spite of his protest to the contrary, was thoroughly after his own
+heart; indeed, any mad freak such as this was quite in his line.
+
+Among his crew he had an English sailor who acted as carpenter, and, as
+Léon often said, was worth two or three French sailors in a gale or an
+emergency. He knew the Channel, too, as well as a pilot, and, indeed
+often acted in that capacity; he was an honest, trustworthy man--at
+least, so Léon thought; and as he rode over the hills to Carolles, he
+decided to take this man into his confidence, and see if he could help
+him; it was possible this Englishman knew of some of his own
+countrywomen who would undertake the charge of the child.
+
+Accordingly, when he reached his yacht, Léon called for John Smith, and
+had a long conversation with him in English, which he spoke fairly well,
+the result of which was the carpenter, after a little thought, declared
+he knew of a shepherd and his wife in Sussex who, he felt sure, would
+undertake the charge of the child; his only fear was that they might
+have some scruples about keeping the matter a secret, and might want to
+know who the child was; but if Léon would leave this to him to arrange,
+he could, he thought, manage it so that the shepherd should have no idea
+to whom the child belonged, nor why it was put into his care.
+
+"Where does this good man live?" asked Léon.
+
+"About four or five miles from Brighton, sir. The wind is favourable; we
+might run across in twenty-four hours or less if it lasts, and I think
+it will; we shall have the tide with us going out if we start at ten
+to-night," said the carpenter.
+
+"Well, that is settled. Now the next point is, who is to take care of it
+on board? It must be fed; who of our men understands babies best?"
+
+"I can't undertake that, sir, but there's Pierre Legros, he has half a
+dozen of his own, and when he is at home looks after them all I believe;
+he ought to know all about it."
+
+"Call Pierre, then."
+
+Pierre Legros was accordingly called, and, on hearing what was required
+of him, professed with pride his ability to act as nurse during the
+voyage; and having commissioned him to lay in a stock of food for the
+baby, about which Léon's ideas were exceedingly vague, Léon rode back to
+the château.
+
+The baron was on the lookout for him, and was delighted to hear all was
+arranged for the baby's removal.
+
+"I have not been idle since you have been gone. Luckily Mathilde has a
+headache, so I have sent her to bed, and I sat with her till she was
+asleep. My next care was to get rid of the nurse, so I have packed her
+off to Brécy with one of the other servants for some medicine for
+Mathilde, and the coast is clear to the nursery now. There is only one
+of the housemaids with the baby, and when you are ready to start you
+must lose something and require her to find it while I secure the child.
+Lastly, I ordered the dogcart, and said I would drive you."
+
+"But how about the child?" interrupted Léon.
+
+"I am coming to that. Just as we are going to start, you must lose a
+stick or a coat. I'll offer to go back for it, and meet you at the side
+door; there is a staircase leading to the nursery close to it, down
+which I shall come with the baby after I have sent the housemaid who is
+guarding it to look for your stick. We shall be off and the baby on
+board before it is missed, for the girl is sure to stay gossiping with
+the other servants when we are off."
+
+"Well, I hope you'll succeed, but I confess I think this is the most
+difficult part of the affair. However, there is no time to lose; you had
+better order the dogcart at once, while I go and say good-bye to mother
+and the boys. We must be off in twenty minutes," replied Léon.
+
+Half an hour later the brothers were seated in the dogcart, while the
+old baroness, with a shawl thrown round her head, stood on the steps
+under the portico to catch the last glimpse of her handsome Léon, with
+her two younger boys by her side, and Père Yvon and some of the servants
+in the background. The groom had just let go of the horse's bridle when
+Léon exclaimed--
+
+"Wait a minute! I have forgotten my Malacca cane. I lent it to you the
+other day, Arnaut. I must have it. Where shall I find it?"
+
+"So you did. Here, one of you boys, run into my--but no, you'll wake
+Mathilde, I'll go myself. Here, Léon, take the reins, and drive round to
+the side door; I'll meet you there," said the baron, descending from the
+dogcart, and running into the house.
+
+(_To be continued._)
+
+
+
+
+FASHIONABLE EMBROIDERY.
+
+
+The fancy embroidery of the present day is of such varied character and
+make that all would-be workers will find among the diversities of stitch
+and material some description that suits their particular need and
+ingenuity.
+
+A few years ago one embroidery alone claimed attention. This was the
+celebrated crewel work, of which there is no fault to be found in the
+execution and design of its higher grades, but which, like all fancy
+work that becomes the rage and is cheapened and multiplied without any
+regard to reason, degenerated to the most impossible designs and the
+worst execution attainable. Thus crewel work passed away, and though the
+best kinds are still to be met with, it is really superseded in modern
+drawing-rooms by embroideries all originating in the present desire
+after Oriental colouring and design, but of kinds distinctly
+characteristic and individual.
+
+The work known as Leek embroidery recommends itself in many ways, it
+being very reasonable in price, easily executed, and extremely rich and
+handsome when finished. The foundation is Tussore silk, specially made
+with the pattern to be embroidered upon it printed upon the foundation,
+during its manufacture, and therefore indelible. The colouring of the
+foundation is either cream, straw, pink, blue, green, or terra-cotta,
+and the pattern is not printed in outline only, but filled up with
+indications guiding the arrangement for the centres of flowers, veins of
+leaves, and other distinguishing marks. To work the embroidery it is
+necessary to line the Tussore with fine unbleached muslin, and to work
+with Tussore silk and Japanese gold thread. The Tussore silk costs 1d.
+the skein, and is dyed in every shade of Oriental colouring. Three to
+four shades of a colour are used to work in a flower, and two shades of
+green for the leaves. The stitch is crewel-stitch worked very close. No
+shading about each leaf is necessary, but different greens are used for
+different leaves, and thus a variety of colouring is attained without
+trouble. Every part of the pattern, the bordering included, is worked,
+and only the foundation left, showing where it forms the background to
+the design. The gold thread is laid on as the finishing touch. It is
+placed round all the chief parts of the design, and sewn on as an edging
+with a couching stitch; that is to say, the gold thread is held tightly
+stretched in its position with the left hand, while a stitch brought
+from the back of the material is passed over it and put down to the back
+again with the right hand. Lines of gold are used to mark out the border
+pattern, and are fastened down with the couching stitch. When sewing on
+the gold it is very important to keep it tightly stretched, as if put on
+loosely it is not effective. If the work is at all puckered, iron it
+with a warm but not hot iron on the wrong side before laying down the
+gold thread. Leek embroidery is sold by the yard in strips, varying from
+one inch to twelve inches in width, and costing from 6d. to 2s. the
+yard. These strips are used for mantelpiece borders, table borders,
+chair backs, and curtain bands, according to their width. They look best
+mounted upon plush or velveteen, but are often mounted upon Liberty's
+Oriental silks, or made up as perfectly plain bands. When used for chair
+backs or for hanging firescreens the background should be handsome, and
+either ruby or dark blue in colour, and the work arranged either
+straight down its centre or crossing it in a number of diagonal lines.
+This manner of making up is newer and more effective than merely laying
+it on as an edging. Bands of unmounted Leek embroidery, simply lined
+with twill, are much used for looping up summer curtains, and give
+richness to the soft, creamy materials now employed for curtains.
+
+As dress trimmings Leek embroidery is good, the wide bands making a
+waistcoat front and the narrow the cuff trimmings. To a velveteen winter
+dress a waistcoat and cuffs so made are an admirable finish as long as
+the embroidery is kept subdued by rich colours, and the gold carefully
+put on, while for dinner dresses a broad panel of embroidery is carried
+down the skirt, and the waistcoat cut low, and no trimming required for
+the sleeves.
+
+Oriental embroidery cannot be made up in so many different ways as Leek
+embroidery, but it is quite new, and aims at reproducing early Eastern
+designs. The foundation material is surah silk, the silk sold in large
+squares as Liberty's handkerchief being correct in colouring and
+texture. Upon this foundation the patterns, which all consist of single
+petalled flowers resembling single dahlias, sunflowers, or
+chrysanthemums, are worked with Oriental silk, which are silks of a
+thick make, but very soft and with a gloss on them similar to the gloss
+on floss silk. The leaves surrounding the flowers are of the shape of
+the jessamine, and to these are added tendrils and queer-looking bunches
+of seed-vessels.
+
+There is little variety in the design, as the embroidery is entirely
+executed in one stitch (that of a close herringbone), but there is great
+variety and great scope for good shading in the colouring. Oriental
+silks are all dyed in the shades of blues, yellow pinks, terra-cotta
+reds, and brilliant yellows, to be seen in Eastern embroideries worked
+before the introduction of aniline dyes, and the consequent lapse into
+Imperial purples and magentas and royal blues.
+
+By a judicious use of good colours the same design can be so repeated as
+to look entirely different. Thus, a spray of flowers worked upon an
+orange-red ground, with cream, yellow, pink and pale blue colours, will
+be quite distinct from the same spray laid upon sea-green silk, and
+coloured with deep orange-reds and blues running from sky into navy
+blue.
+
+As before mentioned, the only stitch used is herringboning, and the only
+flowers single petalled ones; but the herringboning is done so closely
+together that it looks like an interwoven stitch of double crossings,
+and the flowers are all worked in their centres in a different silk to
+that used on their tips, and therefore resemble double petalled flowers.
+The tips of each petal are wider than the commencement, and the
+herringboning is not taken along as a wide line of equal width, but as a
+curved line running small, and widening out again several times if the
+petal or seed-vessel is a long one. Each petal is worked separately, and
+the silk is never dragged or drawn tightly, but is allowed to lie easily
+over the foundation, and rather loosely, although the stitches follow
+each other so closely that nothing of the foundation can be seen where
+they are laid. The stems, long leaves, and large branches are worked as
+closely as the petals in herringbone, but tendrils and sprays are more
+opened out, and are given the look of single coral stitch as a variety.
+
+When shading a flower select two colours that are distinct in tone but
+not jarring in their contrast; thus, cream-white used for the outer
+petals can be finished with pale blue, yellow pink, pure orange, or pale
+yellow for its centre petals; scarlet red outside petals with black
+inner petals, bright blue outside petals with lemon yellow or
+terra-cotta red inside petals, and every one of these colours are
+allowable when working bunches of flowers scattered over the whole of a
+five o'clock tea-cloth or fireplace curtains.
+
+The embroidery is used for table-cloths, mantel borders, and curtain
+brackets, knitting bags, handkerchief cases, and as a trimming to
+evening dresses. In all cases it requires a silk lining, and should be
+worked with a muslin lining beneath it. Embroidering Breton
+handkerchiefs is not a new description of fancy work, but it is still in
+vogue; and when a lady has had sufficient patience to successfully
+accomplish the feat of covering every portion of the handkerchief with
+thick filoselle work, there is no doubt that she has produced a piece of
+embroidery not only handsome and durable, but that will justly hand her
+name down to posterity as a real worker, and not one who takes up the
+whim of the hour and throws it on one side as soon as it bores her. The
+squares made of these embroidered handkerchiefs are shown more
+effectually when they are lined with quilted silk and used as
+banner-screens than when they are bordered with wide plush and used as
+table-cloths. The pattern in the latter case is never seen as a whole,
+and the beauty of the work is often marred by water from flower vases
+spilt over it, or wet teacups and saucers put down on it. The small
+screens now so fashionable make another admirable place for mounting
+Breton work. These screens are made of two compartments only, in height
+about 4½ feet. To each panel, 2½ feet from the ground, a ledge
+that can be put up or down is fixed, and that is used for holding a book
+or a teacup. The panel below this ledge is merely filled with a little
+curtain made of coloured Oriental silk, and arranged in very full folds.
+The panel above the ledge, that is fully displayed to every eye, is
+filled with the embroidery stretched quite tightly across it and
+displayed to its full advantage. The back of the embroidery is
+concealed with a satin or silk matching the little curtain beneath. Two
+Breton handkerchiefs are required, one for each division, but they
+should not be selected both of the same design. The little screens are
+made of oak, mahogany, and ebonised wood. They are a simple framework,
+an inch and a half square, and any working carpenter would make them to
+order.
+
+Breton embroidery is too laborious for many people, and those whose time
+is much occupied with household matters, and who cannot devote much of
+it to the task of making their drawing-rooms pretty, we recommend to try
+crazy patchwork in its place. We have lately seen this easy work carried
+out most successfully, and used as mantel and table borders, covers for
+footstools, and as the centres of small table-cloths. The work is one of
+the least expensive that can be tried, and can be put down without
+derangement of effect at any moment (a great point in its favour where
+interruptions are frequent). Before commencing any piece of it, it is
+better to accumulate all the oddments of ribbons, plush, velvet, silk,
+and satin lying in the piece-drawer from dress trimmings or sent as
+patterns from shops. The more plush and velvet obtainable, the greater
+the effect produced, while the colouring should be of a vivid tone, but
+excluding the bright aniline dyes already once referred to as being
+unsuitable to blend with other shades. A strong piece of ticking is
+required for the foundation, and on this the pieces are arranged. They
+should be pinned on while the amalgamation of colouring is being tried,
+and, when that is settled, basted on to the lining, the edges of soft
+materials being turned under and secured with the basting lines.
+Similarity in shape and size is to be avoided when placing the pieces,
+and the effect aimed at that of the colouring of a kaleidoscope in its
+variety and brightness. In order to obtain queer shapes and corners, it
+is not necessary to carefully cut them out and fit them into their
+various spaces; in fact, it is better not to do so, but to lay one
+material partly over another, and by so doing make the desired form. The
+embroidery is generally left until the pieces are basted down to the
+lining, but now and again the scraps should be embroidered before they
+are fixed down, this method being the least troublesome when fine silk
+work is attempted, such as working flowers in shades of colour or
+intricate designs, or following out the lines of stamped velvet or
+brocade with couched-down cords and gold thread. Thin Oriental silks
+require a thin muslin lining underneath them, and the embroidery
+executed before they are tacked to the ticking, as unless this
+precaution is taken they are apt to pucker and look uneven and poor.
+When the patchwork scraps are all arranged, spare strands of filoselle
+of any shades are used to cover over the basting threads with lines of
+coral stitch, feather, chain, rope, and herringbone, while oddments of
+silk cord, Japanese gold thread, very fine braids, etc., are sewn down
+either as borderings to the securing lines or as forming designs and
+figures on the patches themselves. Embroidery stitches of all kinds are
+used to fill in the centres of the patches, and advantage is always
+taken of any pattern on the patches either by filling it in entirely
+with shaded silks, filling up its background with stars, crosses, or
+dots, or by enclosing it within diagonal lines, or sewing spangles down
+so as to cover it over. Every effort is made to enrich the patches by
+the use of gold thread, spangles, gold lace, and silk cords, and when
+the work is faithfully done, no one could guess it was devised out of
+oddments and produced at a nominal cost.
+
+B. C. SAWARD.
+
+
+
+
+ROMANCE.
+
+FOR VIOLIN AND PIANOFORTE.
+
+PROFESSOR SIR G. A. MACFARREN.
+
+[Music]
+
+
+
+
+ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS.
+
+
+EDUCATIONAL.
+
+A. Z.--The part of a whole made by two-thirds of three-fourths is
+one-half. Such books as those you name are not so appropriate for young
+girls as very desirable, instructive, as well as interesting books,
+although a girl of twenty-one might read one of such a kind once in a
+way. There is an article by Dr. Green in the last two numbers of the
+_Leisure Hour_ (published by the Religious Tract Society, 56,
+Paternoster-row, London, E.C.), those for April and May, in which such
+books as you require are recommended--history, biography, travels,
+archæology, geology, astronomy; Shakespeare, Milton, Elizabeth Barret
+Browning, Longfellow, Tennyson, etc. Such books should occupy all your
+leisure for reading, besides the study of household economy, nursing,
+cookery, needlework, and cutting out. The first five years after leaving
+the school-room should be devoted to such studies as these, not wasted
+on the class of literature you specify.
+
+G. H. T.--Yes, there is a Kindergarten College and Practising School
+established by the British and Foreign School Society. It is at 21,
+Stockwell-road, S.W., and it is directed by the Misses Crombie. There
+are ten such schools in London and eight in the provinces. Write for
+papers, and all information will be supplied you direct from that or any
+of the other schools. Had you given your address we could have given
+that which is the nearest to you. We think your age would be suitable.
+The answer you receive as to terms may decide you as to the way in which
+your £20 may be required. Perhaps if you annoyed your cousin she would
+not allow you to return home to sleep. Whether you could do so as well
+as board at the college we could not say. "Look well before you leap."
+
+
+ART.
+
+SHELTIE.--To ornament ginger jars, or any kind of earthenware, without
+knowing how to draw or paint, first size it with ordinary glue-size,
+melted over the fire; then cut bright scraps of chintz, or gaily-painted
+cottons, into diamonds, squares, half-circles, triangles, etc., and
+paste them to the jars, carefully covering every part of the jar with
+the scraps laid closely together, but without making any set design. Let
+the paste dry; then size the jar, and varnish with white hard varnish.
+
+FLEUR DES ALPES.--We fear there are no chances of a sale in London, as
+the market for screen and fan painting is already so full. Besides, you
+should take such work personally to shops and obtain trade orders. Would
+it not be wiser and more easy to dispose of them at Geneva, which is
+within your reach? Accept our best wishes.
+
+WOULD-BE PHOTOGRAPHER.--The reason that the object to be taken appears
+upside down in the camera is this. Light travels in straight lines, and
+rays coming through little crevices (such as are used in cameras), cross
+each other, and become inverted.
+
+
+MISCELLANEOUS.
+
+EFFIE.--The texts of Holy Scripture which you cannot find are to be
+found as follows:--Psalm xciv. 22, and Gen. xvii. 8; Exodus xxix. 45;
+Ezekiel xi. 20; Zechariah viii. 8; 2 Cor. vi. 16; Rev. xxi. 3, and in
+other places. Your "Concordance" must be a very bad one. Your
+handwriting is not formed, but promises well.
+
+GOWAN COBBAN.--We do not recommend publishers to our correspondents. All
+three specimens of writing are legible, but No. 2 is careless and
+unfinished. Why write a small "b" for a "v"? The latter has no tall
+upper stroke.
+
+E. M.--The health of bride, bridegroom, bridesmaids, and respective
+parents of the newly-married pair is drunk, but no others, as a rule.
+
+CORISANDE.--We could not possibly assist you in carrying out or devising
+a method of revenge on the wrong-doer, nor do we think that even the
+aggrieved parents of the injured friend would approve of the plan. If
+you reprobate an ill-bred action, you cannot, consistently with your own
+views of what is seemly and dignified, punish that action by following
+suit, and doing what would be ill-bred yourself. Besides, as a
+Christian, read Romans xii. 19.
+
+UNA MILDRED HITCHINGS (N.Z).--The 14th of February, 1809, was a Tuesday.
+Many thanks for your nice letter.
+
+E. B. P. we think had better take more exercise, and avoid late suppers
+and sitting up late, as it seems probable her digestion is weak.
+
+SEPIA.--Hairpins are not injurious to the hair except when the hair is
+too tightly put up, when that certainly affects the nerves. We think
+young people, as a rule, do not require stimulants unless under the
+doctor's orders. We think oils are far easier to use than water-colours.
+
+MORNING DEWDROP.--We do not think the poetry worth much now, but it
+shows that at fifteen you are thinking about good things in preference
+to evil and idle things, and so we consider writing poetry, in many
+cases, a good amusement.
+
+QUEENIE FOSTER should return the duplicate copy and ask for the right
+one, and if enclosing stamps, as the surest way of getting it, she can
+retain the duplicate.
+
+AN UNHAPPY ONE should not marry her widower on any account, if she feels
+as unhappy as her letter portrays. She must not grow discouraged too
+soon, but cultivate patience, and never minding. And should she finally
+undertake the care of a ready-made family, she must be brave and
+courteous, not rendering railing for railing, but, contrariwise,
+blessing. Be not overcome of evil, but overcome evil with good.
+
+HAWTHORN.--We know of nothing better than your present treatment. We are
+much obliged by your kind offer, but we do not require any at present.
+
+IDONEA.--We should think your digestion was out of order. Read the
+advice given by Medicus to "Working Girls," page 295, vol. vi.
+
+MYSOTIS.--Your nationality is that of your father, but you may adopt a
+country; and if he be naturalised English, you become English too, or
+you may legally become so yourself. Also, if you marry an Englishman you
+become an Englishwoman, without going through the process of
+naturalisation. Of course by blood you are half English, through your
+maternal descent.
+
+OPHELIA.--We feel for "Ophelia" very sincerely; but she should rouse
+herself, and not give way to morbid brooding over her troubles. Has she
+no sacred duties to perform to those around her? No Lord and Master
+above to serve and glorify, by submission to His dispensations? Has she
+no blessed hope of a life beyond the grave? We could not insert your
+verses. "All else" is not "gone," whoever was removed, when you have
+"one that sticketh closer than a brother" to lean upon. Read St. John
+xiv.; indeed, you had better study the whole Gospel, and set yourself
+resolutely to devote yourself to others.
+
+MAY ELWIN.--Our publisher, Mr. Tarn, sent us your letter. We suppose you
+thought him the editor. The writer of the poems you name is not one with
+whom we are acquainted.
+
+MYSELF.--We cannot do better than refer you to the abuses of the Lord's
+supper, to which St. Paul alludes in 1 Cor. ii. 21, 22, which answers
+your question. Also see Hebrews x. 25, and 1 Cor. xiv. 40. Beware how
+you trifle with sacred rites and sacraments. You had better look up the
+whole of the text about Elders and their office in the New Testament
+Epistles. Our Lord's promise is that where two or three are gathered
+together He would be in their midst and bless them. You had better look
+out the word communion in the dictionary, as it cannot refer to one
+person alone; it is an act performed by a certain number of persons
+together, more or less. Again, when the clergyman prays for his
+congregation, is he not a mediator? And when you and your friends pray
+for each other, are you not mediators? And this, without disparagement
+to the doctrine that Christ is the great and chief Mediator, without
+whose divine mediation all other would be useless.
+
+BRUNETTE.--The soul does not attain its highest state of bliss until it
+be re-united to the body; but the soul of a believer in Christ (by which
+we mean one of His faithful people, who loves, serves, and trusts in Him
+and His atonement alone) will enter into a happy and sinless rest. He
+has made "an everlasting covenant with them," not with those who deny
+Him. Any mercy shown to such would be uncovenanted. See for yourself
+what the Scriptures say. We know nothing more than what is revealed in
+them. As to the heathen who have not heard the Gospel, they are "a law
+unto themselves," and will be judged as such, not as those who rejected
+Christ.
+
+ONE WANTING TO LEARN.--We are glad that you find the Sulhampstead
+Question Society, which we recommended, so useful in helping forward
+your education. We do not print our correspondents' letters.
+
+ROY.--We regret that we cannot accede to your request. It would
+interfere with the general usefulness of our magazine if we were to
+introduce the subject of politics into it. We do not even discuss vexed
+questions of religious belief, because our paper is meant for persons of
+all denominations, whose feelings should be respected. We limit our
+teaching to the broad principles of our common Christianity.
+
+LOTTIE.--If in so feeble a state of health, you should obtain medical
+advice. We could not prescribe for a perfect stranger.
+
+JUNE.--All the chief writers of this paper, with the artists and musical
+composers, including ourselves, have already been represented, in a more
+or less satisfactory manner. The story, "That Aggravating Schoolgirl,"
+appeared in the second volume, beginning at page 9.
+
+M. C. F.--We do not quite understand what you mean. Visiting cards
+should never be sent by post, and if they be left at the house you
+acknowledge them by calling in return. If people be at a distance from
+you, you must take an opportunity of calling when near. You must answer
+congratulations either by letter or a call.
+
+BIRCHBROOM.--St. Paul was a bachelor, and tells you so in 1 Cor. vii.
+You will find many pretty designs for knitting in our paper. We do not
+propose to keep any space specially for knitting recipes. You will find
+one for a petticoat at page 41, vol. ii., in the number for October,
+1880.
+
+NELLICA.--We thank you for your kind and grateful letter, and rejoice
+that you enjoy our paper and are allowed to read it. You write a very
+fair, legible handwriting.
+
+A HOTHOUSE PLANT.--Pampas grass must be bleached in a solution of
+chloride of lime. You had better consult the chemist of whom you procure
+the drug as to the proportion of water. Perhaps he would prepare it for
+you. You write well, but use a bad pen--we mean an old, worn-out one.
+
+BEDWAEEN (Hyderabad).--We acknowledge your kind letter with our best
+wishes and thanks. You do not ask any special question; but as you
+regret a want of acquaintance with the rules of English grammar, we
+recommend "The Handbook of the English Tongue," by Dr. Angus, published
+at our office, 56, Paternoster-row, E.C.; address Mr. Tarn.
+
+AMELIA should take her "twopenny mulready envelope" to a shop where
+stamps are sold for collections. This is the only plan, if not disposed
+of to a private collector. We do not think she will make very much on
+the sale.
+
+THE BIRD.--Kindly refer to the article in question, where all
+information is already given.
+
+ORMONDE should call after all invitations, whether she accept them or
+not.
+
+LILY WALKER.--The bridegroom presents the bride and bridesmaids with
+their bouquets; but it is not needful that the latter should have them.
+The health of the bride and bridegroom respectively are proposed by the
+oldest friend of the family present; but other healths are no longer
+drunk as a universal rule, we believe.
+
+ITALIA.--The competition papers are in no case returned. Your quotation
+is very good, but is useless under the circumstances.
+
+DULCIE WESTON should consult a doctor and take a tonic. We should
+decidedly object to cold baths in her case. They should be rather warmer
+than tepid.
+
+DEWDROP.--When the right time comes for the hatching of silkworms, they
+should be kept in the sun. Before that they should be kept cool, as
+their coming out should be delayed until that of the new mulberry
+leaves. The worms need not to be kept in the sun.
+
+BLUEBELL and DOLLY.--Many thanks for your kind letter.
+
+MAYFLOWER.--We should think, from the price you name, that you are
+buying spirits of wine. Send your own bottle to an oilshop for
+methylated spirits. But why not do this:--Get a small oil-lamp and
+kettle, enough to boil a quart of water; when quite boiling it will be
+enough for two gallons of cold water, and, using a sponge bath, you can
+have a comfortable bath?
+
+GRACE should wear the backboard and faceboard, so often recommended by
+us, for an hour every day while reading or learning her lessons. The
+book could be set on a stand or shelf, and she could learn while walking
+to and fro.
+
+GUELDER ROSE.--Some words and names have been given an arbitrary
+pronunciation by that tyrant--the fashion of the day. There is a rule
+for each class of society, by which all within those respective circles
+is bound, unless its members wish to make themselves remarkable. Amongst
+the "Upper Ten" the name Derby is pronounced "Darby," Shrewsbury as
+"Shrowsbury," and clerk as "clark." Balmoral is "Bal-moral," the "mo"
+chiefly accentuated. Writing fairly good.
+
+TRY AGAIN is thanked for her kind letter. That a competitor should not
+be successful is no discredit to her work, because the number of papers
+sent in is so enormous, none but the most remarkably perfect amongst the
+good ones can be awarded even certificates, not to say prizes.
+
+COMING THRO' THE RYE.--You form your letters fairly well, but reverse
+the heavy and light strokes. The down strokes should be heavy, and the
+up strokes light. Also, if you did not make the ends of your final
+letters in every word turn up like pig-tails, your writing would be
+improved. Perhaps your handwriting may be formed, or begin to be so, at
+sixteen. No children write running hands.
+
+ROSE.--No "gentlemen" presume to speak to girls in their own rank of
+life without an introduction; it would be an insult. And as to proposing
+to walk with you, as a stranger, if you have no father, brother, nor
+uncle to warn him away, he deserves to be handed over to the police. But
+men do not usually take such liberties unless they have had some
+encouragement. Beware of looking at strange men in passing them. Look
+away when they come near.
+
+EDITH.--Sage tea is good for cooling the face and healing the skin when
+much sunburnt; but it should be used the same day. Lie on a sofa, and
+lay the wet leaves over your face.
+
+
+
+
+AUTUMN.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+BY HELEN MARION BURNSIDE.
+
+
+ The chestnut burrs are falling
+ On the shining dew-steeped lawn,
+ Where the swallows have been calling
+ To each other since the dawn;
+ For again the forest leaves,
+ And the upland's crown of sheaves,
+ Wear the fair pathetic glory, which so quickly is withdrawn.
+
+ And a youthful pair goes straying,
+ As we used to do of old,
+ With the sunlight on them playing,
+ Through the elm trees' paling gold;
+ And I wonder as they go,
+ Pacing slowly to and fro,
+ Are they telling one another just such secrets as we told?
+
+ In the cool and fragrant dunlight
+ Of the woodlands, wet with dew,
+ Looking out towards the sunlight
+ Here I stand--but where are you?
+ Where are summer's lusty leaves,
+ Where the swallows from the eaves,
+ And the hopes, and dreams, and longings that in those old days we knew?
