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+ <title>
+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 16, No. 94, August, 1865.
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css">
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+
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+<body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 16, No. 94,
+August, 1865, 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 Atlantic Monthly, Volume 16, No. 94, August, 1865
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: May 3, 2010 [EBook #32232]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ATLANTIC MONTHLY, AUGUST, 1865 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Joshua Hutchinson, Josephine Paolucci and the
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net.
+(This file was produced from images generously made
+available by Cornell University Digital Collections.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h4>THE</h4>
+
+<h1>ATLANTIC MONTHLY.</h1>
+
+<h2><i>A Magazine of Literature, Art, and Politics.</i></h2>
+
+<h3>VOL. XVI.&mdash;AUGUST, 1865.&mdash;NO. XCIV.</h3>
+
+<p>Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1865, by <span class="smcap">Ticknor and
+Fields</span>, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the District of
+Massachusetts.</p>
+
+<p class="notes">Transcriber's Note: Minor typos have been corrected and footnotes moved
+to the end of the article. Table of contents has been created for the HTML version.</p>
+
+<h2>Contents</h2>
+
+<!-- Autogenerated TOC. Modify or delete as required. -->
+<p>
+<a href="#AMONG_THE_HONEY-MAKERS"><b>AMONG THE HONEY-MAKERS.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#COUNTESS_LAURA"><b>COUNTESS LAURA.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#STRATEGY_AT_THE_FIRESIDE"><b>STRATEGY AT THE FIRESIDE.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#AROUND_MULL"><b>AROUND MULL.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#JOHN_BRIGHT_AND_THE_ENGLISH_RADICALS"><b>JOHN BRIGHT AND THE ENGLISH RADICALS.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#NEEDLE_AND_GARDEN"><b>NEEDLE AND GARDEN.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#THE_WILLOW"><b>THE WILLOW.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#MY_SECOND_CAPTURE"><b>MY SECOND CAPTURE.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#DOCTOR_JOHNS"><b>DOCTOR JOHNS.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#LETTER_TO_A_SILENT_FRIEND"><b>LETTER TO A SILENT FRIEND.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#THE_CHIMNEY-CORNER"><b>THE CHIMNEY-CORNER.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#PEACE"><b>PEACE.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#RECONSTRUCTION_AND_NEGRO_SUFFRAGE"><b>RECONSTRUCTION AND NEGRO SUFFRAGE.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#REVIEWS_AND_LITERARY_NOTICES"><b>REVIEWS AND LITERARY NOTICES.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#RECENT_AMERICAN_PUBLICATIONS"><b>RECENT AMERICAN PUBLICATIONS.</b></a><br />
+</p>
+<!-- End Autogenerated TOC. -->
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="AMONG_THE_HONEY-MAKERS" id="AMONG_THE_HONEY-MAKERS"></a>AMONG THE HONEY-MAKERS.</h2>
+
+
+<p>The luxury of all summer's sweet sensation is to be found when one lies
+at length in the warm, fragrant grass, soaked with sunshine, aware of
+regions of blossoming clover and of a high heaven filled with the hum of
+innumerous bees.</p>
+
+<p>It is that happy hum&mdash;which seems to the closed eyes as if the silent
+sunbeams themselves had found a voice and were brimming the bending blue
+with music as they went about their busy chemistry&mdash;that gives the chief
+charm to the moment; for it tunes the mind to its own key, the murmuring
+expression of all pleasant things, the chord of sunshine and perfume and
+flowers.</p>
+
+<p>And it is, indeed, the sound of a process scarcely less subtile than the
+sunbeams' own, of that alchemy by which the limpid drop of sweet
+insipidity at the root of any petal is transformed to the pungent flavor
+and viscid drip of honey. A beautiful woman, weary of her frivolities,
+once half in jest envied the fate of Io, dwelling all day in the sun,
+all night in the starshine and dew, and fed on pasturage of violets; but
+there is the morning beam, the evening ray, the breeze, the dew, the
+spirit of the violet and of the cowslip, all gathered like a
+distillation and sealed into the combs, and this is the tune to which it
+is harvested. Beyond doubt there is no such eminent sound of gladness in
+all the world. The cricket seems to speak of more spiritual things than
+those of this sphere. As to bird-song, poets differ.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"O nightingale, what doth she ail,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And is she sad or jolly?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Sure ne'er on earth was sound of mirth<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">So like to melancholy,"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>exclaims one in compromise with all the others. Every echo is full of a
+lonesome sadness. The musical baying of a distant dog by night
+accentuates the depth and darkness and stillness; the crowing of cocks
+from farm to farm, in their cordon of sentinelship against the invasion
+of the dawn, tells the hearer how all too well the world is getting on
+without him; the lowing of kine through the clear noon air comes robbed
+of roughness, in its deep, mellow sonority, like the oboe and bassoon,
+full of a penetrating pathos. Let Nature but interpose a sheet of water
+or a bit of wood, and the merriest joy-bells that ever rang are infused
+with that melancholy which is the overplus of rapture. But there is no
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>distance to lend that enchantment to the buzzing of a bee: it is close
+about us, a universal sibilation; the air is made of it; it sings of
+work, that joy and privilege,&mdash;of a home, of plenty, of a world whose
+color and odor make one giddy with good cheer; it may have many varying
+elements, but its constant is content.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"When the south wind, in May days,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With a net of shining haze,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Silvers the horizon wall,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And, with softness touching all,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Tints the human countenance<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With a color of romance,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And, infusing subtile heats,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Turns the sod to violets,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thou, in sunny solitudes,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Rover of the underwoods,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The green silence dost displace<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With thy mellow breezy bass."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>And although this burly rover is not our little bee of the hive, but his
+saucy, sonsy country-cousin, the song of the one is scarcely sweeter
+than that of the other, while they blend into rarest unison. And well
+may both be sweet, it is such a pleasant thing to live; there is the
+hive to furnish, there is the dear nest underground; they forget
+yesterday's rain, to-morrow's frost is but a dim phantasm,&mdash;the sun is
+so warm to-day on their little brown backs, and here is such store of
+honey. It is true, the humble-bee is much the most dazzling,&mdash;he has the
+prestige of size, moreover; but the other may find some favor in his new
+bronze and gold armor and his coarse velvet mantle,&mdash;there are few
+creatures that can afford to labor in half such array as that, but when
+the work is so nice one's dress must correspond: it would never do to
+rumple round among the rose-leaves, black as a beetle, and expect not
+only to be heaped with delicates, but to be intrusted with love-tokens.
+One cannot be so splendid as the moths and sphinxes, who have nothing to
+do all summer but to lay eggs among the petals that their offspring may
+devour them; no, there is work to be done. But though one toils, one has
+a dignity to maintain; one remembers it readily when he has been made
+the insignia of royalty, when kings have worn his effigy, when popes
+have put him in their coats-of-arms; one cannot forget that he has
+himself been called the Winged Pontiff of the Flowers. See him now, as
+he hovers over the clover, not the red kind,&mdash;for him each floret of
+that is deep as those shafts of the hashish-eater's dream, where the
+broken tubes of the honeysuckle being planted in the sand, their mouths
+level with the floor of the desert, they became wells, and the Arab
+women dropped their buckets therein and drew them up dripping with
+honey,&mdash;it is the small white clover on which he alights, whose sweets
+are within reach of his little proboscis; or, lost in that great
+blue-bell, he swings it with his motion and his melody; or he burrows
+deep in the heart of a rose, never rolling there, as it has erroneously
+been said, but, collecting the pollen with his pincers, swims over the
+flower while brushing it into the baskets of his hinder legs, and then
+lights again for a fresh fare, till, laden and regaled, he loudly issues
+forth, dusty with treasure; and <i>les rois fain&eacute;ans</i>, the Merovingian
+kings, who powdered their heads and their beards with gold, were no
+finer fellows than he. But a few months' wear and tear will suffice to
+tarnish him; by-and-by the little body will be battered and rusty, the
+wings will be ragged and worn; one day as he goes home heavily burdened,
+if no sailing blue-winged swallow have skimmed him up long ago, the
+flagging flight will fail, a breeze will be too much for him, a
+rain-drop will dash him down, he will fall, and some garden-toad, the
+focal length of whose vision is exactly the distance to which he can
+dart his tongue, will see a tired bee blundering across his sky, and
+will make a morsel of him, honey-bag, pollen, and all. Yet that is in
+the future, far outside the focal length of any bee's vision, that
+fortunate vision which finds creation so fair and himself the centre of
+it, each rose made for him to rifle, and welcome everywhere. "The docile
+flower inclines and lends itself to the unquiet movements of the insect.
+The sanctuary that she had shut from the winds, from the sight, she
+opens to her dear bee, who, all impregnated with her<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span> sweetness, goes
+carrying off her messages. The delicious precautions that Nature has
+taken to veil her mysteries from the profane do not for a single moment
+arrest this venturesome explorer, who makes himself one of the
+household, and is never afraid of being the third. This flower, for
+instance, is protected by two petals which join each other in a dome
+above; it is thus that the flag-flower shelters her delicate little
+lovers from the rain. Another, such as the pea, coifs itself in a kind
+of casque, whose visor must be raised. The bee establishes himself at
+the bottom of these retreats fit for fairies, laid with softest carpets,
+under fantastical pavilions, with walls of topaz and ceilings of
+sapphire. But poor comparisons borrowed from dead stones! These things
+live and they feel, they desire and they await. And if the joyous
+conqueror of their little hidden kingdom, if the imperious violator of
+their innocent barriers, mingles and confounds everything there, they
+give him thanks, heap him with their perfumes, and load him with their
+honey," says M. Michelet, in a brochure upon the insect, which, however
+uncertain its statements, would be perfectly charming in tone and spirit
+but for the inevitable sentimentalisms.</p>
+
+<p>It is a brave companionship to which our tiny adventurer comes,
+likewise,&mdash;a world of opening blossoms, a crowd of shining intimates.
+There is the Chrysopa, a bright-green thing, with filmy transparent
+wings wrought like the rarest point-lace, and with eyes redder than
+rubies are; there is the Rose-Chafer, the little Cetonia of the white
+rose, with an emerald shield upon its back, and carrying underneath a
+breastplate of carbuncle; there are the butterflies,&mdash;the silver-washed
+Fritillaries of June,&mdash;the Painted Lady, found in every clime, and
+sometimes out at sea,&mdash;the Admiral of the White, peerless in his lofty
+flight,&mdash;the Vanessa Atalanta of August,&mdash;the Purple Emperor of the
+Woods,&mdash;the Peacock-tailed butterfly of the autumn; and there are the
+beautiful, savage dragon-flies, with their gauzy wings of silvery green
+and blue,&mdash;all flying flakes of living splendor, which seem to be only
+flowers endowed with wings. And in truth the analogies between flowers
+and insects are noticeable enough, between the egg and the seed, the
+chrysalis and the bud, the wide-spread wings and the expanded corolla;
+there is a vital principle enjoyed by both, individuals of both have the
+power of emitting light, there are ephemera of both; as certain buds
+always bloom at fixed hours, so certain moths break their coverings to
+the minute; as there are flowers that part their petals only at dark, so
+there are insects that fly only by night; there are plants that are
+miniature barometers, there are insects equally sensitive to every
+variation of the atmosphere; for fragrance there is the musk-beetle, the
+tiger-beetle, which affords a scent like that of the attar-of-roses; and
+whereas some blossoms have fetid odors, there is the little golden-eyed,
+lace-winged fly to offset them. It is easy to detect the rudimentary
+flower in the folded bud, thus the lovely little aerial butterfly with
+its ocellated wings may be found all ready for flight wrapped in the
+caterpillar that feeds on the wild strawberry,&mdash;the one has the freedom
+of heaven, the other seems bound by the spells of some beautiful
+enchantment; these Libellul&aelig; are sporting in the air, these sweet-peas
+are just about to depart; there are locusts which appear to be walking
+leaves, and finally there is the bee-orchis, which deceives even the
+bees themselves.</p>
+
+<p>It must fairly seem to this busy, bustling fellow, culling nectar and
+ambrosia, that all outside is shadow, that the earth is made for him and
+his kind, and that, let him cull never so tirelessly, he cannot hive
+half its honey,&mdash;so that there will always be a drop or two left over
+for his little poor relations, the violet-carpenter, the
+roseleaf-cutter, and the poppy-bee. They have need of it, that drop or
+two, to sweeten all the anxieties of their solitary lives the span of a
+summer long, vagabonds at best, and not always allowed what
+domesticities they have in peace. The pitiful fortunes of a mason-bee,
+as told in "A Tour round<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span> my Garden," are liable to befall one as
+another.</p>
+
+<p>"Look at her," says the author, "returning home with her provisions; her
+hind feet are loaded with a yellow dust, which she has taken from the
+stamens of flowers: she goes into the hole; when she comes out again,
+there will be no pollen on her feet; with honey which she has brought,
+she will make a savory paste of it at the bottom of her nest. This is,
+perhaps, her tenth journey to-day, and she shows no inclination to rest.</p>
+
+<p>"All these cares are for one egg which she has laid,&mdash;for a single egg
+which she will never see hatched; besides, that which will issue from
+that egg will not be a fly like herself, but a worm, which will not be
+metamorphosed into a fly for some time afterwards. She has, however,
+hidden it in that hole, and knows precisely how much nourishment it will
+require before it arrives at the state which ushers in its
+transformation into a fly. This nourishment she goes to seek, and she
+seasons and prepares it. There, she is gone again!</p>
+
+<p>"But what is this other brilliant little fly which is walking up the
+house-wall? Her breast is green, and her abdomen is of a purple red; but
+these two colors are so brilliant that I am really at a loss to find
+words splendid enough to express them, but the names of an emerald and a
+ruby joined together.</p>
+
+<p>"That pretty fly&mdash;that living jewel&mdash;is the 'Chrysis.' I scarcely dare
+breathe, for fear of making it fly away. I should like to take it in my
+hands, that I might have sufficient time to examine it more closely.
+This likewise is the mother of a family; she also has an egg to lay,
+from which will issue a fly like herself, but which she will never see.
+She also knows how much nourishment her offspring will require; but,
+more richly clothed than the bee, she does not, like her, know how to
+gather the pollen from flowers or to make a paste of it with honey.</p>
+
+<p>"She has but one resource, and that resource she is determined to
+employ; she will recoil neither from roguery nor theft to secure the
+subsistence of her offspring; she has recognized the solitary bee, and
+she is going to lay her egg in her nest. It will hatch sooner than that
+of the true proprietor; then the intruder will eat the provisions so
+painfully collected for the legitimate child, who, when it is hatched in
+its turn, will have nothing to do but to die of hunger.</p>
+
+<p>"There she is at the edge of the hole,&mdash;she hesitates,&mdash;she
+decides,&mdash;she enters.</p>
+
+<p>"This insect interests me, she is so beautiful. The other likewise
+interests me, she is so industrious. But here she comes back through the
+air: one would think her a warrior covered with chased armor and a
+golden cuirass; she buzzes as she comes along. The Chrysis has heard the
+buzzing, which is for her the terrible sound of a war-trumpet. She
+wishes to fly; she comes out; but the other, justly irritated, pounces
+upon the daring intruder, beating it with her head. She bruises and
+tears the brilliant gauze of her wings, and beats her down to the dust,
+where she falls stupefied and inanimate.</p>
+
+<p>"The bee then enters into her nest, and deposits and prepares her
+provisions; but still agitated with her combat and her victory, she sets
+out again through the air. I follow her with my eyes for a long time,
+and at last she disappears.</p>
+
+<p>"The poor Chrysis is not, however, dead: she gets up again, shakes
+herself, flutters, and attempts to fly; but her lacerated wings will no
+longer support her. What can she do to escape the fury of her enemy? It
+is not her business to fly away; her business is to deposit her egg in
+the bee's nest, and to secure future provision for her offspring,&mdash;but
+the bee came back too soon. She ascends, climbing painfully: at times
+her strength seems to fail her; she is forced to stop, but at last she
+arrives,&mdash;she enters,&mdash;she is in! This time the interest is for her.
+Then she was only beautiful, now she is very unfortunate. I am aware
+that a long plea might be made for the other. I should not like to be
+appointed judge between<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span> them. Ah! she is out again,&mdash;she flies away!
+But, oh, how happy she is to have succeeded! Now I begin to feel for the
+bee. The poor bee continues to bring provisions for its young, which,
+nevertheless, will die of hunger."</p>
+
+<p>Nor is the Chrysis her only tormentor, it may be remarked; there are
+some frivolous little vagabonds of her own kind that never think of
+building for themselves, but always appropriate the homes of others in
+this style, and they are known as cuckoo-bees.</p>
+
+<p>It is no wonder that the happy bee of the community, escaping all such
+trial, makes blithe murmur to itself over its luscious labor. Perhaps
+all artisans would sing as cheerfully, were their task as sweet; it can
+be no such severe duty to fill one's basket with the bountiful store at
+hand, when one has just banqueted on the very dew of the morning. There
+are a few secondary products of Nature on which words cannot be wasted.
+It is pleasant to recall the poetical charms of wine, its tints, its
+aromas, and its sparkles; yet, with all that fire and fragrance, it
+seems but poor, thin stuff, when poured out beside the heavy flow of
+honey with sunbeams dissolved in every plash. The Hungarian huntsman may
+praise his ropy Cotnar, fine ladies sip cordial Rosolio and Levantine
+sirups, the fancy warm over African Constantia; but every peasant has
+honey in his garden, and they buy it of him to enrich their best
+Muscats. The great globes of the grape on which the wind and weather
+have breathed a bloom, pulped with rain, and sweetened with sun, the
+dew-drops slipping down among them as they stir beneath the weight of
+some bird that springs from the stem into the sky,&mdash;these lend their
+beauty and innocence as a kind of chrism to cover the profanities of
+wine, which, before it can be used at all, undergoes a kind of
+decomposition; but the wild wine of the bramble-rose has no need of its
+youth in apology for its age. It is stainless honey still; the sweet
+earth-juices stole up the tiny ducts of the flower to secrete it;
+showers and odors, warmth and balm, distilled together into the nectary
+to give it wealth and savor; it yet preserves the essence of long summer
+days, of serene nights, of wandering winds, of mingled blossoms; it is
+the link between vegetable and animal productions; it has undergone the
+processes of a higher organization than that of the plant; it is, in
+fact, the bee himself, and not all the art of all the laboratories can
+reproduce it. Into all these other secondary products some stain of
+humanity enters; but little sinless sprites of greenwood and glen alone
+share the occult science of this with the blossoms. As light and heat
+are the generative forces of the world, honey seems to be their first
+result; it is lapped, indeed, in flowers, but it looks like candied
+sunshine. From the beginning, it has been regarded as a sacred
+substance; some have supposed it the earliest element of vegetation. The
+ancients made offering of it to the souls of the departed; they
+preserved their dead in its incorruptible medium; they sacrificed it to
+the gods. "With honey out of the rock should I have satisfied thee,"
+said the Psalmist, as if earth had nothing more to give. Nor has it to
+our bee. Let him fill his honey-vesicle, he will regurgitate the deposit
+into a cell that he closes with a thin waxen pellicle, or into another
+already partially occupied by the farina of flowers, which he knows to
+be perishable, and therefore secludes from the air in the same fashion
+that the Romans used to seal their flasks of Falernian,&mdash;with a few
+drops of honey at the mouth. Give him a grain of pollen, a taste of
+stagnant water, a drop of honey, and kings could not enrich him. The
+honey is his food, in the stagnant water he finds salts requisite as
+remedies; but what the bee wants with the grain of pollen is still a
+doubtful matter among apiarists. He makes of it a confection for the
+brood, it is also an ingredient of the royal jelly, he eats it himself,
+and he elaborates it in scales of wax upon his body, say those who
+follow Huber; on the other hand, the brood receive no confection or food
+whatever, there is<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span> no such thing as royal jelly, the insect will die
+sooner than partake of pollen, and there is no wax elaborated in scales
+upon the body of any bee, say those who oppose Huber. But if the brood
+are not fed, one may ask, why does the wild bee, the tapestry, or the
+carder bee, take such pains, before closing the nest where her egg is
+hidden, to store there the little drop of honey? and what is it that
+occasions the greater consumption of honey during the brooding period
+than during any other portion of the year? It is really a pity, when
+Huber has given us so many interesting relations, that people must needs
+go prying into their truth. How is it possible that Nature could improve
+upon them? Kirby, indeed, accepts them all, and hands them down to us;
+subsequent encyclopedists have profited by his example; and Michelet,
+who between a true story and a picturesque one never hesitates a
+moment,&mdash;who tells us that the down on the butterfly's wing is a
+collection of exquisitely minute balloons, and that the silkworm files
+its way out of the cocoon with its eyes,&mdash;leading us to think, that, if
+his great history partake of the nature of his lesser works, it must be
+an assemblage of splendid errors,&mdash;M. Michelet out-Hubers Huber himself.
+Contrary to these, Mr. Huish, a British author, declares that a rod
+ought to be pickled for the man who dared impose such sheer inventions
+upon the credulity of a weak-minded public; and although he does not say
+it in so many words, he has evidently pictured to himself the
+consternation with which Huber's wife and servant must have looked at
+one another when he announced to them his intention of publishing a book
+of the fairy stories with which they had amused him, and suffered him to
+amuse his friend Bonnet. Huber has novelty, romance, and interest, upon
+his side; Huish has certainly a little logic. The latter's book upon the
+subject is, nevertheless, as quarrelsome an affair as ever was
+published; he seems to be as choleric and adust of temperament as the
+bees themselves; he contradicts every one who has dared to speak upon
+the matter, and, while insisting that they could by no possibility have
+seen what they pretend to have done, asserts opposing facts, which he
+could no more have seen than they.</p>
+
+<p>There is a close classification in Huber's system, the results of which
+give us several ranks among bees,&mdash;those of the queen, the drone, the
+jelly-maker, the artists in wax, the nurse, the harvester, and a certain
+little useless black bee. Adversely to this, Mr. Huish, who would carry
+bee-craft back to a pre-R&eacute;aumurite period, reverts to the original
+observations, and declares there are but three sorts of bee in the
+hive,&mdash;queen, drone, and worker,&mdash;which obviously simplifies matters;
+while as for the little black bee, he regards it as existing nowhere but
+in the head of its discoverer, so that, if the worthy person had not the
+traditional maggot in his brain, he might at least be said to have a bee
+in his bonnet. The sociable caterpillars, we are told, work as each one
+pleases. John Hunter said that bees did, too; and here Mr. Huish is of
+the same opinion,&mdash;this or that worker scours the fields or fashions the
+cell according to the fancy that may overcome him. Him? That is exactly
+the question. Mademoiselle Jurine, following the anatomical researches
+of her father, promulgated the discovery that the common bee was a
+decided female, with its organs undeveloped. To counterbalance her
+statements, M. Epignes published a treatise in which he proved
+satisfactorily to himself that the common bee is a decided male. Mr.
+Huish insists that the common bee is a decided neuter. Discarding M.
+Epignes with a fillip, Mr. Huish stoutly argues, against Mademoiselle
+Jurine's theory, that the possession of organs destined to no use is an
+incident out of the course of Nature,&mdash;to which, even were the statement
+quite true, it might be added that the creation of a community of a
+thousand males and one female is equally out of the course of Nature.
+Mr. Huish insists, that, if these bees were all females, yet forbidden
+the functions<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span> of their sex, it would be an anomaly; he forgets that the
+existence of a neuter is already an anomaly. Allowing that Mr. Huish is
+here in the wrong, as seems probable, it involves a slight trouble of
+its own; for there would then seem to be need of but two kinds of eggs
+in the hive, whereas it is well established that three kinds are
+laid,&mdash;that of the male, the female, and the worker, or imperfect
+female. Huber, however, in such dilemma, adopting the previous hints of
+Schirach, at once seized upon Mademoiselle Jurine's discovery, and
+assured us, not only that from the egg of a worker a queen could at any
+time be produced, but enlightened us as to the manner of conducting the
+experiment. The queen is dead? It is lamentable, but nothing so easy as
+to make another. There is only to tear down some dozen cells, to set the
+youngest embryo afloat in royal jelly, and a queen appears, who, if not
+in the legitimate line, is capable of performing perfectly all the
+office of a sovereign. There is a moment of intense despair, great riot,
+and agitation; work is suspended; the temperature of the hive mounts
+many degrees. All at once the old art is remembered,&mdash;the administration
+of that delicious medicament, of so astonishingly affluent nature that
+it can make a queen out of a commoner, the enlargement of the narrow
+cradle to that ampler space which forbids the atrophy of a single fibre
+of the body. The preparations are made; and, with tranquillity restored,
+the people await the event. One day there comes a singular piping
+sound,&mdash;it is the cry of the royal babe,&mdash;the hive is filled with
+rejoicing,&mdash;there is no longer any interregnum of the purple,&mdash;the queen
+is born! Perhaps the queen-makers have been too much in earnest, and at
+nearly the same moment the inmates of two royal cells issue together.
+Then is the time to try one's mettle,&mdash;no shrinking, no bias, nothing
+but pure patriotism. Let a ring be formed, and she who proves herself
+victor is worthy of homage. Is one of the two a coward? The impartial
+circle bring her back to the encounter, bite her, tease her, tumble her,
+worry her, tell her plainly that life is possible to her on no terms but
+those of conquest. At length the matter decides itself; the brilliant
+and victorious Amazon bends her long, slender body, and with her royal
+poniard pierces the abject pretender through and through. Then these
+satisfied subjects surround her, load her with endearments, cleanse her,
+brush her, lick her, offer her honey on the end of their proboscides,
+and, if there are yet remaining other royal apartments whose tenants
+give notice of timely appearance, they conduct her on an Elizabethan
+progress, in which, filled with instinctive dismay, she pauses at every
+cell, and stabs her young rivals to death with her sting. As the story
+runs, there are still other conditions to be fulfilled by the aspiring
+princess,&mdash;she must give her people the assurance of a populous empire.
+Should she fail in this, they have recourse to their old man[oe]uvres,
+becoming manifestly insubordinate and unruly. If, however, they at any
+time wax unbearable in their insolence, the young monarch has it in her
+power, by assuming a singular attitude, standing erect at a little
+distance, her wings crossed upon her back and slightly fluttering, while
+she utters a shrill, slender sound, to strike them dumb, so that they
+hang their heads for shame.</p>
+
+<p>All this pretty story the later apiarists deem a tissue of fiction and
+fallacy. If, when a hive is deprived of its queen, there happen to be a
+royal egg remaining in it, they say, it will shortly produce a queen,
+as, if it had been a common egg, it would have produced a common bee.
+They insist that the organism of the creature to be produced is inherent
+in the egg, and do not believe it in the power of a bee to alter a law
+of Nature; they deny the statements of Schirach, Huber, Dunbar, Rennie,
+and others to this effect,&mdash;scout the idea of the existence of such a
+thing as royal jelly at all, with the supposed aristocracy of its
+compounders,&mdash;share with Huber the amazement he says he felt, when, in a
+time of disturbance, he distinctly<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span> heard a queen address her bees in
+the French language, saying, "<i>Je suis ici, je suis ici</i>"&mdash;entirely
+repudiate the royal duels, which the editor of the "Naturalist's
+Library" himself, an advocate as he is of the Huberian principles,
+confesses he has never, in all his experience, been able to
+witness,&mdash;and go to the extreme of declaring, that, far from being the
+truculent and jealous tyrant described, the queen is the most timid of
+all creatures, flying, at the first intimation of danger, into the
+depths of the hive, and never using her sting under any circumstances
+through the whole course of her life, while, should you get one in your
+hand, you may offer her indignities with impunity; she knows her value
+to her people, and that, should she sting and be unable to withdraw her
+barbed weapon, the effort would disembowel her, and prove her own death
+and the ruin of her kingdom. The royal larv&aelig;, Huber tells us, in
+spinning their cocoons, leave the lower rings of the body unprotected by
+the gossamer envelope, that thus,&mdash;and it is certainly considerate on
+their part,&mdash;the head being too well shielded by the hard nature of its
+substances, and the cocoon endangering the safety of her sting by its
+entangling flimsy threads, their queenly assailant may destroy them
+without detriment to herself, by stinging that portion left exposed. On
+the contrary, we are informed by his refuters, that, even were the body
+destitute of this covering, which is not the case, it would present a
+horny, scaly surface, from which there would be infinitely greater
+difficulty in extracting the sting than from the silken meshes of any
+cocoon,&mdash;and that, as no sting could pierce the waxen wall of the cell,
+and as the royal cell is vertical, and the nymph lies with its head
+towards the orifice of it, unless the queen, with her sting of the
+eighth of an inch in length, had the power of darting it through the
+orifice to the distance of three fourths of an inch, the act would be
+otherwise an impossibility,&mdash;and that, to finish the affair, these
+infant princesses are destroyed by the bees themselves, who, finding
+them unnecessary for further swarming, tear them from their cells, and
+despatch them, not by dart or venom, but, when they are in a
+sufficiently advanced stage, by an attack of the teeth at the root of
+the wings, in the same way that they despatch the drone, disabling and
+dragging them out of the hive, after they have become supernumeraries,
+where they drop to the ground, and, powerless to fly and escape, perish
+with cold, or become the prey of bird, mouse, and reptile. It is
+possible that none of the various tribes of all the tiny arm-bearing
+people make use of the <i>coup de gr&acirc;ce</i> in their power, except as a last
+resort. Still, when the bees find it necessary, they use it with Spartan
+cunning. Bruin can testify to that in his sensitive muzzle; and thus,
+when he takes a fancy to their conserve of blossoms, he carries off the
+hive in his hug, and plunges it into the nearest brook or pool till the
+bees are drowned, and all their riches made his undisturbed possession.
+The bee that is not irascible betrays a dismal home and a miserable
+mother; he has nothing worth fighting for. But far from him be malice;
+unmolested, he does not molest. For one who has lived in an old mansion,
+with bats' nests under the eaves and wasps' nests everywhere, waking in
+autumn mornings to count the customary inhabitants of the latter
+clustered on the cornices by threescores, while observing that they
+always made themselves sufficiently at home, not only to claim a place
+at table, but to walk across the cloth and help themselves, pausing
+sometimes midway to flirt out the purple enamel of a wing for
+admiration, and never giving offence to one of the house,&mdash;for one who
+has seen this fierce and fell fury so prettily and quietly behaved, it
+is pardonable to claim an equal amount of moderation for the sweeter and
+purer nature of the little honey-maker, who has learned his gentler
+manners of the flowers themselves. There are occasions, moreover, when
+the bees positively forget they have a sting at all, as when, in
+swarming, they are so entirely absorbed that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span> they may be lifted in
+handfuls. M. Lombard states the circumstance of a child's being cured of
+her fear of the sting by an experience of this season. "A swarm having
+left a hive, I observed the queen alight by herself, at a little
+distance from the apiary. I immediately called my little friend, that I
+might show her this important personage. She was anxious to have a
+nearer view of Her Majesty; and therefore, having first caused her to
+draw on her gloves, I gave the queen into her hand. Scarcely had I done
+so, when we were surrounded by all the bees of the swarm. In this
+emergency, I encouraged the trembling girl to be steady, and to fear
+nothing, remaining myself close by her, and covering her head and
+shoulders with a thin handkerchief. I then made her stretch out the hand
+that held the queen, and the bees instantly alighted on it, and hung
+from her fingers as from the branch of a tree. The little girl,
+experiencing no injury, was delighted above measure at the novel sight,
+and so entirely freed from all fear that she bade me uncover her face.
+The spectators were charmed at the interesting spectacle. I at length
+brought a hive, and, shaking the swarm from the child's hand, it was
+lodged in safety without inflicting a single sting."</p>
+
+<p>But however greatly opinions may vary in this branch of natural history
+on one or another topic, the principal dispute is concerning the
+relations that may subsist between the queen and the drones. Huber had a
+complicated arrangement in reference to this, which his admirers
+accepted enthusiastically, while Latreille and other apiarists reject it
+as a cluster of prurient fancies. The opinion of Huish upon the subject,
+which would seem to have more probability to support it than others
+have, is that the queen commences to lay immediately on being
+established, and that the eggs being in their separate cells, it is the
+office of the drone to make them fruitful, after the custom of certain
+fish and of frogs.</p>
+
+<p>"When the population of the hive has been so increased by the opening of
+the brood-cells that accommodation has become insufficient, and the heat
+so unendurable that every wing droops wet and flaccid with perspiration,
+as grand an emigration as those of the early Northern tribes is ordered,
+scouts are sent out to select the future place of abode, and in some
+propitious moment of perfect sunshine, honey-pouches full and nothing to
+delay, the great exodus takes place with a noise as if the whole hive
+were attacked by vertigo; and Homer himself could find nothing to which
+to compare his multitudinous Greeks thronging from their ships fitter
+than these nations of close-swarming bees. That the young queen should
+lead the departing swarm seems the natural occurrence, being desirous of
+fulfilling her own destiny and of hastening from a hive hostile to all
+but one mistress whom they already know and love. Huber, however, will
+have it that it is the old queen, who, outraged and indignant at her
+treatment when a rival is allowed to live, sounds the alarm and sallies
+forth with her adherents. In support of this Mr. Duncan mentions having
+deprived an old queen of one of her antenn&aelig;, and noticing her thereafter
+at the head of a swarm, although Huber previously makes it known that
+any bee deprived of one of its antenn&aelig; is rendered useless. And in
+opposition to it may be given the circumstance quoted by Mr. Huish, in
+which the German apiarian Scopoli asserts, that, having clipped the
+wings of a queen, he found her still in his hive after an interval of
+many months, during which two excellent swarms had been thrown, and
+rather plumes himself on the triumphant fact, as if by any possibility
+she could have gotten away. A hive will throw off from one to four
+swarms in a season, but the last two are generally worthless, and should
+be deprived of their queens and returned to the parent stock. We have an
+old adage to this purpose,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">A swarm in May<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Is worth a load of hay,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A swarm in June<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Is worth a silver spoon,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But the swarm of July<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Isn't worth a fly,"&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span></div></div>
+
+<p>and any one may verify it who chooses to investigate the condition of
+such swarms at the conclusion of the harvest, when it will be seen that
+those which founded their colony at so late an hour have not collected
+sufficient honey even for their winter provision, and must be fed in
+order to be saved till spring.</p>
+
+<p>They have dainty appetites, these little people. They will work away
+with their forceps at a bit of sweetmeat, but they can absorb only
+liquids through their proboscides. Being in a state of civilization,
+their food must be administered in a civilized way: it must be boiled
+for them. They fancy stimulants; and sugar dissolved in ale, old brown
+October, or, better still, made into a rich sirup with Port wine, they
+find very delectable. Those authors who regard pollen as a part of their
+subsistence deem that it is because they require nitrogenized
+substances; and in order to prove that it is used as food, they remark
+that the bees continue to harvest it so long as a single flower blows,
+and that entirely after the formation of the cells has ceased. This,
+however, may be owing simply to the instinct which prompted them in the
+first place to bring it home, as instinct is generally in all creatures
+stronger than reason and overloaded; and that it cannot be any portion
+of the food of bees seems evident from the fact that whole hives are
+known to have perished by hunger while still abundantly supplied with
+bee-bread, as the pollen is often called. It is more probable that
+pollen is really the chief constituent of wax, although Huber submits
+that honey has that honor; but that this wax is produced in the manner
+that Huber states is extremely doubtful. It is his opinion that the
+wax-workers, having first gorged themselves with honey, suspend
+themselves in festoons from the flowers, where they remain for
+twenty-four hours,&mdash;which in a chilly spring night would break many a
+link of the chain,&mdash;after which, one detaches herself from the festoon,
+enters the hive, and takes up her situation, with her forceps detaches a
+scale of wax from her side where it has recently exuded, works it with
+her tongue, and fashions it to the required consistency, succeeded in
+turn by others, artisan and apprentice. But as honey is the normal and
+established food of bees, it would follow that these scales must be in a
+state of perpetual exudation, and thus before long the hive would become
+filled with them, unless bees have a control of their bodily secretions
+enjoyed by no other order of beings. Anatomical dissection has found
+pollen only in the second stomach of the bee, of which the mouth is the
+sole and single opening; it is therefore presumed, that, being taken in
+a crude condition, and having undergone its due elaboration there, it is
+disgorged again and becomes the wax of the cells. This was the opinion
+of R&eacute;aumur; and for additional proof, it is stated, that, though the
+workers are seen to collect large quantities of farina during the season
+in which the cells are being made, no particle of crude farina is
+meanwhile to be found in a single cell, the whole of it being used in
+their composition. All this, however, will long remain in uncertainty;
+for, till some one is born with eyes of his own, ready to devote his
+lifelong labor to such observations, and perhaps in the end be stung to
+death for his pains,&mdash;since there are rebellions even in heaven, we
+learn,&mdash;there will be general willingness to accept the most piquant
+little statements regarding this most peculiar little people.</p>
+
+<p>Wax itself is a substance that has no similitude to any other known. It
+is now thought, that, as there are three orders of bee, so there are
+three substances merely in the hive,&mdash;honey, farina, and wax. Pliny
+enumerates three others,&mdash;commosis, pissoceros, and propolis. Of these
+many moderns still retain the last, calling it a resinous matter
+collected from alders and willows, and used for the more secure
+foundation of the comb. But upon subjecting a lump of propolis to the
+boiling process by which wax is purified, it turns out simple wax of
+nearly its former weight; and it is accordingly<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span> presumed to be only wax
+in a much more crude stage of elaboration. Dr. Bevan, in experimenting
+with his hives, says that he melted wax and spread it upon a certain
+place, and, while fluid, attached a slight guide-comb to it, which the
+bees immediately adopted, suspending their whole comb thereby; from
+which it is evident, that, wax being strong enough itself for a
+foundation, propolis is unnecessary, and Nature is not apt to afford
+superfluities in her economy of construction.</p>
+
+<p>The beautiful geometry of the cells is, after all, the marvel of the
+whole. Koenig demonstrated, that, in the problem of space and material,
+the bee had at once arrived at the solution which he himself reached
+only after infinitesimal calculations; and it furnishes fresh proof of
+the great mathematical relations of the universe, when even instinct is
+found to take on the accuracy and method of crystals. This honey-comb,
+by the way, is a favorite figure in Nature. If one examines
+microscopically the beautiful and brilliant petal of a gladiolus, it
+will offer this cellular structure in loose and irregular outlines; but
+under the same lens, the eye of a dragon-fly, which displays by daylight
+a jewel-like transparency, will be seen a strict crowd of glittering
+hexagons, with every alveole so closely arranged and so symmetrically
+shaped as to afford instant testimony to the superiority of the animal
+organization. It is by no means the habit of all bees, however, to
+dispose their affairs with such precision, though many other methods may
+have an equal grace. Don Felix d'Azara tells us of South American bees
+which deposit their honey in small waxen cups, and are known as
+Angelitos, because never using the sting; while the little black
+stingless bee of Guadaloupe, which inhabits the clefts of hollow rocks
+by the seaside, stores its honey in cells the size of a pigeon's egg,
+each sacklet being filled only so far as it will hold without tearing
+from its fellow, and a pretty piece of color being effected by the amber
+honey in its receptacles of dark violet-colored wax which never
+blanches, as the whole hangs together like a great cluster of grapes.
+This is a species of bee not greatly differing from that which makes the
+honey of Estabentum, that Clavigero says is taken every two months and
+is the finest in the world. The Mexicans are reported to attend with
+care to the culture of these bees, not so much for their rich honey as
+for the wax, of which large quantities are used in their common church
+ceremonials.</p>
+
+<p>There are many singular incidents related by Huber, which, if they are
+not true, one may exclaim, "The more's the pity." When he notes, that,
+in a time of disorder in the hive, he beheld the queen ascend a royal
+cell and seat herself upon it as if it were a throne, and, having
+sympathized for a season, suddenly assume the awful attitude and strike
+her disloyal people motionless, it interests us like some recital of the
+haps and heroics of Boadicea and her Britons. It is remembered that in
+the early days of what are known as spiritual manifestations, while one
+wit thought our furniture made of Dodonean oak, another regarded the
+manifestations as a wise provision, in aid of the customary May ramble
+of city families from their respective domiciles. It is from a similarly
+provident point of view, with the current price of coal, that we should
+look at Huber's statement concerning the heat of a hive, when he tells
+us that twenty hives will warm an apartment comfortably, and
+twenty-five, occasionally well shaken, will furnish the proper
+temperature for a conservatory,&mdash;which throws Count Rumford's feat of
+boiling water without the aid of fire far into the shade. But when Huber
+proceeds to say that the queen is followed on her rounds by a royal
+guard, who wait on her with obsequious reverence, although it seems to
+be a pretty custom enough, the actual custom may be found a far prettier
+one: for the queen attends to her affairs, as others are assured, quite
+unaccompanied; only as workers at all times cover the comb, when she
+passes from group to group, each bee for a moment leaves labor, bestows
+a caress upon its mother, offers her honey, refreshes her,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span> sees her
+pass to the next group, which hastens to do the same, while the first
+returns to the business of the moment. The elder Huber taxes the
+credulity, however, hardly more than his son does, in presenting a
+drawing of humble-bees hindering a toppling comb from falling by taking
+acrobatic postures, standing on their heads and supporting it with their
+hind legs till relieved, converting themselves, in fact, into a kind of
+flying-buttresses. Indeed, the trouble with all these things is, that
+naturalists persist in endowing the little creatures with human
+passions; and having once given the rein to imagination, it runs away
+with them. Now and then they find themselves in a quagmire; but
+sometimes the result is simply amusing, as in old Butler's most graphic
+and entertaining description of the pillage of a weak hive by its rich
+and powerful neighbor, in the "Feminine Monarchie." Yet these stories
+have been told ever since the Flood. Aristotle assures us, that, when a
+bee has a headwind to encounter, he ballasts himself with a little
+pebble between his feet; and the Abb&eacute; della Rocca, who made observations
+on the bees of the Grecian Archipelago, had the pleasure of witnessing
+the circumstance in person,&mdash;which would cause one to conjecture that
+the Greek bees, ever since they made honey on Plato's lip, have had
+habits peculiar to themselves, were it not that the little solitary
+mason-bee comes to the rescue,&mdash;the mason-bee, that, loaded with gravel
+and material for her nest, both Aristotle and the Abb&eacute; della Rocca
+undoubtedly saw. It is Virgil, however, on whom, in practical matters,
+apiarists have not yet improved, who has told the most amazing stories
+about bees, certifying that the body of their people may be bred from
+decay, and particularizing the blossom on which the king of the bees is
+born; but Virgil lived, it is to be recollected, nearly two thousand
+years ago, and two hundred have not yet passed since Redi, sometimes
+called the father of experimental entomology, first brought discredit on
+the doctrine of spontaneous generation: having tried the recipe for the
+manufacture of snakes, by his friend the learned Kircher, he could never
+witness, he says, "the generation of those blessed snakelets made to
+hand." M. Michelet, having a kind word for everybody, has a graceful
+apology also for the errors of Virgil, avowing that this was not Horace,
+the elegant favorite of Rome, nor the light and indiscreet Ovid, but
+Virgil, the child of the soil, the noble and candid figure of the old
+Italian peasant, the religious interpreter of Nature; and though he may
+have been mistaken as to names, what he said he saw; he was simply
+deceived, as subsequently R&eacute;aumur was for a moment, by the rat-tailed
+larv&aelig; or sewer-flies, which, having escaped from their cradle of
+corruption, now shining and adorned, are thereupon brevetted to the rank
+of noble Virgilian-bees.</p>
+
+<p>Certain superstitions seem to have prevailed in all countries ever since
+bees were first domesticated. In England they must not be bought, though
+they may be bartered; but there can be no haggling. In this country they
+are not even to be bartered. As their homeward flight is supposed to be
+westerly, it is necessary to obtain them from a place due east of their
+future residence; and their first swarm is to be hived and returned to
+the original owner, the bees relying on your good faith and working one
+summer on credit, so to say: they are not slaves, to be exchanged for
+silver. At this and all subsequent swarmings, it is requisite that they
+should be stunned by a confused clatter of bells, pans, pebbles, and
+cries, although it was long ago explained by Butler that this noise came
+into custom merely in signal of the ownership of a vagrant swarm. When a
+death occurs in the household, the hives are to be told of it and
+dressed in crape, in Switzerland turned topsy-turvy, as without such
+treatment the bees do not consider themselves used as a part of the
+family, and will fly away.</p>
+
+<p>Among all the anecdotes given, perhaps the best instance in relation to
+the intelligence of the bee is that narrative<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span> of its stratagems in
+warfare with the famous Death's-Head Moth. Mr. Huish, to be sure,
+leaning upon Buffon, laughs at it, believes it on a par with Jack's
+Beanstalk, and is grimly satisfied that no bees ever erected
+fortifications of any kind other than as against the effluvium of
+murdered mouse or snail when they wall up its source in a tomb of wax;
+but it is impossible to look at the benevolent, bland face in any
+picture of Huber, with its sweetness of expression, and its innocent,
+wide, wandering eyes, and not wish to believe every word he says. M.
+Michelet tells the story so pleasantly that it would be difficult to
+quote it, especially as it is well to be credulous in good company.</p>
+
+<p>"About the time of the American Revolution, a little before that of the
+French, there appeared and multiplied a thing unknown to our Europe, a
+being of frightful shape, a large and powerful moth, marked plainly
+enough in yellowish gray, with an ugly death's head. This sinister
+creature, that had never before been seen, alarmed the rural regions,
+and appeared to be an augury of the greatest misfortunes. In reality,
+those who were terrified by it had brought it upon themselves. It had
+entered the country as a caterpillar upon its natal plant, the American
+potato, the fashionable vegetable of the time, extolled by Parmentier,
+protected by Louis XVI., and spreading everywhere. The <i>savans</i>
+christened this stranger by a name not too reassuring,&mdash;the Sphinx
+Atropos.</p>
+
+<p>"This animal was terrible indeed,&mdash;but only to honey. Of that it was
+gluttonous, and capable of everything in order to obtain it. A hive of
+thirty thousand bees did not appall it. In the depth of midnight, the
+voracious monster, profiting by that hour when the outskirts of the city
+are weakly guarded, with a little dull lugubrious noise, muffled as if
+by the smooth down which covered him, invaded the hive, sought the
+combs, gorged himself, pillaged, spoiled, overthrew the stores and the
+brood. In vain might the attacked party awaken, assemble, and riot;
+stings could not pierce the covering,&mdash;the species of soft, elastic
+mattress with which he was everywhere garnished, like the Mexicans of
+the time of Cort&eacute;s in their cotton armor that no Spanish weapon could
+penetrate.</p>
+
+<p>"Huber took counsel with himself for some means of protecting his bees
+from this daring robber. Should he make gratings? should he make doors?
+and how? That was his doubt. The best imagined closure possible had the
+inconvenience of hindering the great movement of exit and entrance
+always going on at the sill of the hive. Their impatience rendered these
+barriers, in which they would entangle themselves and break their wings,
+intolerable to the bees.</p>
+
+<p>"One morning, the faithful servant who aided him in all his experiments
+informed him that the bees had already solved the problem for
+themselves. They had in various hives conceived and carried out divers
+systems of defence and fortification. Here they had constructed a waxen
+wall, with narrow windows, through which the huge enemy could not pass;
+and there, by a more ingenious invention, without stirring anything,
+they had placed at their gates intersecting arcades or little
+partitions, one behind another, but alternating, so that opposite the
+empty spaces between those of the first row stood the partitions of the
+second row. Thus were contrived numerous openings for the impatient
+crowd of bees, who could go out and come in as usual, and without any
+other obstacle than the slight one of going a little zigzag; but limits,
+absolute obstructions, for the great, clumsy enemy, who could not enter
+with his unfolded wings, nor even insinuate himself without bruises
+between the narrow corridors.</p>
+
+<p>"This was the <i>coup d'&eacute;tat</i> of the lower orders, the revolution of
+insects, executed by the bees, not only against those that robbed them,
+but against those that denied their intelligence. The theorists who
+refuse that to them, the Malebranches and the Buffons, must consider
+themselves conquered. We<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span> go back to the reserve of the great students
+of Nature, the Swammerdams, the R&eacute;aumurs, who, far from contesting the
+genius of insects, give us numberless facts to prove that it is
+flexible, that it can increase with dangers and with obstacles, that it
+can quit routine, and in certain circumstances make unexpected
+progress."</p>
+
+<p>Intelligence among the inferior animals seems always more or less an
+affair of acute senses; the bee certainly ought to manifest much of it,
+for his senses are extraordinary. Not to speak of that singular sixth
+sense of the antenn&aelig;, by whose power alone he fashions his cell and
+seems to make and receive communication, nor of his wonderful eyesight,
+to which a double kind of eye contributes, one portion of it being for
+distance and another for vertical objects or for closer work,&mdash;although
+there are naturalists who consider these stemmata as a possible organ of
+hearing,&mdash;he has a sense of smell which must surpass that of any other
+creature on the wing: it is perhaps to this lively faculty that he owes
+his marvellous cleanliness. F&eacute;burier states that at one time the bees,
+attracted by the lemon-trees and flowers of Cuba, emigrated thither in a
+body from the mainland of Florida, a distance of twenty-five
+leagues,&mdash;the fact, however, being that their owners emigrated and took
+them with them. But they have been positively known to track heath a
+distance of four miles, and that across water, through an atmosphere in
+which the faint scent of the heath must have mingled with all the
+powerful salt odor of the sea. Strong little wings they must be, too, to
+travel these distances, and yet perform all the other labor allotted
+them; for every day, while some with their burdens are entering the
+black hive, and some are darting out again into the glaring sunlight
+full of business and on new errands, others may always be distinguished
+stationed by the door and fanning their bits of wings backward and
+forward in ventilation of the hive. Although disputatious to the last,
+Mr. Huish insists that this motion is nothing but the expression of
+intense satisfaction and joy. Either way, it would seem as if an
+answering rest must be required in order to repair such wear and tear;
+and on this point an old Spanish writer sets it down that bees sleep
+during every night and on all fast-days in addition, and a corroborating
+investigator remarks that he has seen them withdraw into the empty
+cells, and, composing themselves, their heads towards the bottom, enjoy
+the deepest slumber, the body gently heaving with the breath, and every
+little limb relaxed,&mdash;to which another person replies, that this is an
+outrageous statement, for it is a decided fact that sleep is as much a
+stranger to the eye of a bee as it is to the eye of a herring. Yet in
+the German countries much of the labor of flight is after all spared
+them, their owners collecting them into caravans, conducting them
+gypsy-wise, encamping here and encamping there, through whatever
+districts linger latest in bloom. They build bee-barges, too, in France,
+capacious enough for a hundred hives, and drift them down the rivers, so
+that the bees shall follow the summer as it flits southward. And in
+Lower Egypt, where the blossoming continues much longer than in the
+upper regions, Niebuhr saw an assemblage of four thousand hives upon the
+Nile; anchoring at places of plentiest pasturage: the bees thus float
+from one end of the land to the other before they return and enrich
+their proprietors with the honey they have harvested from the
+orange-flowers and jasmines of the Said and all the wealthy banks of the
+mighty river. The hunter in America takes advantage of this clear sight
+and of this strength of wing when, he lines a bee to its nest, by
+alluring one to a bait of honey within a circle of wet white paint,
+watching the subsequent flight, letting off another, similarly secured,
+at right angles to that, and looking for the nest at the intersection of
+the two white lines. Nor is the hunter their only depredator. At the
+Cape of Good Hope there lives a bird known as the Honey-Guide, that
+enters into alliance with man, sounds its shrill note, and, fluttering<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span>
+from spray to spray, leads the way to the sweet resort: it would be
+sacrilege, if the Hottentot did not leave a portion of the honey to the
+informer. There, too, is the rattel, a little beast that at sunset
+shelters its eyes with a paw, for clearer view, spots a bee, and follows
+it: often these two make fellowship together, the one for the honey, the
+bird for the brood. But these are not the terrors of a temperate clime;
+the hives can despatch a field-mouse unassisted; the master who cannot
+rid them of the wax-moth they will desert without regrets; sounding the
+slogan for aid, no two bees will hesitate to grapple with the bold
+butchering wasp that invades them; the humble-bee, making her
+underground nest, the poppy-bee, fitting her splendid scarlet tapestry,
+however many each may have, recks of few enemies beyond the rain and
+storm. What should any one of them all remember about the tomtit that
+comes and taps outside and snaps each resident up as it appears
+inquiring at the gate? of the little feathered monster that tears bees
+to pieces, making shreds of heads and wings for his mere amusement? To
+them a briefer memory makes brief life blessed. The happy murmurer of
+our morning knows of little but peace and security, he does not even
+dream that <i>savans</i> infuriate themselves about him, he buzzes from
+flower to flower, daringly puts aside the curtain of sacred shrines and
+makes himself luxurious hermitage in the snowy depths of the lilies,
+lets the south wind swing him a moment on the golden cradle of kingcups,
+pursues his pleasures in the purple recesses of the hyacinth, or,
+gliding into a labyrinth of petals, between the silken linings of
+perfumed chambers, the tinted sunlight softly sifting through, revels
+with the gracious nymphs that wait there, that hail him, caress him, and
+give him their confidence all under the rose; he goes his way, and his
+music spurns the trail of melancholy that never fails to follow the most
+delicious warble that ever trilled from throat of bobolink or throstle.