+
+ Many a spring has blossomed brightly
+ On the grave of a dead past,
+ Many a summer has tossed lightly
+ Her cast leaves upon the blast;
+ And as autumn fades away
+ Into winter's quiet grey,
+ Comes the hope: eternal springtide will give back my friend at last!
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Girl's Own Paper, Vol. VIII: No.
+353, October 2, 1886., by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GIRL'S OWN PAPER ***
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+***** This file should be named 18195-8.txt or 18195-8.zip *****
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Girl's Own Paper, Vol. VIII: No. 353,
+October 2, 1886., 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 Girl's Own Paper, Vol. VIII: No. 353, October 2, 1886.
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: Charles Peters
+
+Release Date: April 17, 2006 [EBook #18195]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GIRL'S OWN PAPER ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Susan Skinner and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/illus001a.png" width="600" height="224" alt="THE GIRL&#39;S OWN PAPER" title="" />
+</div>
+<hr style="width: 95%;" />
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="" width="100%">
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Vol. VIII.&mdash;No. 353.</span></td><td align='center'>OCTOBER 2, 1886.</td><td align='right'><span class="smcap">Price One Penny.</span></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+<hr style="width: 95%;" />
+
+<p class='center'>[Transcriber's Note: This Table of Contents was not present in the original.]</p>
+
+<!-- Autogenerated TOC. Modify or delete as required. -->
+<p class='center'>
+<a href="#MERLES_CRUSADE">MERLE'S CRUSADE: Chapter 1.</a><br />
+<a href="#THE_AMATEUR_CHURCH_ORGANIST">THE AMATEUR CHURCH ORGANIST.</a><br />
+<a href="#EVERY_GIRL_A_BUSINESS_WOMAN">EVERY GIRL A BUSINESS WOMAN: Part 1.</a><br />
+<a href="#VARIETIES">VARIETIES.</a><br />
+<a href="#THE_SHEPHERDS_FAIRY">THE SHEPHERD'S FAIRY: Chapter 1.</a><br />
+<a href="#FASHIONABLE_EMBROIDERY">FASHIONABLE EMBROIDERY.</a><br />
+<a href="#ROMANCE">ROMANCE.</a><br />
+<a href="#ANSWERS_TO_CORRESPONDENTS">ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS.</a><br />
+<a href="#AUTUMN">AUTUMN.</a><br />
+</p>
+<!-- End Autogenerated TOC. -->
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2><a name="MERLES_CRUSADE" id="MERLES_CRUSADE"></a>MERLE'S CRUSADE.<br />
+
+<span style="font-size: 75%;"><span class="smcap">By</span> ROSA NOUCHETTE CAREY, Author of "Aunt Diana," "For Lilias," etc.</span></h2>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/illus001b.png" width="600" height="515" alt="&quot;&#39;WHAT A PITY YOU STOPPED ME JUST THEN.&#39;&quot;" title="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;WHAT A PITY YOU STOPPED ME JUST THEN.&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span></p>
+<h3>CHAPTER I.<br />
+<span style="font-size: 75%;">THE VALLEY OF HUMILIATION.</span></h3>
+
+<p><span class="figleft">
+<img src="images/illus002.png" width="200" height="402" alt="&quot;M" title="" />
+</span>
+erle, I may
+be a little old-fashioned
+in
+my notions;
+middle-aged
+people never
+adjust their
+ideas quite in
+harmony with
+you young
+folk, but in my
+day we never
+paused to
+count fifty at
+a full stop."</p>
+
+<p>Aunt Agatha's
+voice
+startled me
+with its reproachful
+irritability.
+Well, I had
+deserved that
+little sarcasm
+for I must
+confess that I had been reading very
+carelessly. My favourite motto was ringing
+in my ears, "<i>Laborare est orare</i>."</p>
+
+<p>Somehow the words had set themselves
+to resonant music in my brain;
+it seemed as though I were chanting
+them inwardly all the time I was climbing
+down the steep hill with Christiana
+and her boys. <i>Laborare est orare.</i>
+And this is what I was reading on that
+still, snowy Sunday afternoon: "But we
+will come again to this Valley of Humiliation.
+It is the best and most fruitful
+piece of ground in all these parts.
+It is a fat ground, and, as you see,
+consisteth much in meadows, and if a
+man was to come here in the summertime
+as we do now, if he knew not anything
+before thereof, and if he delighted
+himself in the sight of his eyes, he might
+see that which would be delightful to
+him. Behold how green this valley is,
+also how beautiful with lilies! I have
+known many labouring men that have
+got good estates in this Valley of Humiliation."</p>
+
+<p>"Merle," observed Aunt Agatha, a
+little dryly, "we may as well leave off
+there, for it seems that you and I are to
+have our estate among the labouring
+men in this very valley."</p>
+
+<p>Aunt Agatha was a clever woman,
+and could say shrewd things sometimes,
+but she never spoke a truer word than
+this; but my wits were no longer wool-gathering.</p>
+
+<p>"What a pity you stopped me just
+then," I remarked, somewhat sententiously;
+"we have missed the purest
+gem of the allegory. 'He that is down
+need fear no fall; he that is low no
+pride.'" But here a hand was lifted in
+protesting fashion.</p>
+
+<p>"Put the marker in the page, child,
+and spare me the rest; that is in favour
+of your argument, not mine," for a weary
+discussion had been waged between us
+for two whole hours&mdash;a discussion that
+had driven Aunt Agatha exhausted to
+the couch, but which had only given me
+a tingling feeling of excitement, such as
+a raw recruit might experience at the
+sight of a battlefield. Aunt Agatha's
+ladylike ideas lay dead and wounded
+round her while I had made that last
+impetuous charge.</p>
+
+<p>"I am of age, a free Englishwoman,
+living in a free country, and not all the
+nineteenth century prejudices, though
+they are thick as dragons' teeth, shall
+prevent me, Merle Fenton, of sane mind
+and healthy body, from doing what I
+believe to be my duty."</p>
+
+<p>"Humph, I am rather doubtful of the
+sanity; I always told you that you were
+too independent and strong-minded for
+a girl; but what is the use of preaching
+to deaf ears?" continued Aunt Agatha,
+in a decidedly cross voice, as she arranged
+the cushions comfortably.</p>
+
+<p>It was true that I was getting the
+best of the argument, and yet I was
+sorry for Aunt Agatha. I felt how I was
+shocking all her notions of decorum and
+propriety, and giving pain to the kindest
+and gentlest heart in the world; but one
+cannot lead a new crusade without
+trampling on some prejudices. I knew
+all my little world would shriek "fie,"
+and "for shame" into my ears, and all
+because I was bent on working out a new
+theory. The argument had grown out
+of such a little thing. I had shown Aunt
+Agatha an advertisement in the <i>Morning
+Post</i>, and announced my intention of
+answering it in person the following
+morning.</p>
+
+<p>"NURSE.&mdash;Can any lady recommend
+a thoroughly conscientious superior person
+to take charge of two children,
+baby eighteen months old? Assistance
+given in the nursery. Must be a good,
+plain needlewoman. Prince's Gate,
+S.W."</p>
+
+<p>To the last day of my life I do not
+think that I shall ever forget Aunt
+Agatha's face when she read that advertisement.</p>
+
+<p>"You intend to offer yourself for this
+situation, Merle&mdash;to lose caste, and take
+your place among menials? It is enough
+to make my poor brother rise in his
+grave, and your poor, dear mother too,
+to think of a Fenton stooping to such
+degradation." But I will forbear to
+transcribe all the wordy avalanche of
+lady-like invective that was hurled at
+me, accompanied by much wringing of
+hands.</p>
+
+<p>And yet the whole thing lay in a nut-shell.
+I, Merle Fenton, sound, healthy,
+and aged two-and-twenty, being
+orphaned, penniless, and only possessing
+one near relative in the world&mdash;Aunt
+Agatha&mdash;declined utterly to be dependent
+for my daily bread and the
+clothes I wore on the goodwill of her
+husband and my uncle by marriage,
+Ezra Keith.</p>
+
+<p>No, I was not good. I daresay I was
+self-willed, contradictory, and as obstinate
+as a mule that will go every way but
+the right way, but, all the same, I loved
+Aunt Agatha, my dead father's only
+sister, and I detested Uncle Keith with
+a perfectly unreasonable detestation.</p>
+
+<p>Aunt Agatha had been a governess
+all her life. Certainly the Fenton family
+had not much to boast of in the way of
+wealth. Pedigree and poverty are not
+altogether pleasant yoke fellows. It
+may be comfortable to one's feelings to
+know that a certain progenitor of ours
+made boots at the time of the Conquest,
+though I am never quite sure in my mind
+that they had bootmakers then; but my
+historical knowledge was always defective.
+But a little money is also pleasant;
+indeed, if the pedigree and the money
+came wooing to me, and I had to choose
+between them&mdash;well, perhaps I had
+better hold my tongue on that subject;
+for what is the good of shocking people
+unless one has a very good reason for
+doing so?</p>
+
+<p>My father's pedigree did not help him
+into good practice, and he died young&mdash;a
+grave mistake, people tell me, for a
+professional man to commit. My mother
+was very pretty and very helpless, but
+then she had a pedigree, too, and, probably,
+that forbade her to soil her white
+hands. She was a fine lady, with more
+heart than head, which she had lost
+most unwisely to the handsome young
+doctor. After his death, she made
+futile efforts for her child's sake, but
+the grinding wheel of poverty caught the
+poor butterfly and crushed her to death.</p>
+
+<p>My poor, tender-hearted, unhappy
+mother! Well, the world is a cruel
+place to these soft, unprotected natures.</p>
+
+<p>I should have fared badly but for Aunt
+Agatha; her hardly-earned savings
+were all spent on my education. She
+was a clever, highly-educated woman,
+and commanded good salaries, and out
+of this she contrived to board and maintain
+me at a school until she married,
+and Uncle Keith promised that I should
+share their home.</p>
+
+<p>I never could understand why Aunt
+Agatha married him. Perhaps she was
+tired of the drudgery of teaching; at
+forty-five one may grow a little weary
+of one's work. Perhaps she wanted a
+home for her old age, and was tired of
+warming herself at other people's fires,
+and preferred a chimney corner of her
+own; but, strange to say, she always
+scouted these two notions with the utmost
+indignation.</p>
+
+<p>"I married your uncle, Merle," she
+would say, with great dignity, "because
+he convinced me that he was the right
+person for me to marry. I have no
+more idea than you how he contrived to
+instil this notion into my head, for
+though I am a plain body and never
+had any beauty, I must own I liked tall,
+good-looking men. But there, my dear,
+I lived forty-five years in the world without
+three things very common in women's
+lives&mdash;without beauty, without love, and
+without discontent." And in this last
+clause she was certainly right. Aunt
+Agatha was the most contented creature
+in the world.</p>
+
+<p>If Uncle Keith&mdash;for never, never
+would I call him Uncle Ezra, even had
+he asked me as a personal favour to do
+so&mdash;if Uncle Keith had been rich I
+could have understood the marriage
+better, being rather a mercenary and
+far-sighted young person, but he had
+only a very small income. He was
+managing clerk in some mercantile
+house, and, being a thrifty soul, invested
+all his spare cash instead of
+spending it.</p>
+
+<p>Aunt Agatha had lived in grand
+houses all her life, but she was quite<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span>
+content with the little cottage at Putney
+to which her husband took her. They
+only kept one servant; but Aunt Agatha
+proved herself to be a notable housekeeper.
+She arranged and rearranged
+the old-fashioned furniture that had
+belonged to Uncle Keith's mother until
+she had made quite a charming
+drawing-room; but that was just her
+way; she had clever brains, and clever
+fingers, and to manipulate old materials
+into new fashions was just play work to
+her.</p>
+
+<p>But for me, I am perfectly convinced
+that Aunt Agatha would have called
+herself the happiest woman in the world,
+but my discontent leavened the household.
+If three people elect to live
+together, the success of the scheme
+demands that one of the three should
+not smile sourly on all occasions.</p>
+
+<p>For two whole years I tried to be
+amiable when Uncle Keith was in the
+room, and at last gave up the attempt
+in despair, baffled by my own evil
+tempers, and yet I will say I was not a
+bad-tempered girl. I must have had
+good in me or Aunt Agatha would not
+have been so fond of me. I call that a
+real crucial test&mdash;other people's fondness
+for us.</p>
+
+<p>Why is it so difficult to get on with
+some folk, very worthy people in their
+way?</p>
+
+<p>Why do some people invariably rub
+up one's fur until it bristles with discomfort?
+Why do these same thoroughly
+estimable creatures bring a sort
+of moral east wind with them, scarifying
+one's nerves? Surely it is beneath the
+dignity of a human being to be rasped
+by a harsh, drawling voice, or offended
+by trifling mannerisms. Uncle Keith
+was just like one of my sums&mdash;you might
+add him up, subtract from him, divide
+or multiply him, but he would never
+come right in the end; one always
+reckoned that he was more or less than
+he was. He was a little, pale, washed-out
+looking man, with sandy hair and
+prominent brown eyes. Being an old
+bachelor when he married Aunt Agatha,
+he had very precise, formal ways, and
+was methodical and punctual to a fault.
+Next to Uncle Keith, I hated that white-faced
+watch of his. I hated the slow,
+ponderous way in which he drew it from
+his pocket, and produced it for my special
+benefit.</p>
+
+<p>I have said that my detestation of
+Uncle Keith was somewhat unreasonable.
+I must own I had no grave
+reasons for my dislike. Uncle Keith
+had a good moral character; he was a
+steady church-goer, was painstaking
+and abstemious; never put himself in a
+passion, or, indeed, lost his temper for a
+minute; but how was a girl to tolerate
+a man who spent five minutes scraping
+his boots before he entered his own
+door, whatever the weather might be;
+who said, "Hir-rumph" (humph was
+what he meant) before every sentence,
+booming at one like a great bee; who
+always prefaced a lecture with a "my
+dear;" who would not read a paper
+until it was warmed; who would burn
+every cinder before fresh coals were
+allowed on the fire; who looked reproachfully
+at my crumbs (I crumbled
+my bread purposely at last), and scooped
+them carefully in his hand for the benefit
+of the birds, with the invariable remark,
+"Waste not, want not," a saying I
+learnt to detest?</p>
+
+<p>I suppose if we are ever admitted
+into heaven we shall find very odd
+people there; but perhaps they will
+have dropped their trying ways and
+peculiarities, as the chrysalis drops its
+case, and may develop all sorts of new
+prismatic glories. I once heard a lady
+say that she was afraid the society
+there would be rather mixed; she was a
+very exclusive person; but Solomon tells
+us that there is nothing new under the
+sun, so I suppose we shall never be
+without our modern Pharisees and
+Sadducees. The grand idea to me is
+that there will be room for all. I do
+not know when the idea first came to
+me that it was a mean thing to live
+under a man's roof, eating his bread
+and warming oneself at his fire, and all
+the time despising him in one's heart.
+I only know that one day the idea took
+possession of me, and, like an Eastern
+mustard seed, grew and flourished.
+Soon after that Uncle Keith had rather
+a serious loss&mdash;some mercantile venture
+in which he was interested had come to
+grief. I began to notice small retrenchments
+in the household; certain little
+luxuries were given up. Now and then
+Aunt Agatha grew a little grave as she
+balanced her weekly accounts. One
+night I took myself to task.</p>
+
+<p>"What business have you, a strong,
+healthy, young woman," I observed to
+myself, severely, "to be a burthen on
+these good folk? What is enough for
+two may be a tight fit for three; it was
+that new mantle of yours, Miss Merle,
+that has put out the drawing-room fire
+for three weeks, and has shut up the
+sherry in the sideboard. Is it fair or
+right that Aunt Agatha and Uncle
+Keith should forego their little comforts
+just because an idle girl is on their
+hands?"</p>
+
+<p>I pondered this question heavily before
+I summoned courage to speak to
+Aunt Agatha. To my surprise she
+listened to me very quietly, though her
+soft brown eyes grew a little misty&mdash;I
+did so love Aunt Agatha's eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Dear," she said, very gently, "I
+wish this could have been prevented;
+but, for my husband's sake, I dare not
+throw cold water on your plan. I cannot
+deny that he has had a heavy loss,
+and that we have to be very careful. I
+would keep you with me if I could,
+Merle, for you are just like my own child,
+but Ezra is not young;" and here Aunt
+Agatha's forehead grew puckered with
+anxiety.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Aunt Agatha," I exclaimed,
+quite forgetting the gravity of my proposition
+in sudden, childish annoyance,
+"how can you call Uncle Keith, Ezra?
+It is such a hideous name."</p>
+
+<p>"Not to my ears," she answered,
+quite calmly; "a wife never thinks her
+husband's name hideous. He loves to
+hear me say it, and I love to please him,
+for though you may not believe it, Merle,
+I think there are very few men to compare
+with your uncle."</p>
+
+<p>She could actually say this to my face,
+looking at me all the time with those
+honest eyes! I could not forbear a little
+shrug at this, but she turned the subject,
+placidly, but with much dignity.</p>
+
+<p>"I have been a working bee all my life,
+and have been quite contented with my
+lot; if you could only follow my example,
+I should be perfectly willing to let you
+go. I have thought once or twice lately
+that if anything were to happen to me,
+you and your uncle would hardly be
+comfortable together; you do not study
+him sufficiently; you have no idea what
+he really is."</p>
+
+<p>I thought it better to remain silent.</p>
+
+<p>Aunt Agatha sighed a little as she
+went on.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not afraid of work for you,
+Merle, there is no life without activity.
+'The idle man,' as someone observes,
+'spins on his own axis in the dark.' 'A
+man of mere capacity undeveloped,' as
+Emerson says, 'is only an organised daydream
+with a skin on it.' Just listen to
+this," opening a book that lay near her.
+"'Action and enjoyment are contingent
+upon each other. When we are unfit
+for work we are always incapable of
+pleasure; work is the wooing by which
+happiness is won.'"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes," I returned, rather impatiently,
+for Aunt Agatha, with all her
+perfections, was too much given to proverbial
+and discursive philosophy; "but
+to reduce this to practice, what work can
+I do in this weary world?"</p>
+
+<p>"You cannot be a governess, not even
+a nursery governess, Merle," and here
+Aunt Agatha looked at me very gently,
+as though she knew her words must
+give me pain, and suddenly my cheeks
+grew hot and my eyelids drooped.
+Alas! I knew too well what Aunt
+Agatha meant; this was a sore point,
+the great difficulty and stumbling block
+of my young life.</p>
+
+<p>I had been well taught in a good
+school; I had had unusual advantages,
+for Aunt Agatha was an accomplished
+and clever woman, and spared no pains
+with me in her leisure hours; but by some
+freak of Nature, not such an unusual
+thing as people would have us believe,
+from some want of power in the brain&mdash;at
+least, so a clever man has since told
+me&mdash;I was unable to master more than
+the rudiments of spelling.</p>
+
+<p>I know some people would laugh incredulously
+at this, but the fact will remain.</p>
+
+<p>As a child I have lain sobbing on my
+bed, beaten down by a very anguish of
+humiliation at being unable to commit
+the column of double syllables to memory,
+and have only been comforted by Aunt
+Agatha's patience and gentleness.</p>
+
+<p>At school I had a severer ordeal. For
+a long time my teachers refused to admit
+my incapacity; they preferred attributing
+it to idleness, stubbornness, and
+want of attention; even Aunt Agatha
+was puzzled by it, for I was a quick
+child in other things, could draw very
+well for my age, and could accomplish
+wonders in needlework, was a fair
+scholar in history and geography, soon
+acquired a good French accent, and did
+some of my lessons most creditably.</p>
+
+<p>But the construction of words baffle
+me to this day. I should be unwilling<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span>
+to write the simplest letter without a
+dictionary lying snugly near my hand. I
+have learned to look my misfortune in
+the face, and to bear it with tolerable
+grace. With my acquaintances it is a
+standing joke, with my nearest and
+dearest friends it is merely an opportunity
+for kindly service and offers to write
+from my dictation, but when I was
+growing into womanhood it was a bitter
+and most shameful trial to me, one
+secretly lamented with hot tears and
+with a most grievous sense of humiliation.</p>
+
+<p>"No," Aunt Agatha repeated, in the
+old pitying voice I knew so well, "you cannot
+be even a nursery governess, Merle."</p>
+
+<p>"Nor a companion either," I exclaimed
+bitterly. "Old ladies want
+letters written for them."</p>
+
+<p>"That is very true," she replied,
+shaking her head.</p>
+
+<p>"I could be a nurse in a hospital&mdash;in
+fact, that is what I should like, but the
+training could not be afforded, it would
+be a pound a week, Aunt Agatha, and
+there would be my uniform and other
+expenses, and I should not get the
+smallest salary for at least two or three
+years."</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid we must not think of
+that, Merle," and then I relapsed into
+silence from sheer sadness of heart. I
+had always so longed to be trained in a
+hospital, and then I could nurse wounded
+soldiers or little children. I always
+loved little children.</p>
+
+<p>But this idea must be given up, and yet
+it would not have mattered in a hospital
+if I had spelt "all-right" with one "l."
+I am quite sure my bandages would
+have been considered perfect, and that
+would have been more to the point.</p>
+
+<p class="center">(<i>To be continued.</i>)</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/illus003.png" width="600" height="113" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="THE_AMATEUR_CHURCH_ORGANIST" id="THE_AMATEUR_CHURCH_ORGANIST"></a>THE AMATEUR CHURCH ORGANIST.<br />
+<br />
+<span class="smcap" style="font-size: 75%;">By the Hon. VICTORIA GROSVENOR.</span></h2>
+
+
+<p>We believe that young people generally have
+a desire to be useful. Sometimes not an
+actually formulated desire, but a vague intention
+which they mean some day shall have a
+practical issue, when and how they do not
+quite know, or in what way. It is proposed
+in this article to point out one means of
+eminent usefulness&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, that of amateur organ
+playing in our churches. It is scarcely
+necessary to show what a large field of good
+useful work is open to amateurs in this direction.
+We all know that on the one hand
+parishes wholly agricultural&mdash;the other
+suburban parishes in large towns&mdash;are utterly
+unable to pay for the services of a professional
+player; while there is nothing so calculated to
+lift up the heart of the congregations such as
+these are likely to obtain, as good music.
+Would it not therefore be a pleasant duty for
+anyone gifted with musical talent and leisure
+to qualify in the best manner possible for this
+ennobling and helpful occupation?</p>
+
+<p>The intending organ-player must ascertain
+that he or she has a gift for music, and this
+need not be of the highest order, as even a
+small portion of the gift can be improved with
+care, and fostered into usefulness. A first
+rate ear can be a snare to those who trust to it
+too much&mdash;although it is undoubtedly the
+best of servants, if kept in its proper sphere of
+work. A very ordinary measure of talent,
+supplemented by calm and good sense, clear
+power of thought, and determined perseverance,
+will be a good foundation to start
+with. Good sense and attention have more to
+do with the good music of ordinary persons (as
+opposed, we mean, to remarkably clever ones)
+than people are apt to think. It was said of
+Mendelssohn that music was the <i>accident</i> of
+his being; and there are many of whom the
+same could be said, with this meaning&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>,
+that the powers which make them succeed in
+music would enable them to succeed in other
+great things if attempted.</p>
+
+<p>We will therefore suppose the case of a
+young lady possessing a moderate gift for
+music, desiring to improve it and herself, and
+to take up organ playing with a view to real
+usefulness. She should first find out whether
+her playing on the piano is perfectly correct,
+taking the easiest possible music to exercise
+herself upon, and trying whether her musical
+ear is competent to be her teacher in the
+matter of correctness. If neither steady
+attention nor ear enable her to discover mistakes,
+she had better consider that music is
+not the talent God has given her to use to His
+glory. A musical ear may, however, be
+much improved by its possessor. With even
+the smallest of voices she should join a choir
+or madrigal society and learn to sing at sight.
+She should, when listening to a musical performance,
+try to guess its key. She should
+endeavour to know, without seeing, the sound
+and name of single notes on the piano,
+practising herself with her eyes shut. It is
+good practice, also, to take an easy chant or
+hymn tune, hitherto unknown, and try to get
+some idea of its melody and harmony without
+playing it. When all this is done, one of the
+most important tasks remains: that of
+mastering time in all its branches. Slovenliness
+in this particular is fatal to all music,
+above all to that for the organ, which is meant
+to guide and control. A feeling for rhythm
+and a quick-sighted accurate knowledge of
+time, may be much improved by playing with
+others, either duets on the piano, or accompaniments
+to voice or instrument. The
+player should compel herself to account for
+the time reason of every passage slowly,
+until she is able to do so with rapidity and
+precision at sight. At this point it may be
+well to begin lessons on the organ, taking
+great pains to become familiar with the
+technical part of the instrument, the names of
+stops and meaning of these names, mechanism
+and its use. Then will come the careful
+practice of pedals, which are at first so
+absolutely bewildering that amateurs are
+filled with despair at the apparent impossibilities
+they are asked to face with hope.</p>
+
+<p>Into the teacher's work it is not our province
+to go; but we would ask the learner to
+be armed with courage and perseverance, and
+to practise patiently. Success is more than
+likely.</p>
+
+<p>We now proceed with advice to one possessed
+of some knowledge of organ-playing
+and some acquaintance with its technical capabilities.
+First, we should say&mdash;Play on all
+available instruments, as no two are alike, and
+the stops are called by many different names,
+which must be identified quickly as emergencies
+arise. Then acquire a knowledge of harmony,
+specially useful in accompanying church
+music with dignity, and enabling the player to
+fill in chords which the vocal score (or voice
+parts) have left thin and ineffective. Volumes
+might be written on accompaniments; but on
+this subject we would advise amateurs to consult
+heart, head, and common sense, and we
+would recommend them to read Dr. Bridge's
+"Organ Accompaniment," one of Novello's
+music primers, which will open out to them
+many possibilities, on the use of which they
+must decide for themselves according to their
+technical ability and the effect they aim at.
+It may be they can only try to pull a few weak
+voices through the singing allotted to them&mdash;in
+which case a strong, steady accompaniment
+of the simplest description is the best.</p>
+
+<p>One word on voluntaries. These should be
+chosen with great care and the deepest respect
+for the church and the instrument, and kept
+well within the powers of the player. Amateurs
+do not as a rule obtain much control of
+their nerves, and the greatest help in the world
+is given by the knowledge that there is not a
+"difficult bit" coming. Voluntary books are
+not quite to be trusted, as their selection often
+contains operatic music very unfit for organ or
+church; but they generally contain some pieces
+of a sacred and dignified character,
+which may be useful. It is also dangerous
+for the inexperienced to plunge into easy
+arrangements of unknown music, taking perhaps
+wrong views of the time, and sometimes<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span>
+making the more experienced listener smile, if
+nothing worse, at the curious rendering of
+some well-known air, jumbled up with its
+obbligato accompaniment, the existence of
+which was entirely unknown to the poor player.
+Every organist should possess a metronome,
+and carefully ascertain with it the correct time
+of any music intended for use in public.</p>
+
+<p>Finally, if every small action is to be done
+to the glory of God, how much more the
+playing in His church! Let none take this
+noble work in hand without a desire to give,
+in its degree, the best work that can be given
+in absolute self-renunciation, humility, and
+reverence.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/illus004.png" width="600" height="127" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+
+<h2><a name="EVERY_GIRL_A_BUSINESS_WOMAN" id="EVERY_GIRL_A_BUSINESS_WOMAN"></a>EVERY GIRL A BUSINESS WOMAN.<br />
+<br />
+<span style="font-size: 75%;">A PRACTICAL GUIDE TO THE WORLD OF INDUSTRY AND THRIFT.</span><br />
+<br />
+<span class="smcap font-size: 75%;">By JAMES MASON.</span></h2>
+
+<h3>PART I.</h3>
+
+
+<p>Every girl who is guided by common sense
+will aim at becoming a business woman. That
+is to say, she will try to cultivate habits of
+order, industry, perseverance, method, and
+punctuality, and will do her best to learn how
+to conduct formal correspondence, how to
+keep accounts, how to manage money, and
+what to do with savings. Besides this, she
+will make a point of knowing something about
+the laws relating to domestic life&mdash;the renting
+of houses and the employment of servants, for
+example&mdash;and she will push her inquiries in
+every direction, so as to acquire not only the
+right way of doing things, but the right way
+of forming a judgment upon them.</p>
+
+<p>A wise girl will thus greatly increase her
+usefulness in the world. She will be able to
+take part in the affairs of life with pleasure to
+herself and without being a trouble and hindrance
+to her neighbours.</p>
+
+<p>Another advantage may be pointed out.
+There are always people trying to get the
+better of those who know nothing, and their
+victims more often than not are ladies. It is
+easy to fall a prey to rogues and sharpers if
+one is ignorant of business, especially when
+nature has made women kind-hearted and
+experience has not rendered them suspicious.
+As a protection, there is nothing like being a
+business woman.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps someone may say that "business
+woman" has a hard sound, and stands for a
+character precise, selfish, and uninteresting.
+That is not what we intend by it at all. Is a
+girl to be less loveable, less gentle, less charming,
+whenever we cease to say of her, That
+girl, in regard to all the ways of business, is a
+perfect simpleton? On the contrary, business
+is a fine training-school for many virtues;
+and of all good women, a good business
+woman may be reckoned the very best.</p>
+
+<p>Our articles are intended to be of use to
+two classes of girls. The first consists of those
+who either have or are likely to have a little
+money of their own, and need to know how
+to manage it and how to regulate those affairs
+which money always brings in its train. By
+ignorance of business many a useful life of this
+class as been marred.</p>
+
+<p>The second is made up of girls who have to
+earn their own living and make their own way
+in the world. These have a special need to
+know something about business. People as a
+rule are valuable in proportion to their knowledge&mdash;those
+who know nothing being simply
+worth nothing.</p>
+
+<p>One great reason for the work of girls and
+women being poorly paid, is that few know
+anything about either the principles or the
+practice of the most ordinary business affairs.
+We shall try in these articles to put girls in
+future on a better footing, and to make them
+in business equal, at any rate, to any average
+men. In this way there is a good chance of
+doubling their usefulness and value, and of
+more than doubling their independence.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing is done all at once, and in business,
+as in everything else, if you mean to build
+high you must begin low. A girl who wishes
+to be a business woman must start with accumulating
+the same sort of knowledge as an
+office-boy. We shall therefore try to deal
+with the subject simply and from the very
+beginning. You may sometimes be tempted
+to say, "Oh, we knew that before," but
+another girl may not have been so fortunate,
+and her ignorance must be taken as our reason
+for pointing out what appears to be familiar
+facts.</p>
+
+<p>We begin with the subject of business
+letters, and the first thing we shall say about
+them is&mdash;Be very particular about their
+appearance. There is a proverb, to be sure,
+warning us that appearances are deceitful, but
+that proverb is only true occasionally; in
+general we may safely draw an inference as to
+the writer from the look of her letter. An
+ill-folded, clumsy, up-and-down-hill, blotted,
+greasy-looking letter almost certainly comes
+from an untidy house and a stupid girl,
+whereas a neat, carefully-written epistle suggests
+just as surely the opposite.</p>
+
+<p>In friendly letters our correspondents know
+something about us beforehand, but in business
+we may be writing to perfect strangers, who
+can only judge of us by the figure we cut on a
+sheet of note-paper. To secure prompt attention
+and a polite reply, no plan works so well
+as putting good taste into the appearance of
+letters. They are really a part of ourselves,
+and a girl should as soon think of sending
+them marked with carelessness to either a
+friend or a stranger as of going to make a call
+in a patched frock, a faded hat, and gloves
+with holes.</p>
+
+<p>An indispensable point in a business letter
+is to have the meaning quite clear. It must
+say exactly what the writer intends, leaving
+nothing to be guessed at.</p>
+
+<p>And after clearness the next point is shortness.
+A brief letter makes far more impression
+than a long one, besides which it usually gets
+attended to at once. We have known a man
+open a lady's letter on a matter of business,
+and, seeing it a long rigmarole, put it at once
+in his pocket and let it lie there forgotten for
+a week.</p>
+
+<p>That long letters receive most notice is a
+mistake into which girls fall very often, but
+she who aspires to be a real business woman
+must give herself to the study of such short
+epistles as that of the officer who sent in as his
+official report, "Sir,&mdash;I have the honour to
+inform you that I have just shot a man
+who came to kill me.&mdash;Your obedient servant,
+&mdash;&mdash;."</p>
+
+<p>All letters should be headed with the address
+from which they were written, the day
+of the month, and the year; in this way:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+2, Ireland Avenue,<br />
+Stratford-on-Avon, 9th October, 1886.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>It is an irritating peculiarity with many
+people unaccustomed to business to be careless
+on this point. Common sense suggests
+that they should mend their ways, and by
+putting the date and a full address on every
+letter, save their correspondents sometimes a
+good deal of trouble.</p>
+
+<p>There is a short way, occasionally employed,
+of writing the date; for example, 4&nbsp;/&nbsp;7&nbsp;/&nbsp;86;
+meaning the 4th day of the 7th month (July,
+that is) of 1886. This contraction&mdash;which is
+improved by having the month put in Roman
+figures (as, 4&nbsp;/&nbsp;vii.&nbsp;/&nbsp;86)&mdash;is handy now and
+again, but it does not strike one as looking
+particularly well at the head of a letter.</p>
+
+<p>Put the name of the person to whom the
+letter is written at the beginning or the end.
+Long ago, when envelopes were not in use,
+this did not matter so much, because the name
+of the person addressed could be seen by
+turning to the postal direction; but nowadays
+the envelope bearing the address is dropped
+into the waste-paper basket, and a second
+address is required to give the letter completeness,
+and enable third parties, perhaps, to
+understand it.</p>
+
+<p>As to how to begin, whether "Sir" or
+"Madam," or "Dear Sir" or "Dear
+Madam," everyone may please herself, only
+taking note that the "Dear" should be
+omitted when any special reason exists for
+being distant and formal. Not, however, that
+the word when used in a business letter has
+anything of an affectionate meaning. It is
+just one of the drops of oil used to keep the
+machinery of human intercourse working
+smoothly. Perhaps it originally crept in to
+soften the sharp effect of "Sir," which sounds<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span>
+for all the world as if it would snap a correspondent's
+head off.</p>
+
+<p>"Dear Sir" and "Dear Sirs" are both right,
+but "Dear Gentlemen" is not, though there
+seems no reason against it. If you begin
+"Sir" you must not end "I remain, dear sir."
+The beginning and the end should be all of a
+piece, and in both places the same form of
+address should be used.</p>
+
+<p>In concluding a business letter you may say
+"yours respectfully," or "your obedient
+servant," or "yours truly," or "yours faithfully,"
+according to the degree of intimacy
+existing between you and your correspondent.
+But really there are no very nice distinctions to
+be observed between such phrases, and their
+use may safely be left to every girl's common
+sense and discretion.</p>
+
+<p>Take pains to sign your name always so
+that people can read it. Some, out of pure
+affectation, conceal what they call themselves
+under a scribble which none can read&mdash;"a
+hopeless puzzle of intemperate scratches."
+How is a stranger, getting a letter signed in
+this way, to know to whom to send a reply,
+unless, as is sometimes done, he cuts out the
+signature, pastes it on the envelope, and adds
+the address? But illegible signatures, it must
+be confessed, are more often a man's folly
+than a woman's.</p>
+
+<p>Always, too, sign your name the same way:
+get into the habit of it. Don't let it be to-day
+"Mary G. Snodham," and to-morrow
+"Mary Snodham," and the day after "M.&nbsp;G.
+Snodham." If character comes out anywhere
+in writing, it is in the signature, and it ought
+to be every day the same, the same in words,
+the same in writing, and the same in flourishes&mdash;that
+is to say, if there are any flourishes.</p>
+
+<p>When you send a Post Office order to anyone,
+however, you may make an exception to
+this rule. It is a good plan to sign a letter
+accompanying such an order with initials only.
+When this is done, should the letter fall into
+the hands of dishonest people, the chances are
+considerably reduced of their knowing the
+name of the sender so as to get payment of
+the order. In getting the money for a Post
+Office order it is always necessary, as perhaps
+you know, to tell at the post-office who
+sent it.</p>
+
+<p>When you (we shall call you Elizabeth
+Fisher) are asked to write a letter in the name
+of another person (call her Janet Constable),
+how should you sign it? Not, certainly, by
+just writing Janet Constable; that would be
+highly improper. To put another person's
+name to any letter or document whatever, even
+in fun, is not even to be dreamt about. You
+must sign&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Yours truly,<br /></span>
+<span style="margin-left: 4em;"><i>for</i> <span class="smcap">Janet Constable,</span><br /></span>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 6em;">Elizabeth Fisher.<br /></span>
+</p>
+
+<p>Or, if you like it better&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Yours respectfully,<br /></span>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 4em;">Janet Constable,<br /></span>
+<span style="margin-left: 6em;"><i>p.</i> <span class="smcap">Elizabeth Fisher.</span><br /></span>
+</p>
+
+<p>In this case the <i>p.</i> stands for <i>per</i>, and means
+that Janet Constable signs the letter <i>by</i> or
+<i>through</i> you. You may write <i>per</i> in full, if
+you like.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes you may have to write inquiring
+about the character of people or their standing
+from a money point of view. In doing so, put
+the name or names on a slip of paper and gum
+it at the foot of your letter, so that it can be
+easily torn off. Your correspondent can then
+at once destroy the slip, and should your letter
+or her reply afterwards be read by other people,
+they will probably be none the wiser, for they
+will only see in your letter an inquiry regarding
+the person or persons "noted at foot," and in
+hers an answer about the person or persons
+"about whom you inquire."</p>
+
+<p>All enclosures sent in a letter should be
+mentioned in a note in the left-hand bottom
+corner after signing one's name. Thus:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Enclosed:<br /></span>
+<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Postal Order, 10s. 6d.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Recipe for cooking rattlesnakes.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Pattern: the Tullochgorum mantle.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>We have spoken about the clearness and
+brevity required in business letters, but to the
+subject of style a few lines more may be
+devoted. Business letters are of necessity dry
+and matter-of-fact, and in writing them no
+time should be lost in hunting for fine expressions.
+They should contain politeness, but
+light and airy sentences are worse than thrown
+away.</p>
+
+<p>"Accuracy of expression," says Mr. George
+Seton, in his pleasant "Gossip about Letters
+and Letter-writers," "as distinguished from
+looseness and slovenliness of statement, is of
+the utmost consequence&mdash;not only with the
+view of saving the time of one's correspondent,
+but also to prevent what may prove a very
+serious misunderstanding. I have known many
+cases of prolonged litigation which were chiefly
+owing to some doubtful or equivocal expressions
+in the course of a business correspondence."</p>
+
+<p>There are many phrases peculiar to business
+letters&mdash;formal beginnings, for example, such
+as&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I am favoured with yours of 14th curt."</p>
+
+<p>"I duly received your favour of 19th inst."</p>
+
+<p>"I am in receipt of your lines of y'day, and
+note that, &amp;c."</p>
+
+<p>"I beg to confirm my last respects of 25th
+ult."</p>
+
+<p>"I beg to confirm my letter of yesterday."</p>
+
+<p>These phrases and many others which will
+appear in the course of these articles may seem
+formal enough, but we must not expect in
+business to meet with the language of story-books.</p>
+
+<p>A common business term is "advice," used
+to mean information sent by letter. For example:
+"I wait your advice as to the despatch
+of the parcel." A funny misunderstanding of
+the word occurred recently, when a provincial
+postmaster, new to his duties, in the United
+States, sent the following communication to
+the Postmaster-General:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Seeing by the regulations that I am required
+to send you a letter of advice, I must
+plead in excuse that I have been postmaster
+but a short time; but I will say, if your office
+pays no better than mine, I advise you to give
+it up."</p>
+
+<p>Every subject mentioned in a letter should
+have a separate paragraph. Very formal, you
+may say. Perhaps; but it is also very clear.</p>
+
+<p>Always acknowledge receipt of business
+letters at the earliest possible opportunity. If
+they come with money, an acknowledgment
+ought to be sent by return of post, that is to
+say, by the first post after they arrive. The
+same rule may safely be applied to letters
+coming with any enclosure whatever. Sometimes
+delay may be of no consequence, but to
+answer at once will at any rate get you the
+credit of courtesy.</p>
+
+<p>Of all business letters a copy should be
+kept. If you write few they may be copied
+by hand into a book kept for the purpose, but
+if many the use of a copying-press saves a
+great deal of monotonous labour, and secures
+absolute accuracy besides.</p>
+
+<p>The way to use a copying-press is this.
+Write the letter with copying-ink. Then put
+a sheet of oiled paper under the leaf of the
+letter-book on which you wish to take the
+copy. Letter-books of thin paper are sold for
+the purpose. Wet the leaf with a brush or
+soft sponge. On the top of the wet leaf put
+a sheet of blotting paper, and on the top of
+that another sheet of oiled paper. Then shut
+the book, put it in the press, and give it a
+squeeze for a second to take off the superfluous
+moisture. Take out the book, remove
+the blotting-paper and the top sheet of oiled
+paper, and in their place put your letter face
+downwards on the damp page. Shut the
+book, put it back into the copying-press, give
+it a hard squeeze by means of the lever or
+screw, leave it in from half a minute to a
+minute, and the whole thing is done; an exact
+copy of the letter will be left in your letter-book.</p>
+
+<p>A letter being written and copied, has to be
+posted; but before being posted it must be
+addressed. The address should be written
+neatly and plainly, neither too high up nor
+too low down.</p>
+
+<p>To say, Be sure to put the direction on your
+letters is not unnecessary advice. Thousands
+of letters are posted every year without any
+address whatever. In the year ending 31st
+March, 1886, there were no fewer than 26,228
+of them, and of this large number 1,620 contained
+cash and cheques to the amount, in all,
+of &pound;3,733 17s. 5d.</p>
+
+<p>Be sure, too, that your letters are properly
+fastened. On this subject, hear Mr. George
+Seton. "There is," he says, "no real security
+in wafers, and probably still less in adhesive
+envelopes, which are now in almost universal
+use. Both may easily be loosened by the
+application of either water or steam. The
+best mode of securing a letter is first to wafer
+it and then seal it with wax. When, however,
+an adhesive envelope is used, the proper
+course is to <i>damp</i>, rather than wet, <i>both</i> sides
+of the flap before pressing it down; and if
+the paper is very thick, the upper side should
+be again damped after being pressed down."</p>
+
+<p>Insufficient and wrong addresses occasion a
+great deal of trouble to the Post Office officials,
+and this trouble one of the present Postmaster-General's
+predecessors remarks, with some
+pathos, "ought scarcely to be given to make
+up for what generally arises from the carelessness
+of the writers, without an additional
+charge." Last year, through some fault in the
+addresses, no fewer than 12,822,067 letters,
+postcards, newspapers, and parcels were
+received in the returned letter offices.</p>
+
+<p>As an example of an insufficiently-addressed
+letter, we may mention one the subject of a
+complaint made by a Mrs. Jones of Newmarket.
+She stated that a letter had been
+posted to her, but had not reached her. It
+appeared, however, on inquiry, that there
+were twenty-nine Mrs. Joneses at the place,
+and that there was nothing in the address to
+help the postman to decide between their
+several claims.</p>
+
+<p>When money or anything of value is sent
+through the post, the letter in which it goes
+should be registered. By this means we can
+be almost absolutely sure of its travelling
+safely. The fee for a registered letter was
+at one time half-a-crown, and not so long ago
+was a shilling. In 1878 it was reduced from
+4d. to 2d. Not only has the fee been reduced
+to what may be thought the lowest possible
+point, but registered letter envelopes are now
+sold in different and convenient sizes. The
+Post Office also undertakes to make good,
+under certain reasonable conditions, up to &pound;2
+the value of any registered letter which it loses.</p>
+
+<p>If people who have these facilities for sending
+letters securely provided for them choose to
+run the risk of loss, they deserve very little
+sympathy if the chance goes against them.
+Last year an unregistered letter containing a
+cheque was alleged to have been stolen in the
+post. It was found, however, to have been
+duly delivered by being pushed under the front
+door, and afterwards to have been torn in
+pieces by some puppies inside the house. The
+fragments were in the end discovered in the
+straw of the dog-kennel. Now, had the
+sender only spent 2d. in registering this letter,
+a receipt would have been taken on its delivery,
+and all chance of its falling into the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span>
+paws of the puppies would have been prevented.</p>
+
+<p>But it is wonderful what people, penny-wise
+and pound foolish, will sometimes do to save
+2d. A few years back the sealing-wax on a
+letter was found to contain &pound;1 10s. in gold
+coins. There could hardly be a more stupid
+way of sending money.</p>
+
+<p>If coin, or watches, or jewellery are posted
+in letters or packets without registration, and
+the fact is discovered, the Post Office people
+bring into force a system of registration by
+compulsion, and on delivery charge a fee of
+8d. in addition to the ordinary postage.</p>
+
+<p>When coins are sent in a letter they should
+on no account be put in loose, but should be
+packed so as to move about as little as possible.
+The best way is to take a card, and,
+cutting quite through to the other side, make
+a cross on it for each coin; then slip the coin
+into the cross, so that it is held in its place
+by the tongues of cardboard, two on each
+side.</p>
+
+<p>Who owns letters whilst they are in the
+post? In Great Britain the ownership of a
+letter whilst it is in the post lies in the Queen,
+as represented by her Postmaster-General and
+her Secretary of State. "Neither the sender
+nor the person to whom it is sent can claim
+to interfere with a letter whilst it is in the
+Post Office. Only the warrant of a Secretary
+of State can stay its delivery." Once a letter
+is dropped into a letter-box it is like a spoken
+word, it cannot be recalled.</p>
+
+<p>After letters come postcards, which were
+introduced into this country in October, 1870,
+and have proved a great convenience to many
+people, saving them both time and money.
+By means of reply postcards you can make
+sure of an answer from a correspondent without
+putting her to any expense or to any trouble
+worth mentioning.</p>
+
+<p>The back of the postcard is for the message;
+nothing must be put on the front except the
+address. This limitation of space is useful for
+the cultivation of brevity; but those who have
+a great deal to say may derive consolation
+from the fact that on the back of a postcard
+you can, by writing small, easily put at least
+four hundred and sixty words! We do not,
+however, say that such a performance, good
+enough for amusement, would be like that of
+a woman of business.</p>
+
+<p>All business letters ought to be preserved.
+They should be folded neatly longways and
+all of a size, and docketed, as it is called&mdash;that
+is to say, the date and the name of the
+sender and his (or her) address, and the
+subject, should be put on the back thus:</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+6th September, 1886.<br />
+<span class="smcap">Martin Rose and Co.</span>,<br />
+Liverpool.<br />
+Remittance, &pound;10 19s. 2d.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Do not, however, crowd these particulars together,
+as has been done here for convenience in
+printing; leave a considerable space between
+the first and second, and the third and fourth
+lines. When letters are folded and docketed
+they should be tied up in the order of their
+dates, or put away in pigeon holes under the
+different letters of the alphabet. One can
+never tell when it may be necessary to refer
+to old letters on matters of business, so it is
+prudent to keep them all. Doing so and
+turning them over occasionally is also useful
+for giving us a humble opinion of ourselves;
+we see by the light of additional experience
+how we might often have managed things
+much better than we did.</p>
+
+<p>Besides letters and postcards, telegrams
+furnish another means of communication.
+For a telegram sent to any place in the
+United Kingdom, the charge is sixpence for
+the first twelve words, and a halfpenny for
+every word after the first twelve. Addresses
+are charged for, so a sixpennyworth of
+telegraphing does not represent a long
+message, but by ingenuity&mdash;and a business
+woman is nothing without ingenuity&mdash;a few
+words may be made to mean a great deal. The
+cost of a reply to a telegram may be prepaid.</p>
+
+<p>About the newspaper post, the book post,
+and the parcel post, not much need be said.
+Always be careful about wrappers. A great
+many newspapers and books escape from their
+wrappers every day, and land in the returned
+letter office. In sending parcels the packing
+is often a weak point; it is not so much that
+people are either handless or stupid, they are
+just thoughtless. "It must be borne in
+mind," says the Postmaster-General,
+"although, of course, every care will be
+taken by the officers, that a parcel with
+fragile or perishable contents must be several
+times handled before it reaches its destination,
+and will probably have to be packed with
+many others of a different kind and shape, or
+more weighty and bulky. Eggs, butter, and
+fruit, especially delicate fruit, such as grapes
+and peaches, should be placed in strong
+boxes and so placed as not to shift. Fresh
+flowers should be carefully packed in strong
+boxes; but cardboard boxes should not be
+used for the purpose, as they are often
+reduced to pulp by the moisture which
+exudes from the contents. Fish or game
+should be carefully packed in strong boxes, or
+hampers, or in perforated boxes."</p>
+
+<p>Remember that some things are forbidden
+to be sent by post&mdash;live animals, for instance.
+This prohibition is very little regarded by
+some people. Last year, in Dublin alone, two
+hens, eight mice, and two hedgehogs were
+stopped on their way through the post. One
+of the hens which was addressed to a
+veterinary surgeon in London, was in bad
+health, and though carefully attended to, died
+in the office. The rest of the animals were
+given up alive to the senders.</p>
+
+<p>Certificates of the posting of parcels can be
+got at all post offices. If you have any doubt
+about the trustworthiness of the person
+entrusted with the posting of a parcel,
+instructions should be given to bring back a
+receipt. A few months ago the Post Office
+was charged at Liverpool with the non-delivery
+of a bottle of wine and a box of figs.
+It turned out, however, that the missing
+goods had never come under its charge, the
+person to whom the packet had been given to
+post having eaten the figs and drunk the wine.</p>
+
+<p>Parcels can also be insured against loss and
+damage by the payment of a small sum.
+Paying a penny insures to the extent of &pound;5 and
+twopence to the amount of &pound;10.</p>
+
+<p>In order to understand the outs and ins
+of the Post Office&mdash;and it is a subject
+with which every sensible person should
+be familiar&mdash;let a girl invest sixpence
+in a copy of the Post Office Guide, a
+publication of which an edition is issued every
+quarter. She will there find everything necessary
+to be known about the posting of letters, postcards,
+newspapers, book packets, and parcels
+to places in the United Kingdom, or abroad,
+the sending of telegrams, the rates for money
+and postal orders, and the regulations of the
+Savings Bank. To turn over its 300 pages or
+so is decidedly interesting. One sees what a
+complicated machinery is now employed for
+the convenience of the public, what wonders&mdash;to
+speak of letters alone&mdash;can be done for a
+penny, and how thousands of miles can be
+reduced to insignificance by the magic of
+twopence-halfpenny.</p>
+
+<p>In the twelve months from the 31st of
+March, 1885, to the same day of this year, the
+number of letters delivered in the United
+Kingdom was 1,403,547,900, giving an
+average of 38.6 to each person in the kingdom.
+The total number of postcards was 171,290,000.
+Adding to the letters and postcards the book-packets,
+newspapers, and parcels which passed
+through the Post Office during the twelve
+months, we have a grand total of 2,091,183,822,
+which shows an average to each person of
+57.5.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="VARIETIES" id="VARIETIES"></a>VARIETIES.</h2>
+
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">The "Woman of Stenay."</span></p>
+
+<p>"And so you have not heard the story of the
+'Woman of Stenay'?" said a Lorraine peasant.
+"It was in war-time, and she offered a
+barrel of wine to a detachment of Austrians,
+saying&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"'You are thirsty, friends. Drink. You
+are welcome to all my store.' And as she
+spoke she drank a cupful in their honour.</p>
+
+<p>"The soldiers accepted with pleasure, and
+in a few minutes four hundred men were
+writhing on the ground in agony.</p>
+
+<p>"Then the 'Woman of Stenay' rose, and
+with her dying breath shrieked out&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"'You are all poisoned! <i>Vive la France!</i>'</p>
+
+<p>"She then fell back a corpse."</p>
+
+<p>This is the legend of Lorraine, and the
+memory of its heroine is revered by the
+peasantry as highly as that of Charlotte
+Corday.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Singing Servants.</span></p>
+
+<p>Tusser, in his "Points of Huswifry united
+to the Comforts of Husbandry," published in
+1570, recommends the country housewife to
+select servants who sing at their work as being
+usually the most painstaking and the best.
+He says&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Such servants are oftenest painful and good<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That sing in their labour, as birds in the wood."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">A Hint for Workers.</span>&mdash;St. Bernard has
+said that the more he prayed and read his
+Bible the better he did his ordinary work and
+the more clearly and regularly did he conduct
+his correspondence. An increase of private
+devotion will be found not to lessen one's
+power of work or one's efficiency in ordinary
+duties.</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Our Own Selves.</span>&mdash;How can you learn
+self-knowledge? Never by meditation, but
+best by action. Try to do your duty, and you
+will soon find what you are worth. What is
+your duty? The exigency of the day.&mdash;<i>Goethe.</i></p>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Useless Anxiety.</span>&mdash;I shall add to my list
+as the eighth deadly sin that of anxiety of
+mind, and resolve not to be pining and
+miserable when I ought to be grateful and
+happy.&mdash;<i>Sir Thomas Barnard.</i></p>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The Moonlight Sonata.</span>&mdash;The "Moonlight
+Sonata" is an absurd title which has for
+years been attached, both in Germany and
+England, to one of Beethoven's sonatas. It
+is said to have been derived from the expression
+of a German critic comparing the first
+movement to a boat wandering by moonlight
+on the Lake of Lucerne.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/illus005.png" width="600" height="614" alt="THE SHEPHERD&#39;S FAIRY" title="" />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="THE_SHEPHERDS_FAIRY" id="THE_SHEPHERDS_FAIRY"></a>THE SHEPHERD'S FAIRY<br />
+<br />
+<span style="font-size: 75%;">A PASTORALE.<br /></span>
+<br />
+<span style="font-size: 75%;"><span class="smcap">By DARLEY DALE</span>, Author of "Fair Katherine," etc.</span></h2>
+
+
+<h3>CHAPTER I.<br />
+
+<span style="font-size: 75%;">THE FAIRY'S ORIGIN.</span></h3>
+
+<p>"Die Eifersucht ist eine Leidenschaft
+der mit Eifer sucht muss Leiden
+schaffen."&mdash;<i>German Proverb.</i></p>
+
+
+<p>Very many years ago, in a valley a few
+miles from the coast, there stood a
+French ch&acirc;teau, beautifully situated in
+a handsome park near the Norman
+village of Carolles. The rich woodland
+scenery, the green pastures with their
+large wild fences now laden with wild
+roses; the shady lanes, whose banks
+will soon be covered with the long,
+bright green fronds of the hartstongue,
+and the delicate drooping trichomanes;
+the fine timber, and the picturesque
+farmhouses with their thatched roofs
+nestling in the valleys&mdash;all tend to give
+a home-like English air to the scenery
+of Normandy. And the district in which
+the Ch&acirc;teau de Thorens stands possesses
+all these attractions for an English eye.
+Not that any English people lived in the
+ch&acirc;teau; the De Thorens were French,
+or rather Norman, to the backbone,
+descended from the great duke, and
+proud as Lucifer of their birth. Pride
+and poverty are generally supposed to
+go together; and though poor is perhaps
+hardly the word to apply to people who
+could afford to live in the ease and
+luxury which prevailed at Ch&acirc;teau de
+Thorens, yet for their rank the De Thorens
+were not rich, and, consequently, after
+the fashion of many French families,
+there were three generations of them
+now all living under the ancestral roof.</p>
+
+<p>First there was the old baroness, a
+picturesque old lady with very white hair
+and piercing black eyes, with whom we
+have very little to do; then there was
+her eldest son, the present baron, for his
+father had been dead some years, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>
+his beautiful young wife, whom he was
+so passionately fond of that he was
+jealous&mdash;dreadfully jealous&mdash;of her love
+for her baby, a little girl a few months
+old; and, lastly, there were the baron's
+three younger brothers, who with P&egrave;re
+Yvon, the chaplain, made up the family
+party. The two younger brothers were
+mere boys, still under P&egrave;re Yvon's
+charge, for he acted as tutor to them
+as well as chaplain; but L&eacute;on de
+Thorens was a young man of five-and-twenty,
+only a year or two younger than
+the baron. He was a fine, handsome
+man, tall and thin, with his mother's
+fine black eyes and small well-cut nose
+and mouth. He was of a bold, reckless
+nature, full of animal spirits, the very
+life of the house when he was at home,
+which was seldom, as he owned a yacht,
+in which he spent a great deal of his
+time. He was his mother's favourite
+son, and both he and she had often
+privately regretted that he was not the
+eldest.</p>
+
+<p>The baron was smaller and fairer than
+L&eacute;on, and not so handsome, though
+there was a strong family likeness
+between the brothers. He was of a
+quieter disposition, and his restlessness
+took an intellectual rather than a
+physical form, his wanderings being
+confined to the shelves of the valuable
+library which the ch&acirc;teau boasted,
+instead of extending over the seas on
+which L&eacute;on spent so much of his time.