+As you lie and listen, in the golden tenor of the hive-bee's hum seems
+diffused the wide whisper of continuous gladness; and giving the
+innermost note of summer and of noon, the booming bass of the humble-bee
+blazons abroad all poetry and beauty and sumptuous delight.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Hot midsummer's petted crone,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Sweet to me thy drowsy tone,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Tells of countless sunny hours,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Long days and solid banks of flowers,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of gulfs of sweetness without bound<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In Indian wilderness found,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of Syrian peace, immortal leisure,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Firmest cheer, and bird-like pleasure."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="COUNTESS_LAURA" id="COUNTESS_LAURA"></a>COUNTESS LAURA.</h2>
+
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">It was a dreary day in Padua.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The Countess Laura, for a single year<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Fernando's wife, upon her bridal bed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Like an uprooted lily on the snow,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The withered outcast of a festival,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Lay dead. She died of some uncertain ill,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That struck her almost on her wedding-day,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And clung to her, and dragged her slowly down,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thinning her cheeks and pinching her full lips,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Till, in her chance, it seemed that with a year<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Full half a century was overpast.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span><br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In vain had Paracelsus taxed his art,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And feigned a knowledge of her malady;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In vain had all the doctors, far and near,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Gathered around the mystery of her bed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Draining her veins, her husband's treasury,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And physic's jargon, in a fruitless quest<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For causes equal to the dread result.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The Countess only smiled, when they were gone,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Hugged her fair body with her little hands,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And turned upon her pillows wearily,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As if she fain would sleep, no common sleep,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But the long, breathless slumber of the grave.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">She hinted nothing. Feeble as she was,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The rack could not have wrung her secret out<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The Bishop, when he shrived her, coming forth,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Cried, in a voice of heavenly ecstasy,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">"O blessed soul! with nothing to confess,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Save virtues and good deeds, which she mistakes&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">So humble is she&mdash;for our human sins!"<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Praying for death, she tossed upon her bed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Day after day,&mdash;as might a shipwrecked bark<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That rocks upon one billow, and can make<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">No onward motion towards her port of hope.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">At length, one morn, when those around her said,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">"Surely the Countess mends, so fresh a light<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Beams from her eyes and beautifies her face,"&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">One morn in spring, when every flower of earth<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Was opening to the sun, and breathing up<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Its votive incense, her impatient soul<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Opened itself, and so exhaled to heaven.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">When the Count heard it, he reeled back a pace;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Then turned with anger on the messenger;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Then craved his pardon, and wept out his heart<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Before the menial: tears, ah, me! such tears<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As Love sheds only, and Love only once.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Then he bethought him, "Shall this wonder die<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And leave behind no shadow? not a trace<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of all the glory that environed her,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That mellow nimbus circling round my star?"<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">So, with his sorrow glooming in his face,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">He paced along his gallery of Art,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And strode amongst the painters, where they stood,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With Carlo, the Venetian, at their head,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Studying the Masters by the dawning light<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of his transcendent genius. Through the groups<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of gayly vestured artists moved the Count,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As some lone cloud of thick and leaden hue,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Packed with the secret of a coming storm,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Moves through the gold and crimson evening mists,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Deadening their splendor. In a moment, still<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Was Carlo's voice, and still the prattling crowd;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And a great shadow overran them all,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span><br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As their white faces and their anxious eyes<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Pursued Fernando in his moody walk.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">He paused, as one who balances a doubt,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Weighing two courses, then burst out with this:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">"Ye all have seen the tidings in my face;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Or has the dial ceased to register<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The workings of my heart? Then hear the bell,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That almost cracks the frame in utterance:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The Countess&mdash;she is dead!"&mdash;"Dead!" Carlo groaned.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And if a bolt from middle heaven had struck<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">His splendid features full upon the brow,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">He could not have appeared more scathed and blanched.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">"Dead!&mdash;dead!" He staggered to his easel-frame,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And clung around it, buffeting the air<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With one wild arm, as though a drowning man<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Hung to a spar and fought against the waves.&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The Count resumed: "I came not here to grieve,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Nor see my sorrow in another's eyes.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who'll paint the Countess, as she lies to-night<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In state within the chapel? Shall it be<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That earth must lose her wholly? that no hint<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of her gold tresses, beaming eyes, and lips<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That talked in silence, and the eager soul<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That ever seemed outbreaking through her clay,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And scattering glory round it,&mdash;shall all these<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Be dull corruption's heritage, and we,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Poor beggars, have no legacy to show<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The love she bore us? That were shame to love,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And shame to you, my masters." Carlo stalked<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Forth from his easel, stiffly as a thing<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Moved by mechanic impulse. His thin lips,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And sharpened nostrils, and wan, sunken cheeks,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And the cold glimmer in his dusky eyes,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Made him a ghastly sight. The throng drew back,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As if they let a spectre through. Then he,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Fronting the Count, and speaking in a voice<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Sounding remote and hollow, made reply:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">"Count, I shall paint the Countess. 'Tis my fate,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Not pleasure,&mdash;no, nor duty." But the Count,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Astray in woe, but understood assent,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Not the strange words that bore it; and he flung<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">His arm round Carlo, drew him to his breast,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And kissed his forehead. At which Carlo shrank:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Perhaps 'twas at the honor. Then the Count,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A little reddening at his public state,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Unseemly to his near and recent loss,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Withdrew in haste between the downcast eyes<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That did him reverence as he rustled by.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Night fell on Padua. In the chapel lay<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The Countess Laura at the altar's foot.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Her coronet glittered on her pallid brows;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span><br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A crimson pall, weighed down with golden work,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Sown thick with pearls, and heaped with early flowers,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Draped her still body almost to the chin;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And over all a thousand candles flamed<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Against the winking jewels, or streamed down<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The marble aisle, and flashed along the guard<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of men-at-arms that slowly wove their turns,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Backward and forward, through the distant gloom.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">When Carlo entered, his unsteady feet<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Scarce bore him to the altar, and his head<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Drooped down so low that all his shining curls<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Poured on his breast, and veiled his countenance.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Upon his easel a half-finished work,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The secret labor of his studio,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Said from the canvas, so that none might err,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">"I am the Countess Laura." Carlo kneeled,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And gazed upon the picture,&mdash;as if thus,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Through those clear eyes, he saw the way to heaven.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Then he arose; and as a swimmer comes<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Forth from the waves, he shook his locks aside,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Emerging from his dream, and standing firm<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Upon a purpose with his sovereign will.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">He took his palette, murmuring, "Not yet!"<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Confidingly and softly to the corpse;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And as the veriest drudge who plies his art<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Against his fancy, he addressed himself<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With stolid resolution to his task.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Turning his vision on his memory,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And shutting out the present, till the dead,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The gilded pall, the lights, the pacing guard,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And all the meaning of that solemn scene<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Became as nothing, and creative Art<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Resolved the whole to chaos, and reformed<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The elements according to her law,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">So Carlo wrought, as though his eye and hand<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Were Heaven's unconscious instruments, and worked<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The settled purpose of Omnipotence.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And it was wondrous how the red, the white,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The ochre, and the umber, and the blue,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">From mottled blotches, hazy and opaque,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Grew into rounded forms and sensuous lines;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">How just beneath the lucid skin the blood<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Glimmered with warmth, the scarlet lips apart<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Bloomed with the moisture of the dews of life;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">How the light glittered through and underneath<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The golden tresses, and the deep, soft eyes<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Became intelligent with conscious thought,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And somewhat troubled underneath the arch<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of eyebrows but a little too intense<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For perfect beauty; how the pose and poise<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of the lithe figure on its tiny foot<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Suggested life just ceased from motion; so<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span><br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That any one might cry, in marvelling joy,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">"That creature lives,&mdash;has senses, mind, a soul<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To win God's love or dare hell's subtleties!"<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The artist paused. The ratifying "Good"<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Trembled upon his lips. He saw no touch<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To give or soften. "It is done," he cried,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">"My task, my duty! Nothing now on earth<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Can taunt me with a work left unfulfilled!"<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The lofty flame which bore him up so long<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Died in the ashes of humanity;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And the mere man rocked to and fro again<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Upon the centre of his wavering heart.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">He put aside his palette, as if thus<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">He stepped from sacred vestments, and assumed<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A mortal function in the common world.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">"Now for my rights!" he muttered, and approached<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The noble body. "O lily of the world!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">So withered, yet so lovely! what wast thou<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To those who came thus near thee&mdash;for I stood<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Without the pale of thy half-royal rank&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">When thou wast budding, and the streams of life<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Made eager struggles to maintain thy bloom,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And gladdened heaven dropped down in gracious dews<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">On its transplanted darling? Hear me now!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I say this but in justice, not in pride,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Not to insult thy high nobility,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But that the poise of things in God's own sight<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">May be adjusted, and hereafter I<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">May urge a claim that all the powers of heaven<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Shall sanction, and with clarions blow abroad.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Laura, you loved me! Look not so severe,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With your cold brows, and deadly, close-drawn lips!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">You proved it, Countess, when you died for it,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Let it consume you in the wearing strife<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">It fought with duty in your ravaged heart.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I knew it ever since that summer-day<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I painted Lila, the pale beggar's child,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">At rest beside the fountain; when I felt&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Oh, heaven!&mdash;the warmth and moisture of your breath<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Blow through my hair, as with your eager soul&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Forgetting soul and body go as one&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">You leaned across my easel till our cheeks&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Ah, me! 'twas not your purpose&mdash;touched, and clung!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Well, grant 'twas genius; and is genius nought?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I ween it wears as proud a diadem&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Here, in this very world&mdash;as that you wear.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A king has held my palette, a grand-duke<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Has picked my brush up, and a pope has begged<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The favor of my presence in his Rome.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I did not go; I put my fortune by.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I need not ask you why: you knew too well.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">It was but natural, it was no way strange,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span><br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That I should love you. Everything that saw,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Or had its other senses, loved you, sweet!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And I amongst them. Martyr, holy saint,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I see the halo curving round your head,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I loved you once; but now I worship you,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For the great deed that held my love aloof,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And killed you in the action! I absolve<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Your soul from any taint. For from the day<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of that encounter by the fountain-side<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Until this moment, never turned on me<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Those tender eyes, unless they did a wrong<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To Nature by the cold, defiant glare<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With which they chilled me. Never heard I word<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of softness spoken by those gentle lips;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Never received a bounty from that hand<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Which gave to all the world. I know the cause.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">You did your duty,&mdash;not for honor's sake,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Nor to save sin or suffering or remorse,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Or all the ghosts that haunt a woman's shame,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But for the sake of that pure, loyal love<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Your husband bore you. Queen, by grace of God,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I bow before the lustre of your throne!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I kiss the edges of your garment-hem,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And hold myself ennobled! Answer me,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">If I had wronged you, you would answer me<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Out of the dusty porches of the tomb,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Is this a dream, a falsehood? or have I<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Spoken the very truth?"&mdash;"The very truth!"<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A voice replied; and at his side he saw<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A form, half shadow and half substance, stand,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Or, rather, rest; for on the solid earth<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">It had no footing, more than some dense mist<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That wavers o'er the surface of the ground<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">It scarcely touches. With a reverent look,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The shadow's waste and wretched face was bent<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Above the picture,&mdash;as if greater awe<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Subdued its awful being, and appalled,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With memories of terrible delight<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And fearful wonder, its devouring gaze.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">"You make what God makes,&mdash;beauty," said the shape.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">"And might not this, this second Eve, console<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The emptiest heart? Will not this thing outlast<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The fairest creature fashioned in the flesh?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Before that figure Time, and Death himself,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Stand baffled and disarmed. What would you ask<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">More than God's power, from nothing to create?"<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The artist gazed upon the boding form,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And answered: "Goblin, if you had a heart,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That were an idle question. What to me<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Is my creative power, bereft of love?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Or what to God would be that selfsame power,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">If so bereaved?"&mdash;"And yet the love thus mourned<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span><br /></span>
+<span class="i0">You calmly forfeited. For had you said<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To living Laura&mdash;in her burning ears&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">One half that you professed to Laura dead,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">She would have been your own. These contraries<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Sort not with my intelligence. But say,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Were Laura living, would the same stale play<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of raging passion, tearing out its heart<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Upon the rock of duty, be performed?"<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">"The same, O phantom, while the heart I bear<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Trembled, but turned not its magnetic faith<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">From God's fixed centre." "If I wake for you<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">This Laura,&mdash;give her all the bloom and glow<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of that midsummer day you hold so dear,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The smile, the motion, the impulsive heart,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The love of genius,&mdash;yea, the very love,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The mortal, hungry, passionate, hot love,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">She bore you, flesh to flesh,&mdash;would you receive<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That gift, in all its glory, at my hands?"<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A cruel smile arched the tempter's scornful lips,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And glittered in the caverns of his eyes,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Mocking the answer. Carlo paled and shook;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A woful spasm went shuddering through his frame,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Curdling his blood, and twisting his fair face<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With nameless torture. But he cried aloud,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Out of the clouds of anguish, from the smoke<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of very martyrdom, "O God, she is thine!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Do with her at thy pleasure!" Something grand,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And radiant as a sunbeam, touched the head<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">He bent in awful sorrow. "Mortal, see"&mdash;&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">"Dare not! As Christ was sinless, I abjure<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">These vile abominations! Shall she bear<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Life's burden twice, and life's temptations twice,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">While God is justice?" "Who has made you judge<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of what you call God's good, and what you think<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">God's evil? One to Him, the Source of both,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The God of good and of permitted ill.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Have you no dream of days that might have been,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Had you and Laura filled another fate?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Some cottage on the sloping Apennines,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Roses and lilies, and the rest all love?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I tell you that this tranquil dream may be<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Filled to repletion. Speak, and in the shade<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of my dark pinions I shall bear you hence,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And land you where the mountain goat himself<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Struggles for footing." He outspread his wings,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And all the chapel darkened, as if hell<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Had swallowed up the tapers; and the air<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Grew thick, and, like a current sensible,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Flowed round the person, with a wash and dash,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As of the waters of a nether sea.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Slowly and calmly through the dense obscure,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Dove-like and gentle, rose the artist's voice:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span><br /></span>
+<span class="i0">"I dare not bring her spirit to that shame!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Know my full meaning,&mdash;I that neither fear<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Your mystic person nor your dreadful power.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Nor shall I now invoke God's potent name<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For my deliverance from your toils. I stand<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Upon the founded structure of His law,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Established from the first, and thence defy<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Your arts, reposing all my trust in that!"<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The darkness eddied off; and Carlo saw<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The figure gathering, as from outer space,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Brightness on brightness; and his former shape<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Fell from him, like the ashes that fall off,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And show a core of mellow fire within.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Adown his wings there poured a lambent flood,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That seemed as molten gold, which plashing fell<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Upon the floor, enringing him with flame;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And o'er the tresses of his beaming head<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Arose a stream of many-colored light,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Like that which crowns the morning. Carlo stood<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Steadfast, for all the splendor, reaching up<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The outstretched palms of his untainted soul<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Towards heaven for strength. A moment thus; then asked,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With reverential wonder quivering through<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">His sinking voice, "Who, spirit, and what art thou?"<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">"I am that blessing which men fly from,&mdash;Death."<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">"Then take my hand, if so God orders it;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For Laura waits me." "But bethink thee, man,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">What the world loses in the loss of thee!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">What wondrous Art will suffer with eclipse!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">What unwon glories are in store for thee!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">What fame, outreaching time and temporal shocks,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Would shine upon the letters of thy name<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Graven in marble, or the brazen height<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of columns wise with memories of thee!"<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">"Take me! If I outlived the Patriarchs,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I could but paint those features o'er and o'er;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Lo! that is done." A pitying smile o'erran<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The seraph's features, as he looked to heaven,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With deep inquiry in his tender eyes.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The mandate came. He touched with downy wing<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The sufferer lightly on his aching heart;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And gently, as the sky-lark settles down<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Upon the clustered treasures of her nest,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">So Carlo softly slid along the prop<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of his tall easel, nestling at the foot<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As if he slumbered; and the morning broke<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In silver whiteness over Padua.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="STRATEGY_AT_THE_FIRESIDE" id="STRATEGY_AT_THE_FIRESIDE"></a>STRATEGY AT THE FIRESIDE.</h2>
+
+
+<h3>I.</h3>
+
+<p>Was it the fault of poor Barbara Dinwiddie, that, when Sumter fell, and
+the gallant Anderson saw with anguish the old flag pulled down, she was
+the most desperate little Rebel in all Dixie? By no means! At school, at
+home, at church, she had been taught that Slavery was the divinest of
+all divine institutions; that all those outside barbarians, known as
+Yankees, who questioned its justice, its policy, its eternal fitness,
+were worse than infidels; that those favored individuals whose felicity
+it had been to be born and bred under the patriarchal benignity were the
+master race of this continent; and that one Southern man could, with
+perfect ease to himself, and without any risk whatever of any unpleasant
+consequences, whip and put <i>hors de combat</i> any five of the "homeless
+and traditionless race" that could be brought against him.</p>
+
+<p>Had not Mr. Jefferson Davis so styled them? and had he not said that he
+would rather herd with hyenas than with Yankees? Had not Mr. Yancey
+declared that all the Yankees were cowards? Had not Mr. Walker,
+Secretary of State of the new Confederacy, predicted that the "stars and
+bars" would wave over Faneuil Hall in a twelvemonth? Had not the
+Richmond papers assured the high-born sons of the South, who of course
+included the whole white population, that it was an utter impossibility
+for the chivalry to exist under the same government with the mean,
+intolerable mudsills of the North? The wonder was, that the aforesaid
+chivalry could live under the same sun, breathe the same atmosphere,
+with such miscreants.</p>
+
+<p>Was it, then, surprising that poor little Barbara, receiving in her
+narrow sphere no other political influences than these, should find
+herself at the age of seventeen the most eager of feminine sympathizers
+with Secession? She burned to emulate Mrs. Greenhow, Belle Boyd, and
+other enterprising Amazons who early in the war distinguished themselves
+as spies or carriers for the Rebels. She almost blamed herself as
+recreant, because she read with a shudder the account of that Southern
+damsel who bade her lover bring back, as the most precious gift he could
+lay at her feet, a Yankee scalp. She tried to persuade herself that
+those little mementos, carved from Yankee bones, which were so
+fashionable at one time among the <i>&eacute;lite</i> of the "Secesh" aristocracy,
+would not shock her own sensitive heart.</p>
+
+<p>Barbara's mother had done much to encourage these sentiments in her
+daughter. A match between Barbara and Colonel Pegram of South Carolina
+was one of that mother's pet projects. Mrs. Dinwiddie was of "one of the
+first families of Virginia"; in which she was not singular. She had been
+brought up to regard the Old Dominion as the lawful dictatress of the
+legislation of the American continent; as sovereign, not only over her
+own borders, but over the Congress and especially the Treasury of the
+United States. The tobacco-lands of her father having given out through
+that sagacious system of culture which Slavery applies, and
+negro-raising for the supply of the slave-market farther south being in
+a temporary condition of paralysis, the lady had so far descended from
+her pedestal of ancestral pride as to encourage the addresses of Mr.
+Daniel Dinwiddie, a Baltimore merchant, and himself "of excellent
+family," though he had tarnished his hereditary honors by condescending
+to engage in trade. Two children were the fruits of the alliance which
+ensued,&mdash;our Barbara, and Mr. Culpepper Dinwiddie, who became eventually
+a major in the Rebel army.</p>
+
+<p>What a <i>dies ir&aelig;</i> it was for poor Mrs. Dinwiddie, that day that "Beast
+Butler" rode at a slow walk through the streets of Baltimore, smoking
+his cigar, and swaying to and fro carelessly on<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span> his horse! The poor
+lady was ready to cuff Mr. Dinwiddie's ears, because that worthy citizen
+sat down to his mutton and claret that day at dinner as coolly as if
+nothing had happened. Barbara wept, and sang "My Maryland" and the
+"Bonnie Blue Flag" till she made herself hoarse. She then glanced at a
+photograph of Colonel Pegram, and thought how well he looked the
+conquering hero.</p>
+
+<p>Sunday came. It was a blessed satisfaction that at the Church of St.
+Fortunatus all the communicants were friends of the Rebellion. The
+Reverend Bogus de Bogus was himself an extremist in his advocacy of
+Slavery and the Slave Confederacy. But what was the consternation of the
+whole assembly, at hearing him, on that eventful Sabbath, pray for the
+President and other authorities of the United States! Had he been
+tampered with by the Beast? What was the world coming to? How
+intolerable that the solar system should move on as regularly and
+indifferently as if nothing had happened!</p>
+
+<p>The fomenters of Rebellion in the Monument City continued hopeful,
+notwithstanding the defection of the Reverend Bogus de Bogus. Mrs.
+Dinwiddie almost worried Dinwiddie's life out, teasing him for money
+with which to buy quinine and percussion-caps to smuggle into Rebeldom.
+Barbara worked till her taper little forefinger looked like a
+nutmeg-grater, making shirts and drawers for the "gallant Palmetto
+Tenth," in which certain sprigs of aristocracy from Baltimore had
+enlisted. The regiment was commanded by that splendid fellow, Charlie
+Pegram.</p>
+
+<p>What was Barbara's despair, on learning that all the products of her
+labors had been intercepted by the "Beast," and were safely stored at
+"these headquarters"! Mrs. Dinwiddie went into hysterics at the news,
+but was suddenly restored, on hearing Dinwiddie enter, and inquire in
+the most cold-blooded manner, "Why isn't dinner ready?" Falling upon
+that monster in human shape, she crushed him so far into silence by her
+indignation, that he was glad to make a meal of a few crackers and a
+glass of ale, and then retire for his afternoon cigar to the repose of
+his counting-room.</p>
+
+<p>The war (the civil, not the domestic, we mean) went on. Battle succeeded
+battle, and skirmish skirmish, with alternating successes, when at last
+came the Emancipation Proclamation, not in the earthquake, nor in the
+whirlwind, but in the still small voice. "Well, what of it? 'Tis a mere
+paper bomb!" said Belshazzar at Richmond, looking out on Libby and Belle
+Isle. Mrs. Dinwiddie read the "Richmond Enquirer," and thought, for the
+thousandth time, how intolerable life would be, if ever again Yankees
+were to be suffered to live within a thousand miles of a genuine
+descendant of the Cavaliers. "Spaniels must be whipped into
+subservience," said Mr. Jefferson Davis, alluding to the abhorred race
+north of Mason and Dixon's line.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, they must be whipped!" echoed Mrs. Dinwiddie; and soon afterwards
+came news of the capture of New Orleans, of Vicksburg, of Port Hudson,
+and at last of Atlanta. "These horrid Yankees!" she shrieked. "Why don't
+we do something, Dinwiddie? If one Southerner can whip five Yankees,
+why, in the name of common sense, don't we do something? Speak, you
+stupid, provoking man!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes, what was it you asked?" meekly interrogated Dinwiddie, who
+was calculating how much he had made in the recent rise of United States
+five-twenties.</p>
+
+<p>"What was it? Oh, go to your tobacco-casks, your coupons, and your
+cotton, you soulless, huckstering old man! You can look on and see
+Abolitionism getting rampant in this once proud city, and not lift a
+voice or a finger to save us from ruin! You can see Maryland drifting
+into the horrible abyss of Yankeeism and Anti-slavery, and keep on doing
+business and minding the paltry affairs of your counting-room, as if all
+that gives grace and dignity to this wretched State were not on the
+verge of destruction! If you'd had<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span> the spirit of a hare, you'd have
+been a brigadier-general in the Confederate army by this time."</p>
+
+<p>Dinwiddie was not a man of words. He had a wholesome horror of
+strong-minded women; and to that class he discovered, too late for his
+peace, that his wife belonged. So he simply replied, slightly
+stuttering, as was his wont, except when excited,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"If I had joined the army, Madam, I should have&mdash;have&mdash;ve"&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I should have what?"</p>
+
+<p>"I should have been deprived of your&mdash;ahem&mdash;agreeable society; and then
+you might have been a wid&mdash;wid&mdash;widow."</p>
+
+<p>"I should have been proud. Sir, to have been your widow under such
+circumstances."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, Mrs. Dinwiddie; but being a mod&mdash;mod&mdash;modest man myself, I'd
+rather not make my wife proud."</p>
+
+<p>"There's no danger of your ever doing that, Sir," quoth Madam; "but I
+thank Heaven we're not wholly disgraced. We have one representative of
+our family in the Confederate army. My son Culpepper may live to make
+amends for his sire's degeneracy."</p>
+
+<p>Dinwiddie was beginning to get roused.</p>
+
+<p>"My degeneracy, Madam? Confound it, Madam, where would you and yours
+have been, if I hadn't saved you all from pau&mdash;pau&mdash;pauperism, Madam?"</p>
+
+<p>It was rare that Dinwiddie made so long a speech, and the lady was
+astounded.</p>
+
+<p>"Sir," said she, "do you know it is a Culpepper of whom you speak?"</p>
+
+<p>"Devilish well I know it," said the excited Daniel; "and what you all
+had but your pride I never could find out; and what were you proud of?
+Of a dozen or two old family nig&mdash;nig&mdash;niggers, that were only a bill of
+expense to that pompous old cove, your father."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Dinwiddie began to grow livid with exasperation. Her husband had
+touched her on a tender point.</p>
+
+<p>"Go on, Sir," said she; "I see your drift. I have suspected for some
+time that you were going to play the renegade; to desert your order; to
+prove false to the South; to cooperate with miscreant Yankees in
+overturning our sacred institutions."</p>
+
+<p>"Confound your sacred institutions, Madam! Slavery is played out."</p>
+
+<p>"Played out, you monstrous blasphemer? An institution for which
+Scripture vouches; an institution which the Reverend Dr. Palmer says
+comes right down to us from heaven! Played out? Monster! I thank the
+Lord my two children have not been corrupted by these detestable Yankee
+notions that are upsetting all our old landmarks in this once noble city
+of Baltimore."</p>
+
+<p>"Noble? Ah, yes,&mdash;noble, I suppose, when it allowed its ruffians to
+shoot down a band of Northern soldiers who were marching to the support
+of Government!"</p>
+
+<p>"You yourself said at the time, Mr. Dinwiddie, that it served them
+right."</p>
+
+<p>Dinwiddie winced, for this was a blow square on his forehead between his
+two eyes. He paused, and then, without knowing it, translated the words
+of a Latin moralist, and replied,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Times change, and we change with them."</p>
+
+<p>"You will find, Sir, that a Culpepper doesn't change," said Madam; and,
+with a gesture of queenly scorn, she swept with expansive crinoline out
+of the room.</p>
+
+<p>"So the ice is broken at last," muttered Dinwiddie. "I wouldn't have
+believed I could have faced her so well. After all, I'm not sure that
+the military is not my true sphere."</p>
+
+<p>His soliloquy was interrupted by the ring of muskets on the sidewalk in
+front, of his house, and he jumped with a nervous horror. Looking from
+the window, he saw a file of soldiers, and an officer in the United
+States uniform, with one arm in a sling, and the hand of the other
+holding a drawn sword. He was a pale, but handsome youth, and looked up
+as if to read the name on the door. Then, followed by a sergeant, he
+ascended the steps and rang the bell.</p>
+
+<p>"What the Deuse is all this for. I wonder?"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span> exclaimed Dinwiddie; and in
+his curiosity he opened the outside door, anticipating the negro
+footman, Nero, who exchanged a glance of intelligence with the military
+man.</p>
+
+<p>"I am Captain Penrose, Sir," said the officer; "this is Sergeant
+MacFuse; you, I believe, bear the name on the door-plate before us."</p>
+
+<p>Dinwiddie bowed an affirmative.</p>
+
+<p>"I have orders, Sir," resumed the officer, "to search your house; and I
+will thank you to give me the opportunity with as little delay as
+possible, and without communicating with any member of your family."</p>
+
+<p>"But, Captain, does anybody doubt my loyalty?"</p>
+
+<p>"No one, Sir, that I am aware of," replied the Captain, with a suavity
+that reassured and captivated Dinwiddie. "We haven't the slightest
+doubt, Sir, of your thoroughly loyal and honorable conduct and
+intentions; but, Sir, there is, nevertheless, a Rebel mail in your house
+at this moment. I'll thank you to conduct us quietly to the little
+bathing-room communicating with your wife's apartment on the second
+story."</p>
+
+<p>Dinwiddie saw through it all. He said not a word, but led the way up
+stairs.</p>
+
+<p>"We shall have to pass through Madam's room to get at the place," he
+remarked; "for the door is locked on the inside."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, but the key is out, and I have a duplicate," replied the officer.
+"We will enter by the door that opens on this passage-way. I will just
+give a gentle knock, to learn whether any one is in the bathing-room."</p>
+
+<p>He knocked, and there was no reply.</p>
+
+<p>"I think we may venture in," he said.</p>
+
+<p>He unlocked the door, and they entered,&mdash;Captain Penrose, Sergeant
+MacFuse, Dinwiddie, and Nero. The Captain pointed to a chest of drawers
+let into the wall, and said,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Sir, if you will open that lowest drawer, I think you will find
+what I am in search of."</p>
+
+<p>Dinwiddie opened the drawer, and a strong smell of tobacco, in which
+some furs were packed, made him sneeze; but the Captain proved to be
+correct in his surmise. Nero displayed his ivory in a broad grin, and
+Dinwiddie lifted a small, but well-stuffed leather mail-bag.</p>
+
+<p>At that moment the door leading into Mrs. Dinwiddie's apartment opened,
+and that lady, followed by Barbara, made her appearance. Nero's grin was
+at once transformed into a look of intense solemnity, and the whites of
+his eyes were lifted in sympathetic amazement.</p>
+
+<p>Madam's first effort was to snatch the mail-bag from her husband; but he
+handed it to Sergeant MacFuse, who, receiving it, shouldered his musket
+with military formality.</p>
+
+<p>"But this is an outrage, Sir!" exclaimed Mrs. Dinwiddie, finding words
+at length for her rage.</p>
+
+<p>"Madam," said Captain Penrose, "a carriage ought to be by this time at
+the door. Have the goodness, you and your daughter, to make the
+necessary preparations and accompany me and Sergeant MacFuse to the
+office of the Provost Marshal."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall do no such thing!" said Madam, with set teeth, trembling with
+exasperation.</p>
+
+<p>"You will relieve me, I am sure, Madam," said the Captain, "of anything
+so painful as the exercise of force."</p>
+
+<p>"Force!" cried Madam; "yes, that would be all in the line of you mean
+and dastardly Yankees, to use force to unprotected women!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, mother!" said Barbara, shocked, in spite of her Secession
+sympathies, at the maternal rudeness, and somewhat touched withal by the
+pale face and the slung arm of the handsome young officer; "I am sure
+the gentleman has"&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Gentleman! Ha, ha, ha! You call him a gentleman, do you?" gasped Mrs.
+Dinwiddie, as, quite beside herself with passion, she sank into a chair.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, mother," said Barbara, her heart moved by a thrill as natural as
+that which stirs the leaves of the embryo bud in May; "yes, mother, I
+call him a gentleman; and I hope you will do nothing to prevent his
+calling you a lady."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Captain Penrose looked with a sudden interest on the maiden. Strange
+that he hadn't noticed it before, but truly she was very, very pretty!
+Light, not too light, hair; blue eyes; a charming figure; a face radiant
+with sentiment and with intelligence; verily, in all Baltimore, so
+justly famed for beautiful women, he had not seen her peer! Barbara
+dropped her eyes. Decidedly the young officer's admiration was too
+emphatically expressed in his glance.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Dinwiddie began to grow hysterical.</p>
+
+<p>"Madam," said Captain Penrose, "I fear your strength will not be equal
+to the task it is my painful duty to put you to; and I will venture to
+break through my instructions so far as to say, that, if you will give
+me your promise&mdash;you and your daughter&mdash;to remain at home till you
+receive permission through me to quit the house, I will waive all
+further action at present."</p>
+
+<p>"There, mother," quoth Barbara, "what could be more reasonable,&mdash;more
+gentlemanly? Say you consent to his terms."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Dinwiddie motioned a negative with her handkerchief, and stamped
+her feet, as if no power on earth should extort from her the slightest
+concession.</p>
+
+<p>"There, Sir, she consents, she consents, you see," said Barbara.</p>
+
+<p>"Um&mdash;um&mdash;um!" shrieked Mrs. Dinwiddie, shaking her head, and stamping
+her feet with renewed vigor.</p>
+
+<p>"I see," said Captain Penrose; "and I need not ask if you, Miss
+Dinwiddie, also consent."</p>
+
+<p>"I do, Sir; and I thank you for your consideration," said Barbara.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't&mdash;don't&mdash;don't!" stormed the elderly lady, quivering in every
+limb, like a blown ribbon.</p>
+
+<p>It was strange that Captain Penrose did not hear the exclamation, loud
+and emphatic as it was; but he simply bowed and quitted the room,
+followed by Dinwiddie, Nero, and Sergeant MacFuse.</p>
+
+<p>No sooner had the military men quitted the house than the dinner-bell
+rang. Madam refused to make her appearance. Barbara came down and
+presided. Boys in the street were crying the news of Sherman's capture
+of Savannah.</p>
+
+<p>"Good for Sherman!" said Dinwiddie. "I'm devilish glad of it."</p>
+
+<p>Little Barbara looked up with consternation. She loved her father, but
+never before had she heard from his lips a decided expression of
+sympathy with the loyal cause. True, for the last six months he had said
+little on either side; but, from the absence of any controversy between
+him and her mother, Barbara imagined that their political sentiments
+were harmonious.</p>
+
+<p>She made no reply to her father's remark, but kept up in that little
+brain of hers an amount of thinking that took away all her appetite for
+the dessert. Mrs. Dinwiddie entered before the table was cleared. Then
+there was a ring of the door-bell. It was the postman. Nero brought in a
+letter. Dinwiddie looked at the address.</p>
+
+<p>"'T is a letter for Anjy," said he. "The handwriting looks like
+Culpepper's."</p>
+
+<p>Anjy, or Angelina, was an old black cook, one of the few surviving
+representatives of the vanished glories of the old Culpepper estate. She
+had taken a lively interest in the course of Maryland towards freedom;
+and when at length that noble Commonwealth stripped off the last fetter
+from her limbs, and trampled it under her feet, Anjy was loudest among
+the colored people with her Hallelujahs. She was no longer a slave,
+thank the Lord! There was a future of justice, of self-respect, of
+freedom now dawning upon her abused race.</p>
+
+<p>As Anjy could not read, Barbara had been duly authorized to open all her
+letters. She did so on this occasion, read, turned pale, and
+exclaimed,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Horrible! Oh, the villain!"</p>
+
+<p>"What's the matter?" asked her father.</p>
+
+<p>The letter was from his son, Culpepper, to the old family servant, and
+was in these words:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span>&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p><span class="smcap">"Dear Anjy</span>,&mdash;I have very unpleasant news to tell you. Your
+son Tony has been shot by his master, Colonel Pegram, for
+refusing to fight against the Yankees, and trying to run
+away. Tony was much to blame. He had been a good boy till
+some confounded Abolitionists put it into his head that the
+Yankee scum were fighting the battles of the black man;
+when, as you well know, Anjy, the true friends of the black
+man are those who mean to keep him in that state of slavery
+for which the Lord plainly intended him. But Tony got this
+foolish notion of the Abolitionists into his head, and one
+day frankly told the Colonel that he wouldn't fire a gun at
+the Yankees to save his own life; whereupon the Colonel very
+properly had him whipped, and pretty badly, too. The next
+day Tony was caught trying to make his escape into the
+Yankee lines. He was brought before the Colonel, who told
+him, that, for your sake, Anjy, he would forgive him, if he
+would swear on the Bible not to do so again. Tony refused to
+swear this, began to rave about his rights, and finally
+declared that he was free, first under God's law, next under
+the laws of the United States, and finally under the laws of
+Maryland. There were other negroes, slaves of officers, near
+by, listening to all this wicked stuff, and Pegram felt the
+importance of making an example; so he drew his revolver and
+shot Tony through the heart. How could he help it, Anjy? You
+mustn't blame the Colonel. We all felt he couldn't have done
+otherwise, I saw Tony the minute after he was shot. He died
+easy. I emptied his pockets. There was nothing in them but a
+photograph of you, Anjy, a printed proclamation by the
+wretched Yankee tyrant, Abe Lincoln, and a handkerchief
+printed as an American flag. I'm very sorry at this affair;
+but you must seek comfort in religion, and pray that your
+poor deluded boy may be forgiven for his unfaithfulness and
+bad conduct. Affectionately,</p>
+
+<p class="right">"<span class="smcap">Culpepper</span>."</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>This letter was read aloud,&mdash;not by Barbara, nor by her father, but by
+Mrs. Dinwiddie, who exclaimed, as she finished it,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Here's the result of your Yankee teachings, Mr. Dinwiddie! There wasn't
+a better boy than Tony in all Maryland, till the Abolitionists got hold
+of him. Pegram served him just right,&mdash;just as I would have done."</p>
+
+<p>Dinwiddie rose, pale, trembling, and all his features convulsed. Barbara
+covered her face with her hands and groaned. Never before had she seen
+such an expression on her father's face. Turning to his wife, he said in
+a husky voice, which with a great effort he seemed to make audible,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Pegram was a murderer; and you, Madam, if you commend his act, have in
+you the stuff out of which murderers are made. Now hear me,&mdash;you and
+Miss Barbara here. Here I repudiate Slavery, and every man, woman, or
+child who helps by word or deed to uphold such deviltry as that you have
+just read of. Long enough, Madam, I've allowed my conscience to be
+juggled, fooled, and blinded by your imperious will and absurd family
+pride. 'T is ended. This day I subscribe ten thousand dollars to the
+relief of the Georgia freedmen, made free by Sherman. Utter one syllable
+against it, and, so help me God, I'll make it twenty thousand. Further:
+if either you or your daughter shall dare, after this warning, to lift a
+needle in behalf of this Rebellion,&mdash;if I hear of either one of you
+lending yourself to the smuggling of Rebel mails, or giving aid of any
+kind to Rebel emissaries,&mdash;that moment I give you up to the regular
+authorities and disown you forever. You know that I am a man of few
+threats; but you also know that what I say I mean."</p>
+
+<p>Dinwiddie waited a full minute for some reply to this unparalleled
+outburst, and then left the room with an air of dignity which neither
+Barbara nor her mother had ever witnessed before.</p>
+
+<p>The mother first broke silence. She began with an hysterical laugh, and
+then said,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"If he thinks to involve me in his cowardly treason to the South, he'll
+find himself mistaken. Don't look so pale and frightened, you foolish
+girl! Go and put on your things for the Bee."</p>
+
+<p>The Bee was a society of fashionable ladies, of pronounced disloyalty,
+who met once a week to make up garments for Rebel officers.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall go to the Bee no more, mother," said Barbara; "besides, I have
+given my promise to keep the house till I have permission to quit it."</p>
+
+<p>"And do you venture to set your father's orders above mine, you
+presuming girl? Are you, too, going to desert the Southern cause?"</p>
+
+<p>Barbara's reply was interrupted by the entrance of old Anjy. The scene
+which had just transpired had been faithfully transferred to the memory
+of the listening and observant Nero, who had communicated it all to the
+party chiefly interested.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Dinwiddie quailed a little as she met Anjy's glance; but Barbara
+rose and threw her arms about the faithful old creature's neck, and,
+bursting into tears, exclaimed,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Anjy! 't was the act of a devil! I hate him for it!"</p>
+
+<p>"Mind what you say, Barbara!" said Mrs. Dinwiddie.</p>
+
+<p>Barbara withdrew her arms, and, folding them, looked her mother straight
+in the face and said,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"My father did not speak too harshly of it. 'T was a foul and cowardly
+murder."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh!" cried Mrs. Dinwiddie, again threatening a relapse into hysterics.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear, dear Anjy," said Barbara, her tears flowing afresh, "come up
+to my room, and I will read you your letter."</p>
+
+<p>With a face tearless and inflexible, Anjy allowed herself to be led out
+of the dining-hall, and up stairs into Barbara's apartment. The two
+stayed there a couple of hours, heedless of every summons for them to
+come forth.</p>
+
+
+<h3>II.</h3>
+
+<p>At seventeen the process of conversion is apt to be rapid. Barbara lay
+awake nearly all that night, thinking, praying, and weeping. With her
+sudden detestation of Pegram mingled the personal consideration that he
+knew that Tony was the son of her own favorite Anjy,&mdash;the friend of her
+childhood.</p>
+
+<p>"If he had had one spark of true regard for me," thought Barbara, "not
+to save the whole Southern Confederacy would he have shot the son of
+Anjy. Pegram is a brutal ruffian, and Slavery has made him that."</p>
+
+<p>Anjy helped on the work of conversion by her anguish and her solemn
+adjurations. The old woman had picked up arguments, both moral and
+economical, enough to have posed even Mr. Alexander H. Stephens himself,
+the philosophical apostle of that new dispensation whose deity was born
+of the cotton-gin and sired by the devil Avarice.</p>
+
+<p>Barbara rose and breakfasted late that morning. At eleven o'clock she
+took her music-lesson. Let us leave her for a few minutes, and fly to
+another part of the city, where, in one of the rooms of the
+Provost-Marshal's office, the Rebel mail was being examined. Captain
+Penrose entered, and Detective Wilkins handed him a letter he had just
+opened. It was addressed to Colonel Pegram, and was signed by Mrs.
+Daniel Dinwiddie. We will take the liberty of quoting a portion of it.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"I know, my dear Charlie, that you have been obliged to draw
+largely on your financial resources in aid of the great
+cause of Southern independence, and I am not surprised that
+you should find yourself so severely pushed for money. I
+sent you five hundred dollars in greenbacks in my last, the
+savings of Barbara and myself. I hope to send you as much
+more by the next mail. I regret to say that for the last six
+months my husband has utterly refused to allow me one cent
+for what he<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span> calls disloyal purposes. I consequently have to
+practise some finesse in getting what I do. The money he
+gives us for dresses and for charity is all saved up for
+you; and then I manage to make our grocer's and butcher's
+bills appear twice as large as they really are, and thus add
+to our savings. It is mortifying to have to resort to these
+shifts; but when I reflect on what it is all for, I feel
+abundantly justified. Mr. Dinwiddie's income the last two
+years has been enormous. He is taxed for upwards of a
+million. A good part of this, my dear Charlie, shall be
+yours as soon as you change the title of friend for the
+nearer one of son-in-law. You complain that Barbara wouldn't
+engage herself the last time you met. Her refusal was merely
+an act of maiden coyness, and only meant, 'I want to be won,
+but not too easily.' She sees no young men, and I watch her
+closely; for I am resolved that your interests shall be as
+well looked after as if you were on the spot."</p></div>
+
+<p>As Captain Penrose finished reading the letter, Mr. Dinwiddie walked in,
+and it was handed to him for perusal. That worthy merchant glanced
+through it rapidly, and a grim smile overspread his features. "We shall
+see, Madam," he said, folding up the letter, and handing it to Detective
+Wilkins for filing. Then, turning to the Captain, he remarked,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"You are from Maine, I believe, Captain Penrose?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Mr. Dinwiddie,&mdash;from the very extremity of Yankeedom."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Captain, I have this morning seen a friend of your father's, who
+bade me say to you he is in the city for a day or two, and hopes to see
+you before he leaves."</p>
+
+<p>"To whom do you refer?"</p>
+
+<p>"To Mr. Calvin Carver, of Montreal."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes; I've often heard my father speak of him as one of the best men
+in the world."</p>
+
+<p>"A man, Captain Penrose, of whom you may truly say, 'His word is as good
+as his bond.' I never knew him to overstate a fact, and that is saying a
+great deal of an active business man. I have not seen him before to-day
+since my marriage."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall take an early opportunity of calling on him, Mr. Dinwiddie."</p>
+
+<p>"He told me, Captain, of your gallant conduct the other day at
+Nashville, during Hood's attack. He said I ought to give Stanton no
+peace till he has you promoted to a colonelcy."</p>
+
+<p>"All in good time, Mr. Dinwiddie. There are hundreds of brave fellows
+who have a prior claim. And now, Sir, permit me to say, that I have
+consulted with the Provost-Marshal, and my official duty requires me to
+call on your wife and daughter, and notify them that they are at liberty
+to go where they please."</p>
+
+<p>The Captain might have added, had he thought it discreet, that the
+police authorities had concluded they should learn more of the secrets
+of the Rebel plotters by allowing Madam to go at large than by keeping
+her shut up.</p>
+
+<p>Dinwiddie stood nervously playing with his watch-key. An idea had
+occurred to him,&mdash;a glorious, a ravishing idea,&mdash;an idea which, if
+concreted successfully into action, would revenge him triumphantly on
+his wife for the tricks revealed in the letter he had just read.</p>
+
+<p>"Captain," said he, "if you are going to my house, have you any
+objection to take a letter for my daughter?"</p>
+
+<p>"I shall be pleased to do so," returned the Captain; but he would have
+put more warmth into his reply, had it not been for certain chilly
+misgivings in regard to the preoccupation of Barbara's heart.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dinwiddie sat down at a table, and wrote these lines:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"<span class="smcap">Barbara</span>,&mdash;Captain Arthur Penrose, of Maine, visits you in
+pursuance of his yesterday's promise. If you have any regard
+for your poor, distracted father,&mdash;if you would save me from
+the deepest, the direst mortification,&mdash;exert all your
+powers to conciliate Captain<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span> Penrose, and to detain him
+till I return home and relieve you. I will explain all to
+you hereafter. My peace of mind depends largely on your
+being able to do this. Urge him to call again. In haste,
+your father."</p></div>
+
+<p>The Captain received this missive, bowed, and walked off in the
+direction of Dinwiddie's house.</p>
+
+<p>Nero came to the door.</p>
+
+<p>"Is Mrs. Dinwiddie in?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, Cap'n, but Miss Barbara is in," said the conspiring Nero, in a tone
+of encouragement.</p>
+
+<p>Madam, it should be remarked, was out making calls on a few leading
+feminine sympathizers; but she did not notice, that, wherever she went,
+a little man in black, with a postman's big pocket-book in his hands,
+followed, as if busily employed in delivering letters.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Penrose sent up his card, together with the missive he was
+charged with. Nero returned the next minute, and ushered him into the
+drawing-room, assuring him, with overflowing suavity, that Miss Barbara
+would be down in a minute. It was with profound agitation that that
+young lady read her father's note. What could be the matter?</p>
+
+<p>She looked in the glass,&mdash;combed back her profuse flaxen hair so as to
+expose her fair temples in the most approved fashion of the hour,&mdash;took
+a little tea-rose from the silver vase on her bureau,&mdash;and then, with a
+beating heart, stepped down the broad, low stairs into the drawing-room.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Penrose was examining an exquisite painting of an iceberg, which
+hung on the wall over the piano. He turned to Barbara, bowed gravely,
+and said,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I merely came to say, Miss Dinwiddie, that there is no longer any
+restraint upon your movements. You are at liberty to go where you
+please. Your mother, I learn, has already anticipated the permission for
+herself. You may say to her, that, in her case also, the prohibition is
+removed. I will bid you a very good morning."</p>
+
+<p>He bowed, and had almost reached the door before Barbara could recover
+her composure sufficiently to say,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Sir,&mdash;Captain Penrose,&mdash;I beg you not to leave me so abruptly. Pray be
+seated."</p>
+
+<p>The Captain, arch-hypocrite that he was, looked at the clock as if he
+were closely pushed for time, and replied,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"My official duties, Miss Dinwiddie, are so pressing&mdash;so"&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"But I've something particular to say to you," said Barbara, grown
+desperate.</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed! Then I'm at your service."</p>
+
+<p>Barbara pointed to an arm-chair; but the Captain wheeled it up to her,
+and at the same time pushed along an ottoman for himself. As soon as the
+lady was seated, he, too, sat.</p>
+
+<p>There was a pause, and rather a long one.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Miss Dinwiddie, I shall be happy to hear your communication."</p>
+
+<p>"Ahem! I noticed, Sir, as I came in, that you were looking at yonder
+painting."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; is it not most admirable? 'T is by a Boston artist, I see,&mdash;by
+Curtis."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed! 'T is a picture my father bought only last week. 'T was
+recommended to him by Mr. Carver; for father does not pretend to be a
+connoisseur. You think it good?"</p>
+
+<p>"Good? 'T is exquisite! Look at the atmosphere over that water. You
+might feel a cool exhalation from it on a hot day. The misty freshness
+rolling off, and lit up by the cheery sunlight, is Nature itself. It
+carries me away&mdash;far away&mdash;once more to the coast of Labrador, where I
+spent a summer month in my youth. But, Miss Dinwiddie, how happens it
+that you condescend, in times like these, to patronize a Yankee artist?