+The baron's studious nature had endeared
+him very much to P&egrave;re Yvon,
+with whom he was a prime favourite,
+and who had never shown him any of
+the severity of which the other brothers
+often complained, but, on the contrary,
+had erred on the opposite side with the
+baron, whose wishes had never been
+crossed in any way, and who had grown
+up to think himself the one important
+person in the world to whom the convenience
+of everyone else must be sacrificed.</p>
+
+<p>For the first year of their married
+life the pretty baroness had contributed
+as much as P&egrave;re Yvon to spoil her husband,
+whose every whim she had
+humoured until her baby was born, and
+then, much to his astonishment, the
+baron found that his beautiful, gentle
+wife had a will of her own, and, what
+was still worse in his eyes, a large place
+in her heart for someone else besides
+himself, and although that someone else
+was only his infant daughter, the baron
+was jealous.</p>
+
+<p>In vain had he urged that the baby
+should be sent away to some peasant
+to nurse until it was a year or
+two old, as he and all his brothers had
+been, after a very common custom in
+French families. No, the baroness
+would not hear of such a thing; she
+could not live without her baby, and
+every moment she could spare she spent
+by its cradle. Indeed, so infatuated was
+she with her new possession, whose
+every movement was a delight to her,
+that she did not notice the baron became
+daily more and more morose, and that
+an ominous frown had settled on his fine
+forehead, while his mouth was closed
+with a determination that boded ill for
+his wife and daughter. But the baroness
+lived so much in her child that she did
+not observe the change in her husband;
+and as he never allowed the baby to be
+brought into his presence, the baroness
+saw but little of him except at meals,
+when all the others were present, and
+L&eacute;on's wild spirits covered his brother's
+depression and silence.</p>
+
+<p>At last, one fine June morning,
+matters reached a climax, when the
+family sat down to their one o'clock
+<i>d&eacute;jeuner</i>. The baroness was late; the
+first course was finished, and still she
+did not appear.</p>
+
+<p>"Where is Mathilde, Arnaut?" asked
+the old baroness.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know," said the baron,
+sulkily.</p>
+
+<p>"I do," said L&eacute;on; "she is worshipping
+at the shrine of that precious
+baby of yours, Arnaut. Why on earth
+don't you send it away till it is old
+enough to amuse us?"</p>
+
+<p>"Go and tell Madame la Baronne the
+soup is already finished," said the baron
+to a servant at his elbow; but he vouchsafed
+no further answer.</p>
+
+<p>"I think Arnaut has suggested that
+the baby should be sent away, but
+Mathilde objects," remarked the old
+baroness.</p>
+
+<p>"Send it away without asking her,
+then. Give her a pug instead; it will
+be much more amusing, and not half
+the trouble the baby is," said L&eacute;on.</p>
+
+<p>Here the servant returned to say
+madame would take her <i>d&eacute;jeuner</i> in
+the nursery, as the nurse was out and
+she could not leave the baby.</p>
+
+<p>"Really, Mathilde is
+too absurd, when there
+are at least three or four
+other servants in the
+house who could look
+after the baby as well
+as the nurse," said the
+old baroness, helping
+herself to some omelette.</p>
+
+<p>"She is mad," muttered
+the baron, angrily.</p>
+
+<p>"Quite, all women
+are; there can be no
+doubt about that. Look
+here, Arnaut, it is quite
+clear if you don't send
+that infant away, you
+might just as well live
+<i>en gar&ccedil;on</i>, like me, as I
+foresee you won't have
+much of Mathilde's society
+now," said L&eacute;on.</p>
+
+<p>"It does not require
+much foresight to predict
+that," said the
+baron, bitterly.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, if Mathilde
+won't send it away, just
+hand it over to me the
+next time I take a cruise,
+which will be as soon as
+ever there is wind enough
+to fill my sails, and I'll
+place the child somewhere
+where there is no
+fear of Mathilde getting
+it again till it is of a
+reasonable age," said
+L&eacute;on.</p>
+
+<p>The idea of handing
+the baby over to
+the tender mercies of L&eacute;on struck them
+all as so comic that a general laugh, in
+which all but the baron joined, greeted
+this speech, which was forgotten as soon
+as it was uttered by the speaker.</p>
+
+<p>A few days after L&eacute;on announced that
+he was going on board his yacht that
+evening; a south wind was blowing, and
+he should take a cruise up the Channel.
+Would the baron go with him? They
+were sure to have fine weather, and it
+would be delightful at sea in this heat.
+The baron declined the invitation, as he
+was a wretched sailor; but that evening,
+when he and L&eacute;on were smoking after
+dinner, he said, suddenly, "Where are
+you going, L&eacute;on?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know; it depends on the
+wind. I may run over to England, or
+I may only go to the Channel Isles. I
+shall see."</p>
+
+<p>"Shall you touch anywhere?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, I shall go ashore; I shan't
+take provisions for more than a week.
+Why?"</p>
+
+<p>The baron looked round the verandah
+in which they were sitting to make sure
+that they were alone, and having satisfied
+himself of this he leant forward and
+said, in a half-whisper, "Tiens, L&eacute;on!
+Will you help me? I am determined to
+stand it no longer; it is wearing my life
+out; I have not a moment's peace. If
+I don't get rid of it I believe I shall go
+mad."</p>
+
+<p>"What is it you are talking of? I'll
+help you if I can, but what is wearing
+your life out?" said L&eacute;on.</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/illus006.png" width="300" height="436" alt="THE BARONESS." title="" />
+<span class="caption">THE BARONESS.</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"The baby, of course," said the baron.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"The baby! Well, but what do you
+want me to do with that! I can't kill it,
+you know."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course not, but you said in joke
+the other day you would take it with you
+on one of your trips, and put it out to
+nurse. I wish to heaven, L&eacute;on, you'd
+do it in reality. It is no use my sending
+it to anyone near here; Mathilde would
+go after it the next day. My only
+chance is to send it somewhere where it
+will be safe, of course, and well looked
+after, but where Mathilde can't go after
+it, and as she would go to the end of
+the world for it if she knew where it was,
+it must go where she can't find it; she
+must not know where it is. No one,
+indeed, need know but you, for as far as
+I am concerned the less I know about it
+at present the better; it has spoilt all
+my happiness. Mathilde is so wrapped
+up in that child she does not care a fig
+for me now; in fact, I rarely see her. If
+you can only put that infant safely out
+of our way for a year or two, I'll never
+forget it, L&eacute;on."</p>
+
+<p>"Are you in real sober earnest, Arnaut?"
+asked L&eacute;on, who, in his astonishment,
+had risen to his feet, and was
+puffing away vigorously at his cigar.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course I am. I am willing to
+pay handsomely for it, and I shall depend
+upon you putting it where it will
+be well taken care of. As for all the rest,
+I leave it to you to take it where you
+like&mdash;Australia if you wish, only don't
+tell me where it is, or I might cut my
+own throat by telling Mathilde if she
+makes a great scene, as she will when
+it is gone. Will you do it, L&eacute;on?"</p>
+
+<p>"Whew!" whistled L&eacute;on. "I don't
+care for the work, for if anything should
+happen to the child Mathilde would
+never forgive me nor you either. However,
+if you insist, I think I could manage
+it, but as I am going to start in two
+or three hours, there is not much time. I
+must go down to the yacht and speak to
+my men first. If I may tell them I am
+taking the child by your express wish I
+could manage it, I think. The next difficulty
+is where to take it, but I have
+an idea about that, so I'll be off now,
+and see what I can arrange. I shall
+ride, so I shall be back in an hour."</p>
+
+<p>"Tell them anything you like, except
+not to let anyone know where you leave
+the child," replied the baron, as L&eacute;on
+started on an errand which, in spite of
+his protest to the contrary, was
+thoroughly after his own heart; indeed,
+any mad freak such as this was quite in
+his line.</p>
+
+<p>Among his crew he had an English
+sailor who acted as carpenter, and, as
+L&eacute;on often said, was worth two or three
+French sailors in a gale or an emergency.
+He knew the Channel, too, as
+well as a pilot, and, indeed often acted in
+that capacity; he was an honest, trustworthy
+man&mdash;at least, so L&eacute;on thought;
+and as he rode over the hills to Carolles,
+he decided to take this man into his
+confidence, and see if he could help him;
+it was possible this Englishman knew of
+some of his own countrywomen who would
+undertake the charge of the child.</p>
+
+<p>Accordingly, when he reached his
+yacht, L&eacute;on called for John Smith, and
+had a long conversation with him in
+English, which he spoke fairly well, the
+result of which was the carpenter, after a
+little thought, declared he knew of a
+shepherd and his wife in Sussex who, he
+felt sure, would undertake the charge of
+the child; his only fear was that they
+might have some scruples about keeping
+the matter a secret, and might want to
+know who the child was; but if L&eacute;on
+would leave this to him to arrange, he
+could, he thought, manage it so that the
+shepherd should have no idea to whom
+the child belonged, nor why it was put
+into his care.</p>
+
+<p>"Where does this good man live?"
+asked L&eacute;on.</p>
+
+<p>"About four or five miles from
+Brighton, sir. The wind is favourable; we
+might run across in twenty-four hours or
+less if it lasts, and I think it will; we
+shall have the tide with us going out if
+we start at ten to-night," said the
+carpenter.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, that is settled. Now the next
+point is, who is to take care of it on
+board? It must be fed; who of our men
+understands babies best?"</p>
+
+<p>"I can't undertake that, sir, but
+there's Pierre Legros, he has half a
+dozen of his own, and when he is at
+home looks after them all I believe; he
+ought to know all about it."</p>
+
+<p>"Call Pierre, then."</p>
+
+<p>Pierre Legros was accordingly called,
+and, on hearing what was required of
+him, professed with pride his ability to
+act as nurse during the voyage; and
+having commissioned him to lay in a
+stock of food for the baby, about which
+L&eacute;on's ideas were exceedingly vague,
+L&eacute;on rode back to the ch&acirc;teau.</p>
+
+<p>The baron was on the lookout for him,
+and was delighted to hear all was
+arranged for the baby's removal.</p>
+
+<p>"I have not been idle since you have
+been gone. Luckily Mathilde has a headache,
+so I have sent her to bed, and I sat
+with her till she was asleep. My next
+care was to get rid of the nurse, so I
+have packed her off to Br&eacute;cy with one
+of the other servants for some medicine
+for Mathilde, and the coast is clear to the
+nursery now. There is only one of the
+housemaids with the baby, and when you
+are ready to start you must lose something
+and require her to find it while I
+secure the child. Lastly, I ordered the
+dogcart, and said I would drive you."</p>
+
+<p>"But how about the child?" interrupted
+L&eacute;on.</p>
+
+<p>"I am coming to that. Just as we
+are going to start, you must lose a stick
+or a coat. I'll offer to go back for it, and
+meet you at the side door; there is a
+staircase leading to the nursery close to
+it, down which I shall come with the
+baby after I have sent the housemaid
+who is guarding it to look for your stick.
+We shall be off and the baby on board
+before it is missed, for the girl is sure to
+stay gossiping with the other servants
+when we are off."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I hope you'll succeed, but I
+confess I think this is the most difficult
+part of the affair. However, there is no
+time to lose; you had better order the
+dogcart at once, while I go and say
+good-bye to mother and the boys. We
+must be off in twenty minutes," replied
+L&eacute;on.</p>
+
+<p>Half an hour later the brothers were
+seated in the dogcart, while the old
+baroness, with a shawl thrown round
+her head, stood on the steps under the
+portico to catch the last glimpse of her
+handsome L&eacute;on, with her two younger
+boys by her side, and P&egrave;re Yvon and
+some of the servants in the background.
+The groom had just let go of the horse's
+bridle when L&eacute;on exclaimed&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Wait a minute! I have forgotten my
+Malacca cane. I lent it to you the other
+day, Arnaut. I must have it. Where
+shall I find it?"</p>
+
+<p>"So you did. Here, one of you boys, run
+into my&mdash;but no, you'll wake Mathilde,
+I'll go myself. Here, L&eacute;on, take the
+reins, and drive round to the side door;
+I'll meet you there," said the baron, descending
+from the dogcart, and running
+into the house.</p>
+
+<p class="center">(<i>To be continued.</i>)</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="FASHIONABLE_EMBROIDERY" id="FASHIONABLE_EMBROIDERY"></a>FASHIONABLE EMBROIDERY.</h2>
+
+
+<p>The fancy embroidery of the present day is of
+such varied character and make that all would-be
+workers will find among the diversities of
+stitch and material some description that suits
+their particular need and ingenuity.</p>
+
+<p>A few years ago one embroidery alone
+claimed attention. This was the celebrated
+crewel work, of which there is no fault to be
+found in the execution and design of its higher
+grades, but which, like all fancy work that
+becomes the rage and is cheapened and multiplied
+without any regard to reason, degenerated
+to the most impossible designs and the
+worst execution attainable. Thus crewel work
+passed away, and though the best kinds are
+still to be met with, it is really superseded in
+modern drawing-rooms by embroideries all
+originating in the present desire after Oriental
+colouring and design, but of kinds distinctly
+characteristic and individual.</p>
+
+<p>The work known as Leek embroidery recommends
+itself in many ways, it being very
+reasonable in price, easily executed, and extremely
+rich and handsome when finished.
+The foundation is Tussore silk, specially
+made with the pattern to be embroidered
+upon it printed upon the foundation, during
+its manufacture, and therefore indelible. The
+colouring of the foundation is either cream,
+straw, pink, blue, green, or terra-cotta, and
+the pattern is not printed in outline only, but
+filled up with indications guiding the arrangement
+for the centres of flowers, veins of leaves,
+and other distinguishing marks. To work the
+embroidery it is necessary to line the Tussore
+with fine unbleached muslin, and to work with
+Tussore silk and Japanese gold thread. The
+Tussore silk costs 1d. the skein, and is dyed in
+every shade of Oriental colouring. Three to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>
+four shades of a colour are used to work in a
+flower, and two shades of green for the leaves.
+The stitch is crewel-stitch worked very close.
+No shading about each leaf is necessary, but
+different greens are used for different leaves,
+and thus a variety of colouring is attained
+without trouble. Every part of the pattern,
+the bordering included, is worked, and only
+the foundation left, showing where it forms
+the background to the design. The gold
+thread is laid on as the finishing touch. It is
+placed round all the chief parts of the design,
+and sewn on as an edging with a couching
+stitch; that is to say, the gold thread is held
+tightly stretched in its position with the left
+hand, while a stitch brought from the back of
+the material is passed over it and put down to
+the back again with the right hand. Lines of
+gold are used to mark out the border pattern,
+and are fastened down with the couching
+stitch. When sewing on the gold it is very
+important to keep it tightly stretched, as if
+put on loosely it is not effective. If the work
+is at all puckered, iron it with a warm but not
+hot iron on the wrong side before laying down
+the gold thread. Leek embroidery is sold by
+the yard in strips, varying from one inch to
+twelve inches in width, and costing from 6d. to
+2s. the yard. These strips are used for mantelpiece
+borders, table borders, chair backs, and
+curtain bands, according to their width. They
+look best mounted upon plush or velveteen,
+but are often mounted upon Liberty's Oriental
+silks, or made up as perfectly plain bands.
+When used for chair backs or for hanging firescreens
+the background should be handsome,
+and either ruby or dark blue in colour, and
+the work arranged either straight down its
+centre or crossing it in a number of diagonal
+lines. This manner of making up is newer
+and more effective than merely laying it on as
+an edging. Bands of unmounted Leek embroidery,
+simply lined with twill, are much
+used for looping up summer curtains, and give
+richness to the soft, creamy materials now
+employed for curtains.</p>
+
+<p>As dress trimmings Leek embroidery is
+good, the wide bands making a waistcoat
+front and the narrow the cuff trimmings. To
+a velveteen winter dress a waistcoat and cuffs
+so made are an admirable finish as long as the
+embroidery is kept subdued by rich colours,
+and the gold carefully put on, while for dinner
+dresses a broad panel of embroidery is carried
+down the skirt, and the waistcoat cut low, and
+no trimming required for the sleeves.</p>
+
+<p>Oriental embroidery cannot be made up in
+so many different ways as Leek embroidery,
+but it is quite new, and aims at reproducing
+early Eastern designs. The foundation
+material is surah silk, the silk sold in large
+squares as Liberty's handkerchief being
+correct in colouring and texture. Upon this
+foundation the patterns, which all consist of
+single petalled flowers resembling single
+dahlias, sunflowers, or chrysanthemums, are
+worked with Oriental silk, which are silks of a
+thick make, but very soft and with a gloss on
+them similar to the gloss on floss silk. The
+leaves surrounding the flowers are of the shape
+of the jessamine, and to these are added
+tendrils and queer-looking bunches of seed-vessels.</p>
+
+<p>There is little variety in the design, as the
+embroidery is entirely executed in one stitch
+(that of a close herringbone), but there is
+great variety and great scope for good shading
+in the colouring. Oriental silks are all dyed
+in the shades of blues, yellow pinks, terra-cotta
+reds, and brilliant yellows, to be seen in
+Eastern embroideries worked before the
+introduction of aniline dyes, and the consequent
+lapse into Imperial purples and
+magentas and royal blues.</p>
+
+<p>By a judicious use of good colours the same
+design can be so repeated as to look entirely
+different. Thus, a spray of flowers worked
+upon an orange-red ground, with cream, yellow,
+pink and pale blue colours, will be quite distinct
+from the same spray laid upon sea-green silk,
+and coloured with deep orange-reds and blues
+running from sky into navy blue.</p>
+
+<p>As before mentioned, the only stitch used is
+herringboning, and the only flowers single
+petalled ones; but the herringboning is done
+so closely together that it looks like an interwoven
+stitch of double crossings, and the
+flowers are all worked in their centres in a
+different silk to that used on their tips, and
+therefore resemble double petalled flowers.
+The tips of each petal are wider than the commencement,
+and the herringboning is not
+taken along as a wide line of equal width, but
+as a curved line running small, and widening
+out again several times if the petal or seed-vessel
+is a long one. Each petal is worked
+separately, and the silk is never dragged or
+drawn tightly, but is allowed to lie easily over
+the foundation, and rather loosely, although the
+stitches follow each other so closely that
+nothing of the foundation can be seen where
+they are laid. The stems, long leaves, and
+large branches are worked as closely as the
+petals in herringbone, but tendrils and sprays
+are more opened out, and are given the look of
+single coral stitch as a variety.</p>
+
+<p>When shading a flower select two colours
+that are distinct in tone but not jarring in
+their contrast; thus, cream-white used for the
+outer petals can be finished with pale blue,
+yellow pink, pure orange, or pale yellow for
+its centre petals; scarlet red outside petals
+with black inner petals, bright blue outside
+petals with lemon yellow or terra-cotta red
+inside petals, and every one of these colours
+are allowable when working bunches of flowers
+scattered over the whole of a five o'clock tea-cloth
+or fireplace curtains.</p>
+
+<p>The embroidery is used for table-cloths,
+mantel borders, and curtain brackets, knitting
+bags, handkerchief cases, and as a trimming
+to evening dresses. In all cases it requires a
+silk lining, and should be worked with a
+muslin lining beneath it. Embroidering Breton
+handkerchiefs is not a new description of fancy
+work, but it is still in vogue; and when a lady
+has had sufficient patience to successfully
+accomplish the feat of covering every portion
+of the handkerchief with thick filoselle work,
+there is no doubt that she has produced a
+piece of embroidery not only handsome and
+durable, but that will justly hand her name
+down to posterity as a real worker, and not
+one who takes up the whim of the hour and
+throws it on one side as soon as it bores her.
+The squares made of these embroidered
+handkerchiefs are shown more effectually
+when they are lined with quilted silk and used
+as banner-screens than when they are bordered
+with wide plush and used as table-cloths.
+The pattern in the latter case is never seen as
+a whole, and the beauty of the work is often
+marred by water from flower vases spilt over
+it, or wet teacups and saucers put down on it.
+The small screens now so fashionable make
+another admirable place for mounting Breton
+work. These screens are made of two compartments
+only, in height about 4&frac12; feet. To
+each panel, 2&frac12; feet from the ground, a ledge
+that can be put up or down is fixed, and that
+is used for holding a book or a teacup. The
+panel below this ledge is merely filled with a
+little curtain made of coloured Oriental silk,
+and arranged in very full folds. The panel
+above the ledge, that is fully displayed to
+every eye, is filled with the embroidery
+stretched quite tightly across it and displayed
+to its full advantage. The back of the
+embroidery is concealed with a satin or silk
+matching the little curtain beneath. Two
+Breton handkerchiefs are required, one for
+each division, but they should not be selected
+both of the same design. The little screens
+are made of oak, mahogany, and ebonised
+wood. They are a simple framework, an inch
+and a half square, and any working carpenter
+would make them to order.</p>
+
+<p>Breton embroidery is too laborious for many
+people, and those whose time is much occupied
+with household matters, and who cannot
+devote much of it to the task of making their
+drawing-rooms pretty, we recommend to try
+crazy patchwork in its place. We have lately
+seen this easy work carried out most successfully,
+and used as mantel and table borders,
+covers for footstools, and as the centres of
+small table-cloths. The work is one of the
+least expensive that can be tried, and can be
+put down without derangement of effect at
+any moment (a great point in its favour where
+interruptions are frequent). Before commencing
+any piece of it, it is better to accumulate
+all the oddments of ribbons, plush, velvet,
+silk, and satin lying in the piece-drawer from
+dress trimmings or sent as patterns from shops.
+The more plush and velvet obtainable, the
+greater the effect produced, while the colouring
+should be of a vivid tone, but excluding
+the bright aniline dyes already once referred
+to as being unsuitable to blend with other
+shades. A strong piece of ticking is required
+for the foundation, and on this the pieces are
+arranged. They should be pinned on while
+the amalgamation of colouring is being tried,
+and, when that is settled, basted on to the
+lining, the edges of soft materials being turned
+under and secured with the basting lines.
+Similarity in shape and size is to be avoided
+when placing the pieces, and the effect aimed
+at that of the colouring of a kaleidoscope in
+its variety and brightness. In order to obtain
+queer shapes and corners, it is not necessary to
+carefully cut them out and fit them into their
+various spaces; in fact, it is better not to do
+so, but to lay one material partly over another,
+and by so doing make the desired form. The
+embroidery is generally left until the pieces
+are basted down to the lining, but now and
+again the scraps should be embroidered before
+they are fixed down, this method being the
+least troublesome when fine silk work is attempted,
+such as working flowers in shades of
+colour or intricate designs, or following out
+the lines of stamped velvet or brocade with
+couched-down cords and gold thread. Thin
+Oriental silks require a thin muslin lining
+underneath them, and the embroidery executed
+before they are tacked to the ticking, as unless
+this precaution is taken they are apt to pucker
+and look uneven and poor. When the patchwork
+scraps are all arranged, spare strands of
+filoselle of any shades are used to cover over
+the basting threads with lines of coral stitch,
+feather, chain, rope, and herringbone, while
+oddments of silk cord, Japanese gold thread,
+very fine braids, etc., are sewn down either as
+borderings to the securing lines or as forming
+designs and figures on the patches themselves.
+Embroidery stitches of all kinds are used to
+fill in the centres of the patches, and advantage
+is always taken of any pattern on the patches
+either by filling it in entirely with shaded silks,
+filling up its background with stars, crosses,
+or dots, or by enclosing it within diagonal
+lines, or sewing spangles down so as to cover
+it over. Every effort is made to enrich the
+patches by the use of gold thread, spangles,
+gold lace, and silk cords, and when the work
+is faithfully done, no one could guess it was
+devised out of oddments and produced at a
+nominal cost.</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: right;"><span class="smcap">B.&nbsp;C. Saward.</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="ROMANCE" id="ROMANCE"></a>ROMANCE.<br />
+<br />
+<span style="font-size: 75%;">FOR VIOLIN AND PIANOFORTE.</span><br />
+<br />
+<span class="smcap" style="font-size: 75%;">Professor Sir G.&nbsp;A. Macfarren.</span></h2>
+
+<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="music/romance.midi">Listen</a> | <a href="music/romance.ly">View/Download Lilypond</a></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/romance_1.png" width="600" height="747" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/romance_2.png" width="600" height="827" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/romance_3.png" width="600" height="828" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/romance_4.png" width="600" height="826" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span></p>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/romance_5.png" width="600" height="822" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/romance_6.png" width="600" height="646" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="ANSWERS_TO_CORRESPONDENTS" id="ANSWERS_TO_CORRESPONDENTS"></a>ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS.</h2>
+
+
+<h3>EDUCATIONAL.</h3>
+
+<p>A.&nbsp;Z.&mdash;The part of a whole made by two-thirds of
+three-fourths is one-half. Such books as those you
+name are not so appropriate for young girls as very
+desirable, instructive, as well as interesting books,
+although a girl of twenty-one might read one of such
+a kind once in a way. There is an article by Dr.
+Green in the last two numbers of the <i>Leisure Hour</i>
+(published by the Religious Tract Society, 56, Paternoster-row,
+London, E.C.), those for April and May,
+in which such books as you require are recommended&mdash;history,
+biography, travels, arch&aelig;ology, geology,
+astronomy; Shakespeare, Milton, Elizabeth Barret
+Browning, Longfellow, Tennyson, etc. Such books
+should occupy all your leisure for reading, besides
+the study of household economy, nursing, cookery,
+needlework, and cutting out. The first five years
+after leaving the school-room should be devoted to
+such studies as these, not wasted on the class of
+literature you specify.</p>
+
+<p>G.&nbsp;H.&nbsp;T.&mdash;Yes, there is a Kindergarten College and
+Practising School established by the British and
+Foreign School Society. It is at 21, Stockwell-road,
+S.W., and it is directed by the Misses Crombie.
+There are ten such schools in London and eight in
+the provinces. Write for papers, and all information
+will be supplied you direct from that or any of the
+other schools. Had you given your address we could
+have given that which is the nearest to you. We
+think your age would be suitable. The answer you
+receive as to terms may decide you as to the way in
+which your &pound;20 may be required. Perhaps if you
+annoyed your cousin she would not allow you to
+return home to sleep. Whether you could do so as
+well as board at the college we could not say. "Look
+well before you leap."</p>
+
+
+<h3>ART.</h3>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Sheltie.</span>&mdash;To ornament ginger jars, or any kind of
+earthenware, without knowing how to draw or paint,
+first size it with ordinary glue-size, melted over the
+fire; then cut bright scraps of chintz, or gaily-painted
+cottons, into diamonds, squares, half-circles, triangles,
+etc., and paste them to the jars, carefully
+covering every part of the jar with the scraps laid
+closely together, but without making any set design.
+Let the paste dry; then size the jar, and varnish
+with white hard varnish.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Fleur des Alpes.</span>&mdash;We fear there are no chances of a
+sale in London, as the market for screen and fan painting
+is already so full. Besides, you should take such
+work personally to shops and obtain trade orders.
+Would it not be wiser and more easy to dispose of
+them at Geneva, which is within your reach? Accept
+our best wishes.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Would-be Photographer.</span>&mdash;The reason that the
+object to be taken appears upside down in the
+camera is this. Light travels in straight lines, and
+rays coming through little crevices (such as are used
+in cameras), cross each other, and become inverted.</p>
+
+
+<h3>MISCELLANEOUS.</h3>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Effie.</span>&mdash;The texts of Holy Scripture which you cannot
+find are to be found as follows:&mdash;Psalm xciv. 22, and
+Gen. xvii. 8; Exodus xxix. 45; Ezekiel xi. 20;
+Zechariah viii. 8; 2 Cor. vi. 16; Rev. xxi. 3, and
+in other places. Your "Concordance" must be a
+very bad one. Your handwriting is not formed, but
+promises well.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Gowan Cobban.</span>&mdash;We do not recommend publishers to
+our correspondents. All three specimens of writing
+are legible, but No. 2 is careless and unfinished.
+Why write a small "b" for a "v"? The latter has
+no tall upper stroke.</p>
+
+<p>E.&nbsp;M.&mdash;The health of bride, bridegroom, bridesmaids,
+and respective parents of the newly-married pair is
+drunk, but no others, as a rule.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Corisande.</span>&mdash;We could not possibly assist you in
+carrying out or devising a method of revenge on the
+wrong-doer, nor do we think that even the aggrieved
+parents of the injured friend would approve of the
+plan. If you reprobate an ill-bred action, you cannot,
+consistently with your own views of what is seemly
+and dignified, punish that action by following suit,
+and doing what would be ill-bred yourself. Besides,
+as a Christian, read Romans xii. 19.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Una Mildred Hitchings (N.Z).</span>&mdash;The 14th of
+February, 1809, was a Tuesday. Many thanks for
+your nice letter.</p>
+
+<p>E.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;P. we think had better take more exercise, and
+avoid late suppers and sitting up late, as it seems
+probable her digestion is weak.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Sepia.</span>&mdash;Hairpins are not injurious to the hair except
+when the hair is too tightly put up, when that certainly
+affects the nerves. We think young people, as
+a rule, do not require stimulants unless under the
+doctor's orders. We think oils are far easier to use
+than water-colours.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Morning Dewdrop.</span>&mdash;We do not think the poetry
+worth much now, but it shows that at fifteen you are
+thinking about good things in preference to evil and
+idle things, and so we consider writing poetry, in
+many cases, a good amusement.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Queenie Foster</span> should return the duplicate copy
+and ask for the right one, and if enclosing stamps, as
+the surest way of getting it, she can retain the
+duplicate.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">An Unhappy One</span> should not marry her widower on
+any account, if she feels as unhappy as her letter
+portrays. She must not grow discouraged too soon,
+but cultivate patience, and never minding. And
+should she finally undertake the care of a ready-made
+family, she must be brave and courteous, not
+rendering railing for railing, but, contrariwise, blessing.
+Be not overcome of evil, but overcome evil
+with good.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Hawthorn</span>.&mdash;We know of nothing better than your
+present treatment. We are much obliged by your
+kind offer, but we do not require any at present.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Idonea</span>.&mdash;We should think your digestion was out of
+order. Read the advice given by Medicus to
+"Working Girls," page 295, vol. vi.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mysotis</span>.&mdash;Your nationality is that of your father, but
+you may adopt a country; and if he be naturalised
+English, you become English too, or you may
+legally become so yourself. Also, if you marry an
+Englishman you become an Englishwoman, without
+going through the process of naturalisation. Of
+course by blood you are half English, through your
+maternal descent.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Ophelia</span>.&mdash;We feel for "Ophelia" very sincerely; but
+she should rouse herself, and not give way to morbid
+brooding over her troubles. Has she no sacred
+duties to perform to those around her? No Lord and
+Master above to serve and glorify, by submission to
+His dispensations? Has she no blessed hope of a
+life beyond the grave? We could not insert your
+verses. "All else" is not "gone," whoever was
+removed, when you have "one that sticketh closer
+than a brother" to lean upon. Read St. John xiv.;
+indeed, you had better study the whole Gospel, and
+set yourself resolutely to devote yourself to others.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">May Elwin</span>.&mdash;Our publisher, Mr. Tarn, sent us your
+letter. We suppose you thought him the editor.
+The writer of the poems you name is not one with
+whom we are acquainted.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Myself</span>.&mdash;We cannot do better than refer you to the
+abuses of the Lord's supper, to which St. Paul
+alludes in 1 Cor. ii. 21, 22, which answers your
+question. Also see Hebrews x. 25, and 1 Cor. xiv.
+40. Beware how you trifle with sacred rites and
+sacraments. You had better look up the whole of the
+text about Elders and their office in the New Testament
+Epistles. Our Lord's promise is that where two
+or three are gathered together He would be in their
+midst and bless them. You had better look out the
+word communion in the dictionary, as it cannot
+refer to one person alone; it is an act performed
+by a certain number of persons together, more or less.
+Again, when the clergyman prays for his congregation,
+is he not a mediator? And when you and
+your friends pray for each other, are you not
+mediators? And this, without disparagement to the
+doctrine that Christ is the great and chief Mediator,
+without whose divine mediation all other would be
+useless.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Brunette</span>.&mdash;The soul does not attain its highest state
+of bliss until it be re-united to the body; but the soul
+of a believer in Christ (by which we mean one of
+His faithful people, who loves, serves, and trusts in
+Him and His atonement alone) will enter into a
+happy and sinless rest. He has made "an everlasting
+covenant with them," not with those who
+deny Him. Any mercy shown to such would be
+uncovenanted. See for yourself what the Scriptures
+say. We know nothing more than what is revealed
+in them. As to the heathen who have not heard the
+Gospel, they are "a law unto themselves," and will
+be judged as such, not as those who rejected
+Christ.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">One Wanting To Learn</span>.&mdash;We are glad that you
+find the Sulhampstead Question Society, which we
+recommended, so useful in helping forward your education.
+We do not print our correspondents' letters.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Roy</span>.&mdash;We regret that we cannot accede to your
+request. It would interfere with the general usefulness
+of our magazine if we were to introduce the
+subject of politics into it. We do not even discuss
+vexed questions of religious belief, because our paper
+is meant for persons of all denominations, whose
+feelings should be respected. We limit our teaching
+to the broad principles of our common Christianity.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Lottie</span>.&mdash;If in so feeble a state of health, you should
+obtain medical advice. We could not prescribe for a
+perfect stranger.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">June</span>.&mdash;All the chief writers of this paper, with the
+artists and musical composers, including ourselves,
+have already been represented, in a more or less
+satisfactory manner. The story, "That Aggravating
+Schoolgirl," appeared in the second volume, beginning
+at page 9.</p>
+
+<p>M.&nbsp;C.&nbsp;F.&mdash;We do not quite understand what you
+mean. Visiting cards should never be sent by post,
+and if they be left at the house you acknowledge
+them by calling in return. If people be at a distance
+from you, you must take an opportunity of calling
+when near. You must answer congratulations either
+by letter or a call.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Birchbroom</span>.&mdash;St. Paul was a bachelor, and tells you
+so in 1 Cor. vii. You will find many pretty designs
+for knitting in our paper. We do not propose to
+keep any space specially for knitting recipes. You
+will find one for a petticoat at page 41, vol. ii., in the
+number for October, 1880.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Nellica</span>.&mdash;We thank you for your kind and grateful
+letter, and rejoice that you enjoy our paper and are
+allowed to read it. You write a very fair, legible
+handwriting.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">A Hothouse Plant</span>.&mdash;Pampas grass must be bleached
+in a solution of chloride of lime. You had better
+consult the chemist of whom you procure the drug
+as to the proportion of water. Perhaps he would
+prepare it for you. You write well, but use a bad
+pen&mdash;we mean an old, worn-out one.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bedwaeen</span> (Hyderabad).&mdash;We acknowledge your kind
+letter with our best wishes and thanks. You do not
+ask any special question; but as you regret a want
+of acquaintance with the rules of English grammar,
+we recommend "The Handbook of the English
+Tongue," by Dr. Angus, published at our office,
+56, Paternoster-row, E.C.; address Mr. Tarn.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Amelia</span> should take her "twopenny mulready envelope"
+to a shop where stamps are sold for collections.
+This is the only plan, if not disposed of to a private
+collector. We do not think she will make very much
+on the sale.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The Bird</span>.&mdash;Kindly refer to the article in question,
+where all information is already given.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Ormonde</span> should call after all invitations, whether she
+accept them or not.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Lily Walker</span>.&mdash;The bridegroom presents the bride
+and bridesmaids with their bouquets; but it is not
+needful that the latter should have them. The health
+of the bride and bridegroom respectively are proposed
+by the oldest friend of the family present; but
+other healths are no longer drunk as a universal rule,
+we believe.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Italia</span>.&mdash;The competition papers are in no case
+returned. Your quotation is very good, but is
+useless under the circumstances.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Dulcie Weston</span> should consult a doctor and take a
+tonic. We should decidedly object to cold baths in
+her case. They should be rather warmer than
+tepid.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Dewdrop</span>.&mdash;When the right time comes for the hatching
+of silkworms, they should be kept in the sun.
+Before that they should be kept cool, as their coming
+out should be delayed until that of the new mulberry
+leaves. The worms need not to be kept in the
+sun.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bluebell</span> and <span class="smcap">Dolly</span>.&mdash;Many thanks for your kind
+letter.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mayflower</span>.&mdash;We should think, from the price you
+name, that you are buying spirits of wine. Send
+your own bottle to an oilshop for methylated spirits.
+But why not do this:&mdash;Get a small oil-lamp and
+kettle, enough to boil a quart of water; when quite
+boiling it will be enough for two gallons of cold
+water, and, using a sponge bath, you can have a comfortable
+bath?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Grace</span> should wear the backboard and faceboard, so
+often recommended by us, for an hour every day
+while reading or learning her lessons. The book
+could be set on a stand or shelf, and she could learn
+while walking to and fro.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Guelder Rose</span>.&mdash;Some words and names have been
+given an arbitrary pronunciation by that tyrant&mdash;the
+fashion of the day. There is a rule for each class
+of society, by which all within those respective
+circles is bound, unless its members wish to make
+themselves remarkable. Amongst the "Upper Ten"
+the name Derby is pronounced "Darby," Shrewsbury
+as "Shrowsbury," and clerk as "clark."
+Balmoral is "Bal-moral," the "mo" chiefly accentuated.
+Writing fairly good.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Try Again</span> is thanked for her kind letter. That a
+competitor should not be successful is no discredit to
+her work, because the number of papers sent in is
+so enormous, none but the most remarkably perfect
+amongst the good ones can be awarded even certificates,
+not to say prizes.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Coming thro' the Rye</span>.&mdash;You form your letters fairly
+well, but reverse the heavy and light strokes. The
+down strokes should be heavy, and the up strokes
+light. Also, if you did not make the ends of your
+final letters in every word turn up like pig-tails, your
+writing would be improved. Perhaps your handwriting
+may be formed, or begin to be so, at sixteen.
+No children write running hands.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Rose</span>.&mdash;No "gentlemen" presume to speak to girls in
+their own rank of life without an introduction; it
+would be an insult. And as to proposing to walk
+with you, as a stranger, if you have no father,
+brother, nor uncle to warn him away, he deserves to
+be handed over to the police. But men do not
+usually take such liberties unless they have had
+some encouragement. Beware of looking at strange
+men in passing them. Look away when they come
+near.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Edith</span>.&mdash;Sage tea is good for cooling the face and
+healing the skin when much sunburnt; but it should
+be used the same day. Lie on a sofa, and lay the
+wet leaves over your face.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2><a name="AUTUMN" id="AUTUMN"></a>AUTUMN.<br />
+<br />
+<span class="smcap" style="font-size: 75%;">By HELEN MARION BURNSIDE.</span></h2>
+<table class="autumn" summary="">
+<tbody><tr>
+<td class="autumn">
+<div class="poem">
+<span class="autumntop">&nbsp;</span>
+<span class="autumnmiddle">&nbsp;</span>
+<span class="autumnbottom">&nbsp;</span>
+<span class="autumnbottomb">&nbsp;</span>
+<div class="stanza">
+<span style="display: block; text-indent: 1em;">The chestnut burrs are falling<br /></span>
+<span style="display: block; text-indent: 2em;">On the shining dew-steeped lawn,<br /></span>
+<span style="display: block; text-indent: 1em;">Where the swallows have been calling<br /></span>
+<span style="display: block; text-indent: 2em;">To each other since the dawn;<br /></span>
+<span style="display: block; text-indent: 1em;">For again the forest leaves,<br /></span>
+<span style="display: block; text-indent: 1em;">And the upland's crown of sheaves,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Wear the fair pathetic glory, which so quickly is withdrawn.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span style="display: block; text-indent: 2em;">And a youthful pair goes straying,<br /></span>
+<span style="display: block; text-indent: 4em;">As we used to do of old,<br /></span>
+<span style="display: block; text-indent: 2em;">With the sunlight on them playing,<br /></span>
+<span style="display: block; text-indent: 4em;">Through the elm trees' paling gold;<br /></span>
+<span style="display: block; text-indent: 2em;">And I wonder as they go,<br /></span>
+<span style="display: block; text-indent: 2em;">Pacing slowly to and fro,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Are they telling one another just such secrets as we told?<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span style="display: block; text-indent: 2em;">In the cool and fragrant dunlight<br /></span>
+<span style="display: block; text-indent: 4em;">Of the woodlands, wet with dew,<br /></span>
+<span style="display: block; text-indent: 2em;">Looking out towards the sunlight<br /></span>
+<span style="display: block; text-indent: 4em;">Here I stand&mdash;but where are you?<br /></span>
+<span style="display: block; text-indent: 2em;">Where are summer's lusty leaves,<br /></span>
+<span style="display: block; text-indent: 2em;">Where the swallows from the eaves,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And the hopes, and dreams, and longings that in those old days we knew?<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span style="display: block; text-indent: 2em;">Many a spring has blossomed brightly<br /></span>
+<span style="display: block; text-indent: 4em;">On the grave of a dead past,<br /></span>
+<span style="display: block; text-indent: 2em;">Many a summer has tossed lightly<br /></span>
+<span style="display: block; text-indent: 4em;">Her cast leaves upon the blast;<br /></span>
+<span style="display: block; text-indent: 2em;">And as autumn fades away<br /></span>
+<span style="display: block; text-indent: 2em;">Into winter's quiet grey,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Comes the hope: eternal springtide will give back my friend at last!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+</tbody></table>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Girl's Own Paper, Vol. VIII: No.
+353, October 2, 1886., by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GIRL'S OWN PAPER ***
+
+***** This file should be named 18195-h.htm or 18195-h.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
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+</pre>
+
+</body>
+</html>
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diff --git a/18195-h/music/romance.ly b/18195-h/music/romance.ly
new file mode 100644
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--- /dev/null
+++ b/18195-h/music/romance.ly
@@ -0,0 +1,162 @@
+\version "2.8"
+\include "english.ly"
+
+\header {
+ title = "ROMANCE."
+ subtitle = "FOR VIOLIN AND PIANOFORTE."
+ composer = \markup \smallCaps "Professor Sir G.A. Macfarren."
+}
+
+melody = \relative c' {
+ \clef treble
+ \key g \major
+ \time 4/4
+ \override Rest #'style = #'classical
+
+%12
+
+ s1*0^\markup { \italic {Andante.} } R1 | r2 d4(^\p g8.[ fs16]) | fs2 fs4 g8 a8 | b2 b4( c8 b8) | a4( e4) fs4. e8 |
+
+ d2 d4( g8.[ fs16]) | fs2 fs4 g8 a8 | a4( b4) b4 c8 d8 | d8( e,8 c'2) b8.([ a16]) | g2 g4( a8.[ g16]) |
+
+ fs4( d'4) g,8.([ a32 b32] a8 g8) | fs4( fs'4) d4-.^\<( d8-. d8-.)\! | d8^\>( b8 g8 e8)\!\p b'4.( cs,8) | d8 d4 d8 d4( g8.[ b32 a32]) | g4( fs4) fs8 g8 a8 as8 |
+
+ as4( b4) e4\< f8.[ e16]\! | e'4\>( a,,8 c8\!) e4.^\p( fs,8) | g4 r4 r2 | \tieDown g'8^\f([~ g32 e32 b32 g32]) e8.[ e16] fs8 g8 a8 b8 | b8.([ a16] e'8) r16 a16( e'8) r16 a,,,16( e'8) r16 a16 |
+
+ \tieDown c'8([~ c32 a32 fs32 c32] a8)[ r16 a16_(] \tieUp fs'8[~ fs32 c32 a32 fs32] c8)[ r16 a'16] | g'8.([ fs16] b,8) r16 fs''16( b,8) r16 fs,16( b,8)[ r16 b'16] | b'16.([ g32 e32 b32 g32 e32] b8.)[ g'16] fs8 g8 a8 b8 | c2( f,4) r8. a16 |
+
+%13
+
+ d'16.([ b32 g32 d32 b32 g32] d8.[ g16]) fs8 g8 \acciaccatura b8 a8 g8 | e'4( e,8)[ r16 e'16] e4( e,8)[ r16 e'16] | e16[ g8 fs8 e8 d16]~ d16[ c8 b16] as16([ g'8 as,16]) | b4 r4 r8^\f a8( e'8 a,8) | ds4 r4 r8 as8( g'8) fs8 |
+
+ e4( ds8.)[ b16] b4( e8.[ ds16]) | ds2 c4( fs8.[ e16]) | e2 g,4( d'8.[ cs16]) | e,4( a8.[ g16]) cs,4( fs8.[ e16]) | e4_(^\> ef4)\! d4^\p( g8.[ fs16]) |
+
+ fs2 fs4^\markup { \hspace #3.0 \musicglyph #"scripts.turn" } g8 a8 | b2 b4 \acciaccatura d8 c8 b8 | b8([ a8 e8.) e16] fs16( g16 b16 a16 fs8) e8 |
+
+ d8.[ g,16] b16 d16 g16 b16 d4( g8.[ fs16]) | fs2 fs,16( a16 d16 fs16) g8 a8 | a4( b4) b,16( e16 gs16 b16) b16( c16) c16( d16) |
+
+ d8([ f16 e16] b16 c16 gs16 a16) ds,16( e16 b16 c16 gs16[ a16 c16) r32 fs,32] | g4 r4 g'4( a8. g16) | fs4( d'4) g,8([ \grace {a16[ g16]} fs16 g16] cs16 b16 a16 g16) |
+
+%14
+
+ fs4( fs'4) d8 d4 d8 | d16( b16) b16( g16) g16( e16) e16( b'16) b16( as,16) as16( as'16) as16([ e16 g16.) c,32] | d2\trill( \grace {cs16[ d16]} d8) e8 fs8 \acciaccatura a8 g8 |
+
+ g8.([ fs16] d'4) fs,8 g8 a8 as8 | c8.([ b16] g'4) e4( f8.[ e16]) | e16( c16 a16 g16 e16 c16 a16 e'16) e16( d16 c16 a16 fs16[ d16 c16.) a32] | g1~ |
+
+ g1~ | g1~ | g1~ | g8.[ b16] d16 g16 b16 d16 g4 a8 b8 |
+
+ c4( g'8) c,8 b4( a8.[ e16]) | g4(^\> fs4)\! f16( f'16 d16 b16 g16 gs16 a16 f16) | ds8.([ e16]) e8[ c16 a16] e4 \afterGrace fs4\trill( {e16)[ fs16]} |
+
+ g4 r8 b,8 d4( c4) | b4 r8 g8^\markup { \italic {ritard.} } b4 \afterGrace a4\trill {g16[ a16]} | g16.([ b32 d16 g16] b16 d16 g16_\markup { \italic {dim.} } b16 d4) g4 | b1^\pp \bar "||"
+}
+
+upper = \relative c'' {
+ \clef treble
+ \key g \major
+ \time 4/4
+ \override Rest #'style = #'classical
+
+%12
+
+ b,8\p( d8 g8 d8 b8 d8 b'8 d,8) | b8( d8 g8 d8 b8 d8 b'8 d,8) | c8( d8 a'8 d,8) << {c8( d8 e8 fs8)} \\ {c2} >> | << {g'8( d8 g8 d8)} \\ {b4} >> g'8( b8 e,8 g8) | c,8( e8 c8 e8) c8( a8 d8 c8)
+
+ b8( d8 g8 d8) b8( d8 b'8 d,8) | c8( d8 a'8 d,8) << {c8( d8 e8 fs8)} \\ {c2} >> | << {fs8( d8 g8 d8)} \\ {c4( b4)} >> e8 b8 e8 b8 | e8 c8 a'8 g8 << {fs2} \\ {fs8 e8 d8 c8} >> | <b g'>8 d8 g8 d8 cs8 e8 cs8 e8
+
+ a,8 d8 fs8 d8 cs8 e8 cs8 e8 | a,8 d8 fs8 d8 as8_\< d8 fs8 d8\! | b8_\> d8 b8 e8\! g8_\p e8 g8 e8 | fs8 <fs d' fs>8[( <g e' g>8 <a fs' a>8] <b g' b>4) b8 d,8 | c8 d8 a'8 d,8 a8 b8 c8 d8
+
+ <c fs>8 d8 <b g'>8 d8 b8_\< e8 d8 e8\! | c8_\> e8 c8 e8\! c8\p a8 c8 a8 | b8_\< <b b'>8 <b b'>8 <b b'>8 <b b'>8 <b b'>8 <b b'>8 <b b'>8\! | <b e g b>8\fp <b e g>8 <b e g>8 <b e g>8 <b e g>8 <b e g>8 <b e g>8 <b e g>8 | <c e>8 <c e>8 <c e>8 <c e>8 <c e>8 <c e>8 <c e>8 <c e>8
+
+ <c e a>8\fp <c e a>8 <c e a>8 <c e a>8 <c e fs>8\fp <c e fs>8 <c e fs>8 <c e fs>8 | <b ds a'>8 <b ds a'>8 <b ds a'>8 <b ds a'>8 <b ds a'>8 <b ds a'>8 <b ds fs>8 <b ds fs>8 | <b e b'>8\fp <b e b'>8 <b e b'>8 <b e b'>8 <b e b'>8 <b e b'>8 <b e a>8 <b e g>8 | <c f>8 <c' f>8 < c f a>8 <c f b>8 <c f c'>8 <c f a>8 <c f>8 <c e>8
+
+%13
+
+ <g d'>8\fp <d f>8 <d f>8 <d f>8 <d f>8 <d f>8 <d f>8 <d f>8 | e8_> e8 e8 e8 e8_> e8 e8 e8 | e8_> e8 e8 e8 <e e'>8_> <e e'>8 <e e'>8 <e e'>8 | r8 <fs ds'>8\f <fs ds'>8 <fs ds'>8 <a e'>4 r4 | r8 <fs ds'>8 <fs ds'>8 <fs ds'>8 <e e'>4 r4
+
+ r8 <b fs'>8 <b fs'>8 <b fs'>8 <b e g>8 <b e g>8 <b e g>8 <b e g>8 | <a ds fs>8 <a ds fs>8 <a ds fs>8 <a ds fs>8 <c ds fs>8 <c ds fs>8 <c ds fs>8 <c ds fs>8 | <cs e g>8 <cs e g>8 <cs e g>8 <cs e g>8 <g cs e>8 <g cs e>8 <g cs e>8 <g cs e>8 | <e' g cs>8 <e g cs>8 <e g cs>8 <e g cs>8 <g cs e>8 <g cs e>8 <g cs e>8 <g cs e>8 | <g cs g'>4 r4 r16\p d16_( g16 b16 d16 g16 b16 d16)
+
+ r16 d,,16( fs16 a16 d16 fs16 a16 d16) r16 d,,16 cs16 d16 <c e>16 d16 <c fs>16 d16 | r16 b16 d16 g16 b16 d16 g16 b16 r16 g,16 e16 g16 e16 g16 e16 g16 | c,16 e16 c16 e16 c16 e16 c16 e16 c16 b16 d16 c16 a16 c16 a16 c16
+
+ b16 d16 g16 b16 g16 d16 b16 d16 b16 d16 g16 d16 b16 d16 b'16 d,16 | c16 d16 a'16 d,16 c16 d16 c'16 d,16 c16 d16 c16 d16 <c e>16 d16 <c fs>16 d16 | <c fs>16 d16 <c fs>16 d16 <b g'>16 d16 b16 d16 <b d e>4 d8 e8
+
+ e2 c8 a8 fs'8 a,8 | b16 d16 g16 d16 b16 d16 b'16 d,16 cs16 g'16 cs16 g16 cs,16 e16 g16 e16 | d16 fs16 a16 fs16 d16 fs16 d'16 fs,16 cs16 g'16 cs16 g16 e16 g16 cs,16 g'16
+
+%14
+
+ d16 fs16 a16 fs16 d16 fs16 d'16 fs,16 as,16 d16 as'16 d,16 as16 d16 as'16 d,16 | b4 <b e g>4 <a e' g>4 <a cs g'>4 | <a d fs>8 <fs' d' fs>8([ <g e' g>8 <a fs' a>8] <b g' b>8) g16[ d16] b16_( d16 b'16 d,16)
+
+ c16 d16 c'16 d,16 c16 d16 fs16 d16 c16 d16 e16 d16 fs16 d16 <c fs>16 d16 | <a fs'>16 d16 fs16 d16 b16 d16 g16 d16 d16 e16 b'16 e,16 d16 b16 d16 e16 | c4 <c e g>4 \set doubleSlurs = ##t <c fs a>2( | <b g' b>4) r4 <b' f' g>4\p <c f a>8 <d f b>8
+
+ <e c'>4( <g e'>8) <e g c>8 <d g b>4 <cs g' a>8.[ e16] | \set doubleSlurs = ##f << {g4( fs4)} \\ {<c d>2} >> <b d f>4 <g d' g>8 <g d' f>8 | << {<b d>8.[ <c e>16] <c e>8[ c16 a16]} \\ {g4( g8)} >> e4 \afterGrace fs4\trill( {e16)[ fs16]} | g4 r4 <b f'>16 g16 <b f'>16 g16 <c f>16 g16 <d' f>16 g16
+
+ e16 g,16 <c e>16 g16 <c e>16 g16 <c e>16 g16 <g d'>16 d16 <g d'>16 d16 <g cs>16 e16 <g cs>16 e16 | <a c>16( d,16\> <a' c>16 <gs b>16 <a c>16\! <gs b>16 <a c>16 <as cs>16) <b d>16( gs16) <gs b>16( d16) <d f>16 b16 <d f>16 b16 | << {<f' b>16( g16 <f b>16 g16 <e c'>16 gs16) a16 c16 d4 c4} \\ {c,4( c8) s8 b'16 d,16 b'16 d,16 a'16 d,16 a'16 d,16 } >>
+
+ << {b'4 s4 e4 fs4} \\ {g,16 d16 g16 d16 fs16 g16 b16 d16 b16 d16 b16 d16 a16 d16 a16 d16} >> | << {g4 s4 d'4 c4} \\ {g,16 d'16 b16 d16 cs16 d16 g16 b16 \once \override TextScript #'padding = #2.0 e,16_\markup { \italic {ritard.} } d16 e16 d16 fs16 d16 fs16 d16} >> | <g b>1~ | <g b>4 <g b d>8-.( <g b d>8-.) <g b d>2
+}
+
+lower = \relative c {
+ \clef bass
+ \key g \major
+ \time 4/4
+ \override Rest #'style = #'classical
+
+%12
+
+ <g d' g>1 | <g d' g>2 <g d' g>2 | <a d a'>2 <d, d'>2 | <g d' g>2 <e e'>2 | <a e' a>2 <d, d'>2
+
+ <g g'>2 <g d' g>2 | <a d a'>2 <d, d'>2 | <g g'>2 <gs e' gs>2 | <a e' a>2 <d, d'>2 | <g g'>2 \set doubleSlurs = ##t <e e'>2(
+
+ <d d'>4) r4 <e e'>2( | <d d'>4) r4 <fs fs'>2 | <g g'>2 <a, a'>2 | <d d'>8 \set doubleSlurs = ##f <d' fs>8([ <e g>8 <fs a>8]) <g b>8( d'8 r4) | <a, a'>2 <d, d'>2
+
+%%Transcriber's Note: Could not get slur in bar 4 above to cross staffs with \change Staff command. Compromised by leaving slur in lower staff.
+
+ <g g'>2 <gs e' gs>2 | <a e' a>2 <d, d'>2 | <g g'>8 b8 b8 b8 b8 b8 b8 b8 | <e, e'>8 <e e'>8 <e e'>8 <e e'>8 <e e'>8 <e e'>8 <e e'>8 <e e'>8 | <a a'>8 <a a'>8 <a a'>8 <a a'>8 <a a'>8 <a a'>8 <a a'>8 <a a'>8
+
+ <fs fs'>8 <fs fs'>8 <fs fs'>8 <fs fs'>8 <a a'>8 <a a'>8 <a a'>8 <a a'>8 | b8 b8 b8 b8 b8 b8 a8 a8 | g8 g8 g8 g8 g8 g8 g8 g8 | a8 <a c f>8 <a c f>8 <a c f>8 <a c f>8 <a c f>8 <a c f>8 <a c f>8
+
+%13
+
+ <b f' g>8 <b d g>8 <b d g>8 <b d g>8 <b d g>8 <b d g>8 <b d g>8 <b d g>8 | <c e gs>8-> <c e gs>8 <c e gs>8 <c e gs>8 <c e a>8-> <c e a>8 <c e a>8 <c e a>8 | <c e as>8-> <c e as>8 <c e as>8 <c e as>8 <c e>8-> <c e>8 <c e>8 <c e>8 | r8 <b b'>8 <b b'>8 <b b'>8 <c a'>4 r4 | r8 <b b'>8 <b b'>8 <b b'>8 <c as'>4 r4
+
+ r8 b8 b8 b8 b8 b8 b8 b8 | c8 c8 c8 c8 a8 a8 a8 a8 | as8 as8 as8 as8 <as, as'>8 <as as'>8 <as as'>8 <as as'>8 | <as as'>8 <as as'>8 <as as'>8 <as as'>8 <as as'>8 <as as'>8 <as as'>8 <as as'>8 | <as as'>4 r4 <b' d g>2
+
+ <c d fs a>2 <a c d>4 <d, d'>4 | <g d'>2 <e e'>2 | <a a'>2 <d, d'>2
+
+ <g g'>2 <g d' g>2 | <a d a'>2 <d, d'>2 | <g g'>2 <gs e' gs>2
+
+ <a e' a>2 <d, d'>2 | <g g'>4 r4 \set doubleSlurs = ##t <e e'>2( | <d d'>4) r4 <e e'>2(
+
+%14
+
+ <d d'>4) r4 <fs fs'>2( | <g g'>4) <e e'>4 <a, a'>4 <a a'>4 | <d d'>8 \set doubleSlurs = ##f << {fs'8[ <e g>8 <fs a>8]} \\ {d8( d4)} >> << {b'16[ d16]} \\ {g,2} >>
+
+ a2 d,2 | g2 <gs, e' gs>2 | <a e' a>4 <a e' a>4 \set doubleSlurs = ##t <d, d'>2( | <g g'>4 ) r4 \clef treble <b' f' g>4 <c f a>8 <d f b>8
+
+ <e c'>4( <g e'>8) <e g c>8 <d g b>4 << {<g a>8.[ e16]} \\ {cs4} >> | \set doubleSlurs = ##f << {g'4( fs4)} \\ {<c d>2} >> <b d f>4 <b d>8 <b d>8 | << {f'8.[ e16] e8 e8]} \\ {c4. a8} >> <b d>4 <a c>4 | b8 \clef bass <g, g'>8[ <g g'>8 <g g'>8] <g g'>8 <g g'>8 <g g'>8 <g g'>8
+
+ <g g'>8 <g g'>8 <g g'>8 <g g'>8 <g g'>8 <g g'>8 <g g'>8 <g g'>8 | <g g'>8 <g g'>8 <g g'>8 <g g'>8 <g g'>8 <g g'>8 <g g'>8 <g g'>8 | <g g'>8 <g g'>8 <g g'>8 <g g'>8 <g g'>8 <g g'>8 <g g'>8 <g g'>8
+
+ <g g'>8 <g g'>8 <g g'>8 <g g'>8 <g g'>8 <g g'>8 <g g'>8 <g g'>8 | <g g'>8[ <g, g'>8] <g g'>8[ <g g'>8] <g g'>8 <g g'>8 <g g'>8 <g g'>8 | <g g'>1~\sustainDown | <g g'>4 \clef treble <g'' d' g>8-.^\pp( <g d' g>8-.) <g d' g>2\sustainUp
+}
+
+\score {
+ <<
+ \context Staff = melody \melody
+ \set Staff.instrument = \markup { \smallCaps {Violin.} }
+ \set Staff.midiInstrument = "violin"
+ \context PianoStaff <<
+ \set PianoStaff.instrument = \markup { \smallCaps {Piano.} }
+ \context Staff = upper \upper
+ \context Staff = lower \lower
+ >>
+ >>
+ \layout {
+ \context { \RemoveEmptyStaffContext }
+ \context {
+ \Score
+ \remove Bar_number_engraver
+ }
+ }
+ \midi { \tempo 4 = 84 }
+}
+
+\paper { raggedbottom = ##t } \ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/18195-h/music/romance.midi b/18195-h/music/romance.midi
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--- /dev/null
+++ b/18195-h/music/romance.midi
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diff --git a/18195.txt b/18195.txt
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--- /dev/null
+++ b/18195.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,2261 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Girl's Own Paper, Vol. VIII: No. 353,
+October 2, 1886., 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 Girl's Own Paper, Vol. VIII: No. 353, October 2, 1886.