+When Colonel Pegram comes, you must take down that picture and hide it."</p>
+
+<p>Barbara started and blushed.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you know, Sir, of Colonel Pegram?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing, except that he is a fortunate man, unless Rumor belies him."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"If you refer, Sir, to that foolish report in regard to myself which was
+current last winter, I beg to assure you there is no truth in it."</p>
+
+<p>"Not <i>now</i>, perhaps."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Never</i> shall it be true!" exclaimed Barbara, starting up and pacing
+the floor.</p>
+
+<p>"Excuse me," said the Captain, also rising,&mdash;"excuse me, if I have been
+impertinent on so slight an acquaintance."</p>
+
+<p>He had his hat in his hand, and walked towards the door.</p>
+
+<p>"Deuse take the fellow! can't he stay patiently here five minutes?"
+thought Barbara. She dropped the rose she had been holding. The Captain
+picked it up and offered it.</p>
+
+<p>"Keep it, Sir, if you think it worth while," said Barbara,&mdash;driven to
+this incipient impropriety by the vague apprehensions excited by her
+father's letter.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you," replied the Captain, so taken by surprise that he forgot
+his military laurels, and showed a faint heart by a blush.</p>
+
+<p>Barbara esteemed it a very charming symptom; and as the Captain, with
+his one unwounded arm, tried rather awkwardly to put the flower in the
+buttonhole of his waistcoat, she stepped up with a "Let me aid you";
+and, taking from her own dress a pin, fastened the rose nicely as near
+as she could to the beating heart of the imperilled soldier. Alas! if
+his thoughts had been put into words, he would have soliloquized, "Look
+here, Captain, I'm afraid you are deporting yourself very much like a
+simpleton. Pluck up a spirit, man!"</p>
+
+<p>"There! I'm sure 't is very becoming," quoth Barbara, mischievously.</p>
+
+<p>"You see how convenient it is to have two hands," returned the Captain.
+"And your having two hands, Miss Dinwiddie, reminds me that your piano
+stands open, showing its teeth, as if it, smiling, wanted to say, 'Come,
+play on me.'"</p>
+
+<p>"What a lucky idea!" thought Barbara. "Now I have him, and will hold
+him. He shall get enough of it. When will pa come, I wonder?&mdash;Are you
+fond of music, Captain Penrose?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; I used to be a performer before I was disabled."</p>
+
+<p>"But your voice is not disabled. You sing?"</p>
+
+<p>"A little; but I'm out of practice."</p>
+
+<p>"No matter. Come! Here's a martial piece, suitable for the times: 'To
+Greece we give our shining blades.'"</p>
+
+<p>It was one of the Captain's favorites; and as the two voices, resonant
+and penetrating, rose on the chorus in perfect accord, the singers
+thought they had never sung so well before, and each attributed it to
+the excellent time of the other. Nero and another person listened at the
+aperture of the folding-doors: Nero, who was musical, going through a
+show of vehement applause, and throwing himself about in a manner that
+would have made his fortune as an Ethiopian minstrel.</p>
+
+<p>Other songs followed in rapid succession; and when the Captain sang
+"Annie Lawrie," <i>con espressione</i>, accompanying himself on the piano
+with one hand, Barbara exclaimed, with a frank burst of genuine
+admiration,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, but you sang that superbly!"</p>
+
+<p>She had quite forgotten her anxiety about her father's return.</p>
+
+<p>Then they talked of the popular composers; and from music their
+conversation glanced on literature; and from literature the Captain
+ventured on the dangerous ground of politics.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you incorrigibly a Rebel?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>Barbara looked down. She feared that any confession of change in her
+notions would seem too much like insincerity.</p>
+
+<p>"Now I'm going to lecture you," he continued. "Are you not rejoiced that
+Maryland is a Free State? that no longer on this soil a man has power to
+rob a fellow-man of his labor, and to shoot him down, if he lifts a hand
+in opposition to brutal oppression? Does not your generous heart tell
+you that the system under which such injustice is organized is wrong,
+unchristian, devilish? Are we not well rid of the curse?"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Barbara looked up, and responded in a hearty, emphatic <i>Yes</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"But," she added, "my conversion is recent. And who do you suppose
+converted me?"</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot imagine."</p>
+
+<p>Here a door was thrown open, and Mr. Dinwiddie entered. The perfidious
+man had been listening. Captain Penrose glanced guiltily at the clock,
+and saw, to his consternation, that two hours had somehow unaccountably
+slipped away.</p>
+
+<p>"I have been a loiterer, you see, Mr. Dinwiddie," he said; "but the
+fault is your daughter's. I will now take my leave."</p>
+
+<p>"We shall be happy to see you again," said Barbara, glancing assent to a
+nod from her father.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Captain Penrose," said Dinwiddie, "I hope you'll not drop our
+acquaintance, notwithstanding the circumstances under which it was
+made."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall esteem any circumstances fortunate," replied the Captain, "that
+have given me so agreeable a visit"; and, bowing, he left the room, and
+Barbara rang the bell for Nero to open the outer door.</p>
+
+<p>"Saved! saved!" cried Dinwiddie, sinking into a chair, and covering his
+face with his handkerchief.</p>
+
+<p>"Saved? How saved?" asked Barbara, alarmed.</p>
+
+<p>"But no," exclaimed Dinwiddie, starting up with a very tragic
+expression. "Perhaps it was but a transient pow&mdash;pow&mdash;power you exerted
+over him. Barbara, should you meet again, put forth all your attractions
+to&mdash;to&mdash;to bind him as with a sp&mdash;sp&mdash;spell to keep my fatal secret."</p>
+
+<p>"What secret, father?"</p>
+
+<p>"Hush&mdash;sh&mdash;sh!" said Dinwiddie, stepping on tiptoe to one door and then
+to another, and then looking with a cautious air under the sofa. He
+beckoned to his daughter. She drew near. Once more he looked anxiously
+around the room, and then whispered, in a hoarse, low tone, in her ear,
+these words, "You shall know all in due time."</p>
+
+<p>Little Barbara drew a long breath, and resolved that it should not be
+her fault, if the Captain was not captivated. At that moment there was a
+ring at the door-bell; and Mrs. Dinwiddie came in from high conference
+with a select conclave of fashionable ladies, who yet clung with
+pathetic tenacity to the declining fortunes of Slavery and Secession.</p>
+
+
+<p>III.</p>
+
+<p>For a fortnight matters seemed to go on swimmingly. Dinwiddie had, as he
+thought, so managed as to bring the young people repeatedly together
+without his wife's having a suspicion of what was in the wind; and when
+Captain Penrose called on him at his counting-room and asked whether he
+might pay his addresses to Barbara, Dinwiddie whirled round on his
+office-stool, jumped down, and gave the young soldier a cordial hug.</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly, my dear boy! Win her. She likes you. I like you. Everybody
+likes you. Go ahead."</p>
+
+<p>"It is proper to inform you, Sir," said the Captain, "that my income is
+only twelve hundred a year; but"&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Pshaw! What do I care for your income? There! Go and settle it with
+Barbara. You'll find her alone, I think. Mrs. Dinwiddie, for the last
+week, has been as busy as&mdash;as&mdash;we'll not say who&mdash;in a gale of wind.
+Remember, 'Fortune favors the brave.' I'm obliged to go to Philadelphia
+this afternoon. Good bye."</p>
+
+<p>In a transport of delight, the Captain darted from the office, took a
+carriage, and drove to Dinwiddie's.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Miss Barbara is in. Walk up, Captain."</p>
+
+<p>"What could be more propitious? Poets are not always in the right. Isn't
+my love true love, and doesn't it run smooth?"</p>
+
+<p>Wait awhile, my Captain! Perhaps Shakspeare was not so much in error,
+after all.</p>
+
+<p>Barbara's eyes plainly spoke her pleasure at seeing him. Adjoining the
+drawing-room was a little boudoir filled with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span> sunshine and flowers.
+Into that she led him. They sat down on one of those snug contrivances
+for a <i>t&ecirc;te-&agrave;-t&ecirc;te</i>, formed like the capital letter S. A fragrance as of
+spring was shed through the room from the open door of a conservatory,
+and a canary-bird near by was tuning his voice for a song.</p>
+
+<p>"Barbara, do you know it is a whole fortnight that we have known each
+other?"</p>
+
+<p>She looked up at him inquiringly, for this was the third time he had
+called her by her first name. He continued,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Barbara, I had a pleasant interview with your father this morning, and
+what do you suppose I said to him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Said it was a fine day, most like," returned Barbara, intent on
+spreading out the leaves of a half-blown rose.</p>
+
+<p>"No, I said not a word about the weather. I asked him if he would have
+any objection to me for a son-in-law."</p>
+
+<p>"And what did he reply?" asked Barbara, after a pause, during which her
+little heart beat wildly.</p>
+
+<p>"He told me I could settle it all with you."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed!" said Barbara. "But I never had any genius for settlements. I
+always hated business."</p>
+
+<p>"But this is a matter of pleasure, not of business," urged the Captain;
+and then coming round to her side, and falling on one knee, he took her
+unreluctant little hand, put it to his lips, and said, "May I not have
+it for my own?"</p>
+
+<p>Before she could reply, approaching steps were heard, and a youth of
+some nineteen years, wearing the coarse pea-jacket, red baize shirt, and
+glazed hat of a sailor, made his appearance.</p>
+
+<p>"Culpepper!" exclaimed Barbara, while the Captain resumed his seat,&mdash;"is
+it you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," replied the youth. "Sister, I have a few words to say to this man
+privately. Please leave the room."</p>
+
+<p>Master Culpepper was one of those nondescripts in social zo&ouml;logy,
+classed by some philosophers as "cubs," and by others as
+"hobbledehoys,"&mdash;"not a man, nor a boy, but a hobbledehoy." At school he
+had been set down as a hopeless blockhead, and Barbara had severely
+tasked her patience, trying to insinuate into his brains the little
+knowledge of the ordinary branches of education which he possessed.
+Consequently, though she was two years his junior, she had been
+accustomed to regard herself as several years his senior, and to talk to
+him as to the inferior he really was in everything but brute strength.
+The cub's strong points, morally considered, were his family pride and
+his hatred of "Abolitionism": in these he bade fair to surpass even the
+maternal proficiency.</p>
+
+<p>"Captain Penrose," said Barbara, "this is my brother Culpepper. Now,
+Cully, go and play in the stable, that's a good boy."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know, Miss Barbara, that you are addressing a Major in the
+Confederate army," replied Cully, folding his arms with a great effort
+at dignity. "You will accost me hereafter as Major Dinwiddie, if you
+please."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Major, this gentleman and myself are engaged, so"&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Engaged!" howled Cully, with flashing eyes and vociferous speech.
+"Engaged! And you dare to confess it to me, your brother! Engaged! And
+to an Abolitionist,&mdash;a low-born Yankee! I cancel the engagement."</p>
+
+<p>Barbara was too much roused by the cub's insolence to care to correct
+the misapprehension which he had blundered into so precipitately, and
+which she was now disposed to make a verity.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mean to tell me," demanded the cub, "that you are engaged to be
+married to this man?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, if he'll have me," said Barbara, putting forth her hand, which
+Penrose eagerly seized, exclaiming,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Will I <i>have</i> you, Barbara? Yes, as the best treasure life can offer."</p>
+
+<p>And the first kiss was exchanged.</p>
+
+<p>"Look here," said Cully, "this business must stop where it is. I demand,
+Sir, that you leave the house with me this instant."</p>
+
+<p>And then, as an amused expression flitted over the Captain's face, the
+cub asked angrily,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Why do you smile, Sir?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sir," said the Captain, "your sister and I have cause for smiling; we
+are happy."</p>
+
+<p>The cub took from his side-pocket a revolver and cocked it. Penrose
+stood up, and Barbara threw herself between him and her brother.</p>
+
+<p>"Coward!" cried the cub, "to allow yourself to be shielded by a woman!"</p>
+
+<p>The cub, under the influence of Pro-slavery precedents, had really got
+it into his thick head, that he, under the circumstances, was the man of
+chivalry and valor, and that because the unarmed Penrose would not
+present a fair shot to his revolver, that gentleman was chargeable with
+an excess of poltroonery of which only a Yankee could be guilty.</p>
+
+<p>The cub's heroics were ignominiously cut short. Suddenly his two arms
+were seized from behind, while his pistol was wrenched from his grasp.
+Two armed policemen, followed by Mr. Dinwiddie and Nero, had entered the
+room.</p>
+
+<p>"Am I betrayed?" exclaimed the cub.</p>
+
+<p>"Blockhead!" said his father, "Fort Warren shall henceforth be your
+school, till we knock a little common-sense into that obstinate skull of
+yours."</p>
+
+<p>"Fort Warren!" cried Cully, gnashing his teeth. "But I'm here on a
+furlough, disguised as a sailor, you perceive. I promised to be back to
+my regiment by Friday. Fort Warren?"</p>
+
+<p>"Never!" shrieked Mrs. Dinwiddie, entering the room from the
+conservatory, where she had been hiding. "Kill me, but don't compel my
+son to break his pledge to the Confederate authority."</p>
+
+<p>"Bah!" said Dinwiddie. "Officers, take the booby away."</p>
+
+<p>Nero almost sank into his boots with excess of enjoyment, but abruptly
+put on a very agonized face, and showed the whites of his eyes, as Mrs.
+Dinwiddie looked towards him.</p>
+
+<p>Cully submitted, though with an ill grace, to what was plainly a case of
+necessity; but he turned, before crossing the threshold, and said to
+Penrose,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I take everybody to witness, Sir, that I prohibit your having anything
+further to do with my sister. The consequences be on your own head, if
+you disobey."</p>
+
+<p>"And I, Captain Penrose," said Dinwiddie, "take everybody to witness,
+that, if, after having paid the court that you have to my daughter, you
+now refuse to take her as your wife, the consequences, Sir, must be on
+your own head."</p>
+
+<p>"Sir," said the Captain, "that is the most agreeable threat that I can
+imagine. I have already committed myself to your daughter."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! disgraceful!" groaned Mrs. Dinwiddie.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you say to that, Cully?" said the father, as, with no very
+gentle thrust, he replaced the glazed hat on the youth's head.</p>
+
+<p>Cully kept silent. The recollection of certain debts which could be paid
+only from the paternal purse inspired a prudent reserve.</p>
+
+<p>"Take him now," said Dinwiddie to the officers; "give him as much
+gingerbread as he wants, and charge it to me."</p>
+
+<p>Cully and the officers disappeared.</p>
+
+<p>"And now," resumed Dinwiddie, "it is time for me to drive to the cars.
+Mrs. Dinwiddie, this is Captain Penrose, your future son-in-law. Treat
+him kindly in my absence. Farewell."</p>
+
+<p>The lady bowed not ungraciously, as Dinwiddie departed. She had been
+meditating, during the last minute, a new flank movement in favor of
+Colonel Pegram. She determined to change her base of operations. Barbara
+was amazed, but, in her inexperience, was wholly unsuspicious of
+strategy.</p>
+
+<p>"Captain Penrose, you'll stop and take tea with us?" said the wily lady
+of the house.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall be charmed to," replied the Captain.</p>
+
+<p>"Mother, let me kiss you!" cried the innocent Barbara, delighted at what
+seemed the vanishing of the only obstacle to the betrothal of herself
+and the Yankee officer.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>There was an ambush in preparation, of which these two did not dream.</p>
+
+
+<p>IV.</p>
+
+<p>Two days afterwards, Barbara and her mother were on their way to
+Montreal.</p>
+
+<p>This was the flank movement, and it was thus accomplished. The second
+morning after her husband's departure, Mrs. Dinwiddie burst into
+Barbara's apartment with the intelligence that she had just received a
+telegraphic dispatch from Mr. Dinwiddie, bidding her start at once for
+Montreal to procure certain funds in the hands of a certain party there,
+which funds were immediately wanted. Barbara, to whom all business
+matters were mysteries profound as the income-tax or the national debt,
+received it all without a question. She did not stop to ask, "Why
+doesn't father send one of his clerks?" or "Why can't he do it all by
+letter?" She took it for granted that there was a great hurry about
+something that required an instant journey to Montreal. So she wrote a
+letter to Captain Penrose, (which Mrs. Dinwiddie took good care to
+intercept,) and, before another hour had slipped by, mother and daughter
+were at the Northern railway station.</p>
+
+<p>The old lady had taken the precaution to send Nero on an errand out of
+the city, and had hired a public hack to convey her to the cars. But as
+she was attending to her trunk, an officious gentleman in black stepped
+up to Barbara, and asked for what place she wished to have the baggage
+checked. Before Mrs. Dinwiddie could interpose, Barbara had answered,
+"Montreal." Thereupon the gentleman had simply remarked, "I don't think
+they check baggage so far," and then had walked away in the direction of
+the telegraph-office,&mdash;for what purpose the sequel must suggest. Mrs.
+Dinwiddie thought nothing more of the matter. They passed through
+Philadelphia and New York the next day uninterrupted.</p>
+
+<p>At Rutland, Vt., a very civil sort of gentleman accosted them in the
+car, and, on learning that they were on their way to Canada, asked if
+they had passports. On Mrs. Dinwiddie's replying in the negative, he
+informed her, that, by a recent order of the United States Government,
+persons travelling to and from Canada were required to have passports;
+and he advised her to stop at Rutland, and he would telegraph to New
+York and procure them. After some hesitation, she consented to do this.
+The third day of her detention, her volunteer informant came with the
+necessary papers, and at the same time introduced Mr. Glide, an
+obsequious little gentleman, who said he was going to Montreal, and
+should be happy to render any service in his power to the ladies.</p>
+
+<p>"Surely, Sir, I have seen you before," said Mrs. Dinwiddie. "Are you not
+from Baltimore?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Madam; and I will tell you where we last met: 't was at the secret
+gathering of ladies and gentlemen for purchasing a new outfit for Mrs.
+Jefferson Davis."</p>
+
+<p>"Hush!" said Mrs. Dinwiddie, slightly alarmed.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, there's no danger," returned Mr. Glide. "I'm discreet. Your
+devotion to the Confederate cause, Madam, your noble efforts, your
+sacrifices, have long been known to me; and I rejoice at having this
+opportunity of expressing my thanks and my admiration. Is there anything
+I can do for you?"</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Dinwiddie looked significantly at him, nodded her head by way of
+warning, and glanced at her daughter.</p>
+
+<p>"I see, Madam," murmured Mr. Glide, in a confidential tone.</p>
+
+<p>"Barbara, go and pack my trunk," said she.</p>
+
+<p>Barbara left the room.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Sir," resumed Mrs. Dinwiddie, "I will confide to you my troubles.
+That young girl has recently engaged herself, against my wishes, to a
+young man,&mdash;a captain in the Yankee army."</p>
+
+<p>"Engaged herself to a Yankee? But, oh, Madam, what an affliction! what a
+humiliation!"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Sir, 't is all that."</p>
+
+<p>"I agree with Mr. Davis, Madam, that the Yankees are the scum of the
+world. Is there no way by which you can avert from your family the
+threatened disgrace?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Sir, I have formed a plan, and, if you will lend me your aid, I
+think we may manage to put the infatuated girl for a time where she will
+have an opportunity of recovering her senses."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Madam, I shall be delighted to serve you in any such good work.
+To save youth and beauty from the polluting touch of a Yankee captain
+might well call forth the warmest zeal, the most devoted daring, of any
+native of the sunny South."</p>
+
+<p>"Sir, your sentiments do you honor. This, then, is my scheme&mdash;Is there
+any chance of our being overheard?"</p>
+
+<p>"By none except the invisibles," said Glide; "and they probably exist
+only in the imagination of Yankee fanatics."</p>
+
+<p>"My plan," whispered the lady, "is to put my daughter in a convent until
+the gentleman to whom I have promised her, Colonel Pegram of the
+Confederate army, can have an opportunity of seeing her. Of course it
+would not take him five minutes to drive out of her head all thought of
+this Yankee lover."</p>
+
+<p>"And has your daughter, Madam, no suspicion of this admirable scheme of
+yours?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not the slightest. She supposes we are going to Montreal on business of
+her father's."</p>
+
+<p>"Madam, you couldn't have been more fortunate in your confidence. It
+happens that I am on most intimate terms with Father Basil, the
+confessor of the nuns, and who, by the rules of the convent, must
+interrogate your daughter before she can be admitted to its privileges."</p>
+
+<p>"But," said Mrs. Dinwiddie, anxiously, "will Father Basil have the
+proper sympathy with my maternal motives and my Southern sentiments?
+Will he be disposed to strain his authority a little in order to put my
+daughter in durance?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think I may venture to promise," answered Glide, "that, such is my
+influence with him, he will do in the matter whatever I may request."</p>
+
+<p>"How fortunate!"</p>
+
+<p>"And now, Madam, you must make preparations for your departure. The cars
+start in ten minutes."</p>
+
+<p>Before seven o'clock that evening the whole party were comfortably
+disposed in one of the best of the Montreal hotels. The obliging Mr.
+Glide went forth immediately to make inquiries in Mrs. Dinwiddie's
+behalf.</p>
+
+<p>After breakfast the next day he presented himself to her and asked,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"You have said nothing as yet to your daughter?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not a word," she replied.</p>
+
+<p>"Then," said he, "our course will be to drive at once to Father Basil's
+residence, and get him to broach the whole matter to Miss Barbara. He
+has a very persuasive tongue, and I think she will at once yield to his
+exhortations. Should she, however, be disposed to resist forcibly our
+measures for her benefit, there will be the means at hand to carry them
+out."</p>
+
+<p>Barbara entered the room, wholly unsuspicious of the plots against her
+liberty.</p>
+
+<p>"The carriage will soon be at the door," said her mother. "Go and get
+ready." And after a whispered hint from Mr. Glide, she added, "Put on
+your pearl silk, Barbara. We shall have to call on certain persons of
+distinction."</p>
+
+<p>Barbara was soon ready. They all three entered the carriage, and after a
+drive of about a mile, it stopped before a large and elegant house.</p>
+
+<p>"Our father confessor lives in style," whispered Mrs. Dinwiddie.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," returned Glide; "one of his wealthy neophytes gives him a home
+here. If you will wait in this little basement room, Madam, I will
+conduct your daughter up to his library."</p>
+
+<p>"Go with Mr. Glide, Barbara," said Mrs. Dinwiddie.</p>
+
+<p>Supposing it was merely one of the mysterious forms of business, little
+Barbara at once took the gentleman's proffered<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span> arm and ascended the
+stairs with him.</p>
+
+<p>Ten minutes,&mdash;twenty,&mdash;thirty,&mdash;Mrs. Dinwiddie waited, and nobody came.
+She looked at the furniture, the carpets, the paintings, till she had
+exhausted the curiosities of the apartment. Suddenly there was a sound
+of music from above,&mdash;not sacred music,&mdash;it sounded very much like the
+waltz from "Gustavus." What could it all mean?</p>
+
+<p>At last Mr. Glide made his appearance.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Madam, 't is all arranged," said he. "I regret to say that we had
+to use the most stringent measures for reducing your daughter to terms.
+But she is so bound at last that she can have little hope of regaining
+her freedom."</p>
+
+<p>"Bound, Sir? Did you have to bind her?" asked Mrs. Dinwiddie, with a
+throb of maternal solicitude.</p>
+
+<p>"You shall see, Madam."</p>
+
+<p>He threw open the door at the head of the landing, and they entered a
+stately room, where some thirty or forty ladies and gentlemen seemed to
+be assembled. Mrs. Dinwiddie drew away her arm and almost swooned with
+amazement and consternation.</p>
+
+<p>At the front end of the apartment, before a gorgeous mirror, stood
+Barbara and Captain Penrose. A veil and a bunch of orange-blossoms had
+been added to the young lady's coiffure. At her side stood a handsome
+old gentleman, with bright, affectionate eyes, (very much like the
+Captain's,) who seemed to regard her with a gratified look. On the side
+of Penrose stood&mdash;horrors!&mdash;Mr. Dinwiddie himself, a smile of fiendish
+exultation on his face; while a gentleman with a white cravat and a
+narrow collar to his coat, evidently an Episcopal clergyman, went up and
+shook hands with Barbara, and then mingled with the rest of the company.</p>
+
+<p>A middle-aged gentleman, whom the guests accosted as Mr. Carver, drew
+near to Dinwiddie, and said,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Now introduce me to your wife."</p>
+
+<p>Dinwiddie took his arm, and, leading him to where the lady stood,
+said,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Wife, this is my old friend Carver, of whom you have so often heard me
+speak. Yonder stands your daughter, Mrs. Penrose, waiting for your
+maternal kiss of congratulation."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Dinwiddie debated with herself a moment whether to shriek, to fall
+into hysterics, to explode in a philippic, or to rush from observation.
+Her husband, seeing her hesitation, took her by the hand and led her
+into an unoccupied room. A veil must be dropped upon the connubial
+interview which then and there took place.</p>
+
+<p>Suffice it to say, that, when she came forth leaning on the arm of Mr.
+Dinwiddie, it was with the air of one who has made up her mind to make
+the best of a case of necessity,&mdash;an air very much like that, I fancy,
+with which the South will yet take the arm of its consort, the North.
+She saw there was no longer any chance for another flank movement.</p>
+
+<p>One vindictive glance she turned on the dapper Mr. Glide, as he stood
+guzzling Champagne, and looking the picture of meek fidelity; and then
+she courageously walked up, kissed her daughter, shook hands with the
+Captain, curtsied condescendingly to old Mr. Penrose, and smothered her
+astonishment as she best could, on being taken up to a lady of rare
+elegance of person and demeanor, whom she had set down as the wife of
+the Governor-General at least, but who, on presentation, she learned was
+the mother of her new son-in-law.</p>
+
+<p>"Ladies and gentlemen," said Mr. Carver,&mdash;and at his voice the buzz of
+conversation was hushed,&mdash;"I believe we have none here who will not
+readily comply with the request I have now to make. Since all's well
+that ends well, I ask it as a favor, that no person of this company, who
+may happen to be acquainted with the peculiar circumstances of this
+marriage, will mention them outside of the circle here present. Will you
+all say <i>ay</i> to this proposition?"</p>
+
+<p>Amid smiles there rose what sounded like a unanimous assent; but a close
+observer might have remarked that the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span> Perfidious Mr. Glide, instead of
+moving his lips affirmatively, simply lifted his Champagne-glass, and in
+the act raised his forefinger so as to cover the side of his nose. To
+this individual, no doubt the boon companion of some rascally reporter,
+we probably owe the circumstance that a garbled and incorrect account of
+this affair appeared in the Baltimore and Washington papers. The present
+writer has consequently felt it incumbent on him to place on record a
+version which, whatever may be said of it, cannot be stigmatized as
+exaggerated.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="AROUND_MULL" id="AROUND_MULL"></a>AROUND MULL.</h2>
+
+
+<h3>PART II.</h3>
+
+<p>The island of Staffa being nearly a mile in length, we have already had
+a distant external view of the huge grassy mound which constitutes its
+surface, reared on a steep, craggy base, hear and there exhibiting
+superb basaltic columns, and everywhere consisting of basaltic pillars
+more or less broken, irregular, and contorted, and in some instances
+forming the entrance to caves of great interest, though of less grandeur
+and magnificence than the giant temple of Nature which is the principal
+feature and pride of Staffa and the chief object of our visit. Ah, here
+comes the Bailie, looking as innocent as possible of the pipe! Christie,
+too, has crept up from the cabin, and, though professing inability to go
+ashore, is relieved by the sudden cessation of the steamer's motion, and
+is prepared to witness with cheerfulness the disembarkation of her more
+fortunate fellow-passengers. It is the office of boatmen from the
+neighboring island of Ulva, hardy and skilful men, accustomed to these
+boisterous seas, to row passengers ashore, and in case of calm weather,
+such as we are blest with, to conduct their boats within the noble
+archway and up the grand broad aisle of Fingal's Cave: for the floor of
+this glorious cathedral is the rolling sea, whose green waves surge with
+a grand swell and fall to the very extremity of the cave, echoing
+through its vaults with a resonance which gave it its early Ga&euml;lic name
+of Uaimh Bhinn, the Musical Cave. How and when these boatmen approached
+unseen and surrounded our steamer as she lies here in the sun, I cannot
+imagine; so perfect are all the arrangements for our convenience, that
+they have probably been lying in wait for our approach, and had only to
+dash our form among the black rocks of the shore; but in view of the
+power of Nature in this locality, the wonderful architecture, of which
+we witness as yet the mere <i>d&eacute;bris</i>, and the noble palace of the sea
+which our imagination is already shadowing forth, it is not difficult to
+believe that these hardy mariners spring up from the depths at the
+voyager's bidding, and that they are neither more bidding, and that they
+are neither more nor less than ocean genii, the servants of some ocean
+king, appointed to wait on and convoy his guests. The Dexterity of these
+men and the strength of their boats inspire perfect confidence, however;
+for the latter are fast filling and putting off for the shore. The
+landing-place mist be near at hand, though as yet out of sight; for
+"See!" I exclaim to the Bailie, "one or two of the boats have landed
+their parties and are already returning! Everybody is disappearing from
+the steamer; had we not better make haste and secure a passage?"</p>
+
+<p>But the Bailie, who is something of a philosopher, has confidence that
+there is time and accommodation enough for us all; so he and I proceed
+very leisurely to the step-ladder, and, as everybody else is in a hurry,
+we fall to the very<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span> last boat that leaves the steamer. A few unforeseen
+claimants and stragglers present themselves just as we are putting off,
+and, as often happens at the last chance to go ashore, our boat is
+somewhat overloaded, and I find myself separated from my companion, who
+is standing upright in the bows, while I am seated in the stern among
+the elderly Scotch folk, who seem so familiar with all the detail of the
+place and proceedings I am led to believer them faithful worshipper of
+Nature who come periodically to pay their vows in the national minster,
+as members of some parish church go up reverently to the cathedral
+convocations. An eager, excitable gude-wife next to me is especially
+anxious and officious, and seems disposed to question the efficiency and
+prudence of our Ulva boatmen.</p>
+
+<p>"The boat is too full!" she cries, with the emphasis of certainty. "Tell
+them to put back; she is too full!" and the murmur of alarm echoes in
+our vicinity. "Don't be afraid, my dear," she adds, in a sort of
+stage-aside to me, who, though I have observed that the boat's edge is
+almost on a level with the water, have never dreamed of danger until she
+put it into my head, "Not a bit of danger," she continues, patting me
+encouragingly on the shoulder, while in the same breath she reiterates
+to those in authority her startling warning and her assurance that we
+shall presently sink by our own weight.</p>
+
+<p>But the Bailie, standing in the bow, still maintains his philosophy, and
+the smile on his face reassures me. And now, with only just that sense
+of insecurity which adds to the awe of the occasion, I perceive that we
+are rounding a cliff, and that the entrance to Fingal's Cave is dawning
+on our view.</p>
+
+<p>The magnificent proportions and perfect symmetry of the archway which
+forms the entrance to the cave will be seen to better advantage somewhat
+later, when the steamer, on leaving the island, sweeps directly past the
+vestibule purposely to afford their passengers this opportunity; but one
+is never more impressed with the hugeness and stability of this gigantic
+structure than when measuring it by gradual approach, and looking up
+into its lofty Gothic vault as we glide under the enormous archway and
+out of the dazzling sunshine into the twilight of the deep interior.
+Those whose imaginations are aided by statistics may form a more real
+conception of this great natural structure by reflecting that the
+archway at the entrance is forty-two feet in width, and its height
+nearly seventy above the level of the sea, and that these vast
+proportions are preserved to the farther extremity of the cave, as
+distance of some two hundred and thirty feet. The imposing effect of the
+portico is still further enhanced by the massive entablature of thirty
+feet additional which it supports, and by the noble cluster of pillars
+grouped on each side of the entrance-way. These lofty pillars, or
+complication of basaltic columns, are in a general sense perpendicular,
+their departure from the stern lines and angles of human architecture
+serving only to proclaim them the workmanship of that Architect who
+alone is independent of artistic rules, and giving new force to what
+Goethe tells us is understood by genius, namely, "that Art is called Art
+because it is <i>not</i> Nature." Here with the poet of Nature, we may offer</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Thanks for the lessons of this spot,&mdash;fit school<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For the presumptuous thoughts that would assign<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Mechanic laws to agency divine,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And, measuring heaven by earth, would overrule<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Infinite Power."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>And here, if anywhere, is the place to learn how vainly Art may seek to
+rival Nature. "How splendid," exclaims a learned prelate, "do the
+porticos of the ancients appear in our eyes from the ostentatious
+magnificence of the descriptions we have received of them! And with what
+admiration are we seized, on seeing the colonnades of our modern
+edifices! But when we behold the Cave of Fingal, formed by Nature in the
+Isle of Staffa, it is no longer possible to make a comparison; and we
+are forced to acknowledge that this piece of Nature's architecture far
+surpasses that of the Louvre, that of St. Peter's at<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span> Rome, all that
+remains of Palmyra and P&aelig;stum, and all that the genius, taste, and
+luxury of the Greeks were ever capable of inventing."</p>
+
+<p>So much for a comparison of this ocean cathedral with buildings of human
+construction; and no less decisive is the verdict of the French author,
+M. de St. Fond, in contrasting Staffa with other natural edifices. "I
+have," he says, "seen many ancient volcanoes, and I have given
+descriptions of several basaltic causeways and delightful caverns in the
+midst of lavas; but I have never found anything which comes near to
+this, or can bear any comparison with it, for the admirable regularity
+of its columns, the height of the arch, the situation, the form, the
+elegance of this production of Nature or its resemblance to the
+masterpieces of Art, though Art has had no share in its construction. It
+is therefore not at all surprising that tradition should have made it
+the abode of a hero."</p>
+
+<p>These are but general descriptions of this <i>chef d'[oe]uvre.</i> Shall I
+attempt in my own words, or those of any other, to give even a feeble
+impression of the grandeur which overarches and surrounds us as our boat
+glides into the interior? Let Wilson speak; I dare not. Listen to his
+words while I vouch for their truth.</p>
+
+<p>"How often have we since recalled to mind the regularity, magnitude, and
+loftiness of those columns, the fine o'er-hanging cliff of small
+prismatic basalt to which they give support, worn by the murmuring waves
+of many thousand years into the semblance of some stupendous Gothic
+arch,</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">'Where, through the long-drawn aisle and fretted vault,'<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>the wild waters ever urge their way; and the receding sides of that
+great temple, running inwards in solemn perspective, yet ever and anon,
+as ocean heaves and falls, rendered visible in its far sanctuary by the
+broad and flashing light reflected by the foaming surges sweeping
+onwards from below! Then the broken and irregular gallery which
+overhangs that subterranean flood, and from which, looking upwards and
+around, we behold the rich and varied hues of red, green, and gold,
+which give such splendid relief to the deep and sombre colored
+columns,&mdash;the clear bright tints which sparkle beneath our feet, from
+the wavering, yet translucent sea,&mdash;the whole accompanied by the wild,
+yet mellow and sonorous moan of each successive billow which rises up
+the sides or rolls over the finely formed crowns of the lowlier and
+disjointed pillars: these are a few of the features of this exquisite
+and most singular scene, which cannot fail to astonish the beholder."</p>
+
+<p>Up this irregular gallery, which extends to the farther extremity of the
+cave, most of our steamer's party have already gone, having successively
+deserted the boats to take advantage of this natural pathway, whereby,
+stepping carefully along the wet slippery floor, and clinging for
+security to a rope attached to iron bolts riveted in the solid stone of
+the wall, they can penetrate to the innermost depths of the cavern.
+Through the dim religious light of the place we can discern their
+figures, diminished in the distant perspective, as in long procession
+they grope their way, the joyous laughter of the younger votaries
+mingling with the little shrieks of alarm or warning with which the more
+cautious or timid emphasize every misstep or uncertain footing,&mdash;the
+entire human murmur, fortunately for us, softened by distance, or
+returned to our ears only in the mellowed form of an echo, so that we
+are spared in some degree that mockery of mirth and discord, otherwise
+so inevitable, and always so uncongenial to the spirit of the
+place,&mdash;that tumult of voices, exclamations, and shouts so familiar to
+the tourist, and which drew from Wordsworth, on occasion of his visit to
+the spot, the half-bitter reflection,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"We saw, but surely, in the motley crowd,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Not one of us has felt the far-famed-sight:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">How <i>could</i> we feel it, each the other's blight,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Hurried and hurrying, volatile and loud?"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Thus the Bailie's philosophy has not proved in fault. There is an
+advantage in being the last comers, if it is merely<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span> that our
+fellow-tourists have taken themselves out of our way. Only the harsh
+vituperations of our boatmen make dissonance with Nature, as, their long
+poles driven hard now against one side and now the other of the cave,
+they strive to keep the boat in middle position, and save a collision
+with the rocks. And even this discord is soon overborne. "Sing!" cried
+the gude-wife at my elbow, as we passed under the great archway, and her
+plastic soul, alive as readily to the spirit of praise as to that of
+fear, caught the inspiration of the place; "all of you, sing!"</p>
+
+<p>There was an earnestness, a fervor, in this woman, which made her every
+word and thought contagious; and as either she, or some neighbor of hers
+who shared her emotion and purpose, struck the key-note, voice after
+voice joined in, until there swelled up from our little boat the almost
+universal song,&mdash;no common trivial melody,&mdash;not even a national
+air,&mdash;such would have been sacrilege,&mdash;but a grand old song of praise,
+one of those literal versions of the Psalmist familiar to the ear and
+lip of every kirk-loving Scot. And so, as the singing chorus went
+sailing up that broad aisle, heart and voice united in a spontaneous
+liturgy, an act of devout adoration, which seemed the only fit response
+to the spirit that whispered to our souls, "Praise ye the Lord!"</p>
+
+<p>The psalm ended, our boat with most of its passengers retraces its
+course and is rowed back to the steamer,&mdash;the Bailie and I, however,
+having first disembarked and clambered up to the rough gallery, with a
+view of imitating the parties who are pursuing their explorations on
+foot. This gallery, or causeway, which runs along the eastern side of
+the cave, is about two feet in width, and consists of the bases of
+broken pillars, whose dark purple hexagons, cemented together by
+crystallizations or a white calcareous deposit, form a rough mosaic
+flooring. The inequality of its surface, and the fact that the stones
+are worn smooth and slippery by the action of the sea, render it a very
+precarious pathway; and as soon as we have proceeded far enough to
+gratify our curiosity and obtain satisfactory points of view, we are
+content to abandon the enterprise of penetrating to the remotest depths,
+preferring to reserve our time for a ramble over the exterior surface of
+the island.</p>
+
+<p>Emerging from the cavern and skirting its eastern side, we still find
+ourselves stepping from hexagon to hexagon over a massive bed of refuse
+material, and gazing upward at the columnar wall on our left which
+upholds the table-land of the island. No traveller, however ignorant or
+inappreciative of science, can fail to realize the immense interest
+which these evidences of some great natural convulsion must possess for
+the geologist; and a knowledge of the recent geological discoveries in
+this and other of the Western Islands is not needed to impress us with
+the conviction that treasures of truth are beneath and around us
+everywhere, waiting to be revealed. But we have not the key, nor can we
+pause to pick the lock.</p>
+
+<p>Passing on, then, in our ignorance, but not without an awe of things
+unknown, we recognize as within the scope of our comprehension two
+broken pillars so lodged as to constitute the seat and back of a rude
+chair, which has received the name of Fingal's Chair, and beyond this
+the Clamshell Cave, so called from the curved form of the mass of
+basaltic pillars at its entrance; and at length we attain a point where,
+by scaling a rough staircase constructed for the convenience of
+tourists, we gain the grassy summit of the island. So perpendicular is
+the cliff at every point, that, these green slopes once reached, the
+previous singularity of formation and wildness of scenery at once give
+place to the pastoral. Rocks, columns, caves, and cliffs are all hid
+from our view; we have gained Nature's upper story, and around us is a
+perfect calm. Not even the steamer which brought us hither is visible,
+so effectually do the bold precipices conceal every near thing in their
+shadow. The great cavern through which ocean surges with a ceaseless
+swell lies far beneath us, and no echo of its roar<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span> reaches this spot. A
+few sheep are nibbling the short grass; the golden star-flowers and the
+pink heather plumes at our feet are the lineal descendants, for aught we
+can conceive, of star-flowers and heather plumes that flourished here a
+thousand years ago,&mdash;so undisturbed a possession has Nature had In this
+realm of hers for ages. No change, improvement, growth, has added to or
+taken from Staffa. Storm-washed in winter, flower-crowned in summer, its
+history is forever the same. Sitting here among the heather tufts, and
+looking off on the limitless blue sea and the neighboring islands, it is
+not hard to dream one's self away into by-gone centuries, to imagine
+Bruce and his faithful islesmen sailing past as they go forth to rouse
+the clans, or, diving deeper into legendary days, to picture Fingal
+himself and his warlike allies bending their white sails towards the
+ocean-palace that still claims him as its traditionary king.</p>
+
+<p>"O Ossian, Carril, and Ullin! you know of heroes that are no more. Give
+us the song of other years. Raise, ye bards of other times, raise high
+the praise of heroes; that my son! may settle on their fame."</p>
+
+<p>"Soon shall my voice be heard no more, and my footsteps cease to be
+seen," was the prophetic cry of the "first of a thousand heroes," as he
+learned from "Ullin, the bard of song" that his young son Ryno was "with
+the awful forms of his fathers." But "the bards will tell of Fingal's
+name, the stones will talk of me," was the consolatory thought of him,
+who, grown old in fame, had a foreshadowing of the glory which would
+hang round his memory, when he exclaimed, "But before I go hence, one
+beam of fame shall rise, I will remain renowned; the departure of my
+soul shall be a stream of light."</p>
+
+<p>And who among ancient heroes could better deserve to have his memory
+embalmed than he whom an honorable foe thus eulogized?&mdash;"Blest be thy
+soul, thou king of shells! In peace thou art the gale of spring; in war,
+the mountain storm." And what touching interest to us of later times
+hangs round this legendary champion of the right, when we listen to his
+mingled strain of triumph, lament, and justification!&mdash;"When will Fingal
+cease to fight? I was born in the midst of battles, and my steps must
+move in blood to the tomb, But my hand did not injure the weak, my steel
+did not touch the feeble in arms. I behold thy tempests, O Morven! which
+will overturn my halls, when my children are dead in battle, and none
+remains to dwell in Selma. Then will the feeble come, but they will not
+know my tomb. My renown is only in song, My deeds shall be as a dream to
+future times!"</p>
+
+<p>Yes, a dream,&mdash;and we are the dreamers. The songs of the bards are
+ringing in our ears, and though no stone marks the tomb of Fingal, the
+stones talk of him; the great basaltic columns are his memorial pillars,
+and the sea yet sounds his dirge as its wailing echo sweeps mournfully
+through Fingal's Cave.</p>
+
+<p>But hark! The bell of the Pioneer is rousing us with the cry, "Wake up,
+ye dreamers! Come back from the clouds, ye visionaries!" The time for
+Staffa is up, and the steamer, like a cackling hen who is eager to call
+her brood together, commences a system of coaxing, warning, and threat,
+which soon results in the converging of her passengers from every
+quarter of the island. Most of them are by this time rambling over its
+upper surface, and all make for the rough stairway where the comparative
+difficulties of the "ascensus" and "descensus" are in complete
+contradiction to classical authority: the former having been
+accomplished with ease, while the latter proves a terrific experience.
+There is truly something maternal about the Pioneer; for here, as at
+every other point of difficulty on our excursion, faithful guides are
+stationed and strong hands outstretched for our assistance. Still it is
+with a plunge,&mdash;half a nightmare and half a miracle,&mdash;that we, who are
+among the earliest to make the experiment, arrive safely at the bottom,
+and, stepping on board<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span> a boat, regain the steamer, where we sit at our
+leisure and laugh at the absurd figure made by later comers as they
+scramble down the cliff: Sir Thomas even forgetting his dignity in the
+difficulties of the operation, and the interjectional phrases of her
+Ladyship, as she now and then comes to a hopeless stand-still, tickling
+our ears at the distance where we sit watching them.</p>
+
+<p>Our entire party fairly on board, the Pioneer, now panting to be off,
+sets her wheels in motion and starts on her further course, not,
+however, without first skirting the base of the island and affording us,
+as I have already intimated, one last view of Fingal's Cave, and that
+the finest. It is an impressive circumstance, that at this moment the
+attention of the tourist on the steamer's deck is divided between
+Nature's great cathedral and man's early efforts in the same
+direction,&mdash;that immediately opposite the pillared vestibule of the
+Staffa minster the Abbey tower of the Blessed Isle looms boldly on our
+view, the mimic architecture of man paying silent homage to the spot,</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Where, as to shame the temples decked<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">By skill of earthly architect,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A minster to her Maker's praise!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Not for a meaner use ascend<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Her columns, or her arches bend;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Nor of a theme less solemn tells<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That mighty surge that ebbs and swells,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And still, between each awful pause,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">From the high vault an answer draws,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In varied tone, prolonged and high,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That mocks the organ's melody.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Nor doth its entrance front in vain<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To old Iona's holy fane,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That Nature's voice might seem to say,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">'Well hast thou clone, frail child of clay!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thy humble powers that stately shrine<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Tasked high and hard,&mdash;but witness mine!'"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>And so, with a great lesson behind us and before, we sail away on that
+summer sea and bid farewell to Staffa. The timid seal whom we have
+disturbed creeps back to her cell, the wild-fowl returns to its nest,
+the sea-swell rolls in and out in waves unbroken by our keel, and the
+warm sun holds all in his soft embrace. The winter winds will roar
+through the cavern erelong, the ocean lash pillar and ceiling with its
+foam, tempests will beat and rage against its giant columns, the stormy
+petrel will flap its wings in the archway, and the piercing cry of the
+sea-gull keep time to the diapason of the deep; but the massive
+structure whose corner-stone is hid beneath the waters, and which leans
+upon the Rock of Ages, will still defy the tempest and loom in lonely
+grandeur, alike in summer's smile and winter's frown the dwelling-place
+of the Almighty. Iona's walls, reared centuries ago, and dedicated to
+Him by human tribute, have crumbled or are fast crumbling to decay; but
+this mighty temple, whose foundations no man laid, has gazed calmly
+through all these ages at man's feeble work, and will gaze unchanged
+until He who holds the sea in the hollow of His hand shall uproot its
+columns.</p>
+
+
+<p>III.</p>
+
+<p>Now on to Iona, a distance of seven or eight miles, a formidable voyage,
+perhaps, for early pilgrims to this sacred shrine, to us barely
+affording time for dinner, a meal of which I have no remembrance of
+partaking on this eventful day,&mdash;though my recollections would doubtless
+have been more poignant, if I had failed to do so,&mdash;and of which I can
+at least certify that it was sumptuous and well-served, since the
+luxurious habits of life enjoyed on these floating hotels of the
+Hutchesons are proverbial, and the flavor of good cheer still clings to
+my palate, especially that of the daily "salmon so fresh as still to
+retain its creamy curd."</p>
+
+<p>The approach to Iona, Icolmkill, or Colmeskill, as it is variously
+termed, has in it nothing imposing, if we except the ancient Abbey,
+already descried at a distance, and the neighboring ruins, the simple
+fact of whose presence in this lonely isle is suggestive of all that has
+given interest and sanctity to this cradle of Christianity in Britain.
+On landing at the rude pier, formed of masses of gneiss and granite
+boulders, we find ourselves opposite the modern village, a row of some
+forty cottages, running parallel with the shore,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span> and, as is the case in
+nearly all Scotch villages, including both an established and a free
+church. We have scarcely set foot on the beach before we have a
+verification of Wordsworth's experience:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"How sad a welcome! To each voyager<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Some ragged child holds up for sale a store<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of wave-worn pebbles, pleading on the shore<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Where once came monk and nun with gentle stir,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Blessings to give, news ask, or suit prefer."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>But I have no heart to find fault with this small fry of the modern
+fishing-town, whose trade in pressed sea-weeds, shells, and stones is
+now so extensive that near the ruins they have established rival
+counters, and are a most clamorous set of persecutors; for I still have
+pleasure in looking on the really precious and suggestive mementos of
+the place which they thrust upon me, a willing victim.</p>
+
+<p>A little to the rear of the village, though still nearly on a level with
+the beach, are the ruins, to which we are guided by Archibald Macdonald,
+chief boatman, and authorized to act as our cicerone. In setting forth
+on our explorations, we must premise that little now remains to mark the
+age of the Culdees and the simple life of St. Columba and those
+companions of his apostolic zeal who first settled in Iona, and thence,
+going forth in pilgrim fashion and with the endurance of pilgrim
+hardships, diffused Christianity through Britain. A huge mound, or
+cairn, yet marks the place where the missionaries first landed; and
+there are still, in a remote part of the island, vestiges of the rude
+dwelling-place or cell in which the Culdees first made their abode and
+set up the cross as a luminary for the yet uncivilized nations. With the
+exception of these rude vestiges, the tradition of their virtues and the
+results of their self-sacrificing labors are their only memorial. But
+the standard which they planted followers of later ages have continued
+to maintain; and the monastic buildings, now more or less ruinous, and
+marking successive eras of Church history, are all of great antiquity,
+many being of a date so remote that the records of them are merely
+traditional. But wherever the pilgrim turns his eye or sets his foot,
+voices whisper to him that this is holy ground. The very silence and
+mystery which inwrap the place have a tendency to exalt the soul; and
+although doubts may arise in regard to some of the traditions, and
+incredulity may condemn others as simply mythical, faith so often
+becomes sight, and the essence of faith is so triumphant everywhere, as
+to make us feel, with the great moralist, that "that man is little to be
+envied whose patriotism would not gain force upon the plain of Marathon,
+or whose piety would not grow warmer among the ruins of Iona."</p>
+
+<p>Our first visit is to the Nunnery, of which the chapel only remains
+standing. The style of its architecture is Norman, and it probably dates
+no farther back than the beginning of the thirteenth century. The tomb
+of the Princess Anna, the last prioress, is still preserved, though much
+defaced by the rude feet of soulless tourists. Her figure is sculptured
+in bas-relief on the stone, and the mirror and comb which are introduced
+as symbolic of the female sex suggest that instinct of decoration
+inherent in woman, and which, if superfluous anywhere, certainly would
+be so in a nunnery at Iona. There is a sad interest in the remains of
+this sanctuary, the only refuge for innocence and gentleness in a
+barbarous age, when many a votary was doubtless driven hither by motives
+similar to those which actuated the fair maid of Lorn, of whom Sir
+Walter Scott tells us,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"The maid has given her maiden heart<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">To Ronald of the Isles;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And, fearful lest her brother's word<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Bestow her on that English lord,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">She seeks Iona's piles;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And wisely deems it best to dwell<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A vot'ress in the holy cell,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Until these feuds, so fierce and fell,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">The abbot reconciles."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>"The cemetery of the nunnery," as we learn on the authority of Dr.