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: Charles Peters
+
+Release Date: April 17, 2006 [EBook #18195]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GIRL'S OWN PAPER ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Susan Skinner and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE GIRL'S OWN PAPER
+
+VOL. VIII.--NO. 353.
+
+OCTOBER 2, 1886.
+
+Price One Penny.
+
+
+
+
+
+MERLE'S CRUSADE.
+
+BY ROSA NOUCHETTE CAREY, Author of "Aunt Diana," "For Lilias," etc.
+
+[Illustration: "'WHAT A PITY YOU STOPPED ME JUST THEN.'"]
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE VALLEY OF HUMILIATION.
+
+"Merle, I may be a little old-fashioned in my notions; middle-aged
+people never adjust their ideas quite in harmony with you young folk,
+but in my day we never paused to count fifty at a full stop."
+
+Aunt Agatha's voice startled me with its reproachful irritability. Well,
+I had deserved that little sarcasm for I must confess that I had been
+reading very carelessly. My favourite motto was ringing in my ears,
+"_Laborare est orare_."
+
+Somehow the words had set themselves to resonant music in my brain; it
+seemed as though I were chanting them inwardly all the time I was
+climbing down the steep hill with Christiana and her boys. _Laborare est
+orare._ And this is what I was reading on that still, snowy Sunday
+afternoon: "But we will come again to this Valley of Humiliation. It is
+the best and most fruitful piece of ground in all these parts. It is a
+fat ground, and, as you see, consisteth much in meadows, and if a man
+was to come here in the summertime as we do now, if he knew not anything
+before thereof, and if he delighted himself in the sight of his eyes, he
+might see that which would be delightful to him. Behold how green this
+valley is, also how beautiful with lilies! I have known many labouring
+men that have got good estates in this Valley of Humiliation."
+
+"Merle," observed Aunt Agatha, a little dryly, "we may as well leave off
+there, for it seems that you and I are to have our estate among the
+labouring men in this very valley."
+
+Aunt Agatha was a clever woman, and could say shrewd things sometimes,
+but she never spoke a truer word than this; but my wits were no longer
+wool-gathering.
+
+"What a pity you stopped me just then," I remarked, somewhat
+sententiously; "we have missed the purest gem of the allegory. 'He that
+is down need fear no fall; he that is low no pride.'" But here a hand
+was lifted in protesting fashion.
+
+"Put the marker in the page, child, and spare me the rest; that is in
+favour of your argument, not mine," for a weary discussion had been
+waged between us for two whole hours--a discussion that had driven Aunt
+Agatha exhausted to the couch, but which had only given me a tingling
+feeling of excitement, such as a raw recruit might experience at the
+sight of a battlefield. Aunt Agatha's ladylike ideas lay dead and
+wounded round her while I had made that last impetuous charge.
+
+"I am of age, a free Englishwoman, living in a free country, and not all
+the nineteenth century prejudices, though they are thick as dragons'
+teeth, shall prevent me, Merle Fenton, of sane mind and healthy body,
+from doing what I believe to be my duty."
+
+"Humph, I am rather doubtful of the sanity; I always told you that you
+were too independent and strong-minded for a girl; but what is the use
+of preaching to deaf ears?" continued Aunt Agatha, in a decidedly cross
+voice, as she arranged the cushions comfortably.
+
+It was true that I was getting the best of the argument, and yet I was
+sorry for Aunt Agatha. I felt how I was shocking all her notions of
+decorum and propriety, and giving pain to the kindest and gentlest heart
+in the world; but one cannot lead a new crusade without trampling on
+some prejudices. I knew all my little world would shriek "fie," and "for
+shame" into my ears, and all because I was bent on working out a new
+theory. The argument had grown out of such a little thing. I had shown
+Aunt Agatha an advertisement in the _Morning Post_, and announced my
+intention of answering it in person the following morning.
+
+"NURSE.--Can any lady recommend a thoroughly conscientious superior
+person to take charge of two children, baby eighteen months old?
+Assistance given in the nursery. Must be a good, plain needlewoman.
+Prince's Gate, S.W."
+
+To the last day of my life I do not think that I shall ever forget Aunt
+Agatha's face when she read that advertisement.
+
+"You intend to offer yourself for this situation, Merle--to lose caste,
+and take your place among menials? It is enough to make my poor brother
+rise in his grave, and your poor, dear mother too, to think of a Fenton
+stooping to such degradation." But I will forbear to transcribe all the
+wordy avalanche of lady-like invective that was hurled at me,
+accompanied by much wringing of hands.
+
+And yet the whole thing lay in a nut-shell. I, Merle Fenton, sound,
+healthy, and aged two-and-twenty, being orphaned, penniless, and only
+possessing one near relative in the world--Aunt Agatha--declined utterly
+to be dependent for my daily bread and the clothes I wore on the
+goodwill of her husband and my uncle by marriage, Ezra Keith.
+
+No, I was not good. I daresay I was self-willed, contradictory, and as
+obstinate as a mule that will go every way but the right way, but, all
+the same, I loved Aunt Agatha, my dead father's only sister, and I
+detested Uncle Keith with a perfectly unreasonable detestation.
+
+Aunt Agatha had been a governess all her life. Certainly the Fenton
+family had not much to boast of in the way of wealth. Pedigree and
+poverty are not altogether pleasant yoke fellows. It may be comfortable
+to one's feelings to know that a certain progenitor of ours made boots
+at the time of the Conquest, though I am never quite sure in my mind
+that they had bootmakers then; but my historical knowledge was always
+defective. But a little money is also pleasant; indeed, if the pedigree
+and the money came wooing to me, and I had to choose between them--well,
+perhaps I had better hold my tongue on that subject; for what is the
+good of shocking people unless one has a very good reason for doing so?
+
+My father's pedigree did not help him into good practice, and he died
+young--a grave mistake, people tell me, for a professional man to
+commit. My mother was very pretty and very helpless, but then she had a
+pedigree, too, and, probably, that forbade her to soil her white hands.
+She was a fine lady, with more heart than head, which she had lost most
+unwisely to the handsome young doctor. After his death, she made futile
+efforts for her child's sake, but the grinding wheel of poverty caught
+the poor butterfly and crushed her to death.
+
+My poor, tender-hearted, unhappy mother! Well, the world is a cruel
+place to these soft, unprotected natures.
+
+I should have fared badly but for Aunt Agatha; her hardly-earned savings
+were all spent on my education. She was a clever, highly-educated woman,
+and commanded good salaries, and out of this she contrived to board and
+maintain me at a school until she married, and Uncle Keith promised that
+I should share their home.
+
+I never could understand why Aunt Agatha married him. Perhaps she was
+tired of the drudgery of teaching; at forty-five one may grow a little
+weary of one's work. Perhaps she wanted a home for her old age, and was
+tired of warming herself at other people's fires, and preferred a
+chimney corner of her own; but, strange to say, she always scouted these
+two notions with the utmost indignation.
+
+"I married your uncle, Merle," she would say, with great dignity,
+"because he convinced me that he was the right person for me to marry. I
+have no more idea than you how he contrived to instil this notion into
+my head, for though I am a plain body and never had any beauty, I must
+own I liked tall, good-looking men. But there, my dear, I lived
+forty-five years in the world without three things very common in
+women's lives--without beauty, without love, and without discontent."
+And in this last clause she was certainly right. Aunt Agatha was the
+most contented creature in the world.
+
+If Uncle Keith--for never, never would I call him Uncle Ezra, even had
+he asked me as a personal favour to do so--if Uncle Keith had been rich
+I could have understood the marriage better, being rather a mercenary
+and far-sighted young person, but he had only a very small income. He
+was managing clerk in some mercantile house, and, being a thrifty soul,
+invested all his spare cash instead of spending it.
+
+Aunt Agatha had lived in grand houses all her life, but she was quite
+content with the little cottage at Putney to which her husband took her.
+They only kept one servant; but Aunt Agatha proved herself to be a
+notable housekeeper. She arranged and rearranged the old-fashioned
+furniture that had belonged to Uncle Keith's mother until she had made
+quite a charming drawing-room; but that was just her way; she had clever
+brains, and clever fingers, and to manipulate old materials into new
+fashions was just play work to her.
+
+But for me, I am perfectly convinced that Aunt Agatha would have called
+herself the happiest woman in the world, but my discontent leavened the
+household. If three people elect to live together, the success of the
+scheme demands that one of the three should not smile sourly on all
+occasions.
+
+For two whole years I tried to be amiable when Uncle Keith was in the
+room, and at last gave up the attempt in despair, baffled by my own evil
+tempers, and yet I will say I was not a bad-tempered girl. I must have
+had good in me or Aunt Agatha would not have been so fond of me. I call
+that a real crucial test--other people's fondness for us.
+
+Why is it so difficult to get on with some folk, very worthy people in
+their way?
+
+Why do some people invariably rub up one's fur until it bristles with
+discomfort? Why do these same thoroughly estimable creatures bring a
+sort of moral east wind with them, scarifying one's nerves? Surely it is
+beneath the dignity of a human being to be rasped by a harsh, drawling
+voice, or offended by trifling mannerisms. Uncle Keith was just like one
+of my sums--you might add him up, subtract from him, divide or multiply
+him, but he would never come right in the end; one always reckoned that
+he was more or less than he was. He was a little, pale, washed-out
+looking man, with sandy hair and prominent brown eyes. Being an old
+bachelor when he married Aunt Agatha, he had very precise, formal ways,
+and was methodical and punctual to a fault. Next to Uncle Keith, I hated
+that white-faced watch of his. I hated the slow, ponderous way in which
+he drew it from his pocket, and produced it for my special benefit.
+
+I have said that my detestation of Uncle Keith was somewhat
+unreasonable. I must own I had no grave reasons for my dislike. Uncle
+Keith had a good moral character; he was a steady church-goer, was
+painstaking and abstemious; never put himself in a passion, or, indeed,
+lost his temper for a minute; but how was a girl to tolerate a man who
+spent five minutes scraping his boots before he entered his own door,
+whatever the weather might be; who said, "Hir-rumph" (humph was what he
+meant) before every sentence, booming at one like a great bee; who
+always prefaced a lecture with a "my dear;" who would not read a paper
+until it was warmed; who would burn every cinder before fresh coals were
+allowed on the fire; who looked reproachfully at my crumbs (I crumbled
+my bread purposely at last), and scooped them carefully in his hand for
+the benefit of the birds, with the invariable remark, "Waste not, want
+not," a saying I learnt to detest?
+
+I suppose if we are ever admitted into heaven we shall find very odd
+people there; but perhaps they will have dropped their trying ways and
+peculiarities, as the chrysalis drops its case, and may develop all
+sorts of new prismatic glories. I once heard a lady say that she was
+afraid the society there would be rather mixed; she was a very exclusive
+person; but Solomon tells us that there is nothing new under the sun, so
+I suppose we shall never be without our modern Pharisees and Sadducees.
+The grand idea to me is that there will be room for all. I do not know
+when the idea first came to me that it was a mean thing to live under a
+man's roof, eating his bread and warming oneself at his fire, and all
+the time despising him in one's heart. I only know that one day the idea
+took possession of me, and, like an Eastern mustard seed, grew and
+flourished. Soon after that Uncle Keith had rather a serious loss--some
+mercantile venture in which he was interested had come to grief. I began
+to notice small retrenchments in the household; certain little luxuries
+were given up. Now and then Aunt Agatha grew a little grave as she
+balanced her weekly accounts. One night I took myself to task.
+
+"What business have you, a strong, healthy, young woman," I observed to
+myself, severely, "to be a burthen on these good folk? What is enough
+for two may be a tight fit for three; it was that new mantle of yours,
+Miss Merle, that has put out the drawing-room fire for three weeks, and
+has shut up the sherry in the sideboard. Is it fair or right that Aunt
+Agatha and Uncle Keith should forego their little comforts just because
+an idle girl is on their hands?"
+
+I pondered this question heavily before I summoned courage to speak to
+Aunt Agatha. To my surprise she listened to me very quietly, though her
+soft brown eyes grew a little misty--I did so love Aunt Agatha's eyes.
+
+"Dear," she said, very gently, "I wish this could have been prevented;
+but, for my husband's sake, I dare not throw cold water on your plan. I
+cannot deny that he has had a heavy loss, and that we have to be very
+careful. I would keep you with me if I could, Merle, for you are just
+like my own child, but Ezra is not young;" and here Aunt Agatha's
+forehead grew puckered with anxiety.
+
+"Oh, Aunt Agatha," I exclaimed, quite forgetting the gravity of my
+proposition in sudden, childish annoyance, "how can you call Uncle
+Keith, Ezra? It is such a hideous name."
+
+"Not to my ears," she answered, quite calmly; "a wife never thinks her
+husband's name hideous. He loves to hear me say it, and I love to please
+him, for though you may not believe it, Merle, I think there are very
+few men to compare with your uncle."
+
+She could actually say this to my face, looking at me all the time with
+those honest eyes! I could not forbear a little shrug at this, but she
+turned the subject, placidly, but with much dignity.
+
+"I have been a working bee all my life, and have been quite contented
+with my lot; if you could only follow my example, I should be perfectly
+willing to let you go. I have thought once or twice lately that if
+anything were to happen to me, you and your uncle would hardly be
+comfortable together; you do not study him sufficiently; you have no
+idea what he really is."
+
+I thought it better to remain silent.
+
+Aunt Agatha sighed a little as she went on.
+
+"I am not afraid of work for you, Merle, there is no life without
+activity. 'The idle man,' as someone observes, 'spins on his own axis in
+the dark.' 'A man of mere capacity undeveloped,' as Emerson says, 'is
+only an organised daydream with a skin on it.' Just listen to this,"
+opening a book that lay near her. "'Action and enjoyment are contingent
+upon each other. When we are unfit for work we are always incapable of
+pleasure; work is the wooing by which happiness is won.'"
+
+"Yes, yes," I returned, rather impatiently, for Aunt Agatha, with all
+her perfections, was too much given to proverbial and discursive
+philosophy; "but to reduce this to practice, what work can I do in this
+weary world?"
+
+"You cannot be a governess, not even a nursery governess, Merle," and
+here Aunt Agatha looked at me very gently, as though she knew her words
+must give me pain, and suddenly my cheeks grew hot and my eyelids
+drooped. Alas! I knew too well what Aunt Agatha meant; this was a sore
+point, the great difficulty and stumbling block of my young life.
+
+I had been well taught in a good school; I had had unusual advantages,
+for Aunt Agatha was an accomplished and clever woman, and spared no
+pains with me in her leisure hours; but by some freak of Nature, not
+such an unusual thing as people would have us believe, from some want of
+power in the brain--at least, so a clever man has since told me--I was
+unable to master more than the rudiments of spelling.
+
+I know some people would laugh incredulously at this, but the fact will
+remain.
+
+As a child I have lain sobbing on my bed, beaten down by a very anguish
+of humiliation at being unable to commit the column of double syllables
+to memory, and have only been comforted by Aunt Agatha's patience and
+gentleness.
+
+At school I had a severer ordeal. For a long time my teachers refused to
+admit my incapacity; they preferred attributing it to idleness,
+stubbornness, and want of attention; even Aunt Agatha was puzzled by it,
+for I was a quick child in other things, could draw very well for my
+age, and could accomplish wonders in needlework, was a fair scholar in
+history and geography, soon acquired a good French accent, and did some
+of my lessons most creditably.
+
+But the construction of words baffle me to this day. I should be
+unwilling to write the simplest letter without a dictionary lying
+snugly near my hand. I have learned to look my misfortune in the face,
+and to bear it with tolerable grace. With my acquaintances it is a
+standing joke, with my nearest and dearest friends it is merely an
+opportunity for kindly service and offers to write from my dictation,
+but when I was growing into womanhood it was a bitter and most shameful
+trial to me, one secretly lamented with hot tears and with a most
+grievous sense of humiliation.
+
+"No," Aunt Agatha repeated, in the old pitying voice I knew so well,
+"you cannot be even a nursery governess, Merle."
+
+"Nor a companion either," I exclaimed bitterly. "Old ladies want letters
+written for them."
+
+"That is very true," she replied, shaking her head.
+
+"I could be a nurse in a hospital--in fact, that is what I should like,
+but the training could not be afforded, it would be a pound a week, Aunt
+Agatha, and there would be my uniform and other expenses, and I should
+not get the smallest salary for at least two or three years."
+
+"I am afraid we must not think of that, Merle," and then I relapsed into
+silence from sheer sadness of heart. I had always so longed to be
+trained in a hospital, and then I could nurse wounded soldiers or little
+children. I always loved little children.
+
+But this idea must be given up, and yet it would not have mattered in a
+hospital if I had spelt "all-right" with one "l." I am quite sure my
+bandages would have been considered perfect, and that would have been
+more to the point.
+
+(_To be continued._)
+
+
+
+
+THE AMATEUR CHURCH ORGANIST.
+
+BY THE HON. VICTORIA GROSVENOR.
+
+
+We believe that young people generally have a desire to be useful.
+Sometimes not an actually formulated desire, but a vague intention which
+they mean some day shall have a practical issue, when and how they do
+not quite know, or in what way. It is proposed in this article to point
+out one means of eminent usefulness--_i.e._, that of amateur organ
+playing in our churches. It is scarcely necessary to show what a large
+field of good useful work is open to amateurs in this direction. We all
+know that on the one hand parishes wholly agricultural--the other
+suburban parishes in large towns--are utterly unable to pay for the
+services of a professional player; while there is nothing so calculated
+to lift up the heart of the congregations such as these are likely to
+obtain, as good music. Would it not therefore be a pleasant duty for
+anyone gifted with musical talent and leisure to qualify in the best
+manner possible for this ennobling and helpful occupation?
+
+The intending organ-player must ascertain that he or she has a gift for
+music, and this need not be of the highest order, as even a small
+portion of the gift can be improved with care, and fostered into
+usefulness. A first rate ear can be a snare to those who trust to it too
+much--although it is undoubtedly the best of servants, if kept in its
+proper sphere of work. A very ordinary measure of talent, supplemented
+by calm and good sense, clear power of thought, and determined
+perseverance, will be a good foundation to start with. Good sense and
+attention have more to do with the good music of ordinary persons (as
+opposed, we mean, to remarkably clever ones) than people are apt to
+think. It was said of Mendelssohn that music was the _accident_ of his
+being; and there are many of whom the same could be said, with this
+meaning--_i.e._, that the powers which make them succeed in music would
+enable them to succeed in other great things if attempted.
+
+We will therefore suppose the case of a young lady possessing a moderate
+gift for music, desiring to improve it and herself, and to take up
+organ playing with a view to real usefulness. She should first find out
+whether her playing on the piano is perfectly correct, taking the
+easiest possible music to exercise herself upon, and trying whether her
+musical ear is competent to be her teacher in the matter of correctness.
+If neither steady attention nor ear enable her to discover mistakes, she
+had better consider that music is not the talent God has given her to
+use to His glory. A musical ear may, however, be much improved by its
+possessor. With even the smallest of voices she should join a choir or
+madrigal society and learn to sing at sight. She should, when listening
+to a musical performance, try to guess its key. She should endeavour to
+know, without seeing, the sound and name of single notes on the piano,
+practising herself with her eyes shut. It is good practice, also, to
+take an easy chant or hymn tune, hitherto unknown, and try to get some
+idea of its melody and harmony without playing it. When all this is
+done, one of the most important tasks remains: that of mastering time in
+all its branches. Slovenliness in this particular is fatal to all music,
+above all to that for the organ, which is meant to guide and control. A
+feeling for rhythm and a quick-sighted accurate knowledge of time, may
+be much improved by playing with others, either duets on the piano, or
+accompaniments to voice or instrument. The player should compel herself
+to account for the time reason of every passage slowly, until she is
+able to do so with rapidity and precision at sight. At this point it may
+be well to begin lessons on the organ, taking great pains to become
+familiar with the technical part of the instrument, the names of stops
+and meaning of these names, mechanism and its use. Then will come the
+careful practice of pedals, which are at first so absolutely bewildering
+that amateurs are filled with despair at the apparent impossibilities
+they are asked to face with hope.
+
+Into the teacher's work it is not our province to go; but we would ask
+the learner to be armed with courage and perseverance, and to practise
+patiently. Success is more than likely.
+
+We now proceed with advice to one possessed of some knowledge of
+organ-playing and some acquaintance with its technical capabilities.
+First, we should say--Play on all available instruments, as no two are
+alike, and the stops are called by many different names, which must be
+identified quickly as emergencies arise. Then acquire a knowledge of
+harmony, specially useful in accompanying church music with dignity, and
+enabling the player to fill in chords which the vocal score (or voice
+parts) have left thin and ineffective. Volumes might be written on
+accompaniments; but on this subject we would advise amateurs to consult
+heart, head, and common sense, and we would recommend them to read Dr.
+Bridge's "Organ Accompaniment," one of Novello's music primers, which
+will open out to them many possibilities, on the use of which they must
+decide for themselves according to their technical ability and the
+effect they aim at. It may be they can only try to pull a few weak
+voices through the singing allotted to them--in which case a strong,
+steady accompaniment of the simplest description is the best.
+
+One word on voluntaries. These should be chosen with great care and the
+deepest respect for the church and the instrument, and kept well within
+the powers of the player. Amateurs do not as a rule obtain much control
+of their nerves, and the greatest help in the world is given by the
+knowledge that there is not a "difficult bit" coming. Voluntary books
+are not quite to be trusted, as their selection often contains operatic
+music very unfit for organ or church; but they generally contain some
+pieces of a sacred and dignified character, which may be useful. It is
+also dangerous for the inexperienced to plunge into easy arrangements of
+unknown music, taking perhaps wrong views of the time, and sometimes
+making the more experienced listener smile, if nothing worse, at the
+curious rendering of some well-known air, jumbled up with its obbligato
+accompaniment, the existence of which was entirely unknown to the poor
+player. Every organist should possess a metronome, and carefully
+ascertain with it the correct time of any music intended for use in
+public.
+
+Finally, if every small action is to be done to the glory of God, how
+much more the playing in His church! Let none take this noble work in
+hand without a desire to give, in its degree, the best work that can be
+given in absolute self-renunciation, humility, and reverence.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+EVERY GIRL A BUSINESS WOMAN.
+
+A PRACTICAL GUIDE TO THE WORLD OF INDUSTRY AND THRIFT.
+
+BY JAMES MASON.
+
+PART I.
+
+
+Every girl who is guided by common sense will aim at becoming a business
+woman. That is to say, she will try to cultivate habits of order,
+industry, perseverance, method, and punctuality, and will do her best to
+learn how to conduct formal correspondence, how to keep accounts, how to
+manage money, and what to do with savings. Besides this, she will make a
+point of knowing something about the laws relating to domestic life--the
+renting of houses and the employment of servants, for example--and she
+will push her inquiries in every direction, so as to acquire not only
+the right way of doing things, but the right way of forming a judgment
+upon them.
+
+A wise girl will thus greatly increase her usefulness in the world. She
+will be able to take part in the affairs of life with pleasure to
+herself and without being a trouble and hindrance to her neighbours.
+
+Another advantage may be pointed out. There are always people trying to
+get the better of those who know nothing, and their victims more often
+than not are ladies. It is easy to fall a prey to rogues and sharpers if
+one is ignorant of business, especially when nature has made women
+kind-hearted and experience has not rendered them suspicious. As a
+protection, there is nothing like being a business woman.
+
+Perhaps someone may say that "business woman" has a hard sound, and
+stands for a character precise, selfish, and uninteresting. That is not
+what we intend by it at all. Is a girl to be less loveable, less gentle,
+less charming, whenever we cease to say of her, That girl, in regard to
+all the ways of business, is a perfect simpleton? On the contrary,
+business is a fine training-school for many virtues; and of all good
+women, a good business woman may be reckoned the very best.
+
+Our articles are intended to be of use to two classes of girls. The
+first consists of those who either have or are likely to have a little
+money of their own, and need to know how to manage it and how to
+regulate those affairs which money always brings in its train. By
+ignorance of business many a useful life of this class as been marred.
+
+The second is made up of girls who have to earn their own living and
+make their own way in the world. These have a special need to know
+something about business. People as a rule are valuable in proportion to
+their knowledge--those who know nothing being simply worth nothing.
+
+One great reason for the work of girls and women being poorly paid, is
+that few know anything about either the principles or the practice of
+the most ordinary business affairs. We shall try in these articles to
+put girls in future on a better footing, and to make them in business
+equal, at any rate, to any average men. In this way there is a good
+chance of doubling their usefulness and value, and of more than doubling
+their independence.
+
+Nothing is done all at once, and in business, as in everything else, if
+you mean to build high you must begin low. A girl who wishes to be a
+business woman must start with accumulating the same sort of knowledge
+as an office-boy. We shall therefore try to deal with the subject simply
+and from the very beginning. You may sometimes be tempted to say, "Oh,
+we knew that before," but another girl may not have been so fortunate,
+and her ignorance must be taken as our reason for pointing out what
+appears to be familiar facts.
+
+We begin with the subject of business letters, and the first thing we
+shall say about them is--Be very particular about their appearance.
+There is a proverb, to be sure, warning us that appearances are
+deceitful, but that proverb is only true occasionally; in general we may
+safely draw an inference as to the writer from the look of her letter.
+An ill-folded, clumsy, up-and-down-hill, blotted, greasy-looking letter
+almost certainly comes from an untidy house and a stupid girl, whereas a
+neat, carefully-written epistle suggests just as surely the opposite.
+
+In friendly letters our correspondents know something about us
+beforehand, but in business we may be writing to perfect strangers, who
+can only judge of us by the figure we cut on a sheet of note-paper. To
+secure prompt attention and a polite reply, no plan works so well as
+putting good taste into the appearance of letters. They are really a
+part of ourselves, and a girl should as soon think of sending them
+marked with carelessness to either a friend or a stranger as of going to
+make a call in a patched frock, a faded hat, and gloves with holes.
+
+An indispensable point in a business letter is to have the meaning quite
+clear. It must say exactly what the writer intends, leaving nothing to
+be guessed at.
+
+And after clearness the next point is shortness. A brief letter makes
+far more impression than a long one, besides which it usually gets
+attended to at once. We have known a man open a lady's letter on a
+matter of business, and, seeing it a long rigmarole, put it at once in
+his pocket and let it lie there forgotten for a week.
+
+That long letters receive most notice is a mistake into which girls fall
+very often, but she who aspires to be a real business woman must give
+herself to the study of such short epistles as that of the officer who
+sent in as his official report, "Sir,--I have the honour to inform you
+that I have just shot a man who came to kill me.--Your obedient servant,
+----."
+
+All letters should be headed with the address from which they were
+written, the day of the month, and the year; in this way:--
+
+ 2, Ireland Avenue,
+ Stratford-on-Avon, 9th October, 1886.
+
+It is an irritating peculiarity with many people unaccustomed to
+business to be careless on this point. Common sense suggests that they
+should mend their ways, and by putting the date and a full address on
+every letter, save their correspondents sometimes a good deal of
+trouble.
+
+There is a short way, occasionally employed, of writing the date; for
+example, 4 / 7 / 86; meaning the 4th day of the 7th month (July, that
+is) of 1886. This contraction--which is improved by having the month put
+in Roman figures (as, 4 / vii. / 86)--is handy now and again, but it
+does not strike one as looking particularly well at the head of a
+letter.
+
+Put the name of the person to whom the letter is written at the
+beginning or the end. Long ago, when envelopes were not in use, this did
+not matter so much, because the name of the person addressed could be
+seen by turning to the postal direction; but nowadays the envelope
+bearing the address is dropped into the waste-paper basket, and a second
+address is required to give the letter completeness, and enable third
+parties, perhaps, to understand it.
+
+As to how to begin, whether "Sir" or "Madam," or "Dear Sir" or "Dear
+Madam," everyone may please herself, only taking note that the "Dear"
+should be omitted when any special reason exists for being distant and
+formal. Not, however, that the word when used in a business letter has
+anything of an affectionate meaning. It is just one of the drops of oil
+used to keep the machinery of human intercourse working smoothly.
+Perhaps it originally crept in to soften the sharp effect of "Sir,"
+which sounds for all the world as if it would snap a correspondent's
+head off.
+
+"Dear Sir" and "Dear Sirs" are both right, but "Dear Gentlemen" is not,
+though there seems no reason against it. If you begin "Sir" you must not
+end "I remain, dear sir." The beginning and the end should be all of a
+piece, and in both places the same form of address should be used.
+
+In concluding a business letter you may say "yours respectfully," or
+"your obedient servant," or "yours truly," or "yours faithfully,"
+according to the degree of intimacy existing between you and your
+correspondent. But really there are no very nice distinctions to be
+observed between such phrases, and their use may safely be left to every
+girl's common sense and discretion.
+
+Take pains to sign your name always so that people can read it. Some,
+out of pure affectation, conceal what they call themselves under a
+scribble which none can read--"a hopeless puzzle of intemperate
+scratches." How is a stranger, getting a letter signed in this way, to
+know to whom to send a reply, unless, as is sometimes done, he cuts out
+the signature, pastes it on the envelope, and adds the address? But
+illegible signatures, it must be confessed, are more often a man's folly
+than a woman's.
+
+Always, too, sign your name the same way: get into the habit of it.
+Don't let it be to-day "Mary G. Snodham," and to-morrow "Mary Snodham,"
+and the day after "M. G. Snodham." If character comes out anywhere in
+writing, it is in the signature, and it ought to be every day the same,
+the same in words, the same in writing, and the same in flourishes--that
+is to say, if there are any flourishes.
+
+When you send a Post Office order to anyone, however, you may make an
+exception to this rule. It is a good plan to sign a letter accompanying
+such an order with initials only. When this is done, should the letter
+fall into the hands of dishonest people, the chances are considerably
+reduced of their knowing the name of the sender so as to get payment of
+the order. In getting the money for a Post Office order it is always
+necessary, as perhaps you know, to tell at the post-office who sent it.
+
+When you (we shall call you Elizabeth Fisher) are asked to write a
+letter in the name of another person (call her Janet Constable), how
+should you sign it? Not, certainly, by just writing Janet Constable;
+that would be highly improper. To put another person's name to any
+letter or document whatever, even in fun, is not even to be dreamt
+about. You must sign--
+
+ Yours truly,
+ _for_ JANET CONSTABLE,
+ ELIZABETH FISHER.
+
+Or, if you like it better--
+
+ Yours respectfully,
+ JANET CONSTABLE,
+ _p._ ELIZABETH FISHER.
+
+In this case the _p._ stands for _per_, and means that Janet Constable
+signs the letter _by_ or _through_ you. You may write _per_ in full, if
+you like.
+
+Sometimes you may have to write inquiring about the character of people
+or their standing from a money point of view. In doing so, put the name
+or names on a slip of paper and gum it at the foot of your letter, so
+that it can be easily torn off. Your correspondent can then at once
+destroy the slip, and should your letter or her reply afterwards be read
+by other people, they will probably be none the wiser, for they will
+only see in your letter an inquiry regarding the person or persons
+"noted at foot," and in hers an answer about the person or persons
+"about whom you inquire."
+
+All enclosures sent in a letter should be mentioned in a note in the
+left-hand bottom corner after signing one's name. Thus:--
+
+ Enclosed:
+ Postal Order, 10s. 6d.
+ Recipe for cooking rattlesnakes.
+ Pattern: the Tullochgorum mantle.
+
+We have spoken about the clearness and brevity required in business
+letters, but to the subject of style a few lines more may be devoted.
+Business letters are of necessity dry and matter-of-fact, and in writing
+them no time should be lost in hunting for fine expressions. They should
+contain politeness, but light and airy sentences are worse than thrown
+away.
+
+"Accuracy of expression," says Mr. George Seton, in his pleasant "Gossip
+about Letters and Letter-writers," "as distinguished from looseness and
+slovenliness of statement, is of the utmost consequence--not only with
+the view of saving the time of one's correspondent, but also to prevent
+what may prove a very serious misunderstanding. I have known many cases
+of prolonged litigation which were chiefly owing to some doubtful or
+equivocal expressions in the course of a business correspondence."
+
+There are many phrases peculiar to business letters--formal beginnings,
+for example, such as--
+
+"I am favoured with yours of 14th curt."
+
+"I duly received your favour of 19th inst."
+
+"I am in receipt of your lines of y'day, and note that, &c."
+
+"I beg to confirm my last respects of 25th ult."
+
+"I beg to confirm my letter of yesterday."
+
+These phrases and many others which will appear in the course of these
+articles may seem formal enough, but we must not expect in business to
+meet with the language of story-books.
+
+A common business term is "advice," used to mean information sent by
+letter. For example: "I wait your advice as to the despatch of the
+parcel." A funny misunderstanding of the word occurred recently, when a
+provincial postmaster, new to his duties, in the United States, sent the
+following communication to the Postmaster-General:--
+
+"Seeing by the regulations that I am required to send you a letter of
+advice, I must plead in excuse that I have been postmaster but a short
+time; but I will say, if your office pays no better than mine, I advise
+you to give it up."
+
+Every subject mentioned in a letter should have a separate paragraph.
+Very formal, you may say. Perhaps; but it is also very clear.
+
+Always acknowledge receipt of business letters at the earliest possible
+opportunity. If they come with money, an acknowledgment ought to be sent
+by return of post, that is to say, by the first post after they arrive.
+The same rule may safely be applied to letters coming with any enclosure
+whatever. Sometimes delay may be of no consequence, but to answer at
+once will at any rate get you the credit of courtesy.
+
+Of all business letters a copy should be kept. If you write few they may
+be copied by hand into a book kept for the purpose, but if many the use
+of a copying-press saves a great deal of monotonous labour, and secures
+absolute accuracy besides.
+
+The way to use a copying-press is this. Write the letter with
+copying-ink. Then put a sheet of oiled paper under the leaf of the
+letter-book on which you wish to take the copy. Letter-books of thin
+paper are sold for the purpose. Wet the leaf with a brush or soft
+sponge. On the top of the wet leaf put a sheet of blotting paper, and on
+the top of that another sheet of oiled paper. Then shut the book, put it
+in the press, and give it a squeeze for a second to take off the
+superfluous moisture. Take out the book, remove the blotting-paper and
+the top sheet of oiled paper, and in their place put your letter face
+downwards on the damp page. Shut the book, put it back into the
+copying-press, give it a hard squeeze by means of the lever or screw,
+leave it in from half a minute to a minute, and the whole thing is done;
+an exact copy of the letter will be left in your letter-book.
+
+A letter being written and copied, has to be posted; but before being
+posted it must be addressed. The address should be written neatly and
+plainly, neither too high up nor too low down.
+
+To say, Be sure to put the direction on your letters is not unnecessary
+advice. Thousands of letters are posted every year without any address
+whatever. In the year ending 31st March, 1886, there were no fewer than
+26,228 of them, and of this large number 1,620 contained cash and
+cheques to the amount, in all, of L3,733 17s. 5d.
+
+Be sure, too, that your letters are properly fastened. On this subject,
+hear Mr. George Seton. "There is," he says, "no real security in wafers,
+and probably still less in adhesive envelopes, which are now in almost
+universal use. Both may easily be loosened by the application of either
+water or steam. The best mode of securing a letter is first to wafer it
+and then seal it with wax. When, however, an adhesive envelope is used,
+the proper course is to _damp_, rather than wet, _both_ sides of the
+flap before pressing it down; and if the paper is very thick, the upper
+side should be again damped after being pressed down."
+
+Insufficient and wrong addresses occasion a great deal of trouble to the
+Post Office officials, and this trouble one of the present
+Postmaster-General's predecessors remarks, with some pathos, "ought
+scarcely to be given to make up for what generally arises from the
+carelessness of the writers, without an additional charge." Last year,
+through some fault in the addresses, no fewer than 12,822,067 letters,
+postcards, newspapers, and parcels were received in the returned letter
+offices.
+
+As an example of an insufficiently-addressed letter, we may mention one
+the subject of a complaint made by a Mrs. Jones of Newmarket. She stated
+that a letter had been posted to her, but had not reached her. It
+appeared, however, on inquiry, that there were twenty-nine Mrs. Joneses
+at the place, and that there was nothing in the address to help the
+postman to decide between their several claims.
+
+When money or anything of value is sent through the post, the letter in
+which it goes should be registered. By this means we can be almost
+absolutely sure of its travelling safely. The fee for a registered
+letter was at one time half-a-crown, and not so long ago was a shilling.
+In 1878 it was reduced from 4d. to 2d. Not only has the fee been reduced
+to what may be thought the lowest possible point, but registered letter
+envelopes are now sold in different and convenient sizes. The Post
+Office also undertakes to make good, under certain reasonable
+conditions, up to L2 the value of any registered letter which it loses.
+
+If people who have these facilities for sending letters securely
+provided for them choose to run the risk of loss, they deserve very
+little sympathy if the chance goes against them. Last year an
+unregistered letter containing a cheque was alleged to have been stolen
+in the post. It was found, however, to have been duly delivered by being
+pushed under the front door, and afterwards to have been torn in pieces
+by some puppies inside the house. The fragments were in the end
+discovered in the straw of the dog-kennel. Now, had the sender only
+spent 2d. in registering this letter, a receipt would have been taken on
+its delivery, and all chance of its falling into the paws of the
+puppies would have been prevented.
+
+But it is wonderful what people, penny-wise and pound foolish, will
+sometimes do to save 2d. A few years back the sealing-wax on a letter
+was found to contain L1 10s. in gold coins. There could hardly be a more
+stupid way of sending money.
+
+If coin, or watches, or jewellery are posted in letters or packets
+without registration, and the fact is discovered, the Post Office people
+bring into force a system of registration by compulsion, and on delivery
+charge a fee of 8d. in addition to the ordinary postage.
+
+When coins are sent in a letter they should on no account be put in
+loose, but should be packed so as to move about as little as possible.
+The best way is to take a card, and, cutting quite through to the other
+side, make a cross on it for each coin; then slip the coin into the
+cross, so that it is held in its place by the tongues of cardboard, two
+on each side.
+
+Who owns letters whilst they are in the post? In Great Britain the
+ownership of a letter whilst it is in the post lies in the Queen, as
+represented by her Postmaster-General and her Secretary of State.
+"Neither the sender nor the person to whom it is sent can claim to
+interfere with a letter whilst it is in the Post Office. Only the
+warrant of a Secretary of State can stay its delivery." Once a letter is
+dropped into a letter-box it is like a spoken word, it cannot be
+recalled.
+
+After letters come postcards, which were introduced into this country in
+October, 1870, and have proved a great convenience to many people,
+saving them both time and money. By means of reply postcards you can
+make sure of an answer from a correspondent without putting her to any
+expense or to any trouble worth mentioning.
+
+The back of the postcard is for the message; nothing must be put on the
+front except the address. This limitation of space is useful for the
+cultivation of brevity; but those who have a great deal to say may
+derive consolation from the fact that on the back of a postcard you can,
+by writing small, easily put at least four hundred and sixty words! We
+do not, however, say that such a performance, good enough for amusement,
+would be like that of a woman of business.
+
+All business letters ought to be preserved. They should be folded neatly
+longways and all of a size, and docketed, as it is called--that is to
+say, the date and the name of the sender and his (or her) address, and
+the subject, should be put on the back thus:
+
+ 6th September, 1886.
+ MARTIN ROSE AND CO.,
+ Liverpool.
+ Remittance, L10 19s. 2d.
+
+Do not, however, crowd these particulars together, as has been done here
+for convenience in printing; leave a considerable space between the
+first and second, and the third and fourth lines. When letters are
+folded and docketed they should be tied up in the order of their dates,
+or put away in pigeon holes under the different letters of the alphabet.
+One can never tell when it may be necessary to refer to old letters on
+matters of business, so it is prudent to keep them all. Doing so and
+turning them over occasionally is also useful for giving us a humble
+opinion of ourselves; we see by the light of additional experience how
+we might often have managed things much better than we did.
+
+Besides letters and postcards, telegrams furnish another means of
+communication. For a telegram sent to any place in the United Kingdom,
+the charge is sixpence for the first twelve words, and a halfpenny for
+every word after the first twelve. Addresses are charged for, so a
+sixpennyworth of telegraphing does not represent a long message, but by
+ingenuity--and a business woman is nothing without ingenuity--a few
+words may be made to mean a great deal. The cost of a reply to a
+telegram may be prepaid.
+
+About the newspaper post, the book post, and the parcel post, not much
+need be said. Always be careful about wrappers. A great many newspapers
+and books escape from their wrappers every day, and land in the returned
+letter office. In sending parcels the packing is often a weak point; it
+is not so much that people are either handless or stupid, they are just
+thoughtless. "It must be borne in mind," says the Postmaster-General,
+"although, of course, every care will be taken by the officers, that a
+parcel with fragile or perishable contents must be several times handled
+before it reaches its destination, and will probably have to be packed
+with many others of a different kind and shape, or more weighty and
+bulky. Eggs, butter, and fruit, especially delicate fruit, such as
+grapes and peaches, should be placed in strong boxes and so placed as
+not to shift. Fresh flowers should be carefully packed in strong boxes;
+but cardboard boxes should not be used for the purpose, as they are
+often reduced to pulp by the moisture which exudes from the contents.
+Fish or game should be carefully packed in strong boxes, or hampers, or
+in perforated boxes."
+
+Remember that some things are forbidden to be sent by post--live
+animals, for instance. This prohibition is very little regarded by some
+people. Last year, in Dublin alone, two hens, eight mice, and two
+hedgehogs were stopped on their way through the post. One of the hens
+which was addressed to a veterinary surgeon in London, was in bad
+health, and though carefully attended to, died in the office. The rest
+of the animals were given up alive to the senders.
+
+Certificates of the posting of parcels can be got at all post offices.
+If you have any doubt about the trustworthiness of the person entrusted
+with the posting of a parcel, instructions should be given to bring back
+a receipt. A few months ago the Post Office was charged at Liverpool
+with the non-delivery of a bottle of wine and a box of figs. It turned
+out, however, that the missing goods had never come under its charge,
+the person to whom the packet had been given to post having eaten the
+figs and drunk the wine.
+
+Parcels can also be insured against loss and damage by the payment of a
+small sum. Paying a penny insures to the extent of L5 and twopence to
+the amount of L10.
+
+In order to understand the outs and ins of the Post Office--and it is a
+subject with which every sensible person should be familiar--let a girl
+invest sixpence in a copy of the Post Office Guide, a publication of
+which an edition is issued every quarter. She will there find everything
+necessary to be known about the posting of letters, postcards,
+newspapers, book packets, and parcels to places in the United Kingdom,
+or abroad, the sending of telegrams, the rates for money and postal
+orders, and the regulations of the Savings Bank. To turn over its 300
+pages or so is decidedly interesting. One sees what a complicated
+machinery is now employed for the convenience of the public, what
+wonders--to speak of letters alone--can be done for a penny, and how
+thousands of miles can be reduced to insignificance by the magic of
+twopence-halfpenny.
+
+In the twelve months from the 31st of March, 1885, to the same day of
+this year, the number of letters delivered in the United Kingdom was
+1,403,547,900, giving an average of 38.6 to each person in the kingdom.
+The total number of postcards was 171,290,000. Adding to the letters and
+postcards the book-packets, newspapers, and parcels which passed through
+the Post Office during the twelve months, we have a grand total of
+2,091,183,822, which shows an average to each person of 57.5.
+
+
+
+
+VARIETIES.
+
+
+THE "WOMAN OF STENAY."
+
+"And so you have not heard the story of the 'Woman of Stenay'?" said a
+Lorraine peasant. "It was in war-time, and she offered a barrel of wine
+to a detachment of Austrians, saying--
+
+"'You are thirsty, friends. Drink. You are welcome to all my store.' And
+as she spoke she drank a cupful in their honour.
+
+"The soldiers accepted with pleasure, and in a few minutes four hundred
+men were writhing on the ground in agony.
+
+"Then the 'Woman of Stenay' rose, and with her dying breath shrieked
+out--
+
+"'You are all poisoned! _Vive la France!_'
+
+"She then fell back a corpse."
+
+This is the legend of Lorraine, and the memory of its heroine is revered
+by the peasantry as highly as that of Charlotte Corday.
+
+
+SINGING SERVANTS.
+
+Tusser, in his "Points of Huswifry united to the Comforts of Husbandry,"
+published in 1570, recommends the country housewife to select servants
+who sing at their work as being usually the most painstaking and the
+best. He says--
+
+ "Such servants are oftenest painful and good
+ That sing in their labour, as birds in the wood."
+
+
+A HINT FOR WORKERS.--St. Bernard has said that the more he prayed and
+read his Bible the better he did his ordinary work and the more clearly
+and regularly did he conduct his correspondence. An increase of private
+devotion will be found not to lessen one's power of work or one's
+efficiency in ordinary duties.
+
+
+OUR OWN SELVES.--How can you learn self-knowledge? Never by meditation,
+but best by action. Try to do your duty, and you will soon find what you
+are worth. What is your duty? The exigency of the day.--_Goethe._
+
+
+USELESS ANXIETY.--I shall add to my list as the eighth deadly sin that
+of anxiety of mind, and resolve not to be pining and miserable when I
+ought to be grateful and happy.--_Sir Thomas Barnard._
+
+
+THE MOONLIGHT SONATA.--The "Moonlight Sonata" is an absurd title which
+has for years been attached, both in Germany and England, to one of
+Beethoven's sonatas. It is said to have been derived from the expression
+of a German critic comparing the first movement to a boat wandering by
+moonlight on the Lake of Lucerne.
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: THE SHEPHERD'S FAIRY]
+
+THE SHEPHERD'S FAIRY
+
+A PASTORALE.
+
+BY DARLEY DALE, Author of "Fair Katherine," etc.
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE FAIRY'S ORIGIN.
+
+"Die Eifersucht ist eine Leidenschaft der mit Eifer sucht muss Leiden
+schaffen."--_German Proverb._
+
+
+Very many years ago, in a valley a few miles from the coast, there stood
+a French chateau, beautifully situated in a handsome park near the
+Norman village of Carolles. The rich woodland scenery, the green
+pastures with their large wild fences now laden with wild roses; the
+shady lanes, whose banks will soon be covered with the long, bright
+green fronds of the hartstongue, and the delicate drooping trichomanes;
+the fine timber, and the picturesque farmhouses with their thatched
+roofs nestling in the valleys--all tend to give a home-like English air
+to the scenery of Normandy. And the district in which the Chateau de
+Thorens stands possesses all these attractions for an English eye. Not
+that any English people lived in the chateau; the De Thorens were
+French, or rather Norman, to the backbone, descended from the great
+duke, and proud as Lucifer of their birth. Pride and poverty are
+generally supposed to go together; and though poor is perhaps hardly the
+word to apply to people who could afford to live in the ease and luxury
+which prevailed at Chateau de Thorens, yet for their rank the De Thorens
+were not rich, and, consequently, after the fashion of many French
+families, there were three generations of them now all living under the
+ancestral roof.
+
+First there was the old baroness, a picturesque old lady with very white
+hair and piercing black eyes, with whom we have very little to do; then
+there was her eldest son, the present baron, for his father had been
+dead some years, and his beautiful young wife, whom he was so
+passionately fond of that he was jealous--dreadfully jealous--of her
+love for her baby, a little girl a few months old; and, lastly, there
+were the baron's three younger brothers, who with Pere Yvon, the
+chaplain, made up the family party. The two younger brothers were mere
+boys, still under Pere Yvon's charge, for he acted as tutor to them as
+well as chaplain; but Leon de Thorens was a young man of
+five-and-twenty, only a year or two younger than the baron. He was a
+fine, handsome man, tall and thin, with his mother's fine black eyes and
+small well-cut nose and mouth. He was of a bold, reckless nature, full
+of animal spirits, the very life of the house when he was at home, which
+was seldom, as he owned a yacht, in which he spent a great deal of his
+time. He was his mother's favourite son, and both he and she had often
+privately regretted that he was not the eldest.
+
+The baron was smaller and fairer than Leon, and not so handsome, though
+there was a strong family likeness between the brothers. He was of a
+quieter disposition, and his restlessness took an intellectual rather
+than a physical form, his wanderings being confined to the shelves of
+the valuable library which the chateau boasted, instead of extending
+over the seas on which Leon spent so much of his time. The baron's
+studious nature had endeared him very much to Pere Yvon, with whom he
+was a prime favourite, and who had never shown him any of the severity
+of which the other brothers often complained, but, on the contrary, had
+erred on the opposite side with the baron, whose wishes had never been
+crossed in any way, and who had grown up to think himself the one
+important person in the world to whom the convenience of everyone else
+must be sacrificed.
+
+For the first year of their married life the pretty baroness had
+contributed as much as Pere Yvon to spoil her husband, whose every whim
+she had humoured until her baby was born, and then, much to his
+astonishment, the baron found that his beautiful, gentle wife had a will
+of her own, and, what was still worse in his eyes, a large place in her
+heart for someone else besides himself, and although that someone else
+was only his infant daughter, the baron was jealous.
+
+In vain had he urged that the baby should be sent away to some peasant
+to nurse until it was a year or two old, as he and all his brothers had
+been, after a very common custom in French families. No, the baroness
+would not hear of such a thing; she could not live without her baby, and
+every moment she could spare she spent by its cradle. Indeed, so
+infatuated was she with her new possession, whose every movement was a
+delight to her, that she did not notice the baron became daily more and
+more morose, and that an ominous frown had settled on his fine forehead,
+while his mouth was closed with a determination that boded ill for his
+wife and daughter. But the baroness lived so much in her child that she
+did not observe the change in her husband; and as he never allowed the
+baby to be brought into his presence, the baroness saw but little of him
+except at meals, when all the others were present, and Leon's wild
+spirits covered his brother's depression and silence.
+
+At last, one fine June morning, matters reached a climax, when the
+family sat down to their one o'clock _dejeuner_. The baroness was late;
+the first course was finished, and still she did not appear.
+
+"Where is Mathilde, Arnaut?" asked the old baroness.
+
+"I don't know," said the baron, sulkily.
+
+"I do," said Leon; "she is worshipping at the shrine of that precious
+baby of yours, Arnaut. Why on earth don't you send it away till it is
+old enough to amuse us?"
+
+"Go and tell Madame la Baronne the soup is already finished," said the
+baron to a servant at his elbow; but he vouchsafed no further answer.
+
+"I think Arnaut has suggested that the baby should be sent away, but
+Mathilde objects," remarked the old baroness.
+
+"Send it away without asking her, then. Give her a pug instead; it will
+be much more amusing, and not half the trouble the baby is," said Leon.
+
+Here the servant returned to say madame would take her _dejeuner_ in the
+nursery, as the nurse was out and she could not leave the baby.
+
+"Really, Mathilde is too absurd, when there are at least three or four
+other servants in the house who could look after the baby as well as the
+nurse," said the old baroness, helping herself to some omelette.
+
+"She is mad," muttered the baron, angrily.
+
+"Quite, all women are; there can be no doubt about that. Look here,
+Arnaut, it is quite clear if you don't send that infant away, you might
+just as well live _en garcon_, like me, as I foresee you won't have much
+of Mathilde's society now," said Leon.
+
+"It does not require much foresight to predict that," said the baron,
+bitterly.
+
+"Well, if Mathilde won't send it away, just hand it over to me the next
+time I take a cruise, which will be as soon as ever there is wind enough
+to fill my sails, and I'll place the child somewhere where there is no
+fear of Mathilde getting it again till it is of a reasonable age," said
+Leon.
+
+The idea of handing the baby over to the tender mercies of Leon struck
+them all as so comic that a general laugh, in which all but the baron
+joined, greeted this speech, which was forgotten as soon as it was
+uttered by the speaker.
+
+A few days after Leon announced that he was going on board his yacht
+that evening; a south wind was blowing, and he should take a cruise up
+the Channel. Would the baron go with him? They were sure to have fine
+weather, and it would be delightful at sea in this heat. The baron
+declined the invitation, as he was a wretched sailor; but that evening,
+when he and Leon were smoking after dinner, he said, suddenly, "Where
+are you going, Leon?"
+
+"I don't know; it depends on the wind. I may run over to England, or I
+may only go to the Channel Isles. I shall see."
+
+"Shall you touch anywhere?"
+
+"Oh, yes, I shall go ashore; I shan't take provisions for more than a
+week. Why?"
+
+The baron looked round the verandah in which they were sitting to make
+sure that they were alone, and having satisfied himself of this he leant
+forward and said, in a half-whisper, "Tiens, Leon! Will you help me? I
+am determined to stand it no longer; it is wearing my life out; I have
+not a moment's peace. If I don't get rid of it I believe I shall go
+mad."
+
+"What is it you are talking of? I'll help you if I can, but what is
+wearing your life out?" said Leon.
+
+[Illustration: THE BARONESS.]
+
+"The baby, of course," said the baron.
+
+"The baby! Well, but what do you want me to do with that! I can't kill
+it, you know."
+
+"Of course not, but you said in joke the other day you would take it
+with you on one of your trips, and put it out to nurse. I wish to
+heaven, Leon, you'd do it in reality. It is no use my sending it to
+anyone near here; Mathilde would go after it the next day. My only
+chance is to send it somewhere where it will be safe, of course, and
+well looked after, but where Mathilde can't go after it, and as she
+would go to the end of the world for it if she knew where it was, it
+must go where she can't find it; she must not know where it is. No one,
+indeed, need know but you, for as far as I am concerned the less I know
+about it at present the better; it has spoilt all my happiness. Mathilde
+is so wrapped up in that child she does not care a fig for me now; in
+fact, I rarely see her. If you can only put that infant safely out of
+our way for a year or two, I'll never forget it, Leon."
+
+"Are you in real sober earnest, Arnaut?" asked Leon, who, in his
+astonishment, had risen to his feet, and was puffing away vigorously at
+his cigar.
+
+"Of course I am. I am willing to pay handsomely for it, and I shall
+depend upon you putting it where it will be well taken care of. As for
+all the rest, I leave it to you to take it where you like--Australia if
+you wish, only don't tell me where it is, or I might cut my own throat
+by telling Mathilde if she makes a great scene, as she will when it is
+gone. Will you do it, Leon?"
+
+"Whew!" whistled Leon. "I don't care for the work, for if anything
+should happen to the child Mathilde would never forgive me nor you
+either. However, if you insist, I think I could manage it, but as I am
+going to start in two or three hours, there is not much time. I must go
+down to the yacht and speak to my men first. If I may tell them I am
+taking the child by your express wish I could manage it, I think. The
+next difficulty is where to take it, but I have an idea about that, so
+I'll be off now, and see what I can arrange. I shall ride, so I shall be
+back in an hour."
+
+"Tell them anything you like, except not to let anyone know where you
+leave the child," replied the baron, as Leon started on an errand which,
+in spite of his protest to the contrary, was thoroughly after his own
+heart; indeed, any mad freak such as this was quite in his line.
+
+Among his crew he had an English sailor who acted as carpenter, and, as
+Leon often said, was worth two or three French sailors in a gale or an
+emergency. He knew the Channel, too, as well as a pilot, and, indeed
+often acted in that capacity; he was an honest, trustworthy man--at
+least, so Leon thought; and as he rode over the hills to Carolles, he
+decided to take this man into his confidence, and see if he could help
+him; it was possible this Englishman knew of some of his own
+countrywomen who would undertake the charge of the child.