+Johnson, and at the date of his visit, "was, till very lately, regarded
+with such reverence that only women were buried in it." And how the
+burly speech and rugged<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span> bluntness characteristic of the old philosopher
+are softened and atoned for, to my thinking, when he adds, "These relics
+of veneration always produce some mournful pleasure. I could have
+forgiven a great injury more easily than the violation of this imaginary
+sanctity."</p>
+
+<p>Next to its renown as an ancient seat of piety and learning, it is as a
+burial-place that Iona is chiefly known and venerated. Though it is
+difficult now to identify the tombs of kings, or to distinguish them
+from those of the humbler individuals who have found a last
+resting-place in Reilig Orain, the burial-place of St. Oran, it is
+unquestionably true that the sanctity of the island gave it a preference
+over any other spot as a place of sepulture, especially for royalty,&mdash;a
+preference, doubtless, partly due to the belief in an ancient Ga&euml;lic
+prophecy, which foretold that before the end of the world "the sea at
+one tide shall cover Ireland and the green-headed Islay, but Columba's
+Isle shall swim above the flood."</p>
+
+<p>Forty Scottish kings are said to have been interred in Iona, among whom
+we have Shakspeare's authority for including King Duncan.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"<i>Rosse.</i> Where is Duncan's body?<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"<i>Macd.</i> Carried to Colmeskill,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The sacred storehouse of his predecessors,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And guardian of their bones."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Among the monuments of Christianity in Iona, none are more conspicuous
+and eloquent than the numerous crosses, of which the original number is
+said to have been three hundred and sixty. Most of them have been
+ruthlessly carried away or demolished. For myself, much as I deplore the
+Vandalism which has mutilated nearly all these sacred memorials, I can
+well dispense with the other three hundred and fifty-nine crosses for
+the sake of the vivid recollection, I may almost say consciousness, I
+have of one, that of St. Martin, which stands upright and in good
+preservation just at the entrance of the cathedral inclosure, and
+produces a solemn effect upon the mind of every reverential beholder. It
+consists of a solid column of mica schist, fourteen feet in height,
+fixed in a massive pedestal of red granite, and is of substantial rather
+than graceful proportions. It is carved in high relief, and on one side
+is sculptured with emblematic devices, of which the Virgin and Child,
+surrounded by cherubs, occupy the central place. But its most
+characteristic feature is its antiquity, enhanced to the eye by the gray
+lichens and the rust of time, with which it is so incrusted that it
+presents a hoary and venerable aspect, and seems the embodiment of that
+ancient faith to which the whole island is consecrated. Here saints and
+abbots of distant ages have knelt and wept and prayed, and caught the
+inspiration for their labor of love, and here still, if we listen to the
+voices in our hearts, we may hear the Spirit's whisper, and he who runs
+may read the everliving sermon written on the old gray stone.</p>
+
+<p>We have now gained the Cathedral, by far the best preserved and most
+imposing of the ruined edifices of Iona,&mdash;a building which exhibits
+various styles of architecture, and which is probably of more recent
+construction than the other monastic or ecclesiastical monuments. It is
+cruciform, and the square tower at the intersection, about seventy feet
+in height, remains entire. The building is unroofed: for here, as in the
+case of every other ancient structure on the island, every particle of
+wood-work has been carried away, that material being too precious in
+Iona to escape being converted to utilitarian purposes. The dimensions
+of the cathedral or abbey church are spacious, and it boasted, even in
+recent centuries, a noble altar and many other decorations, of which it
+has been despoiled,&mdash;partly, no doubt, by the inhabitants of the island;
+but tourists and pilgrims to the place are in no slight degree
+responsible for these depredations, since, in their eagerness for
+mementos, they have mercilessly robbed and mutilated it, and it is
+prophesied, that, in spite of every possible precaution, many of the
+interesting memorials of antiquity in Iona will soon be unrecognizable
+or will have ceased to exist.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The tomb of Abbot Mackinnon, who died in 1500, though greatly defaced,
+still exhibits a sculptured figure of its occupant, thought to do much
+credit to the art of that period; and the largest monument in the
+island, that of Macleod of Macleod, is still preserved. It is in this
+church that the celebrated "Black Stones" of Iona were kept, on which
+the old Highland chieftains were accustomed to take oaths of contract or
+allegiance, and for which they entertained so sincere a reverence that
+oaths thus ratified were never broken. Dr. Johnson observes,&mdash;"In those
+days of violence and rapine, it was of great importance to impress upon
+savage minds the sanctity of an oath, by some particular and
+extraordinary circumstances. They would not have recourse to the black
+stones upon small or common occasions; and when they had established
+their faith by this tremendous sanction, inconstancy and treachery were
+no longer feared."</p>
+
+<p>Though neither the ancient structures nor the modern village of Iona are
+situated much above the sea-level, and are so near to the shore as to
+constitute the foreground of the picture, as seen from the usual
+landing-place, the island is not without its highlands, which rise to a
+considerable elevation immediately behind the village, some bold cliffs
+even obtruding themselves upon our return pathway to the steamer: for I
+can recall the picturesque effect produced upon the landscape by the
+figure of one of the Baronet's daughters, seated at her ease upon the
+summit of a huge, precipitous rock, her sketch-book in her lap, and her
+pencil busily delineating the prospect in our direction. I scarcely
+think, however, that, like the travelling photographer, she dreamed of
+including her fellow-tourists in her sketch-book of reminiscences, any
+more than I then anticipated the day when I should be tempted to
+illustrate mine by her own and her sister's portraits.</p>
+
+<p>I believe some rare ferns are to be found in Iona; it includes in its
+vegetable kingdom one hawthorn, and a species of dwarf-oak is said to
+occur there sparingly; but I cannot remember seeing even the most
+inferior specimen of a tree upon the island. Bareness, desolation, is
+its one characteristic,&mdash;a feature from which the meanness and poverty
+of the row of village huts by no means detracts. As, once more
+re-embarked on our steamer, we take a final view of Iona, the external
+impression is meagre and poor indeed. So much the warmer and more
+animated, then, is the glow of enthusiasm and gratitude with which we
+dwell on the piety and self-sacrifice of those saints of old with whose
+memory the Blessed Isle is still fragrant. Nor are the piety and zeal of
+God's saints perpetuated chiefly by ecclesiastical monuments, or
+embalmed in human hearts alone; for,</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i6">"when, subjected to a common doom<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of mutability, those far-famed piles<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Shall disappear from both the sister Isles,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Iona's saints, forgetting not past days,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Garlands shall wear of amaranthine bloom,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">While heaven's vast sea of voices chants their praise."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Is it the weariness of body entailed on us by our pilgrimages among the
+wonders of Staffa and the ruins of Iona,&mdash;is it the mind overtasked by
+the effort to grasp and comprehend so much of interest and novelty,&mdash;or
+is it the soul tuned to deeper thoughts and holier sympathies than are
+wont to engage it, which steeps us for the remainder of our voyage in
+the luxury of repose? A mingling of all, I suspect. And happily the
+sentiment seems universal. Christie, who, warned by her painful
+experience of the steamer's oscillations, as she swung like a pendulum
+on the sea-swell off Staffa, has been only too glad to accompany us on
+shore at Iona, is not only relieved of her sea-sickness, but insured for
+the rest of the trip. Somehow she, the Bailie, and I find ourselves
+among that large proportion of our company who have gradually migrated
+to the forward part of the boat, where, forgetful of the
+conventionalities which have hitherto restrained us, we are grouped on
+the fore-deck in whatever listless or indolent attitude the prevailing
+mood may suggest. The August afternoon is drawing to a close, and the
+sun is declining. Our share in the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span> day's labor&mdash;though it be but
+laborious pleasure&mdash;is done; the remainder of the task devolves on the
+Pioneer, and, while she ploughs the waves, we have but to rest,
+meditate, and congratulate ourselves and one another. There is a hum of
+merry voices from the knot of gay young Scots, whose spirits are toned
+down, not damped, by the experiences of the day. Our English girls, with
+their young brother, are prettily grouped on the deck-floor, the latter
+stretched at the feet of the youngest girl, and exchanging with her
+those sweet confidences which always exist between a chivalrous boy and
+the sister nearest his own age. Their confiding parents have remained
+aft, as have a majority of the elders of the company; but, though youth,
+freedom, and high natural spirits preponderate at our end of the boat,
+peace seems to be brooding over us with dove-like wings.</p>
+
+<p>We are still skirting the bold, precipitous shores of Mull, the central
+loadstone which has kept us all day to our course, and now and then our
+attention is especially engrossed by the view of her rugged cliffs,
+terrible in winter's storms, and her natural arches of basalt, through
+which the sea washes at high-water, and which betray in every feature a
+family likeness to great Staffa. But for the most part our hearts and
+thoughts now are with the past, and gratitude and thanksgiving are
+welling up within us for a day on which sunshine, fair breezes, and a
+prosperous voyage have combined with Nature's most glorious revelations
+and humanity's holiest relics in opening up to us pleasures and
+privileges beyond compare. Or, if a thought of the future mingles with
+our meditations, it is the rapturous thought that these gifts of
+Providence once ours are ours for a life-time.</p>
+
+<p>At length, a softening of the majestic landscape, a contraction from the
+sea's wide expanse into comparatively still waters, and, bidding
+farewell to Mull, we have entered the Sound of Kerrera, and the great
+island is hid from us by its less imposing sister, Kerrera Island, the
+same that land-locks the Bay of Oban. We have but to make our way
+through the picturesque channel, whose scenery is already familiar to
+our eyes, and now Dunolly, the moss-crowned warder of the bay, greets us
+once more, her friendly face, as we sweep into our little harbor,
+seeming to hail us with a "Welcome Home!"</p>
+
+<p>Home to the Caledonian, where a "towsy tea," as my Scotch friends would
+term it, awaits the tired and hungry travellers: a motley, substantial
+meal: fowls of the daintiest,&mdash;fresh herring, never eaten in such
+perfection as on the Hebridean coast,&mdash;honey-comb of the tint of burnt
+umber,&mdash;fragrant, ambrosial honey, the very juice of the heather, the
+crystallized sun and dew in which these unshadowed hills bask and bathe
+without let or hindrance.</p>
+
+<p>Then a stroll round the bay and along the white sea-wall, now glistening
+in the moonlight, and then to bed, to dream perhaps of Ossian's heroes,
+of storm-swept castles, of old monkish rites, and of the ocean
+cathedral's eternal chant,&mdash;dreams which, however varied and strange,
+can lull the spirit into no softer illusions, can rouse it to no wilder
+ecstasies than the reality of our experience in our twelve hours' sail
+round Mull.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="JOHN_BRIGHT_AND_THE_ENGLISH_RADICALS" id="JOHN_BRIGHT_AND_THE_ENGLISH_RADICALS"></a>JOHN BRIGHT AND THE ENGLISH RADICALS.</h2>
+
+
+<p>In the June number of this magazine a review of the career of Richard
+Cobden presented the lifelong activity and loftiness of purpose which
+distinguished that great man, whom we have so recently been called to
+mourn. It is our purpose to record something of his friend and ally, Mr.
+Bright, whose devotion to America has led him for once to raise his
+voice in vindication of war, as the only method of preserving liberty.</p>
+
+<p>John Bright was born at Greenbank, near the thrifty town of Rochdale, on
+the 16th of November, 1811. His father was Mr. Jacob Bright, a gentleman
+who, by his own exertions, had risen from humble means to wealth, in the
+vocation of a cotton manufacturer. John was the second of eleven
+children, the oldest of whom died in infancy. The family were devoted
+members of the Society of Friends, and the subject of this sketch still
+adheres to the hereditary faith. John's health, during childhood, caused
+much solicitude to his parents. His constitution was apparently feeble,
+and it was found that study injured his already delicate system. At the
+age of fifteen he was taken from school, and placed in his father's
+counting-room. Mr. Jacob Bright was a shrewd, yet highly honorable man,
+entirely engrossed in the superintendence of his business, and an adept
+in the conduct of his manufactory. It was his ambition that his sons
+should follow in his footsteps, and should become, like himself,
+influential members of the commercial community. He doubtless
+underrated, as the class to which he belonged are apt to do in England,
+the value of a university education; and as soon as the boys reached the
+suitable age, they were set to work in the mills. Had John Bright
+received the culture which a residence at Oxford or Cambridge would have
+afforded him, he would doubtless have occupied a place in the first rank
+of that group of accomplished statesmen who now grace either House of
+Parliament, and whose elegant erudition is as conspicuous as their
+enlightened statecraft. As it was, we find him spending his youth at the
+desk, learning how to buy and sell, and how to rule the miniature
+commonwealth which an English manufactory presents. In the discharge of
+these duties he proved himself skilful, prompt, and energetic.</p>
+
+<p>As he grew to manhood, however, a new interest and a new ambition awoke
+within him. He had always been more of a thinker than the other members
+of his family. When scarcely twenty, he had addressed the people of
+Rochdale in favor of the great Reform of 1832, and with the effect of
+giving him at that early age a local popularity. He had seemingly thrown
+his vigorous mind into the study of the complex elements of the
+Constitution, with especial reference to those parts which affected
+commerce and manufactures. From such studies he had become the confirmed
+disciple of those doctrines which, with a narrower view to
+self-interest, the commercial class almost universally adopted. When the
+passage of the Reform Bill had quieted for a while the agitation on that
+score, Mr. Bright, his interest being now thoroughly awakened to the
+excitements of a public career, turned his attention to the Temperance
+question, then much mooted in the larger towns. The idea of total
+abstinence was at that time new to Englishmen, and Mr. Bright was one of
+the earliest champions of that principle, which has since attracted so
+many powerful orators, and which has reclaimed so many from the
+debasement of the cup. In the year 1835, Mr. Bright, with a view to
+extending his experience, and in order to observe the systems of other
+nations, made the tour of the Continent, extending his travels to Athens
+and Palestine. On his return, he was invited to lecture before the local
+Institute at<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span> Rochdale, and he delivered a series of lectures, taking as
+his subjects the observations he had made abroad. These he followed by
+another series on questions more nearly connected with the practical
+interests of his auditors,&mdash;putting before them with admirable
+perspicuity the ideas he had formed on the commercial policy of England.
+About this time contentions arose respecting the Church Rates, and Mr.
+Bright took active ground for their abolition.</p>
+
+<p>The sufferings of the manufacturing class now revived that agitation
+against the Corn-Laws which had once before engaged the earnest
+attention of the country. Mr. Bright had the patent evidence all around
+him of the misery which the inequitable adjustment of the tariff had
+created. The class over whom he had supervision were materially affected
+by this injustice. With that promptness which is one of his conspicuous
+qualities, he devoted himself to the study of the science which would
+open to him the causes, consequences, and remedies of the evils which a
+legalized monopoly had brought into existence. He found that the landed
+proprietors, whose influence in Parliament had long continued paramount
+through the protection of the Tory party, had secured laws which enabled
+them to enjoy the monopoly of the corn trade, to the practical exclusion
+of foreign competition. Prices were thus increased to such an extent, as
+to put it beyond the power of factory hands, with the wages which their
+employers could afford to pay them, to buy bread.</p>
+
+<p>The distress of the operatives from this cause was already great, and
+was constantly becoming more serious and more alarming. The lower
+classes of England have never been patient under unusual pressure. They
+are prone to take redress by violent resistance to law. Thus the
+agricultural ascendency threatened to drive the rival element to
+desperation. The Tories, led by Wellington, already obnoxious from their
+long opposition to Reform, steadily maintained the existing laws, and
+continued to be the devoted partisans of the landed interest. The
+aristocratic Whigs, who were in power under Viscount Melbourne, and who
+were reaping the fruit of a reform carried by the cooperation of
+popular leaders, were reluctant to do more than make slight
+modifications,&mdash;modifications which still left the evil great and
+dangerous. At this juncture, a new force sprang up, which from small
+beginnings finally effected a total revolution in the economical policy
+of the Government. This was the Anti-Corn-Law League. It was instituted
+by a number of liberal noblemen and gentlemen in Parliament, who had the
+sense to perceive, and the wisdom to provide for, the gloomy crisis
+which seemed to be impending. Charles Pelham Villiers, a son of the Earl
+of Clarendon, and one of the ablest of the younger generation of
+statesmen, was the most prominent leader. The object of the association
+was to organize a crusade against agricultural tyranny, and to effect
+the abrogation of the odious laws by which farmers grew rich by starving
+manufacturers. As usual with all organizations for reform, the League at
+first met with clamorous denunciation from all quarters, was sneered at
+in Parliament, and laughed at by the great proprietors. But it grew
+rapidly. Every day people awakened more and more to the increasing
+necessity. The champions of the League, spreading among the rural
+communities, eloquently and convincingly pointed out the great evils
+which they sought to eradicate. They were untiring in their exertions,
+and their success was beyond their best hopes.</p>
+
+<p>The great advantage to be gained by keeping their cause in constant
+agitation before the public made the Leaguers desirous to employ active
+and eloquent orators. John Bright, in his twenty-seventh year, began to
+speak in advocacy of commercial reform in his own neighborhood. The
+League heard of him, called him to their assistance, and he became one
+of their authorized speakers. This was a triumph not a little flattering
+to a young merchant<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span> whose training had been in a manufactory, and to
+whom the field of forensic eloquence was entirely new. He was thoroughly
+convinced, both from observation and from a naturally quick reason, that
+the principles of which he was now to be a public advocate were just and
+practical. His whole soul was in the effort to alleviate suffering, and
+to find a balance between interests which had been, but were not of
+necessity, conflicting. With that hearty zeal which has ever since
+marked his public career, he entered the political arena, turned over to
+his partners the affairs of the firm, and devoted himself to the study
+and exposition of the new commercial theories. Through the influence of
+the League, he obtained opportunities to speak in many considerable
+places; and he every-day increased his reputation as a vigorous reasoner
+and a pleasing speaker. He went boldly into the agricultural districts,
+where the hard-headed old Tories who believed in Wellington formed his
+audiences, and put to them unwelcome truths which they found it hard to
+swallow. On one occasion he appeared before a large assemblage at
+Drury-Lane Theatre, when the effect of his eloquence was such that his
+name became immediately known throughout the kingdom. Copies of the
+speech were distributed by order of the League, and Bright found himself
+in demand from all quarters. Working in concert with Villiers, Morpeth,
+and the other leaders, he assisted in instituting branches of the League
+in the principal cities. Besides his unquestioned ability as an orator,
+he had one advantage which most of his co-workers did not possess,&mdash;he
+was emphatically a man of the people. He came out from the busy
+community in which he was born and reared, to labor for the people.
+Those who might distrust a Villiers or a Howard,&mdash;who might suspect that
+an agitation set on foot by noblemen was designed for selfish ends,&mdash;who
+might be indifferent to those whom they had been accustomed to regard as
+political schemers,&mdash;would trust and follow one who threw aside his
+commercial vocation and came forward to sustain that commercial interest
+in which he himself was concerned. He could gain the ear and reason of
+many who would not listen to one whose profession was political
+agitation. Thus his influence became considerable; his origin reassuring
+his hearers, his eloquence charming them, and his honesty and
+earnestness commanding their sympathy and approval.</p>
+
+<p>The rapid spread of Free-Trade principles, resulting from the organized
+efforts of the League, and from the demonstration, which actual
+occurrences confirmed, that the farming monopoly could not continue,
+gave the leaders of the League much importance in Parliament. The Whigs,
+nay, even the more moderate Tories, began to profess conversion to
+Free-Trade doctrines. When Parliament was dissolved in 1841, both
+parties went to the country on the issue of Free-Trade or Protection.
+Sir Robert Peel, who afterward became the patriotic instrument by which
+the Corn-Laws fell, represented those who adhered to Protection and the
+agricultural interest. Lord Melbourne came forward as the advocate of
+those principles which the League had been the first to avow, and which
+as Premier he had not been anxious to put in practice. Notwithstanding
+the Reform of 1832, the landed nobility still retained a large control
+in the composition of the House of Commons. Peel had organized the
+Conservatives with great tact, and the ministry of Melbourne was
+suffering from the weakness of internal dissension. The result of the
+election was, that Peel's candidates were so generally successful that
+he gained a clear working majority in the House, and he consequently
+became Prime-Minister.</p>
+
+<p>It was soon after the Conservatives thus attained office that John
+Bright came forward as a candidate for Parliament in the northern city
+of Durham. The Free-Traders were wise enough to seek the assistance of
+the best men their ranks could furnish. Bright, it was universally
+thought, would be a valuable auxiliary, coming as he did from the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span>
+mercantile class, and possessing a clear mind and ready tongue. Durham
+was conservative by tradition. In 1843 the city rejected Bright; but in
+1844, so rapid was the growth of Liberalism, that the same constituency
+returned him to the House of Commons by a handsome majority.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile Sir Robert Peel, elected and supported by Protectionists, was
+gradually turning his steps toward the more liberal policy which his
+opponents had advocated. Soon after assuming office, he had proposed a
+modification of the tariff. The Duke of Buckingham, representing the
+extreme wing of the Protectionists, resigned in alarm. The Premier did
+not falter, but approached still nearer the Free-Trade standard. Lord
+Stanley, a stronger man than Buckingham, retired from the council-board.
+When John Bright entered Parliament, Peel was rapidly coming to the
+abolition of the Corn-Laws. Bright at once mingled in the debates, which
+now daily absorbed the attention of the House, on the one question
+before the country. The little band of Leaguers stood in the front rank
+of the opposition. They were pressing Sir Robert, by steady and
+oft-repeated appeals, to make the final concession. To the voices of
+Villiers, Morpeth, Russell, Gibson, were added the sonorous tones of the
+merchant-orator, and he maintained the debate with the best, whether of
+friends or foes. He reasoned with such clearness, he brought the evils
+of the corn monopoly so vividly before the minds of his auditors, he
+pressed the necessity and justice of its abrogation with such power of
+argument, that from that day he took rank as one of the first speakers
+and logicians in the lower House.</p>
+
+<p>Sir Robert soon threw aside all party and selfish considerations, and
+did fearlessly what his judgment convinced him was urgently demanded by
+the interests of the country. He proposed the repeal of the Corn-Laws.
+He thus exhibited a rare spirit for an English statesman,&mdash;a spirit of
+self-sacrifice for the public good. His old associates assailed him with
+bitter, powerful eloquence. The Whigs, whose thunder he had stolen,
+looked with the coldness of partisan selfishness upon his conversion to
+their views. But in spite of every discouragement, he carried that
+magnanimous measure through both Houses by his influence as First Lord
+of the Treasury. Hardly ever during the present century has Parliament
+been more electrified by stirring and splendid contests of forensic
+genius than during these debates on the repeal. And in these debates
+John Bright proved a worthy competitor to Disraeli, whose caustic
+oratory was justly feared,&mdash;and to Stanley, whose excellence in
+rejoinder made him to be regarded as the equal of Fox in extempore
+debate.</p>
+
+<p>The fall of Sir Robert Peel, who could not retain power whilst Tories
+and Whigs were alike arrayed against him, was followed by the elevation
+of Lord John Russell and his Whig friends to the ministry. Several of
+the leaders of the League accepted office; but John Bright received no
+overtures from the new Premier. No thought of personal ambition, indeed,
+seems to have entered into his views. Possessing that independence and
+fearlessness which men of his origin are apt to exhibit, and deeply
+interested in the new field in which he found himself, his sole desire
+seems to have been to arrive at a knowledge of what would most benefit
+his country. In this search, he rejected all party creeds. He declined
+to put himself under a pledge to abide by the will of a caucus. He
+considered himself bound by no precedent which was unjust, committed to
+no policy which did not have a present reason. He was ready to act with
+the party that sustained, in each individual case, the measure which he
+considered right; nor would he hesitate to vote with those with whom he
+usually found himself at variance, if they brought forward measures
+which his judgment approved.</p>
+
+<p>At the time Lord Russell came into power, Mr. Bright was regarded as
+opposed to the Established Church and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span> to the House of Lords, as
+favorable to a system of general suffrage, and as decidedly
+anti-monarchical in political theory. With opinions so radical the
+aristocratic Whigs were the last to have any sympathy. They were much
+less likely to encourage that class of politicians than their old
+antagonists, the Tories. The reason is evident. Radicalism, by startling
+the masses by the novelty of its doctrines, and thus driving a large
+majority to seek certain safety under the protection of the Tories, had
+kept the Whigs out of Whitehall for half a century. John Wilkes and
+Horne Tooke secured Pitt in his power. Francis Burdett and his
+confederates faithfully served Liverpool. If Lord Russell should
+recognize the later Radicals by calling one of their leaders to his
+counsels, he might well fear a defection far outweighing the
+acquisition. Thus Mr. Bright, an active participant in the contest for
+Free Trade, which had just resulted in a complete victory, cheerfully
+continued to be simply an independent commoner, representing the
+constituency of Durham,&mdash;free to judge, and to speak his honest
+thought,&mdash;at liberty to advocate reforms more thorough than ministers
+dared to propose,&mdash;ready to represent the feelings and wants of that
+great multitude of Englishmen to whom the timeworn restrictions of the
+franchise prohibited a voice in the Government,&mdash;anxious to keep ideas
+in agitation which needed stout hearts and steady heads to maintain them
+in existence.</p>
+
+<p>In 1847, the ministers having caused his defeat as member for Durham, he
+became the successful contestant for the seat for Manchester. This
+metropolis of manufacture was then the centre, as it is now, of extreme
+liberal notions. The fame of Mr. Bright, who had gone forth into public
+life from its immediate neighborhood, was grateful to a district which
+sorely needed such an advocate. He continued to represent Manchester
+through the Parliament which sustained and finally ousted Lord John
+Russell. In 1852, when the Premier, joining issue with Lord Derby,
+(formerly Lord Stanley,) went to the country, Mr. Bright again stood for
+Manchester, and was gratified by receiving a majority of eleven hundred.
+It was the just reward of labors incessant and courageous, to keep the
+interests of the constituency always before the legislature, and to
+bring about that system of equality to which they were thoroughly
+devoted. Mr. Bright continued to represent Manchester until 1857. During
+the session of that year, the late Mr. Cobden, the earnest co-worker
+with Mr. Bright, brought forward a motion condemnatory of the Chinese
+War, then transpiring under the conduct of Lord Palmerston's Government.
+The House divided against the minister. The Radicals and Conservatives
+were in a majority. Palmerston dissolved Parliament, and appealed to the
+nation. Bright once more went before his constituents, on the issue of
+war or peace with China. His notions respecting the iniquity of war in
+general, which resulted from his Quaker education, and his opinion that
+this attack on the Celestial Empire was especially unjustifiable, were
+not welcome to the electors of Manchester. His opponent, like himself a
+radical Whig, but an advocate of the war, was returned by five thousand
+votes. In 1859 Palmerston being again forced to the expedient of a new
+election, Mr. Bright was invited to stand as a candidate for the
+constituency of Birmingham, by whom he was returned to Parliament, where
+he has since continued to represent them. Here he has been very active
+in the advocacy of his own peculiar doctrines, some of which have within
+a few years gained much in public estimation. Independent of all
+parties, he votes usually with the ministry, but sometimes follows Mr.
+Disraeli and Lord Stanley below the bar on a division of the House.</p>
+
+<p>This record of eighteen years in the House of Commons is certainly a
+remarkable one. While constantly opposing both of the great parties, Mr.
+Bright has won the respect of all. His ability as a logician and as an
+effective speaker, and his evident honesty<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span> and earnestness of purpose,
+are conceded by every one. The courage and persistency with which he has
+upheld unpopular doctrines compel the admiration of those who recoil
+from the changes which he seeks to effect. It is not too much to say
+that his character has greatly enhanced the influence of those for whom
+he acts, and of whom he is the unquestioned leader. The Radicals were a
+mere handful when Bright entered Parliament. They are now beginning to
+be feared. Several of the largest and most prosperous cities regularly
+send Radical members to Westminster. Some of the profoundest thinkers in
+England are inclined to admit that the time is approaching when Radical
+ideas shall become practical. Many of them already declare these ideas
+to be abstractly just. The English are getting <i>accustomed</i> to Radical
+doctrines. In due time they will be ready to pass a fair judgment upon
+them.</p>
+
+<p>The progressive party in a nation too often possesses leaders who, being
+low-born, are coarse and lawless, or who seek to foster discontent by an
+artful demagoguism. A good cause is often discountenanced and rendered
+futile by reason of the ignorance or wickedness of those who have been
+prominent in its advocacy. John Wilkes and Thomas Paine scandalized the
+cause of progress in their time by the profligacy of their lives and the
+badness of their motives. So did Robespierre and Danton by the cruel
+ambition which actuated them. The character of such men naturally
+frightened people of honest intentions from their leadership; while the
+extremities to which they carried their views deterred men of practical
+sense from upholding them. The reformers of the present generation,
+however, exhibit traits which command respect. They pursue a course
+which, if not altogether moderate or suited to the times, is evidently
+grounded upon deductions of thoughtful reason.</p>
+
+<p>If we were to compress the description of Mr. Bright's character into a
+few words, we should say he was honest, earnest, fearless, eloquent. He
+is honest; for he casts aside the objects of personal ambition in a life
+devotion to an unpopular cause. He is earnest; for he is constant to his
+faith, untiring in the effort to instil it into the community. He is
+fearless,&mdash;morally fearless; for he permits no obstacle, no obloquy, no
+powerful antagonism, to check him in the expression of unwelcome
+thoughts. He is eloquent; inasmuch as he stands up amid the silence of
+the most critical and restless legislature in the world, and compels
+members to listen, without interruption, to ideas which in the opinion
+of the vast majority are hateful and destructive. His character, as it
+has been displayed by a consistent public record, bears the stamp of
+truth and ingenuousness. He is candid, almost to a fault. He has no
+subtle statecraft; he recognizes no code of expediency. He is impatient
+of that spirit which actuates statesmen as a class to sacrifice
+something of good for the practical attainment even of a worthy end,&mdash;a
+spirit which, for our own part, we cannot wholly disapprove. While as a
+business man his integrity is perfectly unimpeachable, as a legislator
+his opponents have only to fear his strong and indignant eloquence: they
+are safe from any thrust which is not open and manly. He was not
+destined to become a great statesman: he is too rash, too little
+tolerant of antagonistic opinion, too much inclined to absolute
+conclusions, too open by nature in giving expression to his thoughts. In
+the demolishing process which properly precedes, in a long-established
+polity, the constructing process, he has every quality which would fit
+him to be a leader. His Quaker blood is of little avail in making him
+sit in patience whilst deep social wrongs stare him in the face on every
+side. The uprising of the people, especially that peaceable uprising to
+which the English people are by nature and precedent inclined to resort,
+seeking to cure by prompt action what statesmanship has failed to mend,
+would give him the best of opportunities. Quaker though he is, he would
+revel in taking the van of a lawful<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span> reformation aimed at the abuses he
+hates so heartily. So far as the expunging of an iniquitous law from the
+statute-book goes, his work would be well done; but when the time came
+to fill up the page with a new and just enactment, it would be his part
+to yield to more deliberate and judicious counsels. Like Lord Brougham,
+he is great in opposition. He can defend well; he can attack far better.
+Aggressive warfare is his forte. He is as positive in his theological
+and social as in his political opinions. He is a practical
+philanthropist, leads a life of strict probity and temperance, and seeks
+his pleasure, as well as his duty, in benefiting the human race. He
+carries the nervousness and enthusiasm of his public displays into the
+amenities of private life. Hearty in his friendships, and affable in
+social intercourse, he is liked by most persons and respected by all. He
+possesses in a remarkable degree that faculty which is considered as the
+trait of an accomplished gentleman,&mdash;the faculty of putting you at once
+at your ease. In temperament impulsive, he is perhaps too little mindful
+of the feelings of others, and somewhat careless of his expressions when
+pursuing a subject in which his attention is engrossed. In his manner
+there is a blunt sincerity which one who is in his company for the first
+time is apt to mistake almost for ill-temper. It, however, results from
+his entirely candid disposition, his rigidly practical and business
+education, and his carelessness of forms,&mdash;by no means from a want of
+kindliness or an intention to be discourteous.</p>
+
+<p>A first glance gives one a very good impression of Mr. Bright's
+character. He is of medium height, a little inclined to corpulency,
+and quick and nervous in his movements. His eye is full of
+intelligence,&mdash;small, bright, and sharp, apparently powerful to read
+another through the countenance. Its expression is, perhaps, a little
+hard; it seems to search your thought, and to detect the bent of your
+mind. His face is a true British face,&mdash;round and full, with firmly set
+mouth, positive chin, and that peculiar sort of <i>hauteur</i> which is a
+national characteristic. His hair, somewhat gray, is brushed off his
+forehead, which is broad and admirably proportioned; and he wears
+whiskers on the side of his face, like most middle-aged Englishmen. His
+voice is clear, his enunciation rapid, yet distinct, and his choice of
+words exact,&mdash;excellent, indeed, for one self-educated in the correct
+use of language.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Bright is very attractive as an orator. When it is known that he is
+to speak, the galleries are insufficient to hold the multitude which
+gathers to hear him. His delivery is prompt and easy. He has none of
+that hesitation and apparent timidity which mark the address of many
+English orators; but neither, on the other hand, does he possess that
+rich and fascinating intonation which forces us to concede the forensic
+palm to Mr. Gladstone of all contemporary Englishmen. He expresses
+himself with boldness, sometimes almost with rudeness. His declamation
+is fresh, vigorous, and almost always even. At times he is unable to
+preserve the moderation of language and manner which retains the mastery
+over impulse; his indignation carries him away; his denunciation becomes
+overwhelming; his full voice rings out, trembling with agitation, as he
+exposes some wrongful or defends some good measure: then his vigorous
+nature appears, unadorned by cultivated graces, but admirable for its
+manliness and strength. This impetuosity, which is so prominent a
+characteristic of his oratory, is in marked contrast with the manner of
+the late Mr. Cobden, his friend and co&ouml;perator. Mr. Cobden was always
+guarded, cautious, and studiously accurate, in his language. Mr. Bright
+often says things, in the excitement of controversy, which exaggerate
+his real sentiments, and which may be used to misrepresent his opinions.
+Mr. Cobden, whose temperament was more phlegmatic, was careful to avoid
+any undue heat of speech, and hence often passed, erroneously, for a
+more moderate thinker than Mr. Bright.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It is with pleasure that we turn for a moment to speak of Mr. Bright's
+course towards America, and especially while we were suffering under the
+plague of civil war. Ever since he entered public life, his admiration
+of our institutions and history has been frequently the subject of his
+discourse. He has not hesitated to declare that feeling when he must
+have been aware how unwelcome it was to the greater part of his
+countrymen. He has, indeed, recognized in our success the practical
+attainment of those views to which he has so long been devoted, and
+which his experience as a public man seems only to have confirmed. His
+magnanimous mind has scornfully rejected that too prevalent English
+characteristic,&mdash;envy at the growing power of a sister nation. He has
+only seen in our progress a benefit and an example to mankind. As such
+he has gloried in it, and not the less because we are a kindred race and
+an offshoot from British civilization. The fact that we have been the
+inheritors and partakers of the glories of the English nation, which
+seems to increase the asperity with which many English statesmen now
+regard us, is to Mr. Bright a greater reason why sympathy should be
+extended to us. His speeches on America manifest a thorough knowledge of
+our history and of the spirit of our Constitution. He has studied us in
+the earnest desire to know and believe the truth, and faithfully to
+present to others the results of his study. We do not think it
+extravagant to say that few of our own public men evince a more
+intelligent knowledge of our record than Mr. Bright: certainly in this
+respect he is far in advance of the leading English statesmen. When in
+1861 the Rebellion broke out, Mr. Bright raised his voice boldly against
+the non-committal policy of England, in declaring herself neutral. He
+seemed to comprehend at once the causes of the war. He correctly
+regarded the North as really on the defensive,&mdash;defending the integrity
+of the nation. He saw the cause of republican liberty trembling in the
+balance. From that day to this,&mdash;at times when public indignation ran so
+high in England that it was almost dangerous to justify the North,&mdash;at
+times when to avow Northern sentiments was to be met with a howl from
+Spithead to the Frith of Forth,&mdash;at times when his own supporters, the
+manufacturing and commercial classes, feeling sore over the want of
+cotton, bitterly complained and pleaded for intervention,&mdash;John Bright
+has been our constant, zealous, and fearless champion, braving all
+England in our cause, and never silent when we were to be vindicated. In
+the issue of the war Mr. Bright will see the fruition of the hopes of
+the lovers of liberty everywhere. He will rejoice in it as the
+successful assertion by national power of those principles which he has
+devoted his life to advocating. To his mind the assassination of Lincoln
+will appear as the legitimate fruit of Southern treason. We may be sure,
+that, whilst the press of England endeavors to divert the guilt of this
+atrocity from the heads which gave birth to it, there is one Englishman
+at least&mdash;that Englishman, John Bright&mdash;who will be bold to trace it to
+its proper source.</p>
+
+<p>We can do no better than to close this notice by quoting the conclusion
+of a speech made by Mr. Bright in December, 1861, to which our attention
+has been called during the preparation of this article.</p>
+
+<p>"Whether the Union will be restored or not, or the South will achieve an
+unhonored independence or not, I know not and I predict not. But this I
+think I know, that in a few years, a very few years, the twenty millions
+of freemen in the North will be thirty millions or fifty millions,&mdash;a
+population equal to or exceeding that of this kingdom. When that time
+comes, I pray it may not be said among them, that, in the darkest hour
+of their country's trials, England, the land of their fathers, looked on
+with icy coldness, and saw, unmoved, the perils and calamities of her
+children. As for me, I have but this to say: I am one in this audience,
+and but one in the citizenship of this country; but if all other tongues
+are silent, mine<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span> shall speak for that policy which gives hope to the
+bondsmen of the South, and tends to generous thoughts and generous words
+and generous deeds between the two great nations who speak the English
+language, and from their origin are alike entitled to the English name."</p>
+
+<p>Let Americans honor the Englishman who spoke thus nobly!</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="NEEDLE_AND_GARDEN" id="NEEDLE_AND_GARDEN"></a>NEEDLE AND GARDEN.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE STORY OF A SEAMSTRESS WHO LAID DOWN HER NEEDLE AND BECAME A
+STRAWBERRY-GIRL.</h3>
+
+<h4>WRITTEN BY HERSELF.</h4>
+
+
+<h3>CHAPTER VIII.</h3>
+
+<p>That was a long and dreary winter which succeeded this beginning of my
+experimental life. The snow fell heavily, and so frequently that my
+plants were completely hidden from view during a great part of the
+season. But, so far from doing them an injury, the fleecy mantle
+protected them from the open exposure to cold under which the strawberry
+will sometimes perish. It was a privation to me to have them thus
+entirely shut up from observation; but more than once, when the snow had
+softened under the influence of an incipient thaw, I could not refrain
+from plunging my hands into it and uncovering a plant here and there, to
+see how they were faring. So far from perishing under the continued
+cold, I found them holding up their heads with wonderful erectness,
+their leaves crisp and fresh, with an intense greenness that contrasted
+strongly with the white blanket in which Nature had kindly wrapped them.
+Thus satisfied that they were well provided for, I endeavored to check
+my impatience for the coming spring: for really it seemed the longest
+winter I had ever known.</p>
+
+<p>Both my sister and myself continued our labors at the factory, though we
+discovered evidences that even at machine-sewing there was likely to be
+some uncertainty as to continued employment at the usual remunerative
+prices. We had learned to have entire confidence in its stability; but
+symptoms were appearing that the business, in some of its branches, was
+likely to be overdone. The makers of the first machines, having sold
+immense numbers at high prices, had acquired vast fortunes. This invited
+competition, and manufactories of rival machines having been established
+by those who had invented modifications of the original idea, the
+quantity thrown upon the market was very great, while prices were so
+reduced that additional thousands were now enabled to obtain machines
+and set them to work. The competition among the makers thus gave rise to
+competition among those who used the machines. Prices of work declined
+in consequence, and of course the sewing-girls were required to bear a
+large share of this decline, in the shape of a reduction of wages. We
+could do nothing but submit, for the needle was the only staff we had to
+lean upon. If we were to continue realizing as much per week as before,
+we could do so in no other way than by working longer and more
+industriously. This fell very hard upon us during that long winter. We
+could afford no holidays, no recreation, not even to be sick. As we felt
+we had no dependence but the needle, we still clung to the idea, that,
+if we could purchase machines of our own, we should do much better<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span> But
+though now reduced in price, yet the hope of getting them grew fainter
+and fainter under the reduction of wages, and hence my growing
+impatience to achieve some more remunerative employment.</p>
+
+<p>The bright spring at last opened kindly and genially upon us. The snow
+disappeared, leaving my strawberries in the most healthy condition, and
+free from the unsightly fringe-work of dead foliage which encircles
+plants that have been compelled to go through a hard winter without
+protection. I was exultant at the promise which their vigorous
+appearance held forth. I even stole a view, through the cracks in the
+fence, at those of our disagreeable neighbors, to see if they were doing
+any better, and was gratified by finding that mine were equally thrifty.
+Fred and I contrived to stir up the ground about them with heavy rakes,
+though a harrow would have been more effective. April covered the whole
+bed with a profusion of blossoms that even our experienced neighbors
+could not exceed. They came often to our gate, and with more impudence
+than I could muster when stealing an observation through their fence,
+there they stood, two or three together, inspecting my beautiful rows
+for an hour at a time. I wondered what they could find to interest them
+so greatly, as in their eyes the sight could have been no novelty; but I
+fear, that, if surprised at my success thus far, their wonder must have
+been tinged with a jealousy that rendered the display as unpleasant to
+them as it was encouraging to me.</p>
+
+<p>No one ever watched the opening of the blossoms, their dropping off, and
+the formation of the fruit, more attentively than I did. Every spare
+hour was passed among them. The bees flew over the beds, dipping into
+one flower after another, and filling the air with a perpetual humming.
+Even at the earliest morning hour, when the sun had barely reached the
+garden, I found them at their honeyed labors. The poet who declared that
+many a flower was born to blush unseen, and waste its sweetness on the
+desert air, must have believed that the winged denizens of the air had
+no inheritance in them,&mdash;that their sweets were wasted because no human
+eye was present to admire them. I cannot agree with him; for here, when
+our garden was a solitude, with no human eye to admire its wealth of
+blossoms, they were thick with bees, and surely upon them their sweets
+were far from being wasted. The flowers must have been created as much
+for the enjoyment of nameless insects as for the gratification of man.</p>
+
+<p>As May advanced, I could see the fruit forming in clusters that gave
+token of an ample crop. But as the heat increased I found that other
+candidates for observation presented themselves in prodigious numbers,
+not near so interesting, but imperatively demanding attention. The weeds
+shot up all through and between the rows with a luxuriance that
+astonished me. The winter reading of my agricultural library had taught
+me that good strawberries cannot be expected when a rank growth of weeds
+is permitted to occupy the soil. My father's garden-tools were heavy and
+clumsy, made only for a strong man to use; but we plied the hoes
+vigorously in keeping down the interlopers. They were dull tools, with
+thick handles, unsuitable for women's use, so that the mere weight of
+the implements fatigued us more than the labor of hoeing. But all the
+family shared in this work until it was accomplished, and our ground was
+made as cleanly as that of our neighbors. Besides the extermination of a
+host of pests that sucked up the nutriment and moisture necessary to the
+plants, the operation kept the surface of the ground open and mellow,
+permitting the sun and air to penetrate, and thus stimulate the growing
+fruit into berries of superior size. I am sure that it is by attention
+to this single matter of permitting no weeds to grow that most of the
+success in strawberry-culture may be attributed.</p>
+
+<p>As I watched my fruit-laden plants as attentively as if each one had
+been an infant, it should not be wondered at<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span> that my ever-present eye
+detected the first tinge of redness that showed itself among them. No
+one can imagine with how absorbing an interest I hung over this pioneer
+evidence of complete success. I could tell which row contained it, and
+on which plant in the row a blushing cheek was held up to the sun. But
+in a day or two the identity of the ripening berry was lost, for a
+thousand of its fellows became equally ambitious of notice, changing
+their delicate green into a softened, but decided scarlet. The hot suns
+of early June were pouring down upon the sheltered spot where the plants
+were growing, and it was time for them to ripen their wealth of fruit. I
+presume that he who boasts the possession of a dozen acres of
+strawberries has never experienced sensations such as were now the
+ruling ones of my heart. Here was I&mdash;a sewing-girl&mdash;breaking through the
+ordinary routine of female occupations, and standing on the threshold of
+an enterprise considered by the world unsuited to my sex, unfeminine
+because uniformly undertaken by men, hazardous because untried by women,
+but practically within the power of all having taste and courage to
+venture upon it,&mdash;here was I about to realize the dream of a whole year,
+the reward of untold anxieties, the solution of the great problem
+whether the garden were better than the needle.</p>
+
+<p>The very day I made the discovery that the first berry had begun to
+change color, I hastened to my friend the market-woman, intending to
+tell her how finely I was coming on, and that she must be prepared to
+sell my crop. As I had no acquaintance with other strawberry-growers, I
+had little opportunity of ascertaining by comparison with them whether
+my fruit would come earlier or later into market than that of others,
+but took it for granted that mine would be first. It was the mistake of
+an ignorance which subsequent reading and observation have corrected.
+Thus, when I came up to the widow's stand in the market, I was
+confounded at seeing her sitting beside a huge wooden tray heaped up
+with ripe berries. No doubt I had seen the same thing as early in the
+season, years before, but, having no interest in the subject as a
+fruit-grower, I had never consulted dates. But now, being deeply
+interested, the effect of this prematurely early display of fruit was
+that of astonishment and disappointment. I knew that being early in the
+market was a vital point, and supposed that I was as early as the
+earliest; but here was evidence that I had been forestalled. I had
+hardly courage to inquire where these berries came from, or what price
+she was getting for them. But the crowd of purchasers around the stand
+was so great that no one would have noticed my appearance, even if my
+emotions had been written on my face. They were contending with each
+other to be served, and at seventy-five cents a quart! This much could
+be seen and heard without the trouble of inquiry. How I envied the
+grower of the precious fruit in which so many were indulging at this
+extravagant price! How the sight dismayed me,&mdash;I had been so completely
+anticipated by some more skilful cultivator! I did not even seek to
+catch the widow's eye, nor to ask a single question. The spectacle so
+discouraged me that I moved off with a heavy heart to my accustomed
+avocations.</p>
+
+<p>It was but dull practice on my sewing-machine during the whole of that
+day. It is true I thought a thousand times of my own strawberries, but
+then those of my successful competitor were quite as often in my mind.
+How this thing could happen, and why one cultivator should thus
+anticipate all others, and command the market when prices were so
+enormous, I could not then understand. But I resolved to have the matter
+explained. Next morning I was up at daybreak and at the widow's stand.
+She was already there, and was engaged in putting the little fixtures in
+order on which her daily stock of fruits and vegetables was to be
+displayed. No customers were yet visible in this early gray of the
+morning, and there was an opportunity for me to make the momentous
+inquiries I desired. But there<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span> was the same great wooden tray, again up
+with at least a bushel of strawberries. My first question was as to
+where they came from.</p>
+
+<p>"From Baltimore, Miss," was the reply. "You know they ripen there two
+weeks earlier than here. It is farther south, the climate is warmer, and
+they come here on the railroad until the price falls so low as to make
+it unprofitable to send them. But they are a small, poor berry, not
+equal to yours, and will not be in your way. When yours come to market,
+these will be all gone. People buy these only because they can get no
+better ones."</p>
+
+<p>Here was a mountain of discouragement removed at once. I had not been
+forestalled by a neighbor, but only anticipated by some one who had
+taken advantage of a warmer climate. Besides, the widow repeated her
+cheering assurance of the year before, that she could readily dispose of
+all I might have,&mdash;not, however, at the high prices she then was
+getting, because the same sun that was to ripen mine would ripen those
+of all others around me, and bring them into market at the same time;
+but if mine should be better than others, she would be able to secure
+better prices for them.</p>
+
+<p>I went home to breakfast with a lighter heart, and that day at the
+factory made up for the deficiencies of the preceding. But since then,
+after the experience of an entire season, I have looked carefully into
+this matter of the importance of being first in the market, and I find
+it runs through and influences almost every department of horticulture
+which is pursued as a source of gain. The struggle everywhere appears to
+be for precedence. The horticultural world knows that there is a waiting
+community of consumers who stand impatient for the advent of the first
+ripened fruits. It knows that with these the price occasions no
+hesitancy in the purchase: they are able to pay. Hence no resource of
+art or skill is left unpractised to minister to a craving appetite that
+yields a reward so golden. One producer erects hot-houses, into which he
+crowds the plants that otherwise would be hybernating, and, creating an
+artificial summer, stimulates the strawberry into bloom, then into
+fruit, even in the depth of winter the ripened berries are seen at some
+of the most celebrated fruit-stores. They command fabulous prices,&mdash;a
+spoonful of them readily bringing a dollar, without the demand being
+supplied. The rich always have money to spend; and though the world is
+never without its poor, yet it seems also to be never without an
+abundance of those who have more than they can wisely dispose of. This
+branch of horticulture must be profitable, as it is rapidly extending in
+the neighborhood of all our large cities. These hot-house fruits are the
+earliest in the market.</p>
+
+<p>Other growers move off to a warmer climate, within one or two days' ride
+of the great city by railroad, and, by help of hotter suns, crowd their
+half-ripened fruits into Northern markets nearly a month in advance of
+local cultivators. Only those varieties being grown which are naturally
+earlier than all others, they blush into redness while ours have
+scarcely reached their full size. Taken from the vines in an unripe
+condition, they are crisp and firm, and the fast express-train whirls
+them over hundreds of miles, the ripening process, as well as the
+decaying one, going on meanwhile. It is costly transportation to the
+growers, but the impatient public pay with readiness a price so
+extravagant as to make for these wholesale pioneers a stupendous profit.
+Thus the warm alluvial lands encircling Norfolk fill the markets from
+Baltimore to Boston with the earliest fruit. It is unripe, and deficient
+in the full flavor of the strawberry; but what care the wealthy public
+for that? It is the first in market,&mdash;they have been a year without
+it,&mdash;it has somewhat of the genuine aroma,&mdash;and, ripe or unripe, they
+cannot refrain. Great sums are annually realized by these earliest
+caterers for the public palate. The hot-house process is comparatively a
+retail operation; but this traffic reaches to the dignity of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span> a great
+industrial enterprise, employing hundreds of hands, pouring ample
+freightage into the coffers of express-companies, and enriching the men
+by whom it is conducted. It is exclusively the offspring of Northern
+shrewdness, the sluggish instincts of the Southerner unfitting him for
+an occupation requiring incessant activity and promptness,&mdash;while its
+apparent littleness, the peddling of strawberries, were unworthy a race
+whose inheritance is cotton or tobacco.</p>
+
+<p>For a few weeks these cultivators have entire possession of the Northern
+market. In time, however, our suns become hotter, ripening the fruits of
+our own fields. Then comes the rivalry among ourselves,&mdash;who shall be
+earliest with the best fruit;&mdash;for herein lies an important element of
+general success.</p>
+
+<p>My berries ripened rapidly, and I knew they must be ready for picking by
+hearing that our neighbors were about beginning. It was a momentous day
+when we began. My mother and myself undertook it: for that afternoon I
+stayed away from the factory, as it was impossible for me to be absent
+from so interesting a scene. I had no idea what quantity we were to
+expect, though I had ransacked my agricultural library in hopes of
+discovering some approximate solution of this question. Crops were found
+to vary as unaccountably as modes of culture. One grower would obtain
+more fruit from a few rods of ground than another from a whole acre.
+These prevailing contrarieties were well calculated to make me doubtful
+of what my luck was to be. Hence, when we had gone over the whole
+half-acre, and found that we had gathered ninety quarts, I was entirely
+satisfied, and more so from noticing, on a survey of the bed, that there
+was no perceptible diminution of the quantity remaining on the vines.</p>
+
+<p>The fruit was of very superior size, for perhaps few cultivators could
+have bestowed more labor in keeping the ground in order; and this labor
+of our own hands was nearly all that the experiment had cost. As I was
+anxious to follow the directions given by my market friend, we had a
+great time that evening in assorting the berries, putting them in three
+lots,&mdash;the very largest in one, then the next best, and the smallest in
+a third. They were placed in nice new baskets as assorted, so as to be
+handled as little as possible. These were safely stowed in a
+wheelbarrow, and before daybreak the next morning Fred wheeled them to
+market. I was with him, of course. It was my first errand,&mdash;the first
+fruits of my long anxiety,&mdash;my first appearance as a strawberry-girl.</p>
+
+<p>The streets at that early hour were deserted and silent, for the busy
+multitudes were not yet stirring. No pedestrians were about but those in
+some way connected with the markets, whither all were repairing; nor
+were any vehicles moving except the market carts and wagons coming in
+from the adjacent country, most of them driven by women, thus early
+forced from home to be at their daily stands. I confess this freedom
+from curious public observation was not unpleasant to me. Somehow I had
+felt no compunction, no pride, at bearing through the streets, even at
+noonday, the symbol of my calling as a sewing-girl, in the shape of an
+unsightly bundle; but here, notwithstanding long reflection had
+familiarized me with what my new duties would necessarily be, yet when I
+came to the performance of them I felt no ambition to be publicly
+recognized as a strawberry-girl. My mother, who had been up to see us
+off, had covered each basket with a cloth, so that really it was
+impossible for a stranger, seeing the load I had in charge, to know
+whether it was work for the tailor or fruit for the market-house. I
+cannot account for this weakness,&mdash;why I, who had been so strong and
+undismayed on occasions really trying, should have been so affected on
+one that afforded so much reason for exultation. I have sometimes blamed
+my sister as the cause of this unusual nervousness. She, too, was up to
+aid us in getting under way, for all hearts were in the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span>
+enterprise,&mdash;and knowing that I had a nervous apprehension of our
+neighbors, especially of Mrs. Tetchy, and that I would prefer going
+without any of them seeing me, she cried out suddenly, as we came
+through the gate,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Is that Mrs. Tetchy coming after you?"</p>
+
+<p>It was the veriest trifle in the world; but I was so full of what I had
+in hand, and so really desirous of avoiding observation in that quarter,
+that Jane's pleasantry had an unusual effect upon me. I did feel a
+little ashamed at any of the Tetchys watching my movements; yet somehow,
+as we went along to market, the feeling insensibly expanded so as to
+apply to all others. But I have long since mastered it.</p>
+
+<p>The widow was already at her accustomed stand, and had what appeared to
+me a plentiful supply of strawberries. But I saw directly, for I now had
+a quick and practised eye, that they were far inferior to mine. All
+sizes were mixed up together, just as they came from the vines. When I
+uncovered my best baskets and handed them to her, she was loud in
+expressions of admiration at their superior excellence. No customers
+were about, so in a few moments I had handed over my whole stock of
+ninety quarts, and Fred and I were about departing homeward, when the
+widow's first customer for the day came up to the stand. We had a
+natural curiosity to see what would be the result, so moved back a few
+paces, but were still near enough to see and hear whatever might occur.</p>
+
+<p>The customer was a young man of probably three or four and twenty,
+dressed so genteelly as particularly to attract my attention, yet, while
+a model of outward neatness, with not a sign of fashionable glare about
+him. I think it probable that his really handsome face, and the pleasant
+smile that played around his mouth as he approached us, had something to
+do in establishing him thus suddenly in my favor, apart from my
+anticipating him as my first customer. He glanced a moment at the
+strawberries, then turned and looked at me so intently, though not at
+all impertinently, that I felt myself abashed and blushing. All this,
+however, was the sensation of but a single moment. Immediately turning
+again to the widow, and courteously touching his hat as he spoke to
+her,&mdash;a civility which was in perfect keeping with his whole
+demeanor,&mdash;his eye fell on my choicest berries. He seemed struck with
+their superiority, and was so generous in his commendation of them,
+that, as I heard it all, I turned my face away, as I felt the blood
+rushing up from my heart and covering my cheeks with deepening crimson.
+I did not wish him to suspect that he was buying <i>my</i> berries. He
+inquired of the widow where this beautiful fruit was raised, and by whom
+I was in terror lest she should point to me, and was moving out of
+hearing of the reply, when she answered that they were raised just below
+the city, by a young lady.</p>
+
+<p>"You surprise me, Madam. By a young lady? They are the finest I have
+ever seen," he replied. "She must understand her business. I am greatly
+interested in such pursuits, and would like to know more about her. Will
+you have her fruit all through the season?"</p>
+
+<p>I had turned away before he had made these remarks, and did not observe
+whether the idea could have occurred to him of connecting me with the
+lady culturist; but Fred told me, on our way home, that he directed his
+attention strongly to me, and, as my face was averted, surveyed me with
+a long and scrutinizing gaze, then raising the cover of quite a large
+basket which he held in his hand, caused it to be filled with my finest
+berries.</p>
+
+<p>I did not hear the price, as the strangest thoughts that ever occupied
+my mind came thronging in with impetuous vehemence. I was unaccountably
+confused. Here was I with my first little venture surprised by the
+presence of my first customer, and he a gentleman whose whole outward
+demeanor seemed to me the embodiment of whatever might be considered
+agreeable in the other sex. I shrank with instinctive diffidence from
+having my little secret unfolded<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span> in such a presence. It may have been
+mortification of spirit,&mdash;I will not, cannot say,&mdash;but somehow I was
+terrified lest <i>he</i> should know that I was a strawberry-girl.</p>
+
+<p>But Fred was subject to no such useless compunctions, and watched and
+listened with eager attention. His quick ear had caught the price,&mdash;for
+the purchaser had not ascertained it until after his basket had been
+filled.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you hear that?" said Fred, in a voice intended for a whisper, but
+which in my confusion I was sure the young gentleman had overheard.
+"Half a dollar a quart!"</p>
+
+<p>I moved away instantly toward home, never daring to look back at either
+the widow or her customer, lest my eyes should encounter those of the
+latter, as I was sure he must have heard my brother's exclamation, and
+been satisfied that it was I who raised the berries he had so much
+admired. It was unaccountable to me that I should be so foolish. But no
+one, unable to correctly analyze his feelings, can at the moment account
+for the strange impulses which an unlooked-for emergency will send
+hurrying through the heart. Time and a succession of events may
+sometimes unlock the mystery of their origin. I am sure that it required
+both to solve the problem for me.</p>
+
+<p>Fred trundled his barrow at my side as we returned to breakfast. He was
+full of exultation at our success, and even began to count up what our
+profits would be. We had made so capital a beginning that he was sure
+they must be very large. Alas! he knew little of the world except its
+sanguine hopes. He reasoned only from the beginning, without knowing the
+stumbling-blocks that might be encountered before we reached the end.
+But then what would this world be, if hope were banished from it? Still,
+though fairly estimating all these contingent disappointments, my
+spirits were buoyant as his own. That was apparently a short walk to our
+distant home, for there was abundant conversation and debate to beguile
+the way. My mother stood in the doorway as we approached the house; but
+when Fred told her the story of the young gentleman, how he looked and
+behaved,&mdash;I somehow felt unable to do it,&mdash;with the crowning incident of
+the great basketful of berries he had purchased at half a dollar a
+quart, and that without even asking the price, I think I never knew my
+dear mother to be so delighted at any event in the quiet history of our
+little family. Ah, what a happy breakfast it was that we sat down to
+that morning! I could not repeat the exultations expressed on all hands
+over my success. My mother seemed so supremely gratified at the prospect
+now opening before us, that her delight was a bountiful reward for me.
+She had never manifested so much cheerfulness since we lost our father.
+Fred insisted on continuing his calculations of what our profits would
+be; but though he brought out great results on paper, for he was
+remarkably expert at figures, yet, even with my constitutional
+enthusiasm, I refused to be unduly set up by his extravagant
+anticipations. It seemed with him to be as great a happiness to merely
+calculate the profit as it was for me to produce it.</p>
+
+<p>I know that all these are very trifling matters, at least to others, and
+that, if the gentler hearts are kind enough to become interested in
+them, there must be many others that will pass them by as uneventful and
+dull. Yet the life that all these are living is made up of incidents,
+which, if they would but reflect upon them, are not more exciting. But
+they were great affairs to us. They developed the prominent fact, that
+it was possible for a woman, when favorably situated, to become a
+successful fruit-grower, and that a new door could be opened through
+which she might be emancipated from perpetual bondage to the needle,
+without violating the conventional proprieties of the sex. This was the
+problem which my imperfect labors were solving for us. All aspirants may
+not be required to pass through the same experience, while some may be
+compelled to encounter even a greater diversity than I did.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Thus far my first day's picking had been very encouraging. As in a great
+city there are a thousand daily wants, so thousands are kept continually
+employed in ministering to them. When the supply of strawberries begins,
+the public require it to be maintained. The picking of the day is mostly
+eaten up before bedtime, and hence the grower must gather daily
+reinforcements from his vines to meet the public demand. The fruit
+ripens with a continuous rapidity. The hot sun of a cloudless day brings
+it to perfection with wonderful uniformity, while the wet and cloudy one
+retards and injures it. Besides, the price is gradually declining as
+neighboring growers crowd their products into market; hence it is
+imperative to pick daily while the price is up, so as to secure the
+highest return for the longest period. Perfect ripeness no one waits
+for. The consumer never secures it, because his impatient appetite
+stimulates the grower to furnish him with fruit which, though tinged
+with redness, is far from being ripe. Color alone, not flavor, is the
+guide; for the public taste is not yet sufficiently educated to detect
+the great difference between an unripe and a ripe strawberry.</p>
+
+<p>I soon learned these peculiarities of my new calling, and hence picked
+over my beds with daily regularity. As color, not ripeness, was all the
+public cared for, we carried much immature fruit to market,&mdash;though no
+doubt we lost in bulk by thus picking before it had grown to its full
+size. The second day we took forty quarts to the widow, and received for
+the preceding day's consignment nearly forty dollars. It was less than
+Fred had figured up, but we were, all of us, satisfied. Our care in
+assorting the fruit had secured for it the highest market price, while
+the widow was so lavish in her commendation, as well as so full of
+encouragement to me for what I was doing, that the satisfaction of
+dealing with her was almost equal to that which attended my success:
+indeed, I think her kind words went far towards securing it. One day she
+spoke to me of the young gentleman, my first customer, who, she reminded
+me, had praised my fruit so highly and bought so liberally. I am sure my
+cheeks colored as she recalled a circumstance which I had by no means
+forgotten; but as there were many buyers round her stand, I knew she
+would not notice it. Though I went at daybreak every morning with my
+brother to deliver fruit, yet I never met him there but once again.
+Still, she said, he was as punctual as myself, only coming a little
+later, buying my berries, always asking if they were the same young
+lady's fruit, and when told that they were, taking them without
+inquiring the price. But I never understood why she related these little
+incidents to me, unless it was to show me how quickly my works had
+become popular. It may be that her heart melted with sympathetic
+tenderness toward me; for I had told her all about my condition as a
+sewing-girl, my hopes, my efforts, my longing to be able to lay down the
+needle for something that would be less exacting while equally
+remunerative. She, too, had been a drudge of the slop-shops, and thus
+understanding all that I might feel, or suffer, or hope for, it was
+natural that she should enter with interest into my novel enterprise.</p>
+
+<p>Thus my mother and I continued to gather fruit from our little half-acre
+during the whole of the strawberry-season. I was away from the factory
+for many afternoons to assist in picking and assorting. I think no miser
+could have counted his gold more lovingly than we did our gains, when
+summing up, day by day, the yield of our miniature plantation. There
+were several afternoons, at the height of the season, when the product
+ran up surprisingly. There seemed to be a general competition among the
+berries as to which should ripen first. They enlarged in size, putting
+on a crimson corpulency into which the sunbeams infused a sweetened
+juiciness which is the peculiar charm of the perfectly ripened fruit.
+This was in the hottest days of June, which, in spite of an ample
+sun-bonnet, tanned me into a perfect brunette. After<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span> the general
+ripening, the quantity picked began to decline, and the remainder was of
+smaller size. The price, fell off; but then, while the fruit was
+abundant, we had secured the highest rates, so that the declining prices
+affected only a diminishing quantity. Hitherto we had treated ourselves
+to none of the best fruit, but had reserved for home consumption only
+such as we considered unfit for market. As in former times, we thought
+ourselves too poor now to eat even our own strawberries. Every quart
+that we should thus consume would be an average loss of thirty cents. I
+was sure they were not costing us anything like that, and it seemed a
+positive hardship to be thus kept to such rigorous self-denial. But we
+held out until the price declined as the quality depreciated, and then,
+when we knew the sacrifice was trifling, there was a unanimous and
+abundant indulgence in this delicious fruit. I think it tasted even
+sweeter than when it was selling at half a dollar. My mother was sure
+that not half the sugar was required to make it palatable, and all
+agreed that in point of flavor it was unexceptionable. I feel certain
+that none of <i>that</i> crop was lost. Thus our domestic strawberry-season
+began market only when that of the outer world had passed away; but
+though late in entering upon it, it may be set down as certain that none
+enjoyed it with a higher relish than ourselves.</p>
+
+<p>As Fred was wonderfully exact in keeping accounts, he was ready to tell
+us, the moment our last picking had been made, how much our half-acre
+had produced. I sometimes thought it a sort of useless trouble, however,
+this keeping an account, because every one of the family seemed to have
+the figures by heart from the very day when the first picking occurred.
+They were talked over so often at table, that we all remembered what
+they were, nor was there any difficulty in our carrying forward the
+sum-total from day to day, as the amount ran up after each successive
+picking. What had we to remember that was half so interesting as this?
+But as what the sum-total would be was gradually becoming manifest, Fred
+was compelled to come down from the magnificent calculations as to
+profit with which he had set out. He had insisted that we were to get
+the same high prices all through the season, not reflecting that we had
+many competitors, nor that, though our early pickings were really very
+superior, yet there must necessarily be many that would be quite
+otherwise. Still, his persistency had had its effect on all of us; nor
+was it until we got halfway down the column of our daily receipts, and
+noticed the perceptibly diminishing figures, that we were thoroughly
+undeceived. As I had never been over-sanguine, I was not greatly
+disappointed. My study had been to ascertain whether it was possible for
+a family of inexperienced sewing-women to produce strawberries for
+market at a fair profit, the whole labor to be performed by themselves.
+If our first effort were tolerably successful, I was sure we could do
+better the next time, as successful horticulturists are not born, but
+made. Well, the result was, that we had produced a little over four
+hundred quarts, of which the widow had sold enough to bring us a hundred
+and thirty dollars, after deducting her commission. It was not much, I
+confess, but it was a beginning that fully satisfied me. Our half-acre
+had never before yielded so large a profit.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="THE_WILLOW" id="THE_WILLOW"></a>THE WILLOW.</h2>
+
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">O willow, why forever weep,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">As one who mourns an endless wrong?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">What hidden woe can lie so deep?<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">What utter grief can last so long?<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The Spring makes haste with step elate<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Your life and beauty to renew;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">She even bids the roses wait,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And gives her first sweet care to you.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The welcome redbreast folds his wing<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">To pour for you his freshest strain;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To you the earliest bluebirds sing,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Till all your light stems thrill again.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The sparrow trills his wedding song<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And trusts his tender brood to you;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Fair flowering vines, the summer long,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">With clasp and kiss your beauty woo.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The sunshine drapes your limbs with light,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">The rain braids diamonds in your hair,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The breeze makes love to you at night,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Yet still you droop, and still despair.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Beneath your boughs, at fall of dew,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">By lovers' lips is softly told<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The tale that all the ages through<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Has kept the world from growing old.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">But still, though April's buds unfold,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Or Summer sets the earth aleaf,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Or Autumn pranks your robes with gold,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">You sway and sigh in graceful grief.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Mourn on forever, unconsoled,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And keep your secret, faithful tree!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">No heart in all the world can hold<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">A sweeter grace than constancy.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="MY_SECOND_CAPTURE" id="MY_SECOND_CAPTURE"></a>MY SECOND CAPTURE.</h2>
+
+
+<p>The Adjutant T&mdash;&mdash; and myself, not inexperienced in battles, though,
+perhaps, like most Americans, infants in warfare, were captured in
+September last, in the Valley of the Shenandoah, Nature's noble
+art-gallery, on the west side of Opequan Creek, a stream that is a
+picture at almost any point. In one of the gallant charges which our
+eager cavalry, under General Sheridan, made before the great charge that
+captured Winchester and the Valley, our regiment had the right, and
+gained a fine position in the end. But two or three encounters were very
+close. The sea of battle surged back and forth, tormented only, however,
+by the mild breezes of a day like May; and as the waves of our army
+withdrew from the ridge on which the enemy rested, to gain greater
+impetus, my poor horse was shot under me, stranded, and left rolling
+upon the ground, midway between friend and foe. The orderly, my
+attendant, had another in the rear of the retreating column; but,
+inasmuch as that was now swept by the swift-receding current far beyond
+us, he could neither have me mounted nor command other present means
+whereby to get me off. I reclined, like Adonis, upon a soft bed of
+meadow-grass studded here and there with wild-flowers, an emerald velvet
+with silver spangles,&mdash;but suffering, unlike him, from bruises, and with
+my best soulless friend dead at my side. I was somewhat sprained by the
+fall the dying beast had given me. The enemy was close at hand,
+following with yells and chaotic eagerness upon our troops.</p>
+
+<p>"We'll take a march to Libby," said my orderly, dropping on his knees to
+feel my bones.</p>
+
+<p>He drew his arm through his rein, (having had no idea of deserting me in
+his sound health by the aid of his ready animal,) and continued his
+examination; whilst his sturdy favorite chopped the short grass within
+reach of his breathing hitching-post as closely as his long bit would
+allow. In a very few moments the Rebel foam was surging like wild beyond
+us,&mdash;a private pausing at me for a second, to poke me in the ribs with
+his piece.</p>
+
+<p>"There's life there, Grayback," growled my attendant; and the Rebel
+ordered us to the rear.</p>
+
+<p>Indeed, had we remained where we were, we would soon have been in the
+rear, so impetuously did the foe sweep by us. But private soldiers, the
+potent keystones of the Rebel arch, built to crush the voice of the
+many, command the Southern armies in every great engagement; and one of
+these important atoms had given us our hint to move. You never see
+anything but the rank and file in the heart of a Rebel corps. Our new
+commander mounted my orderly's horse, and soon was lost in the distance.</p>
+
+<p>It is not, I have found, a very diverting entertainment to wander free a
+few moments (a free prisoner) in search of some authority, out of the
+myriads who have the opportunity, who shall choose to take charge of
+one. I felt peculiarly as I stood irresolute, now framing one thought,
+now another, casting about in my mind, weighing the odds with no light
+fancy-scales, which of the rushing demons on all sides would draw up
+before me with a curse, and command me to follow him. Our regiment, our
+corps, our whole army, (this last had not left its works for the little
+fight,) were far in the distance now; and the ground on which I stood,
+and which but a short time since was tramped by Northern troops, had, in
+the mutations of war, become a portion of the Rebel dominions. The
+September sun shone brightly through the white fleece of the cloud-swans
+swimming in the morning air; and the early spring breeze that
+I have mentioned&mdash;for &AElig;olus had given freedom to but a tender
+dove-zephyr&mdash;played with the silk fringe of the meadow<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span> grass, finding
+no olive-branch here, venturing its ripple, with the audacity of
+innocence, under the very heels of the contending forces. Possibly the
+feeling of loneliness which overwhelms a man at such a time as this is
+the most acute of all his feelings. I looked my orderly in the face as
+he supported me on his shoulder. He was gazing coolly before him.</p>
+
+<p>"If we have to march soon, you had better rest," he said, deliberately.
+"There's a tree you can sit under. And if you have money or a watch, you
+had better hide them in your armpits."</p>
+
+<p>We went to the tree, and set ourselves against it.</p>
+
+<p>The fresh air that brushed by us, like fine steel points, relieved me of
+my oozing faintness, and in the ease of my circumstances I could attend
+somewhat to my bruises. With the aid of my canteen, I relaxed the
+strained muscles. It was my desire to have my loins girt about and my
+limbs in good order for the foot-journey that I doubted not was before
+us. They would march us to Gordonsville, and thence to Libby, carrying
+us through in an incredibly short time, and without boots at that. I had
+two objects to labor for, as I began to get myself into condition:
+first, to be taken in charge by an officer; and then&mdash;to escape from him
+that night, whilst the train was in disorder. I was of opinion that my
+companion, a taciturn machine, who labored, like the miners, well with
+his little light, had some such plan of his own, as I saw him buckling
+his belt beneath his trousers. He was stowing away his watch and a
+photograph,&mdash;which every soldier must have, of some poor maid or other
+who toils in the shades of obscurity at home,&mdash;and making himself ready
+for a run at any favorable moment. I thought that I would sound him.</p>
+
+<p>"You had better do it, orderly, soon in the day," I said; "since the
+enemy will march you between two files, and you will then have but
+little chance."</p>
+
+<p>"So I think," he replied. "I thought no time better than now. But
+then"&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"But what?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, it's rather hard to leave you here. What with your sprain, and
+your blow on the head, you're pretty sure to halt at Libby."</p>
+
+<p>I had no chance to answer, for the Rebel was before me who was to have
+the honor of my capture.</p>
+
+<p>He was of the flabby white-flesh species of the genus Rebel, a Quaker
+scarecrow with matty locks, that many of my brethren in arms have met;
+harmless in units, but ponderous, as even scarecrows will be, if hurled
+back and forth in thousands, swarms; lank, cadaverous, and whining;
+snuff-chewing, and grossly filthy, even under the best of circumstances.
+His flesh was set dough, and his hair was long and yellow. He spoke
+through the dirty causeway of his nose. The road-dust and drab of his
+uniform, so called in satire, have often been described. These
+gentlemen's faces, to me, who incline to an intelligent expression on
+the human index, look like tallow-vats or nursery-suet, pliable and
+swill-fed; and their mien and carriage have never impressed me
+favorably. I had seen them rush with a wild yell, an army like the Paris
+mob of intoxicated rags, upon our Gibraltar at Gettysburg; and had
+myself charged upon their Attila-works (behind which they had their
+household gods piled up and ready for burning) at Fredericksburg. I had
+even taken a ball from one of them in the shoulder, whilst skirmishing,
+in the shiftings of my experience; and they had before had the honor of
+my capture, in sunny, grape-growing Maryland. Perhaps all these scenes
+passed in panorama before my mind's eye, as I rose to my captor and eyed
+his dirty linen. Here was an indignity, indeed. My soul revolted at the
+thought of a journey southward, and all my instincts warned me against
+so dire an undertaking. I stood before the Rebel with my determination
+in my eye.</p>
+
+<p>"A couple of Yanks, lolling under a tree," he screamed to his
+companions, pointing the finger, and garnishing his speech, in Rebel
+manner, with an oath.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"P'rhaps you thought you were off," he chuckled.</p>
+
+<p>He was "goin'" to take us to the "Gen'ral." He muttered more oaths with
+his orders, and directed us to be "right smart," and to "git."</p>
+
+<p>I glanced at my orderly, who was inaugurating an onset upon the weaker
+side of this mean battery, or ditch-work,&mdash;and who evidently counted
+upon effecting a breach by rapid, electric charges,&mdash;by handing over his
+pistol. It was freely offered, before demanded, and the recipient took
+it in silence. He then drew out his tobacco, a treasure with which, I
+well knew, he would not willingly part, and which was the little
+ewe-lamb of his unjewelled life,&mdash;which, also, was taken quickly, but
+under a nod of acknowledgments from the Rebel. The battery was shaken,
+but, in truth, continued to draw fire. "Give me your boots," said the
+critical captor, and the orderly knocked off his leathers in the best
+good-humor in the world. When we had walked a little farther, the
+orderly, now marching as the Moslems do on holy ground, asked our guide
+if he had any grub about him; and accepted a piece of pork. There was a
+variety of viands in the haversack from which this fragment came,&mdash;both
+pork and bacon,&mdash;but the fire-eaters, I have noticed, always prefer the
+latter meat. I divined at once that my orderly was laying in stores for
+a solitary tramp, and making a raven in this, to him, strange desert, of
+the ill-omened bird that had pounced upon us. He would conciliate his
+enemy, and when the latter was growing careless he would spring into
+some woods. The pork, with the berries to be found there, would sustain
+him after he had broken leash,&mdash;and would be all that he would eat, no
+doubt, in the course of two or three suns.</p>
+
+<p>We noticed a great stir on all sides of us, converging streams of
+stragglers, wounded men, and prisoners, as we made our way, scattering
+grasshoppers, over the fields, and soon mingled with the throng of
+troops on the open road to Winchester. It was about three miles from
+this town that our capture had taken place; and from the immense
+wagon-trains rumbling along with us, and the excited manner of their
+officers, I augured not as well for the Rebel cause. Perhaps Fortune had
+altered her humor, and the white eagles of victory had settled with the
+opposite side. Other parties of Union prisoners journeyed with us, and
+through the urgent manner of their guards I thought I could discern a
+sunlit loop-hole to freedom. In five minutes' time I was assured that
+the Rebels were preparing to retreat. Their six-horse teams were rushing
+to the rear, and their outlying bodies of cavalry were being hurriedly
+dispatched the other way. My mind was very busy upon the new aspect of
+affairs.</p>
+
+<p>The last I saw of my orderly was when he had divested himself of the
+workman's incumbrance,&mdash;his coat,&mdash;and was tramping, bootless, haltingly
+along in the dustiest part of the road. He had conciliated his watchman
+into almost indifference, and was spreading himself with the sand,
+(tossed knee-high in little clouds by his feet,) having then become
+quite a Rebel in looks. In five minutes I turned upon him; but he had
+fallen out of the squad. I have never seen him since.</p>
+
+<p>My own plans would keep me in the Rebel lines some hours longer. It was
+my object to escape; but I had already decided upon the evening, when
+darkness, and, I hoped, rain, would settle down upon us. I indulged a
+hasty prayer in behalf of the vanished man, and durst not more than
+snatch a look at where he should have been, lest the guard should miss
+him also. At one mile beyond Winchester, which town we had avoided by a
+branching road, we came to the office of the provost marshal, a very
+humble shell-work; and those of us who wore shoulder-straps were hustled
+into his presence. He stood, the central figure in a dun picture, in an
+atmosphere of smoke, a dirty-looking Georgian in flying coat and
+high-boots. With hands in pocket he surveyed the objects brought before
+him, concisely delivering his orders over the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span> stem of his teeth-clasped
+pipe. His clerk was at a table near, on which lay the papers of his
+office; and the splintered rafters behind him made the background to a
+cabinet-picture that should have been done in chocolate.</p>
+
+<p>We were placed in charge of a rather mild-looking officer, who wore his
+rank upon his sleeve in so elegantly twisted a knot that I could not
+make out his degree, and who had on a brand-new riding-jacket, of a dark
+blue, to which the sleeve was attached, adorned with the staff-buttons
+of our army. It was his duty to command the guard that drove the
+captives of the Rebel hosts, in which safe branch of the service, as I
+afterwards learned, he had been engaged since '62. No doubt his many
+opportunities for demanding what he wanted, and for seizing, like Ahab,
+what was denied him, had furnished alike the jacket and the buttons; and
+were it not for his placid countenance, I should have fathered his
+entire outfit upon the Yankees,&mdash;as having fallen to his shoulders by
+the same easy process. He was directed to drive us to the road at once,
+and to keep his herd in motion all the time. Hurried orders had come
+from headquarters, that set all the small bees about this lesser hive in
+a whirl of confused labors, whereby our departure was delayed for some
+moments. The provost-marshal's clerk was even then packing up his
+rattling desk, pigeon-holing papers that would hatch knotty questions in
+the coop, and making due preparation for the departure of the Georgian
+magnate himself. I observed that their army-wagons kept trailing
+southward, like chalk vertebr&aelig;, in an unbroken string, and promised for
+a long while yet to obstruct the road. It was growing a little cloudy,
+too. It was now three hours after noon, and I hoped nervously for a
+sullen night.</p>
+
+<p>Just before we set out on our melancholy march, I saw a man make a move
+towards me, and hastily clap one finger across his firm lips. It was the
+Adjutant T&mdash;&mdash;, of whom I have spoken, and who did not wish me to
+recognize him. It was his object to approach me, and to walk as a
+stranger at my side, so that the guards should not part us,&mdash;and, I knew
+at once, to speak of a project common to both. The old stories of our
+camp-fires had flitted across his mind, and had blanched his cheek since
+morning. His blood was just thawing as he signalled me. I took no notice
+of him till after we had started, a company of men with bent brows, and
+he had marched on my right some forty rods. I then muttered slowly,
+"Speak little, and to the point"; whereat he waved his hand. It was
+singular and sad to ignore thus an old companion in the very hour of
+need, when surely a bitterness hung upon our souls that more than ever
+required balm. We were, perforce, to play the stranger, when at no time
+in life did we more thirst for the tender friend. Doubtless, our hopes
+of escape depended much upon each other; and we could but communicate
+those plans in insufficient monosyllables, which, if misunderstood,
+would lead to disaster. If ever plentiful words, in great ear-measures,
+are pardonable, it is at such moments as this,&mdash;when even
+half-words&mdash;diamonds flashing betrayal&mdash;are imprudent The Adjutant edged
+a little closer.</p>
+
+<p>"Before dark, or after?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>To which I replied,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"After."</p>
+
+<p>He gradually glided away from me, and for some time marched at the other
+side of the column.</p>
+
+<p>I had noticed that he was walking without his jacket. The guards were
+accosting the officers in their neighborhood, and had taken his among
+other vestments. Most of the party of sad victims were well peeled ere
+their melancholy was an hour older. A rough boor turned to me and
+demanded my gauntlets. A basilisk fire shone through his eyes, and the
+breath which he blew through the grating of his teeth, over his thin,
+livid lips, and into my face, was freighted heavily with the fumes of
+whiskey. When I made bold to refuse him, he was dumbfoundered in
+astonishment, and was pleased to compress his jaws.</p>
+
+<p>"You d&mdash;&mdash;d Yankee!" he screamed,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span> profanely, red with the inspiration
+of his anger, "if you don't give me your gauntlets, I'll tear your hands
+from your body."</p>
+
+<p>There was enough energy in his action to have guarantied even a more
+vehement man[oe]uvre; and as he made his threat, he raised his arm above
+me. But I had it in my mind to see myself through the affair in the
+course that I had chosen; and having noticed our mild officer a few
+paces in the rear of us, mounted upon his horse, and placidly sitting
+with his hand upon the pommel, I turned to him at once.</p>
+
+<p>"If you will do me the favor, Sir," I said, with some gravity of manner,
+"I would like you to accept my gauntlets,&mdash;a new pair from the box, that
+has only seen this day's work."</p>
+
+<p>"They've had an unlucky birthday," he said, not inaptly, and rather
+courteously, as he took them.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, my gloves heretofore have all been spoiled by the sabre," I
+replied, keeping step with his charger. "I don't know but that you have
+to thank a drunken guard for the pair, Sir; since he threatened to kill
+me, if I kept them on my hands."</p>
+
+<p>He gave a hasty look for his orderly.</p>
+
+<p>"Point out the man, if you can, Sir," he said to me, and beckoned a
+trooper to his side.</p>
+
+<p>"I am obliged to you for your interference," I answered. "The man
+marches third on the left there, and has his piece slung behind him. I
+hope that some day, Sir, I may do you a favor."</p>
+
+<p>A sense of humor, for which I must be grateful, considering the sombre
+dejection of my marching mates, filled my breast as I thanked him for
+putting one under guard for attempting (drunk) what he himself so
+soberly accomplished,&mdash;the capture of my buckskins. He kept the
+gauntlets very willingly, and ordered a sergeant to accompany me. But
+there was generosity and magnificence in his action; the acquisition,
+per duress, of others' property was a daily habit with him,&mdash;and to have
+a sergeant for a guard was a considerable favor.</p>
+
+<p>It was my desire to cultivate the Sergeant thus cast within my reach,
+who otherwise might be a marplot, and who had good of some sort in him,
+I judged from his appearance; although, as with his kind, it was
+evidently very barren winter in his purse, and his summer clothes were
+apparently too open. His butternut jacket, a poor tweed with a cotton
+filling, was clasped about his throat with a shred of twine, flying away
+thence loosely, showing a dirty cotton shirt beneath, and the rough edge
+of the waistband of his pantaloons. The material of which these last
+were made was a very impressible jean, and marked the number of his
+journeys, could one but decipher them, in stains and intricate creases.
+He had the same face of lifeless suet, and the yellow hair, that I have
+noticed as very prevalent in the Rebel armies,&mdash;but withal an elasticity
+of carriage that seemed too honest for the cause, an almost openness of
+countenance, a cast of features tending towards amiability, which imbued
+me with a trembling hope. I had designs upon the Sergeant, and intended
+opening upon him with rhetoric, after, perhaps, some amicable
+skirmishing. His detail to guard my person was a compliment to me which
+only the initiated&mdash;those who have made the same journey&mdash;can
+appreciate. The young provost-officer with the sleeve-knots desired to
+offer me a delicate attention in return for my hand-furniture, and,
+perhaps, to impress me in some sort with his sense of right, even though
+he was of so wrong-headed a company. What a dainty, dew-sipping bunch of
+violets would be to conscious beauty,&mdash;what a quaint volume of old
+matter, dust-breeding and crumbling, would be to the blinking
+scholar,&mdash;what refined gold, or gold ore, or gold stamped in the mint,
+would be to a Wall-Street broker,&mdash;was this sergeant to myself. He was
+the gift of a royal potentate who stood not upon little matters. There
+was no calculation in the largess. I was to have the entire sergeant as
+all my own. We fell a rod behind the officer, and trudged evenly along.</p>
+
+<p>Although big with an evil design, I<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span> did not intend to address my
+companion at once. The monotony of my walk, as I had at present nought
+else to think of, I allowed to engage a number of my thoughts. I
+hazarded conjectures upon many idle points, as my narrative will show. I
+fell to watching my feet, and to placing them, as far as practicable, in
+the footmarks of him who marched before me, instituting a sort of
+comparison between our soles, finding his smaller than mine, as, behind
+his back, I ventured upon his measure, watched the ruts in the road,
+made the wagons in advance of us, and wondered if those behind us had
+axle-trees as wide to an inch,&mdash;as they would have, if made by the same
+contractor;&mdash;in which case, I mused, it is just possible the coming
+train may move in this same rut. It seemed, then, a comfortable sort of
+place. I saw the clouds of dust that had been provoked rising in anger
+and rolling away sullenly many a day that weary summer, and that almost
+buried the wretched company in which we journeyed, hover heavily above
+the road-side, and choke the pretty weeds blooming there, by way of a
+mean revenge upon its human tormentors. Thereupon I envied the blue
+things, not their incubus, but their insignificance: for neither
+artillery, nor camp wagon, nor passing prisoner was aught to them. I
+wondered what each man here would say, if each man could tell his
+thoughts. Primarily, I was convinced, each captive would declare himself
+sick at heart: that is the only expression which will convey the sinking
+feeling. Once I heard a bird sing gayly a clear-throated song from a
+clump of trees; at which my heart grew sick also, to render me as
+miserable as the rest.</p>
+
+<p>My mind reverted to the Adjutant T&mdash;&mdash;, of the manner of whose capture I
+knew nothing, and whom I had left that morning in camp, as the regiment
+set out for the fight. I doubted not but that he would be with me in a
+moment, to throw another mild projectile, a half-sentence, at me. I had
+myself a catechism of one question with which to greet him. As some
+little parley might be necessary between us, which could not go on
+without the consent of our guardian, I concluded that then was the time
+to throw a sop to my sergeant, I turned coolly upon him.</p>
+
+<p>"We are marching rather briskly, are we not, Sergeant?" I said,
+endeavoring to insinuate the independence of unconcern in my bearing.</p>
+
+<p>"Wal,&mdash;right smart," he replied.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot tell by your uniform," I continued, with a half-smile, for the
+fellow was all beggar's rags and patches, "whether you are in the
+cavalry or not; but a pair of spurs, at any rate, may not come amiss to
+you,&mdash;and I can have no use for mine for some time yet. They don't allow
+us, I believe, to kick one another in Libby?"</p>
+
+<p>I took my long spurs from my boots, like fringe from my heart-strings,
+(of which the officer had directed my sergeant to allow no one to
+deprive me,&mdash;the boots, not the heart-strings, they being inaccessible:
+I would, possibly, not lose those till I arrived in Richmond,) and
+handed them over to him.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm of the Thirteenth Virginia Infantry," he said, "but do right smart
+duty on horseback" (he liked the steel). "I'm detailed to the provost
+marshal. They do treat a fellow rather hard down there."</p>
+
+<p>I augured ever so much good from the Sergeant's "do," upon which there
+was an emphasis.</p>
+
+<p>"Were you ever a prisoner, Sergeant?" I asked, always careful to bestow
+his title.</p>
+
+<p>"Once," he said, laconically.</p>
+
+<p>"Well! it's all one in the end," I said, carelessly turning from him, to
+show that I had no desire for the conversation, if he did not relish it.
+"You have a chance now to give me the devil of a time, in revenge for
+your treatment among my friends. 'T is an ill wind that blows nobody
+good."</p>
+
+<p>My sang-froid had the savor of a good pickle. It was a very peculiar
+turn to give the affair, I must own; but I saw that the Sergeant was
+struck by it. Possibly, that one was my best stroke<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span> of the day. I have,
+at any rate, ever since deemed it so.</p>
+
+<p>I walked along as before, speculating, not lightly, upon the dejected
+beings about me, who marched, spectre-fashion, in the dust, like the
+unhappy (would-be) crew on the shores of the Styx, trying to appease
+Charon. They never would be at rest till he ferried them over to the
+shades of the world of death,&mdash;or (what to them seemed impossible) till
+they were remanded back to life among the loved ones of their race. I
+remember particularly one trifle of this momentous march, that
+threatened towards night to gnaw into my very brain-tissues. Soldiers,
+it is known, are not over-careful in their dress, when in daily action
+in the field, nor have they time to grow fastidious during the fighting
+summer months. They then, perforce, disregard tapes with a loftier
+indifference to appearances than that which distinguishes the noble
+cynic of the world. But officers generally use tapes about their ankles
+(perhaps to keep some garment in place immediately upon the stocking);
+and I have known them myself, for prudence' sake, to tie them in hard
+knots. A poor limping lieutenant, a little to the left, and some ten
+feet in advance of me, had not adopted this precaution, and now,
+consequently, more as a punishment to me than to him, one of his nursery
+ties had come undone, and was trailing after his foot in shadow-like
+persistency. I had here a world of torture in a nutshell. When,
+unluckily, my eyes fastened upon this appendage, I could not keep them
+from it. It fascinated me with more than the juggler's success upon the
+serpent. I fell to conjecturing how long the affair might be,&mdash;if four
+inches or five; and pondered the allowance to be made in the calculation
+by reason of the man's distance; merging this view of the matter in
+another, as I watched his heel touch the ground, and noted the time
+which elapsed between that and the jumping forward of the foot, with the
+string, ever faithful, behind it. I conjectured how much dust the tape
+took up at each step, and wondered, if, in a long march, merely by
+accretion thereof, the end of it would not be a sort of dirt-coil,
+perhaps a tenth of an inch in diameter,&mdash;soaring higher, too, in my
+delirium of nervousness, till I could imagine the incalculable increase
+in size which would be insured, should the lieutenant step into a
+puddle, and get the thing all wet: he would wear a sand rope for
+ankle-fetter, upon entering Richmond.</p>
+
+<p>But the most provoking of all the phases to which my humor was reduced,
+and which my dilapidated body had to submit to, by means of this tape,
+was the almost irresistible desire to spring lightly forward, and to
+catch the thing beneath my toe. It invoked me to all sorts of gymnastic
+efforts. The impulse racked my breast, and set up an argument against
+every reason in favor of a jog-trotting march for the balance of the
+daylight. I surveyed the poor lieutenant from head to foot, and pictured
+to myself his surprise, should he find himself hitched to the ground. He
+would turn, I thought, with open, questioning eyes, and perhaps look
+flushed by the accident. He might only hop a step farther on, and trust
+to my not again overreaching him. He might, impelled by the influence
+that tormented me, fall behind me. I had an unwavering conviction that
+that tape would never be removed,&mdash;and that, consequently, in some way,
+the lieutenant, who played guide to it, would be my haunting demon all
+the weary hours of my march.</p>
+
+<p>Soon after I had conferred my tart speech upon the Sergeant, and had so
+sealed my failure to gain his grace in behalf of my friend and myself,
+the Adjutant was at my side. A hale, hearty, well-made man, unperturbed
+usually, he was now almost another person than himself. I thought I knew
+what causes produced the pallor on his face and the quiver about the
+loose-hanging under-lip. The good fellow had had in his jacket (before
+it was stolen) the leave-of-absence which was to have carried him home
+to be married, and he was to have availed himself of it in a week.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span>
+Perhaps the thought of his lady gave him the woebegone expression. All
+sorts of sweet dreams, that had illumined his life for months, and
+filled up the wide chinks of camp monotony, were now quite bitterly
+ended,&mdash;capped by the reality worse than the dream which is called
+nightmare. His smiling eyes were hooded only a little sooner than were
+those milder ones at home, no doubt under traced eyebrows and with far
+finer lashes. The marriage, perforce, was put off. The view of home was
+put off. Perhaps the Adjutant's solemn quietus, like an extinguisher of
+the light of his and his sweetheart's hopes, would drop upon him in
+loathsome Libby, and cancel the leave forever. This, being the weightier
+thought, was evidently bearing upon his mind.</p>
+
+<p>I had resolved, in a business way, upon two points,&mdash;perchance brought
+to my decision through some such tender passage as the above: first,
+that, as we could not escape from the lines together, he must take the
+earlier, because, as in mortgages, the better risk; and second, that if
+he did not answer in a satisfactory manner the one question that I had
+kept for some time uppermost in my brain to propound to him, he must
+pocket my North Star.</p>
+
+<p>"Have you a compass?" I muttered, as he edged by me.</p>
+
+<p>"No," he replied.</p>
+
+<p>My second resolution, then, was, that he should carry my compass.</p>
+
+<p>"I've been robbed of everything," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Take&mdash;my&mdash;compass&mdash;quick!" I returned, and pressed it into his hand.</p>
+
+<p>He was not as good an astronomer as I. He looked a hurried remonstrance
+at me; but was obliged to hide it at once, and could not, I knew, waste
+any eloquence now. Although, moreover, he was a lover, Nature had never
+endowed him with the art of speaking through the eye. There were
+stronger reasons in favor of his escape than of mine,&mdash;worldly, if not
+spiritual,&mdash;and he suffered from a dangerous nervousness, in dwelling
+upon the magnitude of the issue before him, which was not in my way.</p>
+
+<p>"It is now five," I said; "at seven, if in such woods as this, you must
+watch your chance and double."</p>
+
+<p>"Which way?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Travel north-northeast, seven miles," I whispered.</p>
+
+<p>Then, as if anxious to burst into a flood of eager words, he began,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"But you"&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>I looked at him fixedly, and moved off towards my Sergeant. That cursed
+tape before me now again made a twist in my brain.</p>
+
+<p>I was astonished at my Sergeant's opening a conversation.</p>
+
+<p>We were travelling (wearily enough) through a piece of woods,
+overarching and autumn-tinted, the road being cut down, and,
+consequently, either side of it walled in by upheaving embankments,
+green-covered and yellow-fringed, over which the declining sun could not
+dart its rays upon us. The heavy trains of the entire army were making
+the march along with us, disturbing the modest influences of the
+spot,&mdash;some trundling forward in the van, others toiling after in our
+rear, the tending angels of all being drowsy, in the shape of the lazy
+teamsters astride their beasts. Only that peculiar music, made up of the
+ponderous <i>thud</i> (the birds had all grown still) or tramp of the men for
+a bass,&mdash;of the clink and clatter of the canteens for a treble,&mdash;and of
+a little broken conversation, in the whining, drawling tones of the
+guard, on their own side of the lines, and so with no quieting weight
+upon their tongues, for a <i>viva-voce</i> accompaniment,&mdash;broke the sweet
+summer stillness. The shafts of sunlight bridging the road above our
+heads, making a golden ether-plank for the air-insects to cross upon,
+and lighting up the veins in the trembling leaves as the breeze put them
+to confusion, set me to thinking of the eyebrows that the Adjutant was
+engaged to, and, no doubt, of eyebrows in general. A cool air, smelling
+of mould and fallen leaves, perhaps a little damp, fell upon us here.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span>
+The charms of Nature may have loosened the Sergeant's tongue.</p>
+
+<p>"I was captured in Mar'land," he began, looking straight before him, but
+of course honoring me with his address.</p>
+
+<p>I was grateful to him, a little for companionship's sake, but chiefly
+for here giving me a chance that I had hoped for, as I deemed it of
+considerable value,&mdash;I mean, a chance to dig down to the mine of good
+feeling, to the heart of this gray-covered, slumbering crater, that, an
+hour since, had thrust out that "do"; and also, I was beholden to him
+for taking my thoughts from the tape.</p>
+
+<p>"How did our boys treat you?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Very fair," he said quickly, with a faint Judas-start, as if it were a
+matter of conscience, and he had now twitched it out. "They done well by
+me."</p>
+
+<p>Here was good fortune, indeed! The mine, with all its riches, mine
+without any digging.</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad of it," I said, briefly; for I saw that laconics were his
+jewels, perhaps from a sense of expediency as well as of beauty. "We
+always try to treat you well, whenever we are not firing our guns at
+you."</p>
+
+<p>This he acknowledged with a nod, but without turning from his look
+directly front.</p>
+
+<p>"I lay two months in hosp't'l," he began again,&mdash;"in Fred'r'k, in
+Mar'land. I was wounded in the hip."</p>
+
+<p>"In '62, I suppose?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes,&mdash;at Boonsboro'."</p>
+
+<p>Here the conversation ended as suddenly as it had opened. It was very
+clear that the Sergeant had said his last word for some time. But I was
+convinced in my own mind that at length more good would fall to my lot.</p>
+
+<p>He pondered the matter some ten minutes, and then quite overwhelmed me
+with his story.</p>
+
+<p>"One of your boys," he began, "lay wounded by me on the field,&mdash;of a
+ball in the lungs,&mdash;and wanted some water. Whenever he spoke, he threw
+out blood, and wasn't likely to live, nohow. I said,&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"'Yank, will you take my tin?'&mdash;for there was a drop in it yet, and I
+rolled on my side and gave it him.</p>
+
+<p>"'I am goin' to die,' he said.</p>
+
+<p>"'Yes,' says I.</p>
+
+<p>"'They'll treat you well,' he said; 'they'll carry you to the hosp't'l,
+and I hope you'll live to git home.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Thank you,' says I.</p>
+
+<p>"He gave me some 'baccy and a roll of money.</p>
+
+<p>"'The paymaster's been about, and he gave me more 'n I want now. You'll
+want 'baccy in hosp't'l,&mdash;you'll want it all,' he said.</p>
+
+<p>"And he run over in blood and died. He gave me right smart of money. I
+rolled away from him when he died, and they took me to hosp't'l."</p>
+
+<p>The Sergeant paused for my comment.</p>
+
+<p>Under my peculiar circumstances, I was very much touched by this story.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor fellow! many such a one has gone to his account," I said, sadly.</p>
+
+<p>"And I want to give back some of the money to you," said the Sergeant.</p>
+
+<p>I looked at him in astonishment.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll want it down there, as much as you can git. I have no need of
+it. It a'n't mine. It's his'n."</p>
+
+<p>The Sergeant had evidently taken it in trust.</p>
+
+<p>"What claim have I to it?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Any poor fellow's got a claim to it. It's meant to help poor fellows,
+that money is. It's a dead man's work."</p>
+
+<p>I was more than ever touched now, in the presence of the wealth of this
+mine which I had tapped.</p>
+
+<p>"I will take some of it, Sergeant," I replied; "and I shall do my best
+to use it as well as you have."</p>
+
+<p>(This incident, strange to say, in its display of human purity, almost
+tempted me to abandon my scheme of escape, and to go with the Sergeant
+down to Richmond. But he was no measure of his fellows.)</p>
+
+<p>After that we chatted easily off and on, and had a feeling of confidence
+in each other which a two or three days' march could not alone have
+created.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>At about half after six that night, (I had made the Sergeant take my
+watch, which otherwise I should surely be robbed of, I told him; and he
+gave me the time,)&mdash;at about half after six, two officers came riding
+furiously up to our mild officer and kept along with him for awhile,
+making three dim figures above our heads (they only were mounted) in the
+forest shades, in place of the one that, unlike the erl-king, had
+continued on his way harmlessly from our outset. Their consultation
+over, the two strangers dashed over snapping weeds and underbrush to the
+command on ahead, and our mild officer ordered our column (of prisoners)
+to halt. We were in the woods still, but we had emerged from between
+those sun-spanned embankments some time since. The ground was ill chosen
+by our gentle ruler, but he may have depended much upon his men, whose
+vigilance, no doubt, he had before tried in the fall of day. They seemed
+to me but a handful, and only a sieve for their charge to dribble
+through, the latter aided by the time and place in their work of
+dropping off. I drew closer to the Adjutant.</p>
+
+<p>"Say what you have to say for home, in case we miss," I said,&mdash;and in
+the confusion of the halt I could talk rather freely. "Your time has
+come now."</p>
+
+<p>"You will write, if I'm not heard from,&mdash;and&mdash;my love to my"&mdash;he
+gurgled.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes," I said, cheerily. "All right, old fellow,&mdash;we'll both laugh
+over this, some day."</p>
+
+<p>I gave him a moment.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll do me the same favor, if I don't happen to turn up," I said; and
+we seized each other's hands. "You have the compass,&mdash;you know the way.
+There is nothing more, I believe, Ned?" I said, hastily, and looked into
+his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall watch my chance as the wagons pass; there is nothing more," he
+replied; and we parted immediately.</p>
+
+<p>It was as if we had agreed to toss pennies for the guillotine. I had no
+time to think further of him, for my own plans were maturing.</p>
+
+<p>It was soon whispered about that we were to let the trains get ahead of
+us, since it was necessary that they should move faster; and the Rebel
+authorities, I presume, had decided to save their transportation, at the
+risk even of their captives. One or other, then, it seemed likely, would
+be taken. The Yankees were driving us before them, having reversed the
+fortunes of the day, and, perhaps, might liberate the prisoners who so
+impeded this retreat. We stood, I presume, for half an hour, drawn up in
+a compressed mass upon the skirt of the highway, whilst, startled by
+fear, a powerful task-master over teamsters, the late drowsy drivers
+urged forward their toil-worn trains. It was seasonable, but I believed
+that my time had not yet come. The deep shades encouraged me, but I
+awaited the hour that I had hit upon. I thought for a moment of the
+Adjutant, perhaps then ducking his head beneath the bushes, and
+watching, with his heart beating time, the heavy mass by degrees moving
+on. I trusted that the wheel of Fortune, whilst these other wheels were
+moving Rebelward, had turned in his favor.</p>
+
+<p>At a little after seven we again fell into line, not having allowed all
+the teams to pass us; and as the same Fortune would have it, we left the
+woods behind us, and marched between open meadows. It had now grown
+quite dark. My face wore a look of anxiety as I noted the wide stretch
+of open field beyond me.</p>
+
+<p>But there were as anxious faces as mine among the groups of Rebel
+officers who rode slowly along the lines. This was the chill season of
+perturbation to the hot-blooded gentlemen. Some communications were
+passing rapidly between the commander of our detachment and the
+commander of the army. Things were not working satisfactorily to either.
+Orderlies were dispatched to the front and to the rear, and the
+air-blasting bugle was sounded on ahead, as if to chide the teamsters.
+When we had marched up an ascent, and were on the brow of a low ridge,
+we were halted,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span> and then turned into an open field. It was decided,
+apparently, that the rest of the train should pass us.</p>
+
+<p>No doubt I should here have all the graces of a ready pen at my beck,
+honey-dipped, or Vulcan-forged, in accordance with my humor, whether sad
+or harsh, in making up the climax of my account; for at this spot the
+good writer would be most impressive in his language, and set the reader
+in a tremble. We waited for seventy minutes in this road-side field, the
+prisoners resignedly huddling together, with the callous guards making a
+circle about them. Let me enlarge upon our circumstances. The time,
+about eight o'clock; the atmosphere thick and murky; the sky overcast,
+promising a warm September night. I asked the Sergeant if it would rain,
+and said carelessly some other trifles. I feigned an excess of
+sleepiness. Our detachment lay some thirty yards from the highway,
+spread into a thin line of no evenness, running parallel with the road,
+which, in the gloom, our eyes could scarcely find. The exigencies of the
+service had proved the ruin of the fences; and only here and there in
+the vague darkness could one make out the black bunch of a shadowy tree.
+Just beyond us&mdash;for my Sergeant and myself stood at the rear extremity,
+the land's&mdash;end of this shoal of prisoners, outside of the ring of
+guards sparely posted, on the very top of the ridge which we had
+ascended&mdash;was a low clump of bushes, (perhaps neck-high,) squat and
+opaque, with much the appearance of a ball of garden boxwood. The hill,
+I thought, rolled away on either side,&mdash;taking some comfort to myself in
+the conjecture; and the inky leaf-globe, only a little more sombre than
+its background, could not be seen in a hasty glance. This clump, in its
+innocent blackness, would cover my purposed guilt; and I resolved to
+confide to it alone the secret crime of my attempted escape.</p>
+
+<p>But there were calculations to be made, which I set about with the
+eagerness which the occasion required, watching my Sergeant very closely
+as my head ran over its prospectus. And, first, if he stood by my side,
+I revolved, I could not by any chance whisper my tale to the silent
+bushes; although, if, at the favorable moment, when the squad was
+ordered to march, he but stepped a feather's-throw in advance of me, the
+confession could be readily made. His presence would frustrate my plans.
+There was one expedient at my beck, but quite hazardous, by the adoption
+of which against odds I might compass his death and my freedom,&mdash;a
+thought which I dismissed on the instant, as it savored of murder and
+ingratitude. I must trust that he would give me his back, in spite of
+his sense of responsibility, for a breathing-space ere we "fell in."
+With his fellow watch-dogs my ruminations had nothing to do. The nearest
+of them, owing to their scarcity, (and they had grown trebly valuable
+this campaign, as they had grown rarer,) was not within twenty yards of
+me. My new world was scarce that distance in the rear. The moment of all
+moments, the crisis, the vision of a life-time, eddying through the
+brain in the flash of a powder-pan, and stamping red-hot impressions
+there, (which in some cases bleach men's hair-roots,) was finally upon
+me. My Sergeant turned from me, and I glided with tiger-tread to the
+bushes, and laid myself down.</p>
+
+<p>I was, of course, between him and my new friends, and I pretended to
+sleep, so that, if he found me, he could scarce suppose that I meditated
+leaving him in so loose a manner; and, moreover, my being asleep would
+follow naturally upon my reiterated statement that I was sleepy. It
+would have been madness to have taken the other side, since, if there
+found, the case against me would have been clear. I depended, as is ever
+man's wont, upon mere shadows to do much for me where I was.</p>
+
+<p>I have thought often since, however, (then other than the deliberate
+thought which every man in trying circumstances has experienced, and
+which centres upon one subject, being so severe a tension of all the
+faculties as to seem no thought<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span> at all, was impossible,) that it would
+be unwise, and perhaps a stumbling-block to future Union captives in the
+custody of that horrid host, to ascribe my unbroken rest under those
+dry, dusty bush-branches simply to the heavy darkness of the evening,
+excluding all other causes from participation in my affairs. It was
+unusually cloudy, the sky resting overhead like a hanging pall, and
+threatening rain with thunder every moment, as is almost always the case
+after a hotly contested engagement. The fight that morning had been a
+grand one, (quite a Horace Vernet picture,) and hence the clouds that
+night. But I must own that I give my Sergeant a place in my memory now
+with a feeling of gratitude, induced thereto by the strong supposition
+that he did not allow himself to see me as I glided under cover. I count
+much upon his heart, as shown in his little proffered narrative. The
+other guards on the line might readily have failed to notice me, the
+more so as I had a special attendant to see to my wants; and I should
+have been very sorry, indeed, had one of them disturbed my rest. But my
+Sergeant was not three body-lengths from me when I slipped away from his
+protection; and although he had his back turned, I am inclined to think
+that he had only fewer eyes than Argus. His general reputation, to be
+read in his bearing, pronounced him vigilant, and his every act
+betokened circumspection. Far be it from me, however, to bespatter his
+character by avowing him negligent in performing his duty in this case,
+whilst lauding him for his honest devotion to his masters. Perhaps it
+may have been a part of his care to see the squad "fall in," and he
+could not abandon that line of his duty to search for a stray officer,
+smooth-spoken and amiable, to whom he had just shown a kindness. The
+bustle and unnatural darkness of the moment could not inspire one who
+was not a demon with a demoniacal desire to set a screeching and rash
+body of troopers upon my track. The detachment of melancholy mutes was
+moving off when I tried my fate; and he could have had but little time
+to think ere the miserable men were in the distance. The farther my
+Sergeant journeyed, the more likely he was to keep quiet upon my
+subject.</p>
+
+<p>I experienced very peculiar emotions as I lay there and found myself
+alone. I even seemed to hear the whine of the soldiery, the ringing of
+canteens and sabres, and the peculiar sound of the tramping feet, long
+after they had passed away,&mdash;chanting, in my soul's depths, my
+fluttering song of triumph to that imagined accompaniment. I had an
+almost accurate idea of where I was, having observed our course quite
+closely during the day, and proposed going over very nearly the same
+ground in the next twenty-four hours. I had already decided in my own
+mind that the Rebel general was making a retreat before the gallant
+General Sheridan, whose outposts I hoped soon to come upon. But dangers
+many, and some hidden, lay thick-strewn upon my path, which had not run
+over roses hither; and I deemed it best to encumber the cold earth for
+an hour, ere I sallied from my Moses-harbor.</p>
+
+<p>The highway lay within a hundred feet of me; and as I intended taking up
+my lost stitches of the morning in a peculiar (and, I hoped, original)
+manner, having no knowledge of the country beyond the line of our late
+march, I was obliged to count upon keeping within sound of the troops
+and wagons travelling there, if I desired at all to gain my end. The
+Adjutant T&mdash;&mdash; had my compass, and was, I trusted, quite free from
+danger as I remained supinely within hail of men who would be delighted
+to shoot me. His image, as I fancied him, cumbersome and crouching, as
+he hurried along, dodging from tree to tree, reminded me of the hunts
+which the chivalry indulge in farther south, (near that very horrible
+Andersonville slaughter-house,) where the bay of the blood-hound rings
+over the marshes, and the pack is let loose in the clear morning air,
+crystal-bright and all aglow, to lap up the dew with overhanging
+tongues, and to run down escaped prisoners. There is no poetical charm
+attaching to that pack, although Pan<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span> never played his reeds in a more
+poetical country; and its existence and employment are solemnly sober
+truths. They made me very grave, suggesting, as they did, some other
+dangers to which I was then liable. After working myself into a nervous
+state of body, I began pulling off my coat, leaving my shoulder-straps
+therewith, to play the part of asterisks, and explain who was within. My
+pantaloons the soil would soon make as white as a gray-back's; and my
+cap was to stay with the uniform, to grace some indigent discoverer of
+the other side.</p>
+
+<p>When I had secreted my money in my waistband, (not deeming my orderly's
+suggestion feasible,) and had strapped my suspenders tightly about my
+body, I worked my way round the bushes to the other side of the clump.
+As I had expected, I found an even sweep downwards of meadow-land,
+stretching parallel with the road, and as far before me as I could see
+through the darkness.</p>
+
+<p>I got myself flat upon the ground, with my feet, as in Christian burial,
+pointing towards the east,&mdash;for there the highway ran,&mdash;and with my
+handkerchief bound about my head. I then commenced rolling as gently as
+possible down the grassy declivity.</p>
+
+<p>I should be unable to give any account of my thoughts during the first
+ten minutes of my novel evolutions. I moved at one time slowly, at
+another rapidly, as the ideas of prudence and danger by turns reigned in
+my bosom. I risked much in being obliged to keep in line with the
+current of life flowing so noisily the other way, the thought of which
+spurred me onward; and I had far to go, and not very great endurance to
+fall back upon,&mdash;a reflection which counselled a cautious expenditure of
+effort. I was anon anxious to fly over the hard lumps of earth and
+pricking straw-blades,&mdash;anon, eager to move gently, with deliberate hand
+upon the brake. I suffered much at my elbows, which were crushed as my
+body passed over them, (a pulverizing process,) and which, as I had
+clasped my arms across my breast, were most palpably in the way. It
+seemed as if they would be unhinged. My feet, too, demonstrated to me
+the causes of the circular motion of a penholder or a ruler when started
+down a desk-lid, and had the same influence upon my course as the
+pin-point has upon the whole pin when in motion. My head and upper
+members inclined to swing in a circle about my feet. I spent much labor
+upon this defaulting portion of &AElig;sop's body of sovereign independencies,
+which threatened the greatest difficulties. My neck, also, in the narrow
+space between the band of my low woollen shirt and my hair-roots, was
+harassed at every turn by the needle-bed of short grass that I passed
+over; and the loose stones, stubble, and gravel, that had irritated the
+skin, worked their way beneath the garment. I was quite a child's
+rattle, full of pebbles. I could have endured all this for a long while,
+however, the spirit then actuating me being one of those unreflecting
+forces which would (as a last resort) have carried me down the same
+slope in a Regulus-cask. But after travelling quite a distance, I began
+to revolve, not any complete remedy for these manifold ills, but some
+amelioration of the exaggerated violence of their sway. I tore one
+sleeve from my undershirt and wound that around my neck. I held my arms
+straight down my side and flat against my body. Nothing short of
+amputation could have crushed the rebellion in my lower members, and so
+(with the power to amputate not abandoned) I nursed them into insolence
+with a compromise.</p>
+
+<p>A psychological history of the uneven progress of that billowy retreat
+would be as far beyond my reach as of the ten minutes of outset trial. I
+thought only vaguely of my home, of my regiment, of my moments of danger
+in past life. I listened during that night till my sense of hearing
+changed from a passive to an active sense. I got my neck sadly cramped
+in lifting my head from the ground every time my body rolled face upward
+to gain some knowledge of the enemy. My imagination started up all sorts
+of shapes about me.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span> The damp, heavy atmosphere sent a chill through my
+veins. I apprehended rain. I soon, also, began to think of daylight,
+(before which I had many hours,) and to wonder how I should secrete
+myself after sunrise. I did not feel hungry; but I had not gone far
+before I felt the faint longings of thirst.</p>
+
+<p>The ground, too, over which I travelled, was not all meadow land, and
+had worse features than grass-swords and gravel bullets. I did not find
+many fences, but I crossed innumerable small streams and one heavy
+hedge.</p>
+
+<p>I noticed that by degrees, judging from the sound, the Rebel troops were
+getting by, only dropping along finally in dish-water driblets,&mdash;and
+that, at last, but scattering bodies of infantry, and at intervals some
+wagons, occupied the road, moving like dark lobsters in the midnight
+mists. I could not take to it myself, because of them; and I knew too
+well how full it would be of stragglers, those worthless gleanings of an
+army, even after the rear-guard had swept onwards. But I did not
+hesitate to erect my body from its voluntary abasement and to make
+walking a branch of my exercise, when convinced that only vagrants could
+chance to see me. They never capture prisoners on either side. Thus was
+I enabled for two hours before sunrise to accomplish more than twice as
+much as my five hours' rolling labors had attained.</p>
+
+<p>The long-expected rain began to fall in a heavy mist at about dawn, and
+shortly grew in importance, till the windows of heaven were wide open
+and it became a settled pour. Most fortunately, by that time I had
+entered some of the first woods we had passed through in the journey of
+the previous day, and had fair shelter (from Aurora, not Pluvius) within
+my reach. It was a colossal pepper-box lid, that could keep men from
+seeing through it, but not the rain from dropping in. My first impulse
+was to make a fire, so chilled to the very marrow was I in the early
+morning air, that chilliest of all atmospheres, and so wet was I also in
+my light summer garments. But of course Prudence had no word in that
+matter, nor any countenance for a suggestion so reckless, and my soberer
+senses got to casting about for a fitting retreat ere broad day lay
+before me. I must reconnoitre, I thought, dripping at every point, like
+a convict in the marshes, before I continued a tramp here that might
+expose me to a scouting-party at any moment. That hunger, too, which had
+not troubled me in the night-hours, came upon me now and urged very
+suggestive hints. I had made a cup of my hands more than once, and
+slaked my thirst from the streams in my way, Narcissus-fashion; but
+nothing solid had passed my lips for seventeen hours. First, logs and
+leaves for a cover, then food, then a critical examination of my
+position, were my objects, as I hastily settled my plans. The thought of
+the intelligent contraband, so beyond ordinary human excellence in the
+richness of his heart, who might minister to all my wants, (as without
+question many such had done to my distressed brethren flying from
+Libby,) and whose homely traits become to us golden virtues in moments
+of suffering, crossed my brain as the depression of hunger increased.
+Very dim visions of clean and savory cooking haunted me as I took off my
+boots and shook the water from them. I could not imagine anything to
+equal in value a good steak or a hot hash; nor could I check my feeling
+of discontent, a hopeless feeling, at having many a time and oft
+partaken of like viands, perhaps, unappreciatively. The slimy dirt of my
+uppers soiled my hands, as I endeavored to make myself less
+uncomfortable, and I took the shirtsleeve from my neck as the driest
+article about me upon which to wipe them, Near by lay the trunk of a
+large walnut-tree, water-logged and growing sponge-moss; and small
+bushes, like coral reefs in this sea of troubles, were on all sides of
+me. I had not accomplished much when I heard distinctly the sound of a
+bugle.</p>
+
+<p>It was, I supposed, about half a mile distant; but there was no knowing
+how near the wet horsemen whom it signalled<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span> might be to my proposed
+hiding place; and, accordingly, I got hastily down by the walnut, a good
+squirrel-cover, without shelter or head-piece. I lay along that side of
+it which was farthest from the road, and durst not move for fear of
+capture. The woods were quite thick at that place, and from the hidden
+pathway (now become scarce a highway) a body of the enemy might emerge
+at any moment. The unwelcome music of their bugle broke the Sabbath
+stillness of the morning, and interrupted the harmony of the falling
+rain-drops as they pattered through the great cathedral branches
+overhead. I spent, I presume, two hours in this lazy manner, without
+thought of any food, and scarce daring to look about me. During the
+first half of that period I heard the bugle thrice send its clear,
+ringing notes&mdash;for it is sometimes lark-throated&mdash;through the
+tree-aisles and under the half-arches above me, the tones lingering in
+waves on the air, and not failing to startle me. At the first commanding
+blast I got to watching for the troops that did not come forth at all.
+Being quite three grasshopper's flights from the road, I could
+reconnoitre the few rods of it passing near me with comparative ease and
+safety, and the intentness of my look-out drove thoughts of discomfort
+from my head. The silence grew oppressive to one who had been perforce
+so long alone. The thought that at times man has to avoid his
+fellow-beings in his misery, lest his misery be augmented, was
+productive of a tender feeling of self-pity in my bosom, which, perhaps,
+(strange to say,) was a source of some comfort to me. I had, I found,
+awakened a present sympathy in my case, the passive part of my nature
+having enlisted its kindly feelings in behalf of the bespattered,
+dripping gentleman who lay there before it, a sad mass of ooze, soaking
+on wet leaves. I was growing reflective over my woes, when the second
+blast broke upon my ear, and I started much as young ladies do at the
+sudden gun which, on the boards, sends the unholy Caspar to his account.</p>
+
+<p>In a word, I was worn out, wet, and hungry; and had become so unstrung,
+in the accumulated discomforts of the roll from Rebeldom, and the rain
+of the last stages of my journey, that I could not control my growing
+nervousness. Having waited a full hour from the third signal-call of the
+bugle, I jumped desperately to my feet, with a mind made up to hazard
+everything. Many unlucky fellows, escaping from their captors, have
+toiled with a wonderful energy, and have failed, when worthy of
+immediate success, if we rate them by (the war standard) their bravery
+and coolness. They succumb to fever, and despair finally, but a few
+moments ere the object of their toils would drop before them. It is
+ill-advised ever to cast one's hopes adrift as long as life is in
+us,&mdash;an imprudence of which I myself was guilty, and which might have
+carried me back to thraldom. The dragging anchor may fasten, spell-bound
+by some fluke-enamored reef, as the vessel seems on the point of
+striking. I jumped to my feet in desperation, and walked hastily a few
+rods nearer home. I allowed no after-thought in the premises, but
+decided to dodge from tree to tree, like the hunting Indian, as long as
+my present humor impelled me.</p>
+
+<p>I know not how far I advanced thus, through the most desperate (but to
+the reader, whom I commiserate, least interesting) stage of my
+adventure,&mdash;nor anything of my thoughts or emotions, after the hot
+resolve had taken hold of me. I was in a fever, a mad fever, the
+evidence of cold, and the handiwork of the past night's rolling-mill,
+and, I doubt not, was entirely unfitted to evade the enemy with presence
+of mind or skill. I did not pause till I heard the sound of axes, and
+the confused noises of a body of men.</p>
+
+<p>I then again took the serpent's position upon the earth, after he, like
+myself, had lost his Eden, and summoned my oft-trusted counsellors, my
+ears, to their familiar duty of serving for all my senses in one. The
+sounds were very distinct indeed; I could even hear the men's voices,
+chopped up by their<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span> active tools; and I knew, by the noise of their
+labors, that they were driving stakes into the ground. It could scarce
+be the Rebels, I thought, in camp this distance in the rear: it might be
+our men, I hoped, pushing our advance up the Valley. I drew carefully
+forward on hands and knees.</p>
+
+<p>In a little while I saw a bending figure, with its back to me, holding
+something that I could not see over a smoking bundle of fagots. There
+was a poncho about the neck, that covered it down to the ground, and in
+the morning gray, the figure, the colonnade of tree-trunks, the lazy
+smoke, a cabinet picture, wore an India-rubber look.</p>
+
+<p>Presently another came up to my first discovery, as if emerging from the
+bustle elsewhere, and stood erect before him, seeming almost as wet as
+myself. There was a tasselled bugle in his hand, covered with a corner
+of his poncho, under which he had a cavalry sabre. He wore, also, a
+dripping cavalry cord round his hat. After a few words, the two sat upon
+their heels before the fire, which they bent over, paternally, to
+protect, watching the thing that was cooking.</p>
+
+<p>Having drawn myself cautiously nearer, I waited a long while for one of
+the men to display his colors.</p>
+
+<p>The bugler was burnishing his instrument upon his blouse beneath his
+rubber, hazarding some chance notes under shelter, as he laughed and
+chatted with his friend. He would, apparently, consult with him of his
+performance; and he finally lifted himself upon his feet, with the
+instrument tight to his lips. He then blew a rasping, grating blast upon
+the air, ear-splitting and dissonant, that was his own rendition of a
+few bars of Yankee Doodle.</p>
+
+<p>The blouse, being dark, had given me much hope; the air gave me
+certainty; and before the bugler could wind his final note, I became one
+of the group.</p>
+
+<p>My pantaloons showed that I was an officer, but in all other respects I
+appeared less than a highwayman. Accustomed to roughnesses, however, the
+men before me would not have divined that I was miserable, had not my
+appearance been by a few degrees more wretched than that of the most
+dilapidated of warriors. They gave over, the one his mess, the other his
+music, for a second, to inquire into my circumstances, and then
+conducted me to the Major who had command of the detachment some quarter
+of a mile in the rear.</p>
+
+<p>The eight days' leave-of-absence that was given me, after a full report
+at headquarters, garnished with less ornament than the present record,
+afforded me an opportunity to reach my physician in time to have it
+extended by ten more; and in that period I learned from a letter,
+written in a thin, peaked hand, that the Adjutant T&mdash;&mdash; had escaped, but
+had been shot in the thigh. The compass, that had been his cloud by day
+and pillar of fire by night during his sad exodus, was returned to me,
+with his old lady-mother's thanks. Many simple, yet touching, speeches
+welled up from her rich heart, and shone on the thin white paper; and,
+no doubt, her great, manly son was tended by another, whilst, at her
+escritoire, the kindly epistle was made for me. In the subsequent hurry
+of camp-life, I received a second, that contained all those mournful
+expressions of resignation, and dependence upon the Higher Power, which
+broken-hearted Christians so sweetly utter. The Adjutant T&mdash;&mdash;, indeed,
+had received his solemn quietus in running from the Libby Prison, and
+the extinguisher of his life was down.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="DOCTOR_JOHNS" id="DOCTOR_JOHNS"></a>DOCTOR JOHNS.</h2>
+
+
+<h3>XXVIII.</h3>
+
+<p>"Doctor, we miss Reuby," said the Tew partners.</p>
+
+<p>And the good old people said it with feeling,&mdash;though, over and over, at
+winter's dusk, the boy had given a sharp rattle to their shop-door, and
+the warning bell called them away from their snug fire only to see his
+light pair of heels whisking around the corner of the Eagle Tavern. The
+mischief in the lad was, indeed, of such elastic, irrepressible temper,
+that even the gravest of the parishioners were disposed to regard it
+with a frown in which a comic pardon was always lurking. Perhaps this
+may have been by reason of the tender recollections of the poor young
+mother Rachel, who had so suddenly yielded up her life, and taken away
+the charm of her smiles to another country; or it may have been that the
+pranks of the parson's boy found greater toleration by reason of their
+contrast with the sturdy and unyielding gravity of the Doctor; they made
+up a good average of mirth for the household of the parsonage,&mdash;a sort
+of average which the wicked world craves, and which, it is to be feared,
+will be craved until we take on a wholly new moral shape. Or, to put the
+reflection in other form, if the Doctor's immovable serenity was a type
+of the highest embodiment of good in this world, the playful humors of
+the boy were reckoned by the good-natured villagers as the most
+pardonable shape which the inevitable principle of evil that belongs to
+our heritage could possibly take on; and thus, while the father
+challenged their admiration, only the more, by reason of the contrast,
+the boy challenged all their tenderest sympathies.</p>
+
+<p>Even the Tourtelots "quite missed the boy"; though over and over the
+brindled cow of the Deacon was found to have slipped the bars, (a thing
+the orderly creature was never known to do of her own head,) and was
+reported at twilight by the sober-faced Reuben as strolling far down
+upon the Common.</p>
+
+<p>It is but a small bit of canvas we have chosen for the painting in of
+these figures of ours; and returning to the old town of Ashfield, as we
+do now, where the central interest must lie, there is little of change
+to declare, still less of dramatic incident. A serene quietude, year
+after year, is the characteristic of most of the interior New England
+towns. The elections come and go with their fury of previous
+declamation. The Squire presides over the deliberations of his party,
+and some leading Adams man presides over the deliberations of the other;
+even the boys are all Jackson men or Adams men; but when the result is
+declared, there is an acquiescence on all hands that is beautiful to
+behold; and in process of time, Mr. Troop, the postmaster, yields up the
+mail pouches and locks and canvas bags to some active little Jackson
+partisan with the utmost suavity, and smokes off his discontent upon the
+porch of the Eagle Tavern, under the very shadow of the tall hickory
+pole, which for one third of its height is protected by old wagon-tire
+heavily spiked on, against the axes of zealous political opponents.</p>
+
+<p>The old blear-eyed Boody is not so cheery as we have seen him, although
+his party has won brilliant success. There is a sad story of domestic
+grief that has marked a new wrinkle in his forehead and given a droop to
+his eye, which, had all gone fairly, he might have weathered for ten
+years more. The glory of the ringleted Suke has indeed gone, as Phil had
+told; but it has not gone in the way of marriage. God only knows where
+those pink cheeks are showing their graces now,&mdash;not, surely, in any
+home of hers,&mdash;not in any home at all. God only knows what repinings
+have come, all too late, over the glitter and the triumph of an hour.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span>
+The elderly, grave ones shake their heads dismally over this fall, and
+talk of the terribly demoralizing associations amidst which the poor
+child has lived; but do they ask themselves if they did their best to
+mend them? Decoyed toward evil fast and frequently enough, without
+doubt; but were there any decoys, such as kind hands and welcoming
+words, in the other direction? The meeting-house doors have, indeed,
+been always open, for the just and for the unjust. But have not the
+starched, good women of the parish been a little disposed to count the
+pretty tavern-keeper's daughter as outside the fold&mdash;so far as all
+social influences were concerned&mdash;from the beginning? That exuberant
+life in her which led to the dance at a tavern ball, was there any
+palliative for it,&mdash;any hope for it, except to go on in the way of
+destruction?</p>
+
+<p>But we would not judge unjustly. Certain it is, that Miss Johns indulged
+in such scathing condemnation of the poor sinner as made Ad&egrave;le shiver:
+with the spinster at least, there would be little hope for a Magdalen,
+or a child of a Magdalen. Nor could such as she fully understand the
+measured and subdued tone with which the good Doctor talked of a lapse
+from virtue which had so shocked the little community. But the parson
+lived so closely in that spiritual world where all his labor and love
+centred, that he saw under its ineffable light only two great ranks of
+people pressing toward the inevitable goal: a lesser rank, which had
+found favor of God; and a greater, tumultuous one, toward whom his heart
+yearned, that with wavering and doubt and evil intention pressed on to
+destruction. What mattered to him the color of the sin, or who was he to
+judge it? When the secret places of the heart were so full of
+wickedness, why anathematize above the rest those plague-spots which
+revealed themselves to mortals? "Fearful above all others," he was wont
+to say, "will be those sins which, being kept cautiously smouldering
+through life, will, at the blast of the Archangel's trump, blaze out in
+inextinguishable fire!"</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor kept himself and his pulpit mostly free of that theological
+fermentation which in those years was going on throughout New
+England,&mdash;at least of all such forms of it as marked a division in the
+orthodox churches. If he had a leaning, it was certainly in favor of the
+utmost severity of Calvinism. He distrusted human philosophy, and would
+rather have accepted the theory of natural inability in all its
+harshness than see it explained away by any metaphysic subtilties that
+should seem to veil or place in doubt the paramount efficiency of the
+Spirit.</p>
+
+<p>But though slow to accept theological reforms, the Doctor was not slow
+to advocate those which promised good influence upon public morals. Thus
+he had entered with zeal into the Temperance movement; and after 1830,
+or 1832 at the latest, there was no private locker in the parsonage for
+any black bottle of choice Santa Cruz. His example had its bearing upon
+others of the parish; and whether by dint of the Doctor's effective
+preaching, or whether it were by reason of the dilapidated state of the
+buildings and the leaky condition of the stills, it is certain that
+about this time Deacon Simmons, of whom casual mention has been made,
+abandoned his distillery, and invested such spare capital as he chose to
+keep afloat in the business of his son-in-law, Mr. Bowrigg of New York,
+who had up to this time sold the Deacon's gin upon commission.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Bowrigg was a thriving merchant, and continued his wholesale traffic
+with eminent success. In proof of this success, he astonished the good
+people of Ashfield by building, in the summer of 1833, at the
+instigation of his wife, an elegant country residence upon the main
+street of the town; and the following year, the little Bowriggs&mdash;two
+daughters of blooming girl age&mdash;brought such a flutter of city ribbons
+and silks into the main aisle of the meeting-house as had not been seen
+in many a day. Anne and Sophia Bowrigg, aged respectively thirteen and
+fifteen, fell naturally into somewhat intimate associations<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span> with our
+little friends, Ad&egrave;le and Rose: an association that was not much to the
+taste of the Doctor, who feared that under it Ad&egrave;le might launch again
+into those old coquetries of dress against which Maverick had cautioned
+him, and which in their quiet country atmosphere had been subdued into a
+modest homeliness that was certainly very charming.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Sophia, however, the elder of the two Bowrigg daughters, was a
+young lady not easily balked of her intent; and conceiving a violent
+fondness for Ad&egrave;le, whether by reason of the graces of her character, or
+by reason of her foreign speech, in which she could stammeringly join,
+to the great mystification of all others, she soon forced herself into a
+patronizing intimacy with Ad&egrave;le, and was a frequent visitor at the
+parsonage. With a great fund of assurance, a rare and unappeasable
+glibness of tongue, and that lack of refined delicacy which invariably
+belongs to such noisy demonstrativeness, Miss Sophia had after only one
+or two interviews ferreted out from Ad&egrave;le all that the little stranger
+herself knew respecting her history.</p>
+
+<p>"And not to know your mother, Ad&egrave;le! that s so very queer!"</p>
+
+<p>Ad&egrave;le winces at this, but seems&mdash;to so coarse an observer&mdash;only
+preoccupied with her work.</p>
+
+<p>"Is'nt it queer?" persists the garrulous creature. "I knew a girl in the
+city who did not see her mother after she was three,&mdash;think of that! But
+then, you know, she was a bad woman."</p>
+
+<p>The hot Proven&ccedil;al blood mounts to the cheek and brow of Ad&egrave;le in an
+instant, and her eye flashes. But it is quite impossible to show anger
+in view of the stolid face of her companion, with nothing in it but an
+unthinking, girlish curiosity.</p>
+
+<p>"We will talk of something else, Sophie."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! then you don't like to speak of it! Dear me! I certainly wont,
+then."</p>
+
+<p>Yet this rattle-brained girl has no real ill-nature; and it is
+surprising what a number of such well-meaning people go blundering about
+society, inflicting cheerful wounds in all directions by mere reason of
+their bluntness and lack of all delicacy of feeling.</p>
+
+<p>But it is by no means the first time the sensibilities of Ad&egrave;le have
+been touched to the quick. She is approaching that age when they ripen
+with marvellous rapidity. There is never an evening now at that cheerful
+home of the Elderkins&mdash;lighted up as it is with the beaming smiles of
+that Christian mother, Mrs. Elderkin&mdash;but there sweeps over the mind of
+the poor girl, at some interval in the games or the chat, a terrible
+sense of some great loss she has suffered, of which she knows not the
+limits,&mdash;a cruel sense of isolation in which she wanders, and on which
+comes betimes the recollection of a father's kindly face, that in the
+growing distance makes her isolation seem even more appalling.</p>
+
+<p>Rose, good soul, detects these humors by a keen, girlish instinct, and,
+gliding up to her, passes her arm around her,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"What is it now, Ad&egrave;le, dear?"</p>
+
+<p>And she, looking down at her, (for Ad&egrave;le was the taller by half a head,)
+says,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"What a good mother you have, Rose!"</p>
+
+<p>"Only that!"&mdash;and Rose laughs gleefully for a moment, when, bethinking
+herself where the secret grief lay, her sweet face is overcast in an
+instant, and reaching up her two hands, she draws down the face of Ad&egrave;le
+to hers, and kisses her on either cheek.</p>
+
+<p>Phil, who is at a game of chess with Grace, pretends not to see this
+side demonstration; but his next move is to sacrifice his only remaining
+castle in the most needless manner.</p>
+
+<p>Dame Tourtelot, too, has pressed her womanly prerogative of knowing
+whatever could be known about the French girl who comes occasionally
+with Miss Eliza to her tea-drinkings, and who, with a native taste for
+music, is specially interested in the piano of Miss Almira.</p>
+
+<p>"It must be very tedious," says the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span> Dame, "to be so long away from home
+and from those that love you. Almiry, now, hardly goes for a week to
+Cousin Jerushy's at Har'ford but she is a-frettin' to be back in her old
+home. Don't you feel it, Adeel?" (The Dame is not to be driven out of
+her own notions of pronunciation by any French accents.) "But don't be
+down-hearted, my child; it's God's providence that's brought you away
+from a Popish country."</p>
+
+<p>And she pushes her inquiries regarding the previous life of Ad&egrave;le with
+an earnestness and an authoritative air which at times do not fail to
+provoke a passionate retort. To this the old lady is wholly unused; and
+condemning her straightway as a hot-headed Romanist, it is to be feared
+that we must regard the Dame henceforth as one disposed to look upon the
+least favorable lights which may appear, whether in the past history of
+Ad&egrave;le or in the developments to come.</p>
+
+<p>The spinster, also, who is mistress of the parsonage, though never
+giving up her admiring patronage of Ad&egrave;le, and governing her curiosity
+with far more tact than belongs to Dame Tourtelot, has yet shown a
+persistent zeal in pushing her investigations in regard to all that
+concerned the family history of her little <i>prot&eacute;g&eacute;e</i>. She has lent an
+eager ear to all the communications which Maverick has addressed to the
+Doctor; and in moments of what seemed exceptional fondness, when she has
+toyed with the head-gear of Ad&egrave;le, has plied the little brain with
+motherly questions that have somehow widely failed of their intent.</p>
+
+<p>Under all this, Ad&egrave;le ripens into a certain reserve and individuality of
+character which might never have belonged to her, had the earlier
+circumstances of her life been altogether familiar to the circle in
+which she was placed. The Doctor fastens, perhaps, an undue reliance
+upon this growing reserve of hers: sure it is that an increasing
+confidence is establishing itself between them, which it is to be hoped
+nothing will shake.</p>
+
+<p>And as for Phil, when the Squire teases him with his growing fondness
+for the little Jesuit of the parsonage, the boy, though past seventeen
+now, and "with views of his own," (as most young men have at that age,)
+blushes like a girl.</p>
+
+<p>Rose, seeing it, and her eyes flashing with sisterly pride, says to
+herself,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I hope it may come true!"</p>
+
+
+<h3>XXIX.</h3>
+
+<p>From time to time Maverick had written in reply to the periodical
+reports of the Doctor, and always with unabating confidence in his
+discretion and kindness.</p>
+
+<p>"I have remarked what you say" (he had written thus in a letter which
+had elicited the close attention of Miss Eliza) "in regard to the rosary
+found among the girlish treasures of Ad&egrave;le. I am not aware how she can
+have come by such a trinket from the source named; but I must beg you to
+take as little notice as possible of the matter, and please allow her
+possession of it to remain entirely unremarked. I am specially anxious
+that no factitious importance be given to the relic by opposition to her
+wishes."</p>
+
+<p>Heavy losses incident to the political changes of the year 1831 in
+France had kept him fastened at his post; and with the reviving trade
+under the peaceful <i>r&eacute;gime</i> of Louis Philippe, he had been more actively
+engaged even than before. Yet there was no interruption to his
+correspondence with Ad&egrave;le, and no falling off in its expressions of
+earnest affection and devotion.</p>
+
+<p>"I fancy you almost a woman grown now, dear Ad&egrave;le. Those cheeks of yours
+have, I hope, not lost their roundness or their rosiness. But, however
+much you may have grown, I am sure that my heart would guide me so truly
+that I could single you out from a great crowd of the little Puritan
+people about you. I can fancy you in some simple New England dress,&mdash;in
+which I would rather see you, my child, than in the richest silks of
+those about me here,&mdash;&mdash;gliding<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span> up the pathway that leads to the door
+of the old parsonage; I can fancy you dropping a word of greeting to the
+good Doctor within his study (he must be wearing spectacles now); and at
+evening I seem to see you kneeling in the long back dining-room, as the
+parson leads in family prayer. Well, well, don't forget to pray for your
+old father, my child. I shall be all the safer for it, in what the
+Doctor calls 'this wicked land.' And what of Reuben, whose mischief, you
+told me, threatened such fearful results? Sobered down, I suppose, long
+before this, wearing a stout jacket of homespun, driving home the 'keow'
+at night, and singing in the choir of a Sunday. Don't lose your heart,
+Ad&egrave;le, with any of the youngsters about you. I claim the whole of it;
+and every day and every night mine beats for you, my child."</p>
+
+<p>And Ad&egrave;le writes back:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"My heart is all yours, papa,&mdash;only why do you never come and take it?
+So many, many years that I have not seen you!</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I like Ashfield still; it is almost a home to me now, you know.
+New Papa is very kind, but just as grave and stiff as at the first. I
+know he loves me, but he never tells me so. I don't believe he ever told
+Reuben so. But when I sing some song that he loves to hear, I see a
+little quirk by his temple, and a glistening in his eye, as he thanks
+me, that tells it plain enough; and most of all when he prays, as he
+sometimes does after talking to me very gravely, with his arm tight
+clasped around me, oh, I am sure that he loves me!&mdash;and indeed, and
+indeed, I love him back again!</p>
+
+<p>"It was funny what you said of Reuben; for you must know that he is
+living in the city now, and happens upon us here sometimes with a very
+grand air,&mdash;as fine, I dare say, as the people about Marseilles. But I
+don't think I like him any better; I don't know if I like him as well.
+Miss Eliza is, of course, very proud of him, as she always was."</p>
+
+<p>As the nicer observing faculties of his child develop,&mdash;of which, ample
+traces appear in her letters,&mdash;Maverick begs her to detail to him as
+fully as she can all the little events of her every-day life. He has an
+eagerness, which only an absent parent can feel, to know how his pet is
+received by those about her; and would supply himself, so far as he may,
+with a full picture of the scenes amid which his child is growing up.
+Sheet after sheet of this simple, girlish narrative of hers Maverick
+delights himself with, as he sits upon his balcony, after business
+hours, looking down upon the harbor of Marseilles.</p>
+
+<p>"After morning prayers, which are very early, you know, Esther places
+the smoking dishes on the table, and New Papa asks a blessing,&mdash;always.
+Then he says, 'I hope Adaly has not forgotten her text of yesterday.'
+And I repeat it to him. Such a quantity of texts as I can repeat now!
+Then Aunt Eliza says, 'I hope, too, that Ad&egrave;le will make no mistake in
+her "Paradise Lost" to-day. Are you sure you've not forgotten that
+lesson in the parsing, child?' Indeed, papa, I can parse almost any page
+in the book.</p>
+
+<p>"'I think,' says New Papa, appealing to Miss Eliza, 'that Larkin may
+grease the wheels of the chaise this morning, and, if it should be fair,
+I will make a visit or two at the north end of the town; and I think
+Adaly would like to go with me.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Yes, dearly, New Papa,' I say,&mdash;which is very true.</p>
+
+<p>"And Miss Eliza says, very gravely, 'I am perfectly willing, Doctor.'</p>
+
+<p>"After breakfast is over, Miss Eliza will sometimes walk with me a short
+way down the street, and will say to me, 'Hold yourself erect, Ad&egrave;le;
+walk trimly.' <i>She</i> walks very trimly. Then we pass by the Hapgood
+house, which is one of the grand houses; and I know the old Miss
+Hapgoods are looking through the blinds at us, though they never show
+themselves until they have taken out their curl-papers in the afternoon.</p>
+
+<p>"Dame Tourtelot isn't so shy; and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span> we see her great, gaunt figure in a
+broad sun-bonnet, stooping down with her trowel, at work among the
+flower-patches before her door; and Miss Almira is reading at an upper
+window, in pink muslin. And when the Dame hears us, she lifts herself
+straight, sets her old flapping bonnet as square as she can, and stares
+through her spectacles until she has made us out; then says,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"'Good mornin', Miss Johns. You're 'arly this mornin'.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Quite early,' says Miss Eliza. 'Your flowers are looking nicely, Mrs.
+Tourtelot.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Well, the pi'nys is blowed pretty good. Wouldn't Adeel like a pi'ny?'</p>
+
+<p>"It's a great red monster of a flower, papa; but I thank her for it, and
+put it in my belt. Then the Dame goes on to tell how she has shifted the
+striped grass, and how the bouncing-Bets are spreading, and where she
+means to put her nasturtiums the next year, and brandishes her trowel,
+as the brigands in the story-books brandish their swords.</p>
+
+<p>"And Miss Eliza says, 'Almira is at her reading, I see.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Dear me!' says the Dame, glancing up; 'she's always a-readin'. What
+with novils and histories, she's injurin' her health, Miss Johns, as
+sure as you're alive.'</p>
+
+<p>"Then, as we set off again,&mdash;the Dame calling out some last word, and
+brandishing her trowel over the fence,&mdash;old Squire Elderkin comes
+swinging up the street with the 'Courant' in his hand; and he lifts his
+hat, and says, 'Good morning to you, Miss Johns; and how is the little
+French lady this morning? Bright as ever, I see,' (for he doesn't wait
+to be answered,)&mdash;'a peony in her belt, and two roses in her cheeks.'
+Yet my cheeks are not very red, papa; but it's his way....</p>
+
+<p>"After school, I go for the drive with the Doctor, which I enjoy very
+much. I ask him about all the flowers along the way, and he tells me
+everything, and I have learned the names of all the birds; and it is
+much better, I think, than learning at school. And he always says, 'It's
+God's infinite love, my child, that has given us all these beautiful
+things, and these songsters that choir His praises.' When I hear him say
+it, I believe it, papa. I am very sure that the priest who came to see
+godmother was not a better man than he is.</p>
+
+<p>"Then, very often, he lifts my hand in his, and says, 'Adaly, my dear,
+God is very good to us, sinners though we are. We cannot tell His
+meaning always, but we may be very sure that He has only a good meaning.
+You do not know it, Adaly, but there was once a dear one, whom I loved
+perhaps too well;&mdash;she was the mother of my poor Reuben; God only knows
+how I loved her! But He took her from me.'&mdash;Oh, how the hand of New Papa
+griped on mine, when he said this!&mdash;'He took her from me, my child; He
+has carried her to His home. He is just. Learn to love Him, Adaly. The
+love we give to Him we can carry with us always. He does not die and
+leave us. He is everywhere. The birds are messengers of His, when they
+sing; the flowers you love come from His bounty: oh, Adaly, can you not,
+will you not, love Him?'</p>
+
+<p>"'I do! I do!' I said.</p>
+
+<p>"He looked me full in the face, (I shall never forget how he looked,)
+'Ah, Adaly, is this a fantasy of yours,' said he, 'or is it true? Could
+you give up the world and all its charms, could you forego the
+admiration and the love of all others, if only He who is the Saviour of
+us all would smile upon you?'</p>
+
+<p>"I felt I could,&mdash;I felt I could, papa.</p>
+
+<p>"But then, directly after, he repeated to me some of those dreary things
+I had been used to hear in the Catechism week after week. I was <i>so</i>
+sorry he repeated them, for they seemed to give a change to all my
+thought. I am <i>sure</i> I was trustful before, when he talked to me so
+earnestly; but when he repeated only what I had learned over and over,
+every Saturday night, then I am afraid my faith drooped.</p>
+
+<p><i>"'Don't</i> tell me that, New Papa,' said I, 'it is so old; talk to me as
+you <i>were</i> talking.'</p>
+
+<p>"And then the Doctor looked at me<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span> with the keenest eyes I ever saw, and
+said,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"'My child, are you right, and are the Doctors wrong?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Is it the Catechism that you call the Doctors?' said I.</p>
+
+<p>"'Yes,' said he.</p>
+
+<p>"'But were they better men than you, New Papa?'</p>
+
+<p>"'All men alike, Adaly, all struggling toward the truth,&mdash;all wearying
+themselves to interpret it in such way that the world may accept it, and
+praise God who has given us His Son a sacrifice, by whom, and whom only,
+we may be saved.' And at this he took my hand and said, 'Adaly, trust
+Him!'</p>
+
+<p>"By this time" (for Ad&egrave;le's letter is a true transcript of a day) "we
+have reached the door of some one of his people to whom he is to pay a
+visit. The blinds are all closed, and nothing seems to be stirring but a
+gray cat that is prowling about under the lilac bushes. Dobbins is
+hitched to the post, and the Doctor pounds away at the big knocker.
+Presently two or three white-headed children come peeping around the
+bushes, and rush away to tell who has come. After a little the stout
+mistress opens the door, and wipes her fingers on her apron, and shakes
+hands, and bounces into the keeping-room to throw up the window and open
+the blinds, and dusts off the great rocking-chair for the Doctor, and
+keeps saying all the while that they are 'very back'ard with the spring
+work, and she really had no time to slick up,' and asks after Miss Eliza
+and Reuben, and the Tourtelots, and all the people on the street, so
+fast that I wonder she can keep her breath; and the Doctor looks so
+calm, and has no time to say anything yet. Then she looks at me, 'Sissy
+is looking well,' says she, and dashes out to bring in a great plate of
+gingerbread, which I never like at all, and say, 'No.' But she says, 'It
+won't hurt ye; it a'n't p'ison, child.' So I find I must eat a little;
+and while I sit mumbling it, the Doctor and she talk on about a great
+deal I don't understand, and I am glad when she bounces up again, and
+says, 'Sis would like to get some posies, p'raps,' and leads me out of
+doors. 'There's lalocs, child, and flower-de-luce: pick what you want.'</p>
+
+<p>"So I go wandering among the beds along the garden, with the bees
+humming round me; and there are great tufts of blue-bell, and
+spider-wort, and moss-pink; and the white-haired grandchildren come and
+put their faces to the paling, looking at me through the bars like
+animals in a cage; and if I beckon to them, they glance at each other,
+and dash away."</p>
+
+<p>Thus much of Ad&egrave;le's account. But there are three or four more visits to
+complete the parson's day. Possibly he comes upon some member of his
+flock in the field, when he draws up Dobbins to the fence, and his
+parishioner, spying the old chaise, leaves his team to blow a moment
+while he strides forward with his long ox-goad in hand, and, seating
+himself upon a stump within easy earshot, says,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Good mornin', Doctor."</p>
+
+<p>And the parson, in his kindly way, "Good morning, Mr. Pettibone. Your
+family pretty well?"</p>
+
+<p>"Wa&auml;l, middlin', Doctor,&mdash;only middlin'. Miss Pettibone is a-havin'
+faint-ish spells along back; complains o' pain in her side."</p>
+
+<p>"Sorry, sorry," says the good man: and then, "Your team is looking
+pretty well, Mr. Pettibone."</p>
+
+<p>"Wa&auml;l, only tol'able, Doctor. That nigh ox, what with spring work an'
+grass feed is gittin' kind o' thin in the flesh. Any news abaout,
+Doctor?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not that I learn, Mr. Pettibone. We're having fine growing weather for
+your crops."</p>
+
+<p>"Wa&auml;l, only tol'able, Doctor. You see, arter them heavy spring rains,
+the sun has kind o' baked the graound; the seed don't seem to start
+well. I don't know as you remember, but in '29, along in the spring, we
+had jist sich a spell o' wet, an' corn hung back that season amazin'ly."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Mr. Pettibone, we must hope for the best: it's all in God's
+hands."</p>
+
+<p>"Wa&auml;l, I s'pose it is, Doctor,&mdash;I s'pose it is." And he makes a cut at
+a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span> clover-head with the lash upon his ox-goad; then&mdash;as if in
+recognition of the change of subject&mdash;he says,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Any more talk on the street abaout repairin' the ruff o' the
+meetin'-house, Doctor?"</p>
+
+<p>At sundown, all visits being paid, they go jogging into town again,&mdash;the
+Doctor silent by this time, and thinking of his sermon, Dobbins is tied
+always at the same post,&mdash;always the hitch-rein buckled in the third
+hole from the end.</p>
+
+<p>After tea, perhaps, Phil and Rose come sauntering by, and ask if Ad&egrave;le
+will go up 'to the house'? Which request, if Miss Eliza meet it with a
+nod of approval, puts Ad&egrave;le by their side: Rose, with a beautiful
+recklessness common to New England girls of that day, wearing her hat
+drooping half down her neck, and baring her clear forehead to the
+falling night-dews. Phil, with a pebble in his hand, makes a feint of
+throwing into a flock of goslings that are waddling disturbedly after a
+pair of staid old geese, but is arrested by Rose's prompt "Behave,
+Phil!"</p>
+
+<p>The Squire is reading his paper by the evening lamp, but cannot forbear
+a greeting to Ad&egrave;le:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, here we are again! and how is Madam&ograve;izel?" (this is the Squire's
+style of French,)&mdash;"and has she brought me the peony? Phil would have
+given his head for it,&mdash;eh, Phil?"</p>
+
+<p>Rose is so bright, and glowing, and happy!</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Elderkin in her rocking-chair, with her gray hair carefully plaited
+under the white lace cap whose broad strings fall on either shoulder, is
+a picture of motherly dignity. Her pleasant "Good evening, Ad&egrave;le," would
+alone have paid the warm-hearted exile for her walk.</p>
+
+<p>Then follow games, chat, and an occasional noisy joke from the Squire,
+until the nine o'clock town-bell gives warning, and Ad&egrave;le wends homeward
+under convoy of the gallant Phil.</p>
+
+<p>"Good night, Ad&egrave;le!"</p>
+
+<p>"Good night, Phil!"</p>
+
+<p>Only this at the gate. Then the Doctor's evening prayer; and after
+it,&mdash;in the quiet chamber, where her sweet head lay upon the
+pillow,&mdash;dreams. With recollections more barren than those of most of
+her years, of any early home, Ad&egrave;le still dreamed as hopefully as any of
+a home to come.</p>
+
+
+<h3>XXX.</h3>
+
+<p>In the autumn of 1836, Maverick wrote to his friend, the Doctor, that,
+in view of the settled condition of business, he intended to visit
+America some time in the course of the following season. He preferred,
+however, that Ad&egrave;le should not be made acquainted with his expected
+coming. He believed that it would be a pleasant surprise for his child;
+nor did he wish her anticipations of his arrival to divert her from the
+usual current of her study and every-day life.</p>
+
+<p>"Above all," he writes, "I wish to see her as she is, without any note
+of preparation. You will therefore, I beg, my dear Johns, keep from her
+scrupulously all knowledge of my present intentions, (which may possibly
+miscarry, after all,) and let me see, to the very finest touch, whether
+of a ribbon or of a ringlet, how far you have New-Englandized my dear
+girl. I form a hundred pictures in my fancy; but every new letter from
+her somehow disturbs the old image, and another is conjured up. The only
+<i>real</i> thing in my mind is, after all, a little child of eight, rosy and
+piquantly coquettish, who slaps my cheek when I tease her, and who, as I
+bid her adieu at last upon the ship's deck, looks through her tears at
+me and waves her little kerchief.</p>
+
+<p>"It is quite possible that I may manage for her return with me, (of this
+plan, too, I beg you to give no hint,) and in view of it I would suggest
+that any available occasion be seized upon to revive her knowledge of
+French, which, I fear, in your staid household she may almost have
+forgotten. Tell dear Ad&egrave;le that I am sometimes at Le Pin, where her
+godmother never fails to inquire after her and call down blessings on
+the dear child."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Upon this the Doctor and Miss Johns take counsel. Both are not a little
+disturbed by the anticipation of Ad&egrave;le's leave. The grave Doctor finds
+his heart wrapped about by the winning ways of the little stranger in a
+manner he could hardly have conceived possible on the day when he first
+greeted her. On the score of her religious beliefs, he is not, indeed,
+as yet thoroughly satisfied; but he feels sure that she is at least in a
+safe path. The old idols are broken: God, in His own time, will do the
+rest.</p>
+
+<p>The spinster, though she has become unconsciously attached to Ad&egrave;le to a
+degree of which she hardly believes herself capable, is yet not so much
+disconcerted by the thought of any violence to her affections,&mdash;for all
+violence of this kind she has schooled herself to regard with cool
+stoicism,&mdash;but the possible interruption of her ambitious schemes with
+respect to Reuben and Ad&egrave;le discomposes her sadly. Such a scheme she has
+never given over for one moment. No plan of hers is ever given over
+lightly; and she has that persistent faith in her own sagacity and
+prudence which is not easily shaken. The growing intercourse with the
+Elderkins, in view of the evident devotion of Phil, has been, indeed,
+the source of a little uneasiness; but even this intimacy she has
+moderated to a certain degree by occasional judicious fears in regard to
+Ad&egrave;le's exposure to the night air; and has made the most&mdash;in her quiet
+manner&mdash;of Phil's exceptional, but somewhat noisy, attentions to that
+dashing girl, Sophie Bowrigg.</p>
+
+<p>"A very suitable match it would be," she says some evening, casually, to
+the Doctor; "and I really think that Phil, if there were any seriousness
+about the lad, would meet his father's wishes in the matter. Ad&egrave;le,
+child," (she is sitting by at her worsted,) "are you sure you've the
+right shade of brown there?"</p>
+
+<p>But, like most cool schemers in what concerns the affections, she makes
+her errors. Her assurance in regard to the improved habits and character
+of Reuben, and her iteration of the wonderful attachment which the
+Brindlocks bear to the lad, have a somewhat strained air to the ear of
+Ad&egrave;le. And when the spinster says,&mdash;folding up his last letter,&mdash;"Good
+fellow! always some tender little message for you, my dear," Ad&egrave;le
+thinks&mdash;as most girls of her age would be apt to think&mdash;that she would
+like to see the tender message with her own eyes.</p>
+
+<p>But what of the French? Where is there to be found a competent teacher?
+Not, surely, in Ashfield. Miss Eliza, with grave doubts, however,
+suggests a winter in New York with the Brindlocks. The Doctor shakes his
+head:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Not to be thought of, Eliza. It is enough that my boy should undergo
+the perils of such godless association: Adaly shall not."</p>
+
+<p>The question, however, of the desired opportunity is not confined to the
+parsonage; it has currency up and down the street; and within a week the
+buoyant Miss Bowrigg comes to the rescue.</p>
+
+<p>"Delighted above all things to hear it. They have a charming teacher in
+the city, Madame Arles, who has the best accent. And now, Ad&egrave;le, dear,
+you must come down and pass the winter with us. It will be charming."</p>
+
+<p>It is, indeed, a mere girlish proposal at first; but, much to the
+delight of Miss Eliza, it is abundantly confirmed by a formal invitation
+from Mrs. Bowrigg, a few weeks after, who, besides being attracted by
+the manners and character of Ad&egrave;le, sees in it an admirable opportunity
+for the accomplishment of her daughters in French. Her demonstrative
+girls and a son of twenty comprise her family. For these reasons, she
+will regard it as a favor, if the Doctor will allow Miss Maverick to
+establish herself with them for the winter.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Eliza is delighted with the scheme, but fears the cool judgment of
+the Doctor: and she has abundant reason.</p>
+
+<p>"It cannot be," he said, and was quite inexorable.</p>
+
+<p>The truth is, that Mrs. Bowrigg, like a good many educated with a narrow
+severity, had expanded her views under<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span> the city influences in
+directions that were by no means approved by the good Doctor. Hers was
+not only a godless household, but given over to the lusts of the eye and
+the pride of life. It was quite impossible for him to entertain the idea
+of submitting Ad&egrave;le to any such worldly associations.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Eliza pleaded the exigencies of the case in vain; and even Ad&egrave;le,
+attracted by the novelty of the proposed situation, urged her claim in
+the cheeriest little manner conceivable.</p>
+
+<p>"Only for the winter, New Papa; please say 'Yes'!"</p>
+
+<p>And the tender hands patted the grave face, as she seated herself with a
+childish coquetry upon the elbow of his chair.</p>
+
+<p>"Impossible, quite impossible," says the Doctor. "You are too dear to
+me, Adaly."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, now, New Papa, you don't mean that,&mdash;not <i>positively</i>?"&mdash;and the
+winning fingers tap his cheek again.</p>
+
+<p>But for this time, at least, Ad&egrave;le is to lose her claim; the Doctor well
+knows that to suffer such endearments were to yield; so he rises
+brusquely,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I must be just, my child, to the charge your father has imposed upon
+me. It cannot be."</p>
+
+<p>It will not be counted strange, if a little ill-disguised petulance
+appeared in the face of Ad&egrave;le that day and the next.</p>
+
+<p>The winter of 1836-7 was a very severe one throughout New England.
+Perhaps it was in view of its severity, that, on or about New Year's
+Day, there came to the parsonage a gift from Reuben for Ad&egrave;le, in the
+shape of a fur tippet, very much to the gratification of Miss Eliza and
+to the pleasant surprise of the Doctor.</p>
+
+<p>Rose and Phil, sitting by the fire next day, Rose says, in a timid
+voice, with less than her usual sprightliness,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know who has sent a beautiful fur tippet to Ad&egrave;le, Phil?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," says Phil, briskly. "Who?"</p>
+
+<p>"Reuben," says Rose,&mdash;in a tone as if a blush ran over her face at the
+utterance.</p>
+
+<p>If there was one, however, Phil could not have seen it; he was looking
+steadfastly into the fire, and said only,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I don't care."</p>
+
+<p>A little after, (nothing having been said, meantime,) he has occasion to
+rearrange the wood upon the hearth, and does it with such preposterous
+violence that the timid little voice beside him says,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Don't, Phil, be angry with the fire!"</p>
+
+<p>It was a winter, as we have said, for fur tippets and for glowing
+cheeks; and Ad&egrave;le had now been long enough under a Northern sky to
+partake of that exhilaration of spirits which belongs to every true-born
+New-Englander in presence of one of those old-fashioned snowstorms,
+which, all through the day and through the night, sifts out from the
+gray sky its fleecy crystals,&mdash;covering the frosted high-roads, covering
+the withered grasses, covering the whole summer's wreck in one glorious
+white burial; and after it, keen frosty mornings, the pleasant jingling
+of scores of bells, jets of white vapor from the nostrils of the
+prancing horses, and a quick electric tingle to the blood, that makes
+every pulse beat a thanksgiving. Squire Elderkin never made better
+jokes, the flame upon his hearth never danced more merrily,&mdash;the Doctor
+never preached better sermons, and the people never listened more
+patiently than in those weeks of the dead of winter.</p>
+
+<p>But in the midst of them a black shadow fell upon the little town. News
+came overland, (the river being closed,) that Mrs. Bowrigg, after an
+illness of three days, was dead; and the body of the poor woman was to
+come home for burial. She had been reared, as we have said, under a
+harsh regimen, and had signalized her married escape from the somewhat
+oppressive formalities of home by a pretty free entertainment of all the
+indulgences accessible in her new life. Not that she offended against
+any of the larger or lesser proprieties of society, but she showed a
+zest for the pleasures of the world, and for a certain measure of
+display, which had been the occasion of many a sober shake of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span> the head
+along the streets of Ashfield, and the subject of particular
+commiseration on the part of the good Doctor.</p>
+
+<p>Now that her brilliant career (as it seemed to many of the staid folk of
+Ashfield) was so suddenly closed, the Doctor could not forbear taking
+advantage of the opportunity to press home upon his people, under the
+influences of this sombre funeral procession, the vanities of the world
+and the fleeting character of its wealth and pride. "We may build
+palaces," said he, (and people thought of the elegant Bowrigg mansion,)
+"but God locks the door and assigns to us a narrower home; we may court
+the intoxicating air of cities, but its breath, in a day, may blast our
+strength, and, except He keep us, may blast our souls." Never had the
+Doctor been more eloquent, and never had he so moved his people. After
+the evening prayer, Ad&egrave;le stole into the study of the Doctor, and
+said,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"New Papa, it was well I stayed with you."</p>
+
+<p>The old gentleman took her hand in his,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Right, I believe, Adaly; but vain, utterly vain, except you be counted
+among the elect."</p>
+
+<p>The poor girl had no reply, save only to drop a kiss upon his forehead
+and pass out.</p>
+
+<p>With the opening of the spring the townspeople were busy with the
+question, if the Bowriggs would come again to occupy their summer
+residence, that, with its closed doors and windows, was mournfully
+silent. But soon the gardeners were set to work; it was understood that
+a housekeeper had been engaged, and the family were to occupy it as
+usual. Sophie writes to Ad&egrave;le, confirming it all, and adding,&mdash;"Madame
+Arles had proposed to make us a visit, which papa hearing, and wishing
+us to keep up our studies, has given her an invitation to pass the
+summer with us. She says she will. I am so glad! We had told her very
+much of you, and I know she will be delighted to have you as a scholar."</p>
+
+<p>At this Ad&egrave;le feels a thrill of satisfaction, and looks longingly
+forward to the time when she shall hear again from native lips the
+language of her childhood.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Ma fille! ma fille!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>The voices of her early home seem to ring again in her ear. She basks
+once more in the delicious flow of the sunshine, and the perfume of the
+orange-blossoms regales her.</p>
+
+<p>----"<i>Ma fille!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Is it the echo of your voice, good old godmother, that comes rocking
+over the great reach of sea, and so touches the heart of the exile?</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="LETTER_TO_A_SILENT_FRIEND" id="LETTER_TO_A_SILENT_FRIEND"></a>LETTER TO A SILENT FRIEND.</h2>
+
+
+<p>Were you, my friend, one of those who make a merit of their silence, I
+should have little occasion to write this letter. But as I know you, on
+the contrary, to have lamented your colloquial deficiencies as sincerely
+as any one, as I know that you have most earnestly coveted greater
+fluency of speech and admired most warmly those who possessed it, I
+venture to hope that I may say something to convince you that your case
+is not so bad as you think. Yes, I am bold enough to believe that you
+may aspire to the character which now seems to you so utterly beyond
+reach,&mdash;the character of a talker! Before you smile incredulously,
+listen to me, a fellow-sufferer. I also have known the misery and
+weakness of an unready tongue. No poor man ever looked upon a heap of
+gold coin with more longing eyes than I have looked upon those who could
+so easily coin their thoughts into words. From<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span> a boy I conceived myself
+doomed to taciturnity. The charge, to "talk more," was a well-meant
+appeal to awaken my powers of utterance, but its only effect was to shut
+my mouth closer than ever. Few persons can talk upon compulsion, and
+boys least of all. As I grew old enough, however, to recognize some
+responsibility for conversation, I was the more distressed that I could
+not do what I knew I ought to do. I was beyond measure vexed with myself
+this incapacity. It stood in the way of my usefulness, it did not make
+my company desirable, it drove me into morbid and depressing thoughts.
+And yet&mdash;to make a long story short&mdash;I have gradually come to be, not a
+"talker" certainly, but no longer afraid that I "can find nothing to
+say," no longer trammelled by a false reserve, but presuming, on the
+contrary, that with most persons whom I meet it will be quite possible
+to engage in easy and fluent conversation,&mdash;a presumption, by the way,
+always likely to justify itself by the event. I insist, therefore, from
+my own experience, that conversation is an art as well as a gift; and
+that where it is not a gift, the deficiency may be more surely
+supplemented by art than almost any other. You will tell me, perhaps, in
+common with others who are not talkers, that speech must be natural to
+be attractive, and that all appearance of effort will spoil its charm.
+Is not this rather the excuse of indolence than the valid objection of
+reason? It has been finely argued, that even with children "work" must
+precede "play." The proverb, too, says that "every beginning is hard." I
+know that the <i>appearance</i> of effort is not attractive; but after a
+while there is no such appearance, not merely because "the province of
+art is to conceal art," but because habit has become a second nature.
+When you think what a trained and educated thing our life is in its
+minutest particulars, and how not only the civilized, but the savage man
+has to <i>learn</i> the use of his senses, his muscles, and his brain, you
+must admit that it is frivolous to urge against the charm or value of
+conversation, that it must be studied. It is hardly too much to say,
+that all the noblest things in the world are the result of study. Why
+not also study the noble and most desirable art of framing our thoughts,
+opinions, sentiments, tastes, into free, familiar, and appropriate
+speech?</p>
+
+<p>But here I fancy you may meet me with a question,&mdash;Is it, after all, so
+desirable an art, and one well worth the learning? I have, it is true,
+given you credit for coveting earnestly a greater facility of speech;
+and yet you may have become more reconciled to your deficiency than you
+like to acknowledge, through the influence of certain popular maxims and
+fallacies. The one I wish especially to challenge now is expressed in
+that German proverb which Mr. Carlyle has taken under his peculiar
+patronage,&mdash;"Speech is silver, silence is gold." A great comfort, to be
+sure, to one who is either too lazy or too diffident to open his lips to
+get credit so cheaply for superior wisdom! When he does not talk, of
+course it can only be because he keeps up such an incessant thinking!
+"Too deep for utterance" is the character of all his meditations! Do you
+remember Coleridge's amusing experience with one of these reputed sages?
+But for the appearance of the "dumplings,"&mdash;almost as historic now as
+King George's famous ones,&mdash;it might never have been suspected that this
+empty-headed fellow was not the profoundest of philosophers. Can you or
+anybody explain the reasons for this singular praise of silence and
+disparagement of speech? You do not expect to be commended for shutting
+your eyes instead of keeping them open. The feeble and unused hand is
+not preferred to the strong cunning one. Nor is there any sense or
+faculty of our nature of which the simple non-use is better than the
+use. Why, then, account it a merit to refrain from using this wondrous
+faculty of speech? I may grant all that you will tell me of the
+deplorable amount of vapid, idle, bitter, malicious, foul, and profane
+talk. Silence is better than the <i>abuse</i> of words,&mdash;none of us will
+question that. I am only defending the normal<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span> and legitimate exercise
+of this faculty. And perhaps you will see the matter in still clearer
+light, if you should undertake to apply the principle of the Carlyle
+proverb to some other endowments and opportunities, to which in fact
+many do apply it. If one may say, "I am weary of all this talking,
+henceforth let there be silence," why may not another, improving upon
+this hint, say, "I am sick of these miserable daubs, there shall be no
+more painting," and another, "I am disgusted with politics, I will have
+nothing more to do with the science or the art of government"? Because
+there are infelicities of married life, is it so certain that "single
+blessedness" is the best estate? Because there are some timeservers and
+worldlings among the clergy, shall we join in denunciation of priests
+and churches everywhere? I see that you are prepared to answer, that
+speech is peculiarly liable to abuse. Exactly, and that is true of all
+the most excellent and valuable gifts of Providence. It is impossible to
+escape the condition of peril attached to everything under the sun that
+is most worthy of desire. Have we not learned by this time the folly of
+every form of asceticism, of every attempt to trample upon God's gifts
+as evil instead of using them for good?</p>
+
+<p>Now I shall not attempt a dissertation, however tempting the theme, upon
+the uses of speech in general. I will only ask you to consider that
+single department of it which we call conversation. Did you ever think
+how great a power in the world this is? See how early it begins to shape
+our opinions, our plans, our studies, our tastes, our attachments, etc.
+I remember that a casual remark, dropped in conversation by a beloved
+and revered relative long before I had entered my teens, made me for
+years feel more kindly towards the much-abused natives of the Emerald
+Isle, though I have no doubt that she whose word I had listened to with
+so much deference was entirely unsuspicious of having lodged such a
+fruitful seed in my memory. If you can recall the formative periods of
+your own life, I have no doubt you also will find hundreds of similar
+instances, where a new direction was given to your sentiments and
+purposes by some quite random words of friendly and domestic talk.
+Consider how large a part of the life of most human beings is spent in
+society of some sort, and then reflect how that society is bound
+together and constituted, as it were, by familiar speech, and you will
+begin to appreciate the extent of the power of conversation. Compare
+this power with that of written language,&mdash;as books, letters, etc.,&mdash;or
+even with more formal spoken language,&mdash;such as orations, sermons, and
+the like,&mdash;and I think you will allow that it surpasses them all in its
+diffusion and its permanence. Were the question solely as to the amount
+of information imparted, books and deliberate addresses certainly stand
+higher. But you must not fall into the common error, that the chief
+object of conversation is or should be to instruct. It has manifold
+objects, and some of them, to say the least, are quite as desirable as
+instruction. We talk to keep up good feeling, to enliven the else dull
+hours, to give expression to our interest in one another, to throw off
+the burden of too much private care and thought. We have also, in
+special cases, more serious ends in view, when we talk to reprove or
+encourage, to console or arouse. Even this partial enumeration of the
+offices of familiar speech may suffice to show you how desirable it is
+to wield such a power. Conversation establishes a personal relation
+between yourself and another soul. It is the open door through which
+your spiritual treasures are interchanged. For the time, at least, it
+supposes some degree of equality, some power both to give and receive,
+in those who take part in the dialogue. I know very well how the cynics
+like to quote the diplomatist's sarcasm, that "speech is the art of
+hiding thought." Let this perversion have what force it may. I am
+speaking now of the higher uses and possibilities of conversation. You
+can hide your thoughts under your words, if you choose to be a
+hypocrite;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span> but I am taking for granted that you are a man of truth,&mdash;a
+"man of your word," as the common phrase happily has it. I assume that
+you would be glad to talk, because you wish to form sincere and friendly
+relations with your fellow-men. When two or more human beings meet, the
+rule, the normal condition, is, that they give utterance to some
+thoughts, feelings, or sentiments in audible words. <i>Silence is
+unsocial</i>: there lies its condemnation. It is true that silence may
+often be justified, notwithstanding; for social claims must sometimes
+yield to higher considerations, or even to physical necessity. But most
+persons, I believe, feel instinctively that a persistent silence is an
+affront to them,&mdash;a denial, in some sort, of their right to be received
+into your company. "You won't speak to me" is their resentful
+interpretation of your silence. You ought not to ask so much as "a penny
+for your thoughts." They should, so far as practicable, be shared freely
+by those whom you call friends. The limitations and exceptions to this
+rule we will presently refer to, but the rule is important and clear.
+True social feeling, true warmth and cordiality, naturally expresses
+itself in words, and is strengthened by the expression. Will you not
+admit, that, if we are conscious of having anything to say which might
+please or profit a friend, it is a reproach to us to keep it back? Yes,
+it is desirable to talk, were it simply a mark of interest and
+confidence in those whom you come in contact with. I have noticed that a
+great deal of taciturnity comes from a very discreditable diffidence, by
+which I mean a distrust or suspicion that our words may be misconstrued,
+or that they may not be appreciated, or that they may chance to give
+serious offence. Now, in my opinion, one had better make innumerable
+<i>faux pas</i> than indulge such unworthy fears and suspicions. A little
+less vanity, and vastly more courage and self-forgetfulness,&mdash;such is
+the remedy to be administered to many of the taciturn. You are the best
+judge whether it would suit your own case.</p>
+
+<p>As an illustration of the value of conversation in its more familiar
+forms and its daily requirements, consider its service at meal-times.
+General usage has determined that three times a day we shall assemble
+with our families for the common purpose of appeasing the demands of
+hunger and satisfying the fancies or whims of the palate. Moreover, to
+many men these are the only times of the day when they can have the
+opportunity to meet all the members of their family in free and
+unrestrained intercourse. Now to make this occasion something more than
+mere "feeding," and to elevate it to the dignity of rational
+intercourse, conversation is indispensable. We must open our mouths for
+something more than the reception of food. As a mere hygienic rule, I
+wish that excellent old proverb could be circulated among our
+countrymen,&mdash;"Chatted food is half digested." I would almost pledge
+myself by this single rule to cure or prevent nearly half the cases of
+dyspepsia. But for higher reasons chiefly I speak of it now. We ought to
+insist that everything shall be favorable at meal-times to the truest
+sociality. No clouded brows, no absent or preoccupied demeanor, should
+be permitted at our tables. Whoever is not ready to do his part in
+making it a cheerful hour should be made to feel that he does not belong
+there. Better the merest nonsense, better anything that is not scandal
+and detraction, than absolute and freezing silence then. I am sure that
+the usages of all the most civilized and refined people will bear me out
+in this,&mdash;that the only way to dignify our meals, and make them
+something better than the indulgence of mere animal appetites, is to
+intersperse them largely with social talk. There, if not elsewhere, we
+look for the <i>soluta lingua</i>. There all reserve and embarrassment of
+speech, we trust, will have vanished, and each will feel free to impart
+to the rest his brightest and most joyous moods. Shall we ever realize
+this ideal, as long as "bolting" usurps the place of eating?</p>
+
+<p>And what, after all, constitutes the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span> charm and the power of
+conversation, and makes it so desirable an attainment? Not, certainly,
+the amount of knowledge one can bring into play; for, as I have already
+shown you, instruction is a secondary object of conversation; and it is
+well known also that some of the most learned and best-informed men have
+been very poor talkers. Indeed, the scholastic habits which learning
+usually engenders are almost a disqualification for fluent and eloquent
+speech. The student is one of the last persons who are expected to shine
+at a social reunion. But neither can you rely upon brilliant talents, or
+original genius, or even upon wit and humor, to make the most charming
+converser. The qualities more immediately in requisition for this end
+are moral and social. Truth, courage, deference, good-nature,
+cheerfulness, sympathy, courtesy, tact, charity,&mdash;these are ingredients
+of the best conversation, which it would seem that no one need despair
+of attaining, and without which, in large measure, the most brilliant
+wit, the liveliest imagination, must soon repel rather than attract. And
+observe also, in connection with this, that it is not so much the words
+a man utters as the tones of his voice which express these moral and
+social qualities. Harsh, rude, blunt, severe tones will spoil the
+greatest flow of ideas or the utmost elegance of language. But when we
+are listening to the low, sweet music in which a genial and joyous and
+tender soul will utter itself, what care we for the wit or genius which
+are so much envied elsewhere? We did not miss it here. We may have
+brought away with us from such company no great fund of new ideas, but
+you may be sure something deeper than thought has been awakened,&mdash;the
+well-spring of purest and tenderest sensibilities has been made to
+overflow, and our life will be the greener for it hereafter. Perhaps, if
+you think of this a little more, my friend, you will not find it in your
+heart to condemn so unsparingly the more ordinary staple of
+conversation. Some cynical or unsocial character, deeming himself
+superior to the vulgar vacuity and insipidity, will take no part in the
+every-day talk which deals so largely in commonplace and truisms.
+"Absurd waste of time and breath!" he exclaims. "Of what use this
+incessant harping on the weather, or the renewed inquiries after one's
+health, or the utterly pointless, if not insincere, exchange of daily
+civilities? Who is the wiser for it? What possible good can it do
+anybody?" Let us look a little at this, Mr. Cynic. You think it a waste
+of breath to greet a friend with a "good morning," or to give your
+testimony to the beauty of the day? Of course you are right, if one
+should never open his mouth but to impart a new idea, or to announce
+some startling fact. But what would you substitute for the morning
+salutation? Nothing! And would you really have two friends or brothers
+meet on the threshold of a new day, and interchange&mdash;blank silence? I
+admit, there is no variety in the words,&mdash;they are stale, they have been
+repeated a thousand times over. But it is the heartiness we put into
+them which gives them their value, and I am sure that you, with all your
+objections to the form of greeting, would find the world many shades
+more dreary, were <i>no</i> such forms to welcome us with the rising sun. For
+myself I can truly say, that, many and many a time, this morning
+salutation, spoken out with a generous fulness, and not with that
+grudging curtness which sometimes distinguishes it, has touched my heart
+as with a happy prophecy which the day was sure to fulfil. As to the
+dreadfully threadbare topic of the weather, I must confess I often hear
+it to satiety; but that is when it ceases to be the mere prelude to the
+dialogue, and occupies one's whole talk. In itself you cannot deny that
+it is natural and proper enough to invite another's sympathy in a
+subject which so nearly concerns the physical, if not the moral
+well-being of most of us. "What a glorious day we have!" when
+interpreted rationally, means nothing less than this,&mdash;"Come, let us
+enjoy together the lavish bounty of the Creator!" We may be<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span> sensible of
+a new and purer joy for such an appeal. Already we were glad to have the
+sun shine so brightly; but it seems doubly bright now that our friend
+has invited us to share his joy. Does it seem to you superfluous,
+perhaps, to give utterance to a thought which is obviously already in
+the mind of your companion? Well, let us try this by some familiar test.
+You have just gone among the mountains to spend a few weeks with an
+agreeable company. You wake in the morning and find yourself in the
+midst of a most majestic spectacle. At the very door of the farm-house
+where you have taken lodgings, your eyes travel upward five thousand
+feet to admire that cloud-piercing summit which stands there to give you
+the welcome of the morning. As you watch its coursing shadows and all
+its wondrous variety of beauty and grandeur, have you nothing to say to
+the friend who has come with you there to see it all? What would be more
+unnatural than to repress all words or tokens of admiration,&mdash;to meet
+your friend day after day and interchange no word of recognition amid
+such scenes? I know that he who feels most in the presence of these
+sublimities will often say least. But because it is impossible to give
+expression to one's deepest thoughts, shall one say nothing? You may
+reasonably be supposed to care something for the sympathy of those whom
+you have accompanied hither; and sympathy, though not entirely dependent
+on words, naturally seeks some words to express itself, and is injured
+when that expression is restrained.</p>
+
+<p>But now I fancy you replying to all this,&mdash;"You do not hit my
+difficulty. I have no trouble in talking with a chosen companion. My
+friend 'draws me out,' because I am his friend. In his presence my
+tongue is easily loosed, I have no hesitation in saying exactly what I
+wish, and there are innumerable things that I wish to say. But the great
+majority of men 'shut me up.' All my fluency departs when they enter.
+There is an indescribable awkwardness in our interview. We belong to
+different spheres, and it is mere pretence to affirm that we have
+anything to communicate to each other."&mdash;Here I am willing to admit that
+you have touched upon a very important consideration, although it by no
+means justifies all that you would build upon it. I am myself conscious
+that with some persons it is an effort to talk, and with others a
+delight; nor can I always understand whence this difference. It is
+certainly not owing to the length or shortness of acquaintance. It has
+been no infrequent experience with me, to meet persons who at the first
+interview broke down all my natural reserve. And on the other hand, I
+have known men all my life with whom it is still a study what I shall
+say when we meet. Who shall tell us what this magic is? Who shall give
+us the "open sesame" to every heart? We name it "sphere,"
+"organization," "sympathy," or what not, to cover our ignorance: all I
+insist upon is, that you will not name it <i>fate</i>. Pride or indolence is
+always suggesting that these lines of demarcation are fixed and
+unalterable. Beware of entertaining that suggestion! Were two of the
+most uncongenial persons in the world to be thrown together on a desert
+island, would they have nothing to say to each other? Would they not
+learn by the necessities of the case to communicate more and more? Would
+it not probably be a constant discovery, that they had vastly more in
+common than either had ever dreamed? I think so, at least. Well, if mere
+external necessity can surmount these natural barriers, may not a
+determined will, backed by a strong sense of moral obligation, do the
+same? Let me tell you this also, as one of my experiences: that I have
+not seldom reversed my first judgments or impressions of men, and have
+found, that, after a very thin crust was once broken through, there was
+no further obstacle to easy conversation. You will observe that some
+persons, at the first encounter, bristle all over with uncongenial
+points; and yet, if you will quietly ignore these, or boldly rush upon
+them, you shall gain a true friend. Behind that formidable barrier is a
+field<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span> all your own, and worth cultivating. This needs to be considered,
+especially under our northern skies, where cultivated society intrenches
+itself behind a triple wall of reserve. The code of this society seems
+to assume, that no stranger has a right to our confidence, that every
+new person may be supposed to have little in common with us, till we
+learn the contrary. Hence conversation in the saloons is a dexterous
+tossing about of the most vapid generalities, or a series of desperate
+attempts at non-committal. I do not wonder that you, my friend, like
+many other sensible people, infinitely prefer saying nothing to talking
+on this wise. But, with a little more courage, may not one break boldly
+through these artificial restraints, and ignore these supposed claims of
+polite society? Do not call me Quixotic, because I exhort you to show
+something like independence. Why may you not establish your own claim to
+confidence by confiding in others? Why not, without affectation, have to
+some extent your own standard of polite usage,&mdash;not, indeed, rashly
+despising all conventionalisms, but conforming to whatever is
+essentially refined, courteous, and deferential, yet proving in your
+manners and language that such conformity does not require one to
+suppress all that is simple, natural, spontaneous, enthusiastic, and
+fresh? Do not be afraid, however, that I would have you addicted to
+superlatives,&mdash;though I might object to them for another reason than
+that given by our American Essayist. He complains of them, that "they
+put whole drawing-rooms to flight,"&mdash;a result which I am almost
+malicious enough to say might sometimes be by no means undesirable. I do
+not say it, however. I merely express my impatience at the extremely
+artificial barriers which society interposes to any genuine, unaffected
+intercourse of human souls.</p>
+
+<p>To return to the question of spheres and sympathy. I frankly admit, that
+it is very unreasonable to suppose we can talk equally well and feel
+equally at ease with all kinds of persons. Not only organization, but
+habits, occupations, and culture, make inevitable differences between
+men, such as render it less easy for them to converse together. The
+scholar and the mechanic, the sailor and the farmer, the mistress and
+the maid, in most cases will have little to interest each other. Their
+interview will probably be awkward and brief, their words few and
+constrained. This, perhaps, cannot be essentially remedied. But I trust
+you will agree with me, that the true remedy is to be sought in a more
+hearty recognition of that <i>common humanity</i> which underlies all the
+shades and diversities of human character. "<i>Nihil humani alienum</i>"&mdash;we
+must go back to old Terence still, even to learn how to talk. You happen
+to be thrown into the same public conveyance with a man of no literary
+or intellectual tastes. "All his talk is of oxen," or perchance of his
+speculations and profits in trade. Moreover, he offends your ear by a
+shocking disregard of grammar, and vulgarisms of pronunciation. Your
+first reflection is,&mdash;"What can I have to say to such a man? How
+unfortunate to be condemned to such company!" Yet is there not <i>aliquid
+humani</i> even here? Were it only as an intellectual exercise, why not try
+to find out the real man beneath all these wrappages? The gold-miner
+does not grumble at having to crush the quartz, that he may bring to
+light the few grains of precious metal hidden in it. Infinitely more is
+it worth all the labor it costs to break through that harder shell in
+which man hides his intrinsic gold. And besides, it will not reflect
+much credit on the largeness of your own culture, if you suffer a mere
+offence against taste and manners to keep you ignorant of your
+companion's deeper nature. "But how to draw him out? What effectual
+method to break through this hard or coarse covering?" I have no
+infallible directions to give you. But you must first have a genuine
+interest in him as a new specimen of <i>a man</i>; and then you must be able
+to inspire him with confidence in you, confidence that you respect him
+for his human nature and hold<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span> yourself to be on an equality with him,
+inasmuch as "man measures man the world over." Start some topic which
+will evidently not be remote from his familiar range, and by a little
+tact you will easily find other related topics, till at last, as the
+field continually widens, you will both be amazed to see how many common
+interests, desires, beliefs you had, and how much unexpected benefit
+each has received from the other. Were there no other advantage to be
+sought from the power of general conversation, this alone should be
+enough to induce us to cultivate it: that so many uncomfortable social
+distinctions would thereby be removed. Have you not heard it often said,
+that, if certain classes only "knew each other better," they would be
+better friends, no longer separated by mutual envies, jealousies, and
+contempt? Now conversation is the readiest way to this mutual
+acquaintance, and it specially behooves one of the educated class to
+make the first advances in conversation. I have in my mind an instance
+of a man of natural reserve and diffidence, and of scholastic habits,
+who greatly to his grief had the reputation among some uneducated people
+of being "proud." But having occasion to do some little service to a
+woman of this class, he entered her plain dwelling, seated himself at
+once as if at home, and had no sooner uttered a few words of sympathy,
+such as the occasion called for, than all that suspicion of pride was
+most thoroughly dissipated, leaving only the wonder that it could ever
+have been entertained. My friend, will you not, in this world of
+frequent misunderstanding, do your part, by <i>word</i> as well as deed, to
+show others, whom society classes below you, that you are not divided
+from them in respect to all those great interests which make the true
+dignity of human nature? Talk of the virtue of silence! I will tell you
+from my own experience of a thousand cases where the simple failure to
+speak has kept up a coolness and alienation which one little word would
+have dispersed forever. Among the many sins and weaknesses which I have
+to lay at my own door, few give me greater compunction than the
+cowardice&mdash;or whatever else it was&mdash;which kept back the timely words
+that ought to have been uttered, but were not.</p>
+
+<p>Can I make this letter more practically useful by a few rules? It would
+seem, that, if conversation is an art, like other arts, there must be
+rules and methods to attain to it. This is true; but I must first remind
+you that mere facility, propriety, or elegance of speech is but a small
+part of the discipline required to make an agreeable and profitable
+talker. You must have something to express, something that you long to
+utter, something that you feel it would be for the advantage of others
+to hear. For the furnishing of mind and heart comes before any special
+power to <i>bring out</i> of one's treasury things new or old. In other
+words, the power to converse well is not an isolated and independent
+power; it has a close relation to the entire character, moral and
+intellectual. An enlightened conscience would make many persons better
+talkers than they are now, for it would present the matter in the light
+of a duty. A consciousness of intellectual power or of ample learning
+makes one more ready to open his mouth before intelligent men; for,
+whether rightly or not, one does not like to talk before others of
+subjects on which he knows that they are better informed than he. And
+yet it is no good reason for maintaining silence in the company of some
+eminent scholar, that he <i>knows</i> so much more than you. You are
+naturally shy of expressing your opinion on the "origin of species," or
+the "antiquity of man," before some great naturalist. But why not come
+to him as a learner, then? The art of putting questions well is no small
+part of the art of conversation. You can derive information from him in
+the most direct and impressive manner, while at the same time you are
+showing a pleasing deference to his superior knowledge. Or suppose the
+case reversed, and that you are the more learned of the two, may you not
+benefit some young scholar by questioning him so skilfully that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span> he
+shall seem to have imparted all the information evolved, instead of
+receiving it? The "wisest of mankind" always declared that he merely
+drew out the sentiments of those he talked with. He assisted in the
+delivery of their thoughts. He simply helped them to that most valuable
+knowledge,&mdash;the knowledge of themselves. He was forever putting
+questions to them, with a result which often surprised and sometimes
+made them angry, but which, at any rate, effectually served the
+interests of truth. And, upon the whole, I do not know any rule for
+making a good talker which deserves a more prominent place than this:
+Put your questions properly, and ask many questions. Observe how
+naturally nearly all conversation begins with an inquiry. "When did you
+arrive?" "Are you a stranger here?" "How far did you walk to-day?"
+"Which view did you most enjoy?" "Did you hear any news from the seat of
+war?" The simple reason of this method, as already intimated, is, that
+it puts the questioner in a more modest position. He whom you question
+has the agreeable consciousness of being able to impart something which
+you have not. You put yourself in the background, and make him the
+important person. He is therefore at once amicably disposed towards you,
+and is not likely to let the conversation languish, so auspiciously
+begun. He in turn becomes the questioner, and so in not many moments you
+stand on the footing of equals. But remember, all this is true only on
+condition that the questions are <i>properly put</i>. If they manifest an
+impertinent curiosity, a mere disposition to pry into affairs which do
+not belong to one,&mdash;if they are of a nature to expose the ignorance of
+the questioned, even though not intended for such,&mdash;if they are
+incessant, and unrelieved by any affirmations, as though you were
+unwilling to commit yourself, or grudged to impart your knowledge,&mdash;and,
+finally, if the tone and voice of the questioner imply a feeling of
+superiority,&mdash;then, instead of promoting conversation, you will have
+done your worst to check it. You will have made the breach wider than if
+you had said nothing. Again, before putting your questions, consider a
+little the character of the man or woman whom you would address; for,
+while some evidently delight in being the objects of interrogation,
+others are as plainly, beyond a very moderate amount, annoyed by it. You
+must, of course, take this into account. You will gain nothing by the
+rudeness of pressing your questions upon unwilling ears. If one
+obstinately (or not obstinately) refuses to be drawn out, there is no
+help for it but silence. Conversation implies <i>some</i> reciprocity,&mdash;not
+by any means an equal amount of words on both sides, but at any rate
+some sign of intelligence, some expression of interest, some listening
+ear and face to encourage you; else it were better to utter your
+monologue to the woods and flowers.</p>
+
+<p>Another rule of conversation, as old at least as George Herbert, is, to
+talk with men on the subjects which belong to their peculiar calling or
+occupation,&mdash;with a farmer about his crops, with a merchant about the
+markets, with a sailor about the charms and perils of the sea, etc. Let
+it be only with considerable qualification that you accept this rule. I
+like Coleridge's comment on it: Talk with a man about his trade or
+business, if your object is to get information on such points; but if
+you wish to know the man himself, try him on all other topics sooner.
+The rule, however, is a convenient one; it is almost instinctively
+adopted in general society; and if judiciously applied, it may express a
+friendly feeling, which it is very desirable to commence with. It is not
+applied judiciously, when you seem to assume by it that your
+interlocutor is <i>limited</i> to these topics, and that "the cobbler must
+stick to his last," in word as well as deed. Or, again, if your
+questions shall have the air of "pumping" him, you will not make much
+progress towards friendly communication; for that seems an unfair
+advantage to take of your position,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span> besides that it is making of him a
+mere convenience, not treating him as an equal. No one likes to be
+catechized after he has grown to man's estate. I advise you, therefore,
+to use this rule simply as a convenient introduction to conversation
+where other methods fail, and to rely more upon a rule which is in some
+respects the reverse of this: Begin by talking about those things which
+interest yourself, assuming that your interlocutor is interested in them
+also. But I must warn you that here even more tact and discretion are
+required than in the other case. Follow such a rule literally and
+everywhere, and you would often have no hearer left. Fancy some student,
+fresh from his Greek or Sanscrit, endeavoring to impart his enthusiasm
+to a crowd of rustics! It is plain that I must add to my rule,
+<i>provided</i> your interest does not lie in things too remote from common
+apprehension and sympathy. Remember what I have already said about our
+"common humanity." Do not be so absorbed in your favorite study that you
+shall not also have an eye and a heart for matters pertaining to the
+general welfare. Then there will be no company in which you need be
+wholly silent, though there will always be preference for a company
+which sympathizes with your more decided tastes and pursuits. I cannot,
+indeed, understand how one should ever arrive at that state in which he
+has no preference for any particular class or society. Yet the more one
+cultivates acquaintance with a variety of characters, the more one will
+enjoy conversation in the favorite circle. Looking upon society simply
+as the means of developing the power of speech in man, the wider and
+more intimate our acquaintance with it, the more varied and attractive
+will be that power. I have somewhere read of two prisoners of state in
+Europe, who, entire strangers to each other before, were thrown into the
+same prison-cell to pass years together. One of them, after his release,
+relates, that, for the first year, they told each other all that they
+ever did,&mdash;every incident that memory could possibly rake up out of
+their past lives. For the second year, they talked over all their
+interior life, confiding to each other every phase of thought and
+affection and spiritual experience. But in the third year, they were
+<i>utterly silent</i>. They had "talked out." And what could more strikingly
+picture the misery of such a confinement than this entire exhaustion of
+materials for mutual communication? Yet how could it be otherwise? With
+absolutely nothing new to flow in, how could anything new be drawn out?</p>
+
+<p>The story impresses upon us the lesson, that, if we would enrich and
+enliven our conversation, we must always be supplying ourselves with new
+resources, new studies, new experiences. Let me lay it down, then, as a
+further rule to help one in the attainment of this valuable art: Make it
+a point to inform yourself on a variety of topics. One of the greatest
+hindrances, you will observe, to profitable or entertaining conversation
+is the extremely limited range of ideas with which most persons are
+familiar. Take any miscellaneous company, brought together in some
+public conveyance, or detained at some public house. The chances are,
+that very few out of the whole number will be conscious of any definite
+opinions to express on the higher departments of thought. They could
+doubtless tell you a great many <i>facts</i> which have interested them; but
+ask them for their <i>ideas</i> upon science, theology, politics, or morals,
+and they are dumb. They will talk with you of <i>persons</i> as long as you
+will listen, but of <i>principles</i> they seem to have only the remotest
+conception. Now I do not quite agree with the "Guesses at Truth," that
+"personality is the bane of conversation"; for persons come nearer to
+our every-day sympathies, and one need not, one does not, always bring
+them forward for gossip and scandal. But does it not denote extreme
+poverty of thought to introduce personalities into every conversation?
+Let them rather be illustrations, and thus stepping-stones to something
+higher and more edifying.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span> Come now and then, at least, fully prepared
+for something like intellectual gymnastics. Put your whole strength into
+the conflict. Gather up all your forces of thought and knowledge, and do
+your best as a man among men, contending not for victory or display, but
+for the truth and the right. If you ever belonged to a literary club or
+debating-society of any kind, you will remember what healthy glow and
+freshness it gave to all your faculties to enter into this intellectual
+arena. You could read and study with a great deal more interest after
+that. You knew better what you really believed and thought concerning
+the great interests of humanity. Your ideas of art, of ethics, of
+history, of government, of philosophy, were set in clearer order, and
+made you conscious of greater power. Now I am not pretending that you
+can make a debating-club out of every mixed company you may chance to
+meet, but only that you should carry into all society a readiness to
+discuss the higher topics, whenever they come up naturally to mind. Here
+it is <i>tact</i> again, and evermore tact, which is required to make the
+rule efficient,&mdash;tact to prevent "lugging in" unseasonable topics,&mdash;tact
+to avoid too long a discussion,&mdash;tact to keep out offensive
+egotism,&mdash;tact, in general, to adapt one's self to one's surroundings.</p>
+
+<p>I will not conclude this letter, however imperfectly it may meet your
+wants, without devoting a few words to the grave question, Shall we talk
+of a subject so sacred as <i>religion</i> in mixed society? For myself, I
+must confess to some change of opinion on this point. I have greater
+respect than I once had for that reserve which keeps one habitually
+silent on this highest of all themes. I protest against the assumption,
+that a religious man will feel it his duty to converse often about
+religion. His duty must be governed by the peculiar circumstances of
+each case. He certainly must not do violence to his own feelings of
+reverence; nor ought he to suppose that the mere introduction of
+religious themes into conversation, anyhow and anywhere, is sure to do
+good. On the contrary, I believe that an injudicious treatment of this
+subject has done vastly more harm than good. And yet there is no power,
+in my opinion, within the whole range of the human faculties, more
+desirable than that of awakening religious life and thought by means of
+familiar speech. Whoever would wield such a power must know, as one of
+the chief requisites, how to seize the <i>mollia tempora fandi</i>. The word
+in season,&mdash;the very word to reach and move this individual heart,&mdash;find
+<i>this</i>, and you have found the great secret of influence. And be sure
+there is such a key to every man. Somewhere and sometime, if you watch
+for it, you shall discover the tender place in the roughest and hardest
+character. Men arm themselves against you by a thousand assumptions of
+indifference, stoicism, and irreverence, put on for the occasion, that
+you may not invade their inner sanctuary. Do not therefore be led into
+the mistake that for them there is no sanctuary, no citadel to defend.
+Better take for granted the reverse, and use every lawful art and
+persuasion to find the entrance to it. Of multitudes it is indeed true,
+that they have "no religion to speak of"; but that with any intelligent
+man is no longer a reproach. To sound a trumpet before one has a
+disagreeable reminder of certain ancient pretenders. Some men, when the
+heart is fullest, cannot speak; and nothing would be more unjust than to
+charge with want of feeling for the deepest and highest subjects of
+thought those who cannot frame a sentence to convey their emotions. Yet,
+after all these considerations have been fairly weighed, it is still
+desirable that men should communicate with each other far oftener than
+they do, on the interests which concern all men alike,&mdash;the interests,
+not of a temporal, but of an eternal state. A wholly unnatural reserve,
+the result of false education, hedges in the subject of religion.
+Never,&mdash;let this he a sacred and inviolable rule to you,&mdash;never, by
+word, tone, or manner, falsify your own nature and experience, when
+referring to this subject; never affect in the slightest degree an
+interest you do not feel;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span> never dare to open your mouth merely because
+you are expected to do so,&mdash;and, my word for it, you will already
+possess important negative qualifications, to say the least, for
+conversing on the highest of all topics. I have exalted "tact" in
+conversation, but here I would exalt simplicity no less. Lay aside the
+<i>too many</i> folds. Learn the courage to "speak right out," when you know
+that your heart is charged with no malice or vanity, that you should
+fear to speak. Have you never envied the courage of children in this
+respect? I have. And it has seemed to me that to "become as little
+children" is nowhere more urgently required than here, and that no rule
+would sooner make talkers out of the silent ones,&mdash;you, my friend,
+included. So with this, my last and best word, I take leave of you, not
+despairing that you will yet be able to overcome your taciturnity, if
+you take to heart these counsels of</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+<span class="smcap">Your Friend.</span>
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="THE_CHIMNEY-CORNER" id="THE_CHIMNEY-CORNER"></a>THE CHIMNEY-CORNER.</h2>
+
+
+<h3>VIII.</h3>
+
+<h4>THE NOBLE ARMY OF MARTYRS.</h4>
+
+<p>When the first number of the Chimney-Corner appeared, the snow lay white
+on the ground, the buds on the trees were closed and frozen, and beneath
+the hard frost-bound soil lay buried the last year's flower-roots,
+waiting for a resurrection.</p>
+
+<p>So in our hearts it was winter,&mdash;a winter of patient suffering and
+expectancy,&mdash;a winter of suppressed sobs, of inward bleedings,&mdash;a cold,
+choked, compressed anguish of endurance, for how long and how much God
+only could tell us.</p>
+
+<p>The first paper of the Chimney-Corner, as was most meet and fitting, was
+given to those homes made sacred and venerable by the cross of
+martyrdom,&mdash;by the chrism of a great sorrow. That Chimney-Corner made
+bright by home firelight seemed a fitting place for a solemn act of
+reverent sympathy for the homes by whose darkness our homes had been
+preserved bright, by whose emptiness our homes had been kept full, by
+whose losses our homes had been enriched; and so we ventured with
+trembling to utter these words of sympathy and cheer to those whom God
+had chosen to this great sacrifice of sorrow.</p>
+
+<p>The winter months passed with silent footsteps, spring returned, and the
+sun, with ever-waxing power, unsealed the snowy sepulchre of buds and
+leaves,&mdash;birds reappeared, brooks were unchained, flowers filled every
+desolate dell with blossoms and perfume. And with returning spring, in
+like manner, the chill frost of our fears and of our dangers melted
+before the breath of the Lord. The great war, which lay like a mountain
+of ice upon our hearts, suddenly dissolved and was gone. The fears of
+the past were as a dream when one awaketh, and now we scarce realize our
+deliverance. A thousand hopes are springing up everywhere, like
+spring-flowers in the forest. All is hopefulness, all is bewildering
+joy.</p>
+
+<p>But this our joy has been ordained to be changed into a wail of sorrow.
+The kind hard hand, that held the helm so steadily in the desperate
+tossings of the storm, has been stricken down just as we entered
+port,&mdash;the fatherly heart that bore all our sorrows can take no earthly
+part in our joys. His were the cares,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span> the watchings, the toils, the
+agonies of a nation in mortal struggle; and God looking down was so well
+pleased with his humble faithfulness, his patient continuance in
+well-doing, that earthly rewards and honors seemed all too poor for him,
+so He reached down and took him to immortal glories. "Well done, good
+and faithful servant, enter thou into the joy of thy Lord!"</p>
+
+<p>Henceforth the place of Abraham Lincoln is first among that noble army
+of martyrs who have given their blood to the cause of human freedom. The
+eyes are yet too dim with tears that would seek calmly to trace out his
+place in history. He has been a marvel and a phenomenon among statesmen,
+a new kind of ruler in the earth. There has been something even
+unearthly about his extreme unselfishness, his utter want of personal
+ambition, personal self-valuation, personal feeling.</p>
+
+<p>The most unsparing criticism, denunciation, and ridicule never moved him
+to a single bitter expression, never seemed to awaken in him a single
+bitter thought. The most exultant hour of party victory brought no
+exultation to him; he accepted power not as an honor, but as a
+responsibility; and when, after a severe struggle, that power came a
+second time into his hands, there was something preternatural in the
+calmness of his acceptance of it. The first impulse seemed to be a
+disclaimer of all triumph over the party that had strained their utmost
+to push him from his seat, and then a sober girding up of his loins to
+go on with the work to which he was appointed. His last inaugural was
+characterized by a tone so peculiarly solemn and free from earthly
+passion, that it seems to us now, who look back on it in the light of
+what has followed, as if his soul had already parted from earthly
+things, and felt the powers of the world to come. It was not the formal
+state-paper of the chief of a party in an hour of victory, so much as
+the solemn soliloquy of a great soul reviewing its course under a vast
+responsibility, and appealing from all earthly judgments to the tribunal
+of Infinite Justice. It was the solemn clearing of his soul for the
+great sacrament of Death, and the words that he quoted in it with such
+thrilling power were those of the adoring spirits that veil their faces
+before the throne: "Just and true are thy ways, thou King of Saints!"</p>
+
+<p>Among the rich treasures which this bitter struggle has brought to our
+country, not the least is the moral wealth which has come to us in the
+memory of our martyrs. Thousands of men, women, and children too, in
+this great conflict, have "endured tortures, not accepting deliverance,"
+counting not their lives dear unto them in the holy cause: and they have
+done this as understandingly and thoughtfully as the first Christians
+who sealed their witness with their blood.</p>
+
+<p>Let us in our hour of deliverance and victory record the solemn vow,
+that our right hand shall forget her cunning before we forget them and
+their sufferings,&mdash;that our tongue shall cleave to the roof of our
+mouth, if we remember them not above our chief joy.</p>
+
+<p>Least suffering among that noble band were those who laid down their
+lives on the battle-field, to whom was given a brief and speedy passage
+to the victor's meed. The mourners who mourn for such as these must give
+place to another and more august band, who have sounded lower deeps of
+anguish, and drained bitterer drops out of our great cup of trembling.</p>
+
+<p>The narrative of the lingering tortures, indignities, and sufferings of
+our soldiers in Rebel prisons has been something so harrowing that we
+have not dared to dwell upon it. We have been helplessly dumb before it,
+and have turned away our eyes from what we could not relieve, and
+therefore could not endure to look upon. But now, when the nation is
+called to strike the great and solemn balance of justice, and to decide
+measures of final retribution, it behooves us all that we should at
+least watch with our brethren for one hour, and take into our account
+what they have been made to suffer for us.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Sterne said he could realize the miseries of captivity only by setting
+before him the image of a miserable captive with hollow cheek and wasted
+eye, notching upon a stick, day after day, the weary record of the
+flight of time. So we can form a more vivid picture of the sufferings of
+our martyrs from one simple story than from any general description; and
+therefore we will speak right on, and tell one story which might stand
+as a specimen of what has been done and suffered by thousands.</p>
+
+<p>In the town of Andover, Massachusetts, a boy of sixteen, named Walter
+Raymond, enlisted among our volunteers. He was under the prescribed age,
+but his eager zeal led him to follow the footsteps of an elder brother
+who had already enlisted; and the father of the boy, though these two
+were all the sons he had, instead of availing himself of his legal right
+to withdraw him, indorsed the act in the following letter addressed to
+his Captain.</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+"<span class="smcap">Andover, Mass.</span>, August 15th, 1862.
+</p>
+
+<p>"<span class="smcap">Captain Hunt</span>,&mdash;My eldest son has enlisted in your company. I send you
+his younger brother. He is, and always has been, in perfect health, of
+more than the ordinary power of endurance, honest, truthful, and
+courageous. I doubt not you will find him on trial all you can ask,
+except his age, and that I am sorry to say is only sixteen; yet if our
+country needs his service, take him.</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+"Your obedient servant,<br />
+<br />
+"<span class="smcap">Samuel Raymond.</span>"
+</p>
+
+<p>The boy went forth to real service, and to successive battles at
+Kingston, at Whitehall, and at Goldsborough; and in all did his duty
+bravely and faithfully. He met the temptations and dangers of a
+soldier's life with the pure-hearted firmness of a Christian child,
+neither afraid nor ashamed to remember his baptismal vows, his
+Sunday-school teachings, and his mother's wishes.</p>
+
+<p>He had passed his promise to his mother against drinking and smoking,
+and held it with a simple, childlike steadiness. When in the midst of
+malarious swamps, physicians and officers advised the use of tobacco.
+The boy writes to his mother,&mdash;"A great many have begun to smoke, but I
+shall not do it without your permission, though I think it does a great
+deal of good."</p>
+
+<p>In his leisure hours, he was found in his tent reading; and before
+battle he prepared his soul with the beautiful psalms and collects for
+the day, as appointed by his church, and writes with simplicity to his
+friends,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I prayed God that He would watch over me, and if I fell, receive my
+soul in heaven; and I also prayed that I might not forget the cause I
+was fighting for, and turn my back in fear."</p>
+
+<p>After nine months' service, he returned with a soldier's experience,
+though with a frame weakened by sickness in a malarious region. But no
+sooner did health and strength return than he again enlisted, in the
+Massachusetts cavalry service, and passed many months of constant
+activity and adventure, being in some severe skirmishes and battles with
+that portion of Sheridan's troops who approached nearest to Richmond,
+getting within a mile and a half of the city. At the close of this raid,
+so hard had been the service, that only thirty horses were left out of
+seventy-four in his company, and Walter and two others were the sole
+survivors among eight who occupied the same tent.</p>
+
+<p>On the 16th of August, Walter was taken prisoner in a skirmish; and from
+the time that this news reached his parents, until the 18th of the
+following March, they could ascertain nothing of his fate. A general
+exchange of prisoners having been then effected, they learned that he
+had died on Christmas Day in Salisbury Prison, of hardship and
+privation.</p>
+
+<p>What these hardships were is, alas! easy to be known from those too well
+authenticated accounts published by our Government of the treatment
+experienced by our soldiers in the Rebel prisons.</p>
+
+<p>Robbed of clothing, of money, of the soldier's best friend, his
+sheltering blanket,&mdash;herded<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span> in shivering nakedness on the bare
+ground,&mdash;deprived of every implement by which men of energy and spirit
+had soon bettered their lot,&mdash;forbidden to cut in adjacent forests
+branches for shelter, or fuel to cook their coarse food,&mdash;fed on a pint
+of corn-and-cob-meal per day, with some slight addition of molasses or
+rancid meat,&mdash;denied all mental resources, all letters from home, all
+writing to friends,&mdash;these men were cut off from the land of the living
+while yet they lived,&mdash;they were made to dwell in darkness as those that
+have been long dead.</p>
+
+<p>By such slow, lingering tortures,&mdash;such weary, wasting anguish and
+sickness of body and soul,&mdash;it was the infernal policy of the Rebel
+government either to wring from them an abjuration of their country, or
+by slow and steady draining away of the vital forces to render them
+forever unfit to serve in her armies.</p>
+
+<p>Walter's constitution bore four months of this usage, when death came to
+his release. A fellow-sufferer, who was with him in his last hours,
+brought the account to his parents.</p>
+
+<p>Through all his terrible privations, even the lingering pains of slow
+starvation, Walter preserved his steady simplicity, his faith in God,
+and unswerving fidelity to the cause for which he was suffering.</p>
+
+<p>When the Rebels had kept the prisoners fasting for days, and then
+brought in delicacies to tempt their appetite, hoping thereby to induce
+them to desert their flag, he only answered,&mdash;"I would rather be carried
+out in that dead-cart!"</p>
+
+<p>When told by some that he must steal from his fellow-sufferers, as many
+did, in order to relieve the pangs of hunger, he answered,&mdash;"No, I was
+not brought up to that!" And so when his weakened system would no longer
+receive the cob-meal which was his principal allowance, he set his face
+calmly towards death.</p>
+
+<p>He grew gradually weaker and weaker and fainter and fainter, and at last
+disease of the lungs set in, and it became apparent that the end was at
+hand.</p>
+
+<p>On Christmas Day, while thousands among us were bowing in our garlanded
+churches or surrounding festive tables, this young martyr lay on the
+cold, damp ground, watched over by his destitute friends, who sought to
+soothe his last hours with such scanty comforts as their utter poverty
+afforded,&mdash;raising his head on the block of wood which was his only
+pillow, and moistening his brow and lips with water, while his life
+ebbed slowly away, until about two o'clock, when he suddenly roused
+himself, stretched out his hand, and, drawing to him his dearest friend
+among those around him, said, in a strong, clear voice,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I am going to die. Go tell my father I am ready to die, for I die for
+God and my country,"&mdash;and, looking up with a triumphant smile, he passed
+to the reward of the faithful.</p>
+
+<p>And now, men and brethren, if this story were a single one, it were
+worthy to be had in remembrance; but Walter Raymond is not the only
+noble-hearted boy or man that has been slowly tortured and starved and
+done to death, by the fiendish policy of Jefferson Davis and Robert
+Edmund Lee.</p>
+
+<p>No,&mdash;wherever this simple history shall be read, there will arise
+hundreds of men and women who will testify,&mdash;"Just so died my son!" "So
+died my brother!" "So died my husband!" "So died my father!"</p>
+
+<p>The numbers who have died in these lingering tortures are to be counted,
+not by hundreds, or even by thousands, but by tens of thousands.</p>
+
+<p>And is there to be no retribution for a cruelty so vast, so aggravated,
+so cowardly and base? And if there is retribution, on whose head should
+it fall? Shall we seize and hang the poor, ignorant, stupid, imbruted
+semi-barbarians who were set as jailors to keep these hells of torment
+and inflict these insults and cruelties? or shall we punish the
+educated, intelligent chiefs who were the head and brain of the
+iniquity?<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>If General Lee had been determined <i>not</i> to have prisoners starved or
+abused, does any one doubt that he could have prevented these things?
+Nobody doubts it. His raiment is red with the blood of his helpless
+captives. Does any one doubt that Jefferson Davis, living in ease and
+luxury in Richmond, knew that men were dying by inches in filth and
+squalor and privation in the Libby Prison, within bowshot of his own
+door? Nobody doubts it. It was his will, his deliberate policy, thus to
+destroy those who fell into his hands. The chief of a so-called
+Confederacy, who could calmly consider among his official documents
+incendiary plots for the secret destruction of ships, hotels, and cities
+full of peaceable people, is a chief well worthy to preside over such
+cruelties; but his only just title is President of Assassins, and the
+whole civilized world should make common cause against such a miscreant.</p>
+
+<p>There has been, on both sides of the water, much weak, ill-advised talk
+of mercy and magnanimity to be extended to these men, whose crimes have
+produced a misery so vast and incalculable. The wretches who have
+tortured the weak and the helpless, who have secretly plotted to
+supplement, by dastardly schemes of murder and arson, that strength
+which failed them in fair fight, have been commiserated as brave
+generals and unfortunate patriots, and efforts are made to place them
+within the comities of war.</p>
+
+<p>It is no feeling of personal vengeance, but a sense of the eternal
+fitness of things, that makes us rejoice, when criminals, who have so
+outraged every sentiment of humanity, are arrested and arraigned and
+awarded due retribution at the bar of their country's justice. There are
+crimes against God and human nature which it is treason alike to God and
+man not to punish; and such have been the crimes of the traitors who
+were banded together in Richmond.</p>
+
+<p>If there be those whose hearts lean to pity, we can show them where all
+the pity of their hearts may be better bestowed than in deploring the
+woes of assassins. Let them think of the thousands of fathers, mothers,
+wives, sisters, whose lives will be forever haunted with memories of the
+slow tortures in which their best and bravest were done to death.</p>
+
+<p>The sufferings of those brave men are ended. Nearly a hundred thousand
+are sleeping in those sad, nameless graves,&mdash;and may their rest be
+sweet! "There the wicked cease from troubling, there the weary are at
+rest. There the prisoners rest together; they hear not the voice of the
+oppressor." But, O ye who have pity to spare, spare it for the
+broken-hearted friends, who, to life's end, will suffer over and over
+all that their dear ones endured. Pity the mothers who hear their sons'
+faint calls in dreams, who in many a weary night-watch see them pining
+and wasting, and yearn with a lifelong, unappeasable yearning to have
+been able to soothe those forsaken, lonely death-beds. Oh, man or woman,
+if you have pity to spare, spend it not on Lee or Davis,&mdash;spend it on
+their victims, on the thousands of living hearts which these men of sin
+have doomed to an anguish that will end only with life!</p>
+
+<p>Blessed are the mothers whose sons passed in battle,&mdash;a quick, a
+painless, a glorious death! Blessed in comparison,&mdash;yet we weep for
+them. We rise up and give place at sight of their mourning-garments. We
+reverence the sanctity of their sorrow. But before this other sorrow we
+are dumb in awful silence. We find no words with which to console such
+grief. We feel that our peace, our liberties, have been bought at a
+fearful price, when we think of the sufferings of our martyred soldiers.
+Let us think of them. It was for <i>us</i> they bore hunger and cold and
+nakedness. They might have had food and raiment and comforts, if they
+would have deserted our cause,&mdash;and they did not. Cutoff from all
+communication with home or friends or brethren,&mdash;dragging on the weary
+months, apparently forgotten,&mdash;still they would not yield, they would
+not fight against us; and so for us at last they died.</p>
+
+<p>What return can we make them?<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span> Peace has come, and we take up all our
+blessings restored and brightened; but if we look, we shall see on every
+blessing a bloody cross.</p>
+
+<p>When three brave men broke through the ranks of the enemy, to bring to
+King David a draught from the home-well, for which he longed, the
+generous-hearted prince would not drink it, but poured it out as an
+offering before the Lord; for he said, "Is not this the blood of the men
+that went in jeopardy of their lives?"</p>
+
+<p>Thousands of noble hearts have been slowly consumed to secure to us the
+blessings we are rejoicing in.</p>
+
+<p>We owe a duty to these our martyrs,&mdash;the only one we can pay.</p>
+
+<p>In every place, honored by such a history and example, let a monument be
+raised at the public expense, on which shall be inscribed the names of
+those who died for their country, and the manner of their death.</p>
+
+<p>Such monuments will educate our young men in heroic virtue, and keep
+alive to future ages the flame of patriotism. And thus, too, to the
+aching heart of bereaved love shall be given the only consolation of
+which its sorrows admit, in the reverence which is paid to its lost
+loved ones.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="PEACE" id="PEACE"></a>PEACE.</h2>
+
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i5">Daybreak upon the hills!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Slowly, behind the midnight murk and trail<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of the long storm, light brightens, pure and pale,<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">And the horizon fills.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i5">Not bearing swift release,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Not with quick feet of triumph, but with tread<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">August and solemn, following her dead,<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">Cometh, at last, our Peace.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i5">Over thick graves grown green,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Over pale bones that graveless lie and bleach,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Over torn human hearts her path doth reach,<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">And Heaven's dear pity lean.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i5">O angel sweet and grand!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">White-footed, from beside the throne of God,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thou movest, with the palm and olive-rod,<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">And day bespreads the land!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i5">His Day we waited for!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With faces to the East, we prayed and fought;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And a faint music of the dawning caught,<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">All through the sounds of War.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i5">Our souls are still with praise!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">It is the dawning; there is work to do:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">When we have borne the long hours' burden through,<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">Then we will p&aelig;ans raise.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span><br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i5">God give us, with the time,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">His strength for His large purpose to the world!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To bear before Him, in its face unfurled,<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">His gonfalon sublime!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i5">Ay, we <i>are</i> strong! Both sides<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The misty river stretch His army's wings:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Heavenward, with glorious wheel, one flank He flings;<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">And one front still abides!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i5">Strongest where most bereft!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">His great ones He doth call to more command.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For whom He hath prepared it, they shall stand<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">On the Right Hand and Left!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="RECONSTRUCTION_AND_NEGRO_SUFFRAGE" id="RECONSTRUCTION_AND_NEGRO_SUFFRAGE"></a>RECONSTRUCTION AND NEGRO SUFFRAGE.</h2>
+
+
+<p>The submission of the Rebel armies and the occupation of the Rebel
+territory by the forces of the United States are successes which have
+been purchased at the cost of the lives of half a million of loyal men
+and a debt of nearly three thousand millions of dollars; but, according
+to theories of State Rights now springing anew to life, victory has
+smitten us with impotence. The war, it seems, was waged for the purpose
+of forcing the sword out of the Rebel's hands, and forcing into them the
+ballot. At an enormous waste of treasure and blood, we have acquired the
+territory for which we fought; and lo! it is not ours, but belongs to
+the people we have been engaged in fighting, in virtue of the
+constitution we have been fighting for. The Federal government is now,
+it appears, what Wigfall elegantly styled it four years ago,&mdash;nothing
+but "the one-horse concern at Washington": the real power is in the
+States it has subdued. We are therefore expected to act like the savage,
+who, after thrashing his Fetich for disappointing his prayers, falls
+down again and worships it. Our Fetich is State Rights, as perversely
+misunderstood. The Rebellion would have been soon put down, had it been
+merely an insurrectionary outbreak of masses of people without any
+political organization. Its tremendous force came from its being a
+revolt of States, with the capacity to employ those powers of taxation
+and conscription which place the persons and property of all residing in
+political communities at the service of their governments. And now that
+characteristic which gave strength to the Rebel communities in war is
+invoked to shield them from Federal regulation in defeat. We are
+required to substitute technicalities for facts; to consider the
+Rebellion&mdash;what it notoriously was not&mdash;a mere revolt of loose
+aggregations of men owing allegiance to the United States; and to hold
+the States, which endowed them with such a perfect organization and
+poisonous vitality, as innocent of the crime. The verbal dilemma in
+which this reasoning places us is this: that the Rebel States could not
+do what they did, and therefore we cannot do what we must. Among other
+things which it is said we cannot do, the prescribing of the
+qualifications of voters in the States occupies the most important
+place; and it is necessary to inquire whether the Rebel communities now
+held by our military power are<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span> States, in the sense that word bears in
+the Federal Constitution. If they are, we have not only no right to say
+that negroes shall enjoy in them the privilege of voting, but no right
+to prescribe any qualifications for white voters.</p>
+
+<p>In the American system, the process by which constitutions are made and
+governments instituted is by conventions of the people. The State
+constitutions were ordained by conventions of the people of the several
+States; the constitution of the United States was made the supreme law
+of the land by conventions of the people of all the States; and the only
+method by which a State could be released, with any show of legality,
+from its obligations to the United States, would be the assent of the
+same power which created the Federal constitution,&mdash;namely, conventions
+of the people of <i>all</i> the States. The course adopted by the so-called
+"seceding" States was separate State action by popular conventions in
+the States seceding. This was an appeal to the original authority from
+which State governments and constitutions derived their powers, but a
+violation of solemn faith towards the government and constitution
+decreed by the people of all the States, and which, by the assent of
+each State, formed a vital part of each State constitution. No State
+convention could be called for the purpose of separating from the
+Union,&mdash;of destroying what the officers calling it had sworn to
+support,&mdash;without making official perjury the preliminary condition of
+State sovereignty. Looked at from the point of view of the State
+seceding, the act was an assertion of State independence; looked at from
+the point of view of the constitution of the United States, it was an
+act of State suicide. The State so acting through a convention of its
+people was no longer a State, in the meaning that word bears in the
+Federal constitution; for, whatever it may have been before it was one
+of the United States, it was transformed into a different political
+society by making the Federal constitution a part of its own organic
+law. In cutting that bond, it bled to death as a State, as far as the
+Federal constitution knows a State, to rise again as a Rebel community,
+holding a portion of the Federal territory by force of arms. A State, in
+the meaning of the Federal constitution, is a political community
+forbidden to exercise sovereign powers, and at once a part of the
+Federal government and owing allegiance to it. Is South Carolina, which
+has exercised sovereign powers, which has broken its allegiance to the
+Federal government, and which at present is certainly not a part of it,
+such a political society?</p>
+
+<p>It is, we know, contended by some reasoners on the subject, that the
+Rebel States <i>could not</i> do what they palpably <i>did</i>. This course of
+argument is sustained only by confounding duties with powers. By the
+constitution a State cannot (that is, has no right to) secede, only as,
+by the moral law, a man cannot (that is, has no right to) commit murder;
+nevertheless, States have broken away from their obligations to the
+Union, as murderers have broken away from their obligations to the moral
+law. It is folly to claim that criminal acts are impossible because they
+are unjustifiable. The real question relates to the condition in which
+the criminal acts of the Rebel States left them as political societies.
+They cannot claim, as some of their Northern champions do for them, that
+being <i>in</i> the Union in our view, and <i>out</i> of it in their own, the only
+result of defeating them as Rebels is to restore them as citizens. This
+would be playing a political game of "Heads I win, tails you lose,"
+which they must know can hardly succeed with a nation which has made
+such enormous sacrifices of treasure and blood in putting them down.
+After having, by a solemn act of their own, through conventions of the
+people, forsworn their duties to the constitution, they by that act
+forfeited its privileges. In our view they became Rebel enemies, against
+whom we had both the rights of sovereignty and the rights of war; in
+their own view, they became foreigners; and from that moment they had no
+more "constitutional" control of the area they<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span> occupied, were no more
+"States," than if they had transferred their allegiance to a European
+power, and the war had been prosecuted to wrest the territory they
+occupied, and the people they ruled, from the clutch of England or
+France. Even if we consider the Union a mere partnership of States, the
+same principle will apply; for partnership implies mutual obligations,
+and no partner can steal the property of his firm, and abscond with it,
+and then, after he has been hunted down and arrested, claim the rights
+in the business he enjoyed before he turned rogue.</p>
+
+<p>But it is sometimes asserted that the small minority of citizens in the
+Rebel States claiming to be, and to have been, loyal, constitute the
+States in the constitutional meaning of the term. Now without insisting
+on the fact that it is so plainly impossible to accurately distinguish
+these from the disloyal, that an oath, not required by State
+constitutions, has, in the recent attempt at reconstruction, been
+imposed by Federal authority on all voters alike, it is plain that no
+minority in a political society can claim exemption from political evils
+it had not power to prevent. Had we gone to war with Great Britain, the
+property of Cobden and Bright on the high seas would have been as liable
+to capture as that of Lindsay or Laird. No loyal citizens at the South
+could have been more bitterly opposed to Secession than some of our
+Northern Copperheads were to the war for the Union; and yet the persons
+of the Copperheads were as liable to conscription, and their property to
+taxation, as those of the most enthusiastic Republicans. There would be
+an end to political societies, if men should refuse to be held
+responsible for all public acts except those they personally approved. A
+member of a community whose people, in a convention, broke faith with
+the United States, and made war against it, the Southern Unionist was
+forced into complicity with the crime. By the pressure of a power he
+could not resist he was compelled to pay Confederate taxes, serve in
+Confederate armies, and become a portion of the Confederate strength.
+More than this: the property in human beings, which he held by local
+law, was confiscated by the Federal government's edict of emancipation,
+equally with the same kind of property held by the most disloyal. And
+now that the war is over, he and those who sympathized with him are not
+the State, which was extinguished by its own act when it rebelled. He
+and his friends may be the objects of sympathy, of honor, of reward; but
+in the work of reconstruction the interest and safety of the great body
+of loyal citizens of the United States, of the persons who have bought
+the territory at such a terrible price, are to be primarily consulted.
+And not simply because such a course is expedient, but because the
+Southern Unionists can advance no valid claim to be the political
+societies which were recognized by the Federal constitution as States
+before the Rebellion. If they were, they might proceed at once to assume
+the powers of the States, without any authority from Washington, and
+without calling any convention to form a <i>new</i> constitution. If, on the
+breaking out of the Rebellion, they had rallied in defence of the old
+constitutions within State limits, preserved the organization of the
+States in all departments, raised and equipped armies, and conducted a
+war against the Confederates as traitors to their respective States as
+well as to the United States, they might present some claims to be
+considered the States; but this they did not do, and they were not
+powerful enough to do it. The large proportion of them were compelled to
+form a part of the Rebel power.</p>
+
+<p>And this brings us directly to the heart of the matter. It is asserted
+that the Acts of Secession, being unconstitutional, were inoperative and
+void. But they were passed by the people of the several States which
+seceded, and the persons and property of the whole people were
+indiscriminately employed in making them effective. The States held by
+Rebel armies were Rebel States. All the population were necessarily, in
+the view of the Federal government, Rebel enemies. Consequently the
+territory<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span> of the States was as "void" of citizens of the United States
+as the Acts of Secession were "void." The only things left, then, were
+the inoperative ideas of States.</p>
+
+<p>Again, to put the argument in another form, it is asserted, that, though
+the people of a State may commit treason, the State itself remains
+unaffected by the crime. A distinction is here made between a State and
+the people who constitute it,&mdash;between the State and the persons who
+create its constitution and organize its government. The State
+constitution which existed while it was a State, in the Federal meaning
+of the word, was destroyed in an essential part by the same authority
+which created it, namely, a convention of the people of the State; and
+yet it is said that the State remained unaffected by the deed. By this
+course of reasoning, a State is defined an abstract essence which can
+comfortably exist in all its rights and privileges, <i>in potentia</i>, apart
+from all visible embodiment; a State which is the possibility of a State
+and not the actuality of one; a State which can be brought into the line
+of real vision only by some such contrivance as that employed by the
+German playwright, who, in a drama on the subject of the Creation,
+represented Adam crossing the stage <i>going</i> to be created.</p>
+
+<p>There is, it is true, one method of getting a kind of body to this
+abstract State, but it is a method which may well frighten the hardiest
+American reasoner. It was employed by Burke in one of the audacities of
+his logic directed against the governments established after the French
+Revolution of 1789. He took the ground, that France was not in the
+French territory or in the French people, but in the persons who
+represented its old polity, and who had escaped into England and
+Germany. These constituted what he called "Moral France," in distinction
+from "Geographical France"; and Moral France, he said, had emigrated.</p>
+
+<p>But as few or none will be inclined to take the ground that South
+Carolina and Georgia exist in the persons who left their soil on the
+breaking out of the Rebellion, we are forced back to the conception of
+an invisible spiritual soul and essence of a State, surviving its bodily
+destruction. But even this abstraction must still, from the point of
+view of the Federal constitution, be conceived of as owing allegiance to
+the Federal government; and it can confessedly get a new body only by
+the exercise of Federal authority. Its leading institution has been
+destroyed by Federal power. Its old legislature and governor, who alone,
+on State principles, could call a convention of the people, are spotted
+all over with treason, and might be hanged as traitors, by the law of
+the United States, while engaged in measures to repair the broken unity
+of the State life,&mdash;a fact which is of itself sufficient to show that
+the old State is dead beyond all bodily resurrection. The white
+inhabitants who occupy its old geographical limits are defeated Rebels,
+and not one can exercise the privilege of voting without taking an oath
+which no real "State" prescribes. They are all born again into citizens
+by a Federal fiat; they are "pardoned" into voters; they derive their
+rights, not from their old charters, but from an act of amnesty. Far
+from any discrimination being made between loyal and disloyal, the great
+body of both classes are compelled to submit to Federal terms of
+citizenship or be disfranchised; and they are called upon, not to revive
+the old State, but to make a new one, within the old State lines. And
+all this would result from the necessity of the case, even if it were
+not made justifiable by the essential sovereignty of the United States,
+of which the war-power is but an incident. But if the Federal government
+can thus give the white inhabitants, or any portion of them, the right
+of suffrage, cannot it confer that right upon the black freedmen? It
+will not do, at this stage, to say that the Federal government has no
+right to prescribe the qualifications of voters in the States: because,
+in the case of the whites, it does and must prescribe them; and
+President<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span> Johnson has just the same right to say that negroes shall
+vote as to say that pardoned Rebels shall vote. The right of States to
+decide on the qualifications of its electors applies only to loyal
+States; it cannot apply to political communities which have lost by
+Rebellion the Federal character of "States," which notoriously have no
+legitimate State authority to decide the question of qualification, and
+which are now taking the preparatory steps of forming themselves into
+States through the agency of provisional Federal governors, directing
+voters, constituted such by Federal authority, to elect delegates to a
+convention of the people. It is a misuse of constitutional language to
+Call North Carolina and Mississippi "States," in the same sense in which
+we use the term in speaking of Ohio and Massachusetts. When their
+conventions have framed State constitutions, when their State
+governments are organized, and when their senators and representatives
+have been admitted into the Congress of the United States, then, indeed,
+they will be States, entitled to all the privileges of Ohio and
+Massachusetts; and woe be to us, if they are reconstructed on wrong
+principles!</p>
+
+<p>It is often said, that, although the Federal government may have the
+right and power to decide who shall be considered "the people" of the
+Rebel States, in so important a matter as the conversion of them into
+States of the Federal Union, it is still politic and just to make the
+qualifications of voters as nearly as possible what they were before the
+Rebellion. Conceding this, we still have to face the fact, that a large
+body of men, held before the war as slaves, have been emancipated, and
+added to the body of the people. They are now as free as the white men.
+The old constitutions of the Slave States could have no application to
+the new condition of affairs. The change in the circumstances, by which
+four years have done the ordinary work of a century, demands a
+corresponding change in the application of old rules, even admitting
+that we should take them as a guide. Having converted the loyal blacks
+from slaves into the condition of citizens of the United States, there
+can be no reason or justice or policy in allowing them to be made, in
+localities recently Rebel, the subjects of whites who have but just
+purged themselves from the guilt of treason.</p>
+
+<p>The question of negro suffrage being thus reduced to a question of
+expediency, to be decided on its own merits, the first argument brought
+against it is based on the proposition, that it is inexpedient to give
+the privilege of voting to the ignorant and unintelligent. This sounds
+well; but a moment's reflection shows us that the objection is directed
+simply against deficiencies of education and intelligence which happen
+to be accompanied with a black skin. Three fifths or three fourths of
+the poor whites of the South cannot read or write; and they are cruelly
+belied, if they do not add to their ignorance that more important
+disqualification for good citizenship,&mdash;indisposition or incapacity for
+work. In general, the American system proceeds on the idea that the best
+way of qualifying men to vote is voting, as the best way of teaching
+boys to swim is to let them go into the water. "Our national
+experience," says Chief-Justice Chase, in a letter to the New Orleans
+freedmen, "has demonstrated that public order reposes most securely on
+the broad base of Universal Suffrage. It has proved, also, that
+universal suffrage is the surest guaranty and most powerful stimulus of
+individual, social, and political progress." But even if we take the
+ground, that education and suffrage, though not actually, should
+properly be, identical, the argument would not apply to the case of the
+freedmen. What we need primarily at the South is loyal citizens of the
+United States, and treason there is in inverse proportion to ignorance.
+If, in reconstructing the Rebel communities, we make suffrage depend on
+education, we inevitably put the local governments into the hands of a
+small minority of prominent Confederates whom we have recently defeated;
+of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span> men physically subdued, but morally rebellious; of men who have used
+their education simply to destroy the prosperity created by the industry
+of the ignorant and enslaved, and who, however skilful they may be as
+"architects of ruin," have shown no capacity for the nobler art which
+repairs and rebuilds. If, on the other hand, we make suffrage depend on
+color, we disfranchise the only portion of the population on whose
+allegiance we can thoroughly rely, and give the States over to white
+ignorance and idleness led by white intrigue and disloyalty. We are
+placed by events in that strange condition in which the safety of that
+"republican form of government" we desire to insure the Southern States
+has more safeguards in the instincts of the ignorant than in the
+intelligence of the educated. The right of the freedmen, not merely to
+the common privileges of citizens, but to <i>own themselves</i>, depends on
+the connection of the States in which they live with the United States
+being preserved. They must know that Secession and State Independence
+mean their re&euml;nslavement. Saulsbury of Delaware, and Willey of West
+Virginia, declared in the Senate, in 1862, that the Rebel States, when
+they came back into the Union, would have the legal power to re&euml;nslave
+any blacks whom the National government might emancipate; and it is only
+the plighted faith of the United States to the freedmen, which such a
+proceeding would violate, which can prevent the crime from being
+perpetrated. It is as citizens of the United States, and not as
+inhabitants of North Carolina or Mississippi, that their freedom is
+secure. Their instincts, their interests, and their position will thus
+be their teachers in the duties of citizenship. They are as sure to vote
+in accordance with the most advanced ideas of the time as most of the
+embittered aristocracy are to vote for the most retrograde. They will,
+though at first ignorant, necessarily be in political sympathy with the
+most educated voters of New York, Ohio, and Massachusetts; if they were
+as low in the scale of being as their bitterest revilers assert, they
+would still be forced by their instincts into intuitions of their
+interests; and their interests are identical with those of civilization
+and progress. We suppose that those who think them most degraded would
+be willing to concede to them the possession of a little selfish
+cunning; and a little selfish cunning is enough to bring them into
+harmony with the purposes, if not the spirit, of the largest-minded
+philanthropy and statesmanship of the North.</p>
+
+<p>It is claimed, we know, by some of the hardiest dealers in assertion,
+that the freedmen will vote as their former masters shall direct; but as
+this argument is generally put forward by those whose sympathies are
+with the former masters rather than with the emancipated bondmen, one
+finds it difficult to understand why they should object to a policy
+which will increase the power of those whom they wish to be dominant.
+The circumstances, however, under which credulous ignorance becomes the
+prey of unscrupulous intelligence are familiar to all who have observed
+our elections. An ignorant Irish Catholic may be the victim of a
+pro-slavery demagogue, because the latter flatters his prejudices; but
+can he be deceived by a bigoted Know-Nothing, who is the object of them?
+The only demagogue who could control the negro would be an abolition
+demagogue, and he could control him to his harm only when the negro was
+deprived of his rights. The slave-masters were wont to pay considerable
+attention to zo&ouml;logy,&mdash;not because they were interested in science, but
+because in that science they thought they could obtain arguments for
+expelling blacks from the human species. In their zo&ouml;logical studies,
+did they ever learn that mice instinctively seek the protection of the
+cat, or that the deer speeds to, instead of from, the hunter? The
+persons whose votes the late masters would be most likely to control
+would palpably be those whose votes they always have controlled, namely,
+the poor whites; for, in the late Slave States, white aristocrat is
+still bound to white democrat by the strong tie of a common<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span> contempt of
+"the nigger." Meanwhile it is not difficult to believe, that, among four
+millions of black people, there are enough plantation Hampdens and
+Adamses to give political organization to their brethren, and make their
+votes efficient for the protection of their interests.</p>
+
+<p>We think, then, it may be taken for granted, that, while ignorant, the
+freedmen will vote right by the force of their instincts, and that the
+education they require will be the result of their possessing the
+political power to demand it. Free schools are not the creations of
+private benevolence, but of public taxation; it is useless to expect a
+system of universal education in a community which does not rest on
+universal suffrage; and the children of the poor freeman are educated at
+the public expense, not so much by the pleading of the children's needs
+as by the power of the father's ballot. To take the ground, that the
+"superior" race will educate the "inferior" race it has but just held in
+bondage, that it will humanely set to work to prepare and qualify the
+"niggers" to be voters, only escapes from being considered the artifice
+of the knave by charitably referring it to the credulity of the
+simpleton. We do not send, as Mr. Sumner has happily said, "the child to
+be nursed by the wolf"; and he might have added, that the only precedent
+for such a proceeding, the case of Romulus and Remus, has lost all the
+little force it may once have had by the criticism of Niebuhr.</p>
+
+<p>If the negroes do not get the power of political self-protection in the
+conventions of the people which are now to be called, it is not
+reasonable to expect they will ever get it by the consent of the whites.
+Legal State conventions are called by previous law. There is no previous
+State law applicable to the Rebel communities, because, revolutionized
+by rebellion, the very persons who are qualified by the old State laws
+to call conventions are disqualified by the laws of the United States.
+The result is, that the people are an unorganized mass, to be
+reorganized under the lead of the Federal government; and of this mass
+of people&mdash;literally, in this case, "the masses"&mdash;the free blacks are as
+much a part as the free whites. As soon, however, as the machinery of
+State governments is set in motion by these conventions,&mdash;as soon as
+these governments are recognized by the President and Congress,&mdash;no
+conventions to alter the constitutions agreed upon can be called, except
+by previous State laws. If negro suffrage is not granted in the election
+of members to the present conventions, the power will pass permanently
+into the hands of the whites, and the only opportunity for a peaceful
+settlement of the question will be lost. At the very time when,
+abstractly, no party has legal rights, and only one party has claims, we
+propose to deliberately sacrifice the party that has claims to the party
+which will soon acquire legal rights to oppress the claimants. For,
+disguise it as we may, the United States government really holds and
+exercises the power which gives vitality to the preliminaries of
+reconstruction, and it is therefore responsible for all evils in the
+future which shall spring from its neglect or injustice in the present.</p>
+
+<p>The addition, too, of four millions of persons to the people of the
+South, without any corresponding addition of voters, will increase the
+political power of the ruling whites to an alarming extent, while it
+will remove all checks on its mischievous exercise. The constitution
+declares that "representatives and direct taxes shall be apportioned
+among the several States, which may be included in this Union, according
+to their respective numbers, which shall be determined by adding to the
+whole number of free persons, including those bound to service for a
+term of years, and excluding Indians not taxed, three fifths of all
+other persons." The unanswerable argument presented at the time against
+the clause relating to the slaves did not prevent its adoption. "If," it
+was said, "the negroes are property, why is other property not<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span>
+represented? if men, why three fifths?" Still the South has always
+enjoyed the double privilege of treating the negro as an article of
+merchandise and of using three fifths of him as political capital. He
+has thus added to the power by which he was enslaved, and has been
+represented in Congress by persons who regarded him either as a beast or
+as "a descendant of Ham." In 1860, when the ratio of representation was
+about one hundred and twenty-seven thousand, the South had, by the
+three-fifths rule, the right to eighteen more representatives in
+Congress, and eighteen more electoral votes, than it would have had, if
+only free persons had been counted. The emancipation of the slaves will
+give it twelve more; for the blacks will now no longer be constitutional
+fractions, but constitutional units. The three-fifths arrangement was a
+monstrous anomaly; but the five-fifths will be worse, if negro suffrage
+be denied. Four millions of free people will, by the mere fact of being
+inhabitants of Southern territory, confer a political power equal to
+thirty members of Congress, and yet have no voice in their election. It
+has been computed by the Hon. Robert Dale Owen, in a paper on the
+subject, published in the New York "Tribune," that in some States, where
+the blacks and whites are about equal in number, and where two thirds of
+the whites shall "qualify" as voters, this new condition of things will
+give the Southern white voter, in a Presidential or Congressional
+election, three times as much political influence as a Northern voter.
+And on whom shall we, in many localities, confer this immense privilege?
+Here is Mr. Owen's description of a specimen of the class of Southern
+"poor whites" we propose thus to exalt.</p>
+
+<p>"I have often encountered this class. I saw many of them last year,
+while visiting, as member of a Government commission, some of the
+Southern States. Labor degraded before their eyes has extinguished
+within them all respect for industry, all ambition, all honorable
+exertion to improve their condition. When last I had the pleasure of
+seeing you at Nashville, I met there, in the office of a gentleman
+charged with the duty of issuing transportation and rations to indigent
+persons, black and white, a notable example of this strange class. He
+was a Rebel deserter,&mdash;a rough, dirty, uncouth specimen of
+humanity,&mdash;tall, stout, and wiry-looking, rude and abrupt in speech and
+bearing, and clothed in tattered homespun. In no civil tone, he demanded
+rations. When informed that all rations applicable to such a purpose
+were exhausted, he broke forth,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"What am I to do, then? How am I to get home?'</p>
+
+<p>"'You can have no difficulty,' was the reply. 'It is but fifteen or
+eighteen hours down the river' (the Cumberland) 'by steamboat to where
+you live. I furnished you transportation; you can work your way.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Work my way!' (with a scowl of angry contempt.) 'I never did a stroke
+of work since I was born; and I never expect to, till my dying day.'</p>
+
+<p>"The agent replied, quietly,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"'They will give you all you want to eat on board, if you help them to
+wood.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Carry wood!' he retorted, with an oath. 'Whenever they ask me to carry
+wood, I'll tell them they may set me on shore; I'd rather starve for a
+week than work for an hour; I don't want to live in a world that I can't
+make a living out of without work.'</p>
+
+<p>"Is it for men like that, ignorant, illiterate, vicious, fit for no
+decent employment on earth except manual labor, and spurning <i>all</i> labor
+as degradation,&mdash;is it in favor of such insolent swaggerers that we are
+to disfranchise the humble, quiet, hard-working negro? Are the votes of
+three such men as Stanton or Seward, Sumner or Garrison, Grant or
+Sherman, to be neutralized by the ballot of one such worthless;
+barbarian?"</p>
+
+<p>But this great power, wielded by a population imperfectly qualified to
+vote, in the name of a population which do<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span> not vote at all,&mdash;a power
+equivalent to thirty members of Congress and thirty electoral
+votes,&mdash;will be directed as much against Northern interests as against
+negro interests. Added to the power which the South will derive from its
+voting population, it will enable that section to control one third of
+all the votes in the House of Representatives; and, says Professor
+Parsons, "if they stand together, and vote as a unit, they will need
+only about one sixth more to get and hold control of our national
+legislation and all our foreign and domestic policy." Our political
+experience has unfortunately not been such as to justify us in believing
+it to be impossible for any party, under a resolute Southern lead, to
+obtain one sixth of the Northern strength in Congress. What would be the
+result of such a combination? Why, the National government would be
+substantially in the hands of those who have been engaged in a desperate
+struggle to overthrow it; and it would be a government converted into a
+great military and naval power by the war which resulted in their
+defeat, and fully competent to enforce its decisions at home and abroad
+by the strong hand. Nothing is purchased at such a frightful price as
+the indulgence of a prejudice; the cry against "nigger equality" is a
+prejudice of the most mischievous kind; and it may be we shall hereafter
+find cause to deplore, that, when we had to choose between "nigger
+equality" and Southern predominance, our choice was to keep the "nigger"
+down, even if we failed to keep ourselves up.</p>
+
+<p>One result of Southern predominance everybody can appreciate. The
+national debt is so interwoven with every form of the business and
+industry of the loyal States that its repudiation would be the most
+appalling of evils. A tax to pay it at once would not produce half the
+financial derangement and moral disorder which repudiation would cause;
+for repudiation, as Mirabeau well observed, is nothing but taxation in
+its most cruel, unequal, iniquitous, and calamitous form. But what
+reason have we to think that a reconstructed South, dominant in the
+Federal government, would regard the debt with feelings similar to ours?
+The negroes would associate it with their freedom, of which it was the
+price; their late masters would view it as the symbol of their
+humiliation, which it was incurred to effect. We must remember that the
+South loses the whole cost of Rebellion, and is at the same time
+required to pay its share of the cost of suppressing Rebellion. The cost
+of Rebellion is, in addition to the devastation of property caused by
+invasion, the whole Southern debt of some two or three thousand millions
+of dollars, and the market value of the slaves, which, estimating the
+slaves at five hundred dollars each, is two thousand millions of dollars
+more. The portion of the cost of suppressing Rebellion which the South
+will have to pay can be approximately reached by taking a recent
+calculation made in the Census Office of the Department of the Interior.</p>
+
+<p>Estimating the national debt at twenty-five hundred millions of dollars,
+and apportioning it according to the number of the white male adults
+over twenty years of age in the different sections of the country, it
+has been found that the proportion of the New England States is
+$308,689,352.07; of the Middle States, $740,195,342.32; of the Western
+States, $893,288,781.01; of the Southern States, $461,929,846.85; and of
+the Pacific States, $95,896,677.75. This calculation makes the South
+responsible for over four hundred and sixty millions of the debt. What
+amount have the Southerners invested in it? Where both interest and
+passion furiously impel men to repudiation, can they be trusted with the
+care of the public credit? "But," the Northern people may exclaim, "in
+case of such an execrable violation of justice, we would revolt,&mdash;we
+would"&mdash;&mdash;Ah! but in whose hands would then be "the war power"?</p>
+
+<p>From every point of view, then, in which we can survey the subject,
+negro suffrage is, unless we are destitute of the commonest practical
+reason, the logical sequence of negro emancipation. It is not more
+necessary for the protection<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span> of the freedmen than for the safety and
+honor of the nation. Our interests are inextricably bound up with their
+rights. The highest requirements of abstract justice coincide with the
+lowest requirements of political prudence. And the largest justice to
+the loyal blacks is the real condition of the widest clemency to the
+Rebel whites. If the Southern communities are to be reorganized into
+Federal States, it is of the first importance that they should be States
+whose power rests on the proscription or degradation of no class of
+their population. It would be a great evil, if they were absolutely
+governed by a faction, even if that faction were a minority of the
+"loyal" people, whose loyalty consisted in merely taking an oath which
+the most unscrupulous would be the readiest to take, because the
+readiest to break. We are bound either to give them a republican form of
+government, or to hold them in the grasp of the military power of the
+nation; and we cannot safely give them anything which approaches a
+republican form of government, unless we allow the great mass of the
+free people the right to vote. And least of all should we think of
+proscribing that particular class of the free people who most thoroughly
+represent in their localities the interests of the United States, and
+whose ballots would at once do the work and save the expense of an army
+of occupation.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="REVIEWS_AND_LITERARY_NOTICES" id="REVIEWS_AND_LITERARY_NOTICES"></a>REVIEWS AND LITERARY NOTICES.</h2>
+
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p><i>Life of Horace Mann.</i> By his Wife. Boston: Walker, Fuller &amp;
+Co.</p></div>
+
+<p>The American readers of Mr. Spencer's "Social Statics" have raised their
+eyes in wholesome wonderment at the condemnation which is there found of
+all systems of national education. It is unfortunate that a writer who
+has given effective presentation to many truths should have failed to
+scrutinize his inductions by the light of certain ascertainable facts.
+The presumed requirements of a system caused him to prejudge what should
+have been investigated; and hence, upon the great theme of state
+education his rare illuminating powers shed a few side-lights of
+suggestion, and nothing more. The rough common sense of our humblest
+citizen disperses the philosopher's subtilties of logic with some such
+decisive sentence as that with which Dr. Johnson cut the meshes of the
+Fate-argument, or President Lincoln carried the pious defences of
+man-stealing. "We know we're free, and there's an end on 't." "If
+slavery is not wrong, nothing is wrong." If the state has no right to
+educate, it has no right to protect itself from the assaults of
+ignorance, and consequently no right to exist at all. This, to be sure,
+is dogmatism; but with loyal Americans to-day it comes so near being a
+moral instinct that it may be provisionally assumed and tested at
+leisure by the experience to which it has conducted us. In the crisis
+through which the nation has just passed, education as a state
+expediency has received its fullest vindication. The people whom the
+state educated up to an appreciation of the republican idea arose to be
+its saviours. No magnetism of personal leadership was given them. It was
+the instructed sense of the community which overcame the perils of
+faction and the incompetence of chiefs. And now, while we gratefully
+recognize those who at the critical moment fell or suffered or wrought
+for the Republic, let us not forget the unapplauded heroism which in
+time past laboriously accumulated the force lately revealed in many
+manly acts. The Trent Catechism declares that a final judgment is
+necessary, in order that the bad may be punished for the evil which in
+future time results from their mortal acts. If it may be held,
+conversely, that the conduct of the good is entitled to ever-increasing
+honor, we think it well that the biography of Horace Mann, educator and
+statesman, has been withheld to this day. It is nobly prophetic of the
+perfected faith in popular government and universal liberty which fills
+our hearts. It is in deep accordance with the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span> psalm of victory which
+rises from loyal lips.</p>
+
+<p>The present volume supplies materials for filling up the admirable
+outline of Mr. Mann's life which appeared in Livingston's "Law Journal,"
+and was copied in other publications. For it must necessarily be
+materials for the study of a majestic character, rather than any
+critical <i>dicta</i> concerning it, that Mrs. Mann can offer us. And this is
+not to be regretted. The judgments of an impartial biographer would have
+been dearly purchased at the sacrifice of that sweetest testimony of
+household reverence which only the most intimate relation can supply.
+The little glimpses of Horace Mann, with his children about him, are
+worth many discriminating estimates of services and judicial
+investigations into the merits of forgotten controversies. We are made
+fully acquainted with the noble spirit in which he labored, and this is
+a better bequest to the American people than even the noble results it
+brought to pass. Poor enough seems any halting, sentimental interest in
+human well-being in the presence of that sturdy life, throbbing with
+executive energy, and dignified by thorough disinterestedness.</p>
+
+<p>Horace Mann was born into the narrow circumstances of a small New
+England farm. His father died when he was still a boy. The educational
+opportunities offered by the poorest district of the little town of
+Franklin, Massachusetts, were meagre enough. Knowledge in the husk was
+thrown before the pupils, who were allowed the privilege of picking out
+what they might. The training which stimulates memory had not given
+place to that which encourages thought. In spite of all obstructions,
+Horace displayed an irrepressible love of learning, and obtained that
+sort of education which was probably the best possible for the work he
+had to do. For it was from vividly realizing the hindrances which he had
+the strength partially to surmount that he was able to adjust the means
+for their removal. His youth was far from being a happy one. The poverty
+of his parents subjected him to continual privation, and the remorseless
+logic