+
+Accordingly, when he reached his yacht, Leon called for John Smith, and
+had a long conversation with him in English, which he spoke fairly well,
+the result of which was the carpenter, after a little thought, declared
+he knew of a shepherd and his wife in Sussex who, he felt sure, would
+undertake the charge of the child; his only fear was that they might
+have some scruples about keeping the matter a secret, and might want to
+know who the child was; but if Leon would leave this to him to arrange,
+he could, he thought, manage it so that the shepherd should have no idea
+to whom the child belonged, nor why it was put into his care.
+
+"Where does this good man live?" asked Leon.
+
+"About four or five miles from Brighton, sir. The wind is favourable; we
+might run across in twenty-four hours or less if it lasts, and I think
+it will; we shall have the tide with us going out if we start at ten
+to-night," said the carpenter.
+
+"Well, that is settled. Now the next point is, who is to take care of it
+on board? It must be fed; who of our men understands babies best?"
+
+"I can't undertake that, sir, but there's Pierre Legros, he has half a
+dozen of his own, and when he is at home looks after them all I believe;
+he ought to know all about it."
+
+"Call Pierre, then."
+
+Pierre Legros was accordingly called, and, on hearing what was required
+of him, professed with pride his ability to act as nurse during the
+voyage; and having commissioned him to lay in a stock of food for the
+baby, about which Leon's ideas were exceedingly vague, Leon rode back to
+the chateau.
+
+The baron was on the lookout for him, and was delighted to hear all was
+arranged for the baby's removal.
+
+"I have not been idle since you have been gone. Luckily Mathilde has a
+headache, so I have sent her to bed, and I sat with her till she was
+asleep. My next care was to get rid of the nurse, so I have packed her
+off to Brecy with one of the other servants for some medicine for
+Mathilde, and the coast is clear to the nursery now. There is only one
+of the housemaids with the baby, and when you are ready to start you
+must lose something and require her to find it while I secure the child.
+Lastly, I ordered the dogcart, and said I would drive you."
+
+"But how about the child?" interrupted Leon.
+
+"I am coming to that. Just as we are going to start, you must lose a
+stick or a coat. I'll offer to go back for it, and meet you at the side
+door; there is a staircase leading to the nursery close to it, down
+which I shall come with the baby after I have sent the housemaid who is
+guarding it to look for your stick. We shall be off and the baby on
+board before it is missed, for the girl is sure to stay gossiping with
+the other servants when we are off."
+
+"Well, I hope you'll succeed, but I confess I think this is the most
+difficult part of the affair. However, there is no time to lose; you had
+better order the dogcart at once, while I go and say good-bye to mother
+and the boys. We must be off in twenty minutes," replied Leon.
+
+Half an hour later the brothers were seated in the dogcart, while the
+old baroness, with a shawl thrown round her head, stood on the steps
+under the portico to catch the last glimpse of her handsome Leon, with
+her two younger boys by her side, and Pere Yvon and some of the servants
+in the background. The groom had just let go of the horse's bridle when
+Leon exclaimed--
+
+"Wait a minute! I have forgotten my Malacca cane. I lent it to you the
+other day, Arnaut. I must have it. Where shall I find it?"
+
+"So you did. Here, one of you boys, run into my--but no, you'll wake
+Mathilde, I'll go myself. Here, Leon, take the reins, and drive round to
+the side door; I'll meet you there," said the baron, descending from the
+dogcart, and running into the house.
+
+(_To be continued._)
+
+
+
+
+FASHIONABLE EMBROIDERY.
+
+
+The fancy embroidery of the present day is of such varied character and
+make that all would-be workers will find among the diversities of stitch
+and material some description that suits their particular need and
+ingenuity.
+
+A few years ago one embroidery alone claimed attention. This was the
+celebrated crewel work, of which there is no fault to be found in the
+execution and design of its higher grades, but which, like all fancy
+work that becomes the rage and is cheapened and multiplied without any
+regard to reason, degenerated to the most impossible designs and the
+worst execution attainable. Thus crewel work passed away, and though the
+best kinds are still to be met with, it is really superseded in modern
+drawing-rooms by embroideries all originating in the present desire
+after Oriental colouring and design, but of kinds distinctly
+characteristic and individual.
+
+The work known as Leek embroidery recommends itself in many ways, it
+being very reasonable in price, easily executed, and extremely rich and
+handsome when finished. The foundation is Tussore silk, specially made
+with the pattern to be embroidered upon it printed upon the foundation,
+during its manufacture, and therefore indelible. The colouring of the
+foundation is either cream, straw, pink, blue, green, or terra-cotta,
+and the pattern is not printed in outline only, but filled up with
+indications guiding the arrangement for the centres of flowers, veins of
+leaves, and other distinguishing marks. To work the embroidery it is
+necessary to line the Tussore with fine unbleached muslin, and to work
+with Tussore silk and Japanese gold thread. The Tussore silk costs 1d.
+the skein, and is dyed in every shade of Oriental colouring. Three to
+four shades of a colour are used to work in a flower, and two shades of
+green for the leaves. The stitch is crewel-stitch worked very close. No
+shading about each leaf is necessary, but different greens are used for
+different leaves, and thus a variety of colouring is attained without
+trouble. Every part of the pattern, the bordering included, is worked,
+and only the foundation left, showing where it forms the background to
+the design. The gold thread is laid on as the finishing touch. It is
+placed round all the chief parts of the design, and sewn on as an edging
+with a couching stitch; that is to say, the gold thread is held tightly
+stretched in its position with the left hand, while a stitch brought
+from the back of the material is passed over it and put down to the back
+again with the right hand. Lines of gold are used to mark out the border
+pattern, and are fastened down with the couching stitch. When sewing on
+the gold it is very important to keep it tightly stretched, as if put on
+loosely it is not effective. If the work is at all puckered, iron it
+with a warm but not hot iron on the wrong side before laying down the
+gold thread. Leek embroidery is sold by the yard in strips, varying from
+one inch to twelve inches in width, and costing from 6d. to 2s. the
+yard. These strips are used for mantelpiece borders, table borders,
+chair backs, and curtain bands, according to their width. They look best
+mounted upon plush or velveteen, but are often mounted upon Liberty's
+Oriental silks, or made up as perfectly plain bands. When used for chair
+backs or for hanging firescreens the background should be handsome, and
+either ruby or dark blue in colour, and the work arranged either
+straight down its centre or crossing it in a number of diagonal lines.
+This manner of making up is newer and more effective than merely laying
+it on as an edging. Bands of unmounted Leek embroidery, simply lined
+with twill, are much used for looping up summer curtains, and give
+richness to the soft, creamy materials now employed for curtains.
+
+As dress trimmings Leek embroidery is good, the wide bands making a
+waistcoat front and the narrow the cuff trimmings. To a velveteen winter
+dress a waistcoat and cuffs so made are an admirable finish as long as
+the embroidery is kept subdued by rich colours, and the gold carefully
+put on, while for dinner dresses a broad panel of embroidery is carried
+down the skirt, and the waistcoat cut low, and no trimming required for
+the sleeves.
+
+Oriental embroidery cannot be made up in so many different ways as Leek
+embroidery, but it is quite new, and aims at reproducing early Eastern
+designs. The foundation material is surah silk, the silk sold in large
+squares as Liberty's handkerchief being correct in colouring and
+texture. Upon this foundation the patterns, which all consist of single
+petalled flowers resembling single dahlias, sunflowers, or
+chrysanthemums, are worked with Oriental silk, which are silks of a
+thick make, but very soft and with a gloss on them similar to the gloss
+on floss silk. The leaves surrounding the flowers are of the shape of
+the jessamine, and to these are added tendrils and queer-looking bunches
+of seed-vessels.
+
+There is little variety in the design, as the embroidery is entirely
+executed in one stitch (that of a close herringbone), but there is great
+variety and great scope for good shading in the colouring. Oriental
+silks are all dyed in the shades of blues, yellow pinks, terra-cotta
+reds, and brilliant yellows, to be seen in Eastern embroideries worked
+before the introduction of aniline dyes, and the consequent lapse into
+Imperial purples and magentas and royal blues.
+
+By a judicious use of good colours the same design can be so repeated as
+to look entirely different. Thus, a spray of flowers worked upon an
+orange-red ground, with cream, yellow, pink and pale blue colours, will
+be quite distinct from the same spray laid upon sea-green silk, and
+coloured with deep orange-reds and blues running from sky into navy
+blue.
+
+As before mentioned, the only stitch used is herringboning, and the only
+flowers single petalled ones; but the herringboning is done so closely
+together that it looks like an interwoven stitch of double crossings,
+and the flowers are all worked in their centres in a different silk to
+that used on their tips, and therefore resemble double petalled flowers.
+The tips of each petal are wider than the commencement, and the
+herringboning is not taken along as a wide line of equal width, but as a
+curved line running small, and widening out again several times if the
+petal or seed-vessel is a long one. Each petal is worked separately, and
+the silk is never dragged or drawn tightly, but is allowed to lie easily
+over the foundation, and rather loosely, although the stitches follow
+each other so closely that nothing of the foundation can be seen where
+they are laid. The stems, long leaves, and large branches are worked as
+closely as the petals in herringbone, but tendrils and sprays are more
+opened out, and are given the look of single coral stitch as a variety.
+
+When shading a flower select two colours that are distinct in tone but
+not jarring in their contrast; thus, cream-white used for the outer
+petals can be finished with pale blue, yellow pink, pure orange, or pale
+yellow for its centre petals; scarlet red outside petals with black
+inner petals, bright blue outside petals with lemon yellow or
+terra-cotta red inside petals, and every one of these colours are
+allowable when working bunches of flowers scattered over the whole of a
+five o'clock tea-cloth or fireplace curtains.
+
+The embroidery is used for table-cloths, mantel borders, and curtain
+brackets, knitting bags, handkerchief cases, and as a trimming to
+evening dresses. In all cases it requires a silk lining, and should be
+worked with a muslin lining beneath it. Embroidering Breton
+handkerchiefs is not a new description of fancy work, but it is still in
+vogue; and when a lady has had sufficient patience to successfully
+accomplish the feat of covering every portion of the handkerchief with
+thick filoselle work, there is no doubt that she has produced a piece of
+embroidery not only handsome and durable, but that will justly hand her
+name down to posterity as a real worker, and not one who takes up the
+whim of the hour and throws it on one side as soon as it bores her. The
+squares made of these embroidered handkerchiefs are shown more
+effectually when they are lined with quilted silk and used as
+banner-screens than when they are bordered with wide plush and used as
+table-cloths. The pattern in the latter case is never seen as a whole,
+and the beauty of the work is often marred by water from flower vases
+spilt over it, or wet teacups and saucers put down on it. The small
+screens now so fashionable make another admirable place for mounting
+Breton work. These screens are made of two compartments only, in height
+about 41/2 feet. To each panel, 21/2 feet from the ground, a ledge
+that can be put up or down is fixed, and that is used for holding a book
+or a teacup. The panel below this ledge is merely filled with a little
+curtain made of coloured Oriental silk, and arranged in very full folds.
+The panel above the ledge, that is fully displayed to every eye, is
+filled with the embroidery stretched quite tightly across it and
+displayed to its full advantage. The back of the embroidery is
+concealed with a satin or silk matching the little curtain beneath. Two
+Breton handkerchiefs are required, one for each division, but they
+should not be selected both of the same design. The little screens are
+made of oak, mahogany, and ebonised wood. They are a simple framework,
+an inch and a half square, and any working carpenter would make them to
+order.
+
+Breton embroidery is too laborious for many people, and those whose time
+is much occupied with household matters, and who cannot devote much of
+it to the task of making their drawing-rooms pretty, we recommend to try
+crazy patchwork in its place. We have lately seen this easy work carried
+out most successfully, and used as mantel and table borders, covers for
+footstools, and as the centres of small table-cloths. The work is one of
+the least expensive that can be tried, and can be put down without
+derangement of effect at any moment (a great point in its favour where
+interruptions are frequent). Before commencing any piece of it, it is
+better to accumulate all the oddments of ribbons, plush, velvet, silk,
+and satin lying in the piece-drawer from dress trimmings or sent as
+patterns from shops. The more plush and velvet obtainable, the greater
+the effect produced, while the colouring should be of a vivid tone, but
+excluding the bright aniline dyes already once referred to as being
+unsuitable to blend with other shades. A strong piece of ticking is
+required for the foundation, and on this the pieces are arranged. They
+should be pinned on while the amalgamation of colouring is being tried,
+and, when that is settled, basted on to the lining, the edges of soft
+materials being turned under and secured with the basting lines.
+Similarity in shape and size is to be avoided when placing the pieces,
+and the effect aimed at that of the colouring of a kaleidoscope in its
+variety and brightness. In order to obtain queer shapes and corners, it
+is not necessary to carefully cut them out and fit them into their
+various spaces; in fact, it is better not to do so, but to lay one
+material partly over another, and by so doing make the desired form. The
+embroidery is generally left until the pieces are basted down to the
+lining, but now and again the scraps should be embroidered before they
+are fixed down, this method being the least troublesome when fine silk
+work is attempted, such as working flowers in shades of colour or
+intricate designs, or following out the lines of stamped velvet or
+brocade with couched-down cords and gold thread. Thin Oriental silks
+require a thin muslin lining underneath them, and the embroidery
+executed before they are tacked to the ticking, as unless this
+precaution is taken they are apt to pucker and look uneven and poor.
+When the patchwork scraps are all arranged, spare strands of filoselle
+of any shades are used to cover over the basting threads with lines of
+coral stitch, feather, chain, rope, and herringbone, while oddments of
+silk cord, Japanese gold thread, very fine braids, etc., are sewn down
+either as borderings to the securing lines or as forming designs and
+figures on the patches themselves. Embroidery stitches of all kinds are
+used to fill in the centres of the patches, and advantage is always
+taken of any pattern on the patches either by filling it in entirely
+with shaded silks, filling up its background with stars, crosses, or
+dots, or by enclosing it within diagonal lines, or sewing spangles down
+so as to cover it over. Every effort is made to enrich the patches by
+the use of gold thread, spangles, gold lace, and silk cords, and when
+the work is faithfully done, no one could guess it was devised out of
+oddments and produced at a nominal cost.
+
+B. C. SAWARD.
+
+
+
+
+ROMANCE.
+
+FOR VIOLIN AND PIANOFORTE.
+
+PROFESSOR SIR G. A. MACFARREN.
+
+[Music]
+
+
+
+
+ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS.
+
+
+EDUCATIONAL.
+
+A. Z.--The part of a whole made by two-thirds of three-fourths is
+one-half. Such books as those you name are not so appropriate for young
+girls as very desirable, instructive, as well as interesting books,
+although a girl of twenty-one might read one of such a kind once in a
+way. There is an article by Dr. Green in the last two numbers of the
+_Leisure Hour_ (published by the Religious Tract Society, 56,
+Paternoster-row, London, E.C.), those for April and May, in which such
+books as you require are recommended--history, biography, travels,
+archaeology, geology, astronomy; Shakespeare, Milton, Elizabeth Barret
+Browning, Longfellow, Tennyson, etc. Such books should occupy all your
+leisure for reading, besides the study of household economy, nursing,
+cookery, needlework, and cutting out. The first five years after leaving
+the school-room should be devoted to such studies as these, not wasted
+on the class of literature you specify.
+
+G. H. T.--Yes, there is a Kindergarten College and Practising School
+established by the British and Foreign School Society. It is at 21,
+Stockwell-road, S.W., and it is directed by the Misses Crombie. There
+are ten such schools in London and eight in the provinces. Write for
+papers, and all information will be supplied you direct from that or any
+of the other schools. Had you given your address we could have given
+that which is the nearest to you. We think your age would be suitable.
+The answer you receive as to terms may decide you as to the way in which
+your L20 may be required. Perhaps if you annoyed your cousin she would
+not allow you to return home to sleep. Whether you could do so as well
+as board at the college we could not say. "Look well before you leap."
+
+
+ART.
+
+SHELTIE.--To ornament ginger jars, or any kind of earthenware, without
+knowing how to draw or paint, first size it with ordinary glue-size,
+melted over the fire; then cut bright scraps of chintz, or gaily-painted
+cottons, into diamonds, squares, half-circles, triangles, etc., and
+paste them to the jars, carefully covering every part of the jar with
+the scraps laid closely together, but without making any set design. Let
+the paste dry; then size the jar, and varnish with white hard varnish.
+
+FLEUR DES ALPES.--We fear there are no chances of a sale in London, as
+the market for screen and fan painting is already so full. Besides, you
+should take such work personally to shops and obtain trade orders. Would
+it not be wiser and more easy to dispose of them at Geneva, which is
+within your reach? Accept our best wishes.
+
+WOULD-BE PHOTOGRAPHER.--The reason that the object to be taken appears
+upside down in the camera is this. Light travels in straight lines, and
+rays coming through little crevices (such as are used in cameras), cross
+each other, and become inverted.
+
+
+MISCELLANEOUS.
+
+EFFIE.--The texts of Holy Scripture which you cannot find are to be
+found as follows:--Psalm xciv. 22, and Gen. xvii. 8; Exodus xxix. 45;
+Ezekiel xi. 20; Zechariah viii. 8; 2 Cor. vi. 16; Rev. xxi. 3, and in
+other places. Your "Concordance" must be a very bad one. Your
+handwriting is not formed, but promises well.
+
+GOWAN COBBAN.--We do not recommend publishers to our correspondents. All
+three specimens of writing are legible, but No. 2 is careless and
+unfinished. Why write a small "b" for a "v"? The latter has no tall
+upper stroke.
+
+E. M.--The health of bride, bridegroom, bridesmaids, and respective
+parents of the newly-married pair is drunk, but no others, as a rule.
+
+CORISANDE.--We could not possibly assist you in carrying out or devising
+a method of revenge on the wrong-doer, nor do we think that even the
+aggrieved parents of the injured friend would approve of the plan. If
+you reprobate an ill-bred action, you cannot, consistently with your own
+views of what is seemly and dignified, punish that action by following
+suit, and doing what would be ill-bred yourself. Besides, as a
+Christian, read Romans xii. 19.
+
+UNA MILDRED HITCHINGS (N.Z).--The 14th of February, 1809, was a Tuesday.
+Many thanks for your nice letter.
+
+E. B. P. we think had better take more exercise, and avoid late suppers
+and sitting up late, as it seems probable her digestion is weak.
+
+SEPIA.--Hairpins are not injurious to the hair except when the hair is
+too tightly put up, when that certainly affects the nerves. We think
+young people, as a rule, do not require stimulants unless under the
+doctor's orders. We think oils are far easier to use than water-colours.
+
+MORNING DEWDROP.--We do not think the poetry worth much now, but it
+shows that at fifteen you are thinking about good things in preference
+to evil and idle things, and so we consider writing poetry, in many
+cases, a good amusement.
+
+QUEENIE FOSTER should return the duplicate copy and ask for the right
+one, and if enclosing stamps, as the surest way of getting it, she can
+retain the duplicate.
+
+AN UNHAPPY ONE should not marry her widower on any account, if she feels
+as unhappy as her letter portrays. She must not grow discouraged too
+soon, but cultivate patience, and never minding. And should she finally
+undertake the care of a ready-made family, she must be brave and
+courteous, not rendering railing for railing, but, contrariwise,
+blessing. Be not overcome of evil, but overcome evil with good.
+
+HAWTHORN.--We know of nothing better than your present treatment. We are
+much obliged by your kind offer, but we do not require any at present.
+
+IDONEA.--We should think your digestion was out of order. Read the
+advice given by Medicus to "Working Girls," page 295, vol. vi.
+
+MYSOTIS.--Your nationality is that of your father, but you may adopt a
+country; and if he be naturalised English, you become English too, or
+you may legally become so yourself. Also, if you marry an Englishman you
+become an Englishwoman, without going through the process of
+naturalisation. Of course by blood you are half English, through your
+maternal descent.
+
+OPHELIA.--We feel for "Ophelia" very sincerely; but she should rouse
+herself, and not give way to morbid brooding over her troubles. Has she
+no sacred duties to perform to those around her? No Lord and Master
+above to serve and glorify, by submission to His dispensations? Has she
+no blessed hope of a life beyond the grave? We could not insert your
+verses. "All else" is not "gone," whoever was removed, when you have
+"one that sticketh closer than a brother" to lean upon. Read St. John
+xiv.; indeed, you had better study the whole Gospel, and set yourself
+resolutely to devote yourself to others.
+
+MAY ELWIN.--Our publisher, Mr. Tarn, sent us your letter. We suppose you
+thought him the editor. The writer of the poems you name is not one with
+whom we are acquainted.
+
+MYSELF.--We cannot do better than refer you to the abuses of the Lord's
+supper, to which St. Paul alludes in 1 Cor. ii. 21, 22, which answers
+your question. Also see Hebrews x. 25, and 1 Cor. xiv. 40. Beware how
+you trifle with sacred rites and sacraments. You had better look up the
+whole of the text about Elders and their office in the New Testament
+Epistles. Our Lord's promise is that where two or three are gathered
+together He would be in their midst and bless them. You had better look
+out the word communion in the dictionary, as it cannot refer to one
+person alone; it is an act performed by a certain number of persons
+together, more or less. Again, when the clergyman prays for his
+congregation, is he not a mediator? And when you and your friends pray
+for each other, are you not mediators? And this, without disparagement
+to the doctrine that Christ is the great and chief Mediator, without
+whose divine mediation all other would be useless.
+
+BRUNETTE.--The soul does not attain its highest state of bliss until it
+be re-united to the body; but the soul of a believer in Christ (by which
+we mean one of His faithful people, who loves, serves, and trusts in Him
+and His atonement alone) will enter into a happy and sinless rest. He
+has made "an everlasting covenant with them," not with those who deny
+Him. Any mercy shown to such would be uncovenanted. See for yourself
+what the Scriptures say. We know nothing more than what is revealed in
+them. As to the heathen who have not heard the Gospel, they are "a law
+unto themselves," and will be judged as such, not as those who rejected
+Christ.
+
+ONE WANTING TO LEARN.--We are glad that you find the Sulhampstead
+Question Society, which we recommended, so useful in helping forward
+your education. We do not print our correspondents' letters.
+
+ROY.--We regret that we cannot accede to your request. It would
+interfere with the general usefulness of our magazine if we were to
+introduce the subject of politics into it. We do not even discuss vexed
+questions of religious belief, because our paper is meant for persons of
+all denominations, whose feelings should be respected. We limit our
+teaching to the broad principles of our common Christianity.
+
+LOTTIE.--If in so feeble a state of health, you should obtain medical
+advice. We could not prescribe for a perfect stranger.
+
+JUNE.--All the chief writers of this paper, with the artists and musical
+composers, including ourselves, have already been represented, in a more
+or less satisfactory manner. The story, "That Aggravating Schoolgirl,"
+appeared in the second volume, beginning at page 9.
+
+M. C. F.--We do not quite understand what you mean. Visiting cards
+should never be sent by post, and if they be left at the house you
+acknowledge them by calling in return. If people be at a distance from
+you, you must take an opportunity of calling when near. You must answer
+congratulations either by letter or a call.
+
+BIRCHBROOM.--St. Paul was a bachelor, and tells you so in 1 Cor. vii.
+You will find many pretty designs for knitting in our paper. We do not
+propose to keep any space specially for knitting recipes. You will find
+one for a petticoat at page 41, vol. ii., in the number for October,
+1880.
+
+NELLICA.--We thank you for your kind and grateful letter, and rejoice
+that you enjoy our paper and are allowed to read it. You write a very
+fair, legible handwriting.
+
+A HOTHOUSE PLANT.--Pampas grass must be bleached in a solution of
+chloride of lime. You had better consult the chemist of whom you procure
+the drug as to the proportion of water. Perhaps he would prepare it for
+you. You write well, but use a bad pen--we mean an old, worn-out one.
+
+BEDWAEEN (Hyderabad).--We acknowledge your kind letter with our best
+wishes and thanks. You do not ask any special question; but as you
+regret a want of acquaintance with the rules of English grammar, we
+recommend "The Handbook of the English Tongue," by Dr. Angus, published
+at our office, 56, Paternoster-row, E.C.; address Mr. Tarn.
+
+AMELIA should take her "twopenny mulready envelope" to a shop where
+stamps are sold for collections. This is the only plan, if not disposed
+of to a private collector. We do not think she will make very much on
+the sale.
+
+THE BIRD.--Kindly refer to the article in question, where all
+information is already given.
+
+ORMONDE should call after all invitations, whether she accept them or
+not.
+
+LILY WALKER.--The bridegroom presents the bride and bridesmaids with
+their bouquets; but it is not needful that the latter should have them.
+The health of the bride and bridegroom respectively are proposed by the
+oldest friend of the family present; but other healths are no longer
+drunk as a universal rule, we believe.
+
+ITALIA.--The competition papers are in no case returned. Your quotation
+is very good, but is useless under the circumstances.
+
+DULCIE WESTON should consult a doctor and take a tonic. We should
+decidedly object to cold baths in her case. They should be rather warmer
+than tepid.
+
+DEWDROP.--When the right time comes for the hatching of silkworms, they
+should be kept in the sun. Before that they should be kept cool, as
+their coming out should be delayed until that of the new mulberry
+leaves. The worms need not to be kept in the sun.
+
+BLUEBELL and DOLLY.--Many thanks for your kind letter.
+
+MAYFLOWER.--We should think, from the price you name, that you are
+buying spirits of wine. Send your own bottle to an oilshop for
+methylated spirits. But why not do this:--Get a small oil-lamp and
+kettle, enough to boil a quart of water; when quite boiling it will be
+enough for two gallons of cold water, and, using a sponge bath, you can
+have a comfortable bath?
+
+GRACE should wear the backboard and faceboard, so often recommended by
+us, for an hour every day while reading or learning her lessons. The
+book could be set on a stand or shelf, and she could learn while walking
+to and fro.
+
+GUELDER ROSE.--Some words and names have been given an arbitrary
+pronunciation by that tyrant--the fashion of the day. There is a rule
+for each class of society, by which all within those respective circles
+is bound, unless its members wish to make themselves remarkable. Amongst
+the "Upper Ten" the name Derby is pronounced "Darby," Shrewsbury as
+"Shrowsbury," and clerk as "clark." Balmoral is "Bal-moral," the "mo"
+chiefly accentuated. Writing fairly good.
+
+TRY AGAIN is thanked for her kind letter. That a competitor should not
+be successful is no discredit to her work, because the number of papers
+sent in is so enormous, none but the most remarkably perfect amongst the
+good ones can be awarded even certificates, not to say prizes.
+
+COMING THRO' THE RYE.--You form your letters fairly well, but reverse
+the heavy and light strokes. The down strokes should be heavy, and the
+up strokes light. Also, if you did not make the ends of your final
+letters in every word turn up like pig-tails, your writing would be
+improved. Perhaps your handwriting may be formed, or begin to be so, at
+sixteen. No children write running hands.
+
+ROSE.--No "gentlemen" presume to speak to girls in their own rank of
+life without an introduction; it would be an insult. And as to proposing
+to walk with you, as a stranger, if you have no father, brother, nor
+uncle to warn him away, he deserves to be handed over to the police. But
+men do not usually take such liberties unless they have had some
+encouragement. Beware of looking at strange men in passing them. Look
+away when they come near.
+
+EDITH.--Sage tea is good for cooling the face and healing the skin when
+much sunburnt; but it should be used the same day. Lie on a sofa, and
+lay the wet leaves over your face.
+
+
+
+
+AUTUMN.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+BY HELEN MARION BURNSIDE.
+
+
+ The chestnut burrs are falling
+ On the shining dew-steeped lawn,
+ Where the swallows have been calling
+ To each other since the dawn;
+ For again the forest leaves,
+ And the upland's crown of sheaves,
+ Wear the fair pathetic glory, which so quickly is withdrawn.
+
+ And a youthful pair goes straying,
+ As we used to do of old,
+ With the sunlight on them playing,
+ Through the elm trees' paling gold;
+ And I wonder as they go,
+ Pacing slowly to and fro,
+ Are they telling one another just such secrets as we told?
+
+ In the cool and fragrant dunlight
+ Of the woodlands, wet with dew,
+ Looking out towards the sunlight
+ Here I stand--but where are you?
+ Where are summer's lusty leaves,
+ Where the swallows from the eaves,
+ And the hopes, and dreams, and longings that in those old days we knew?
+
+ Many a spring has blossomed brightly
+ On the grave of a dead past,
+ Many a summer has tossed lightly
+ Her cast leaves upon the blast;
+ And as autumn fades away
+ Into winter's quiet grey,
+ Comes the hope: eternal springtide will give back my friend at last!
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Girl's Own Paper, Vol. VIII: No.
+353, October 2, 1886., by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GIRL'S OWN PAPER ***
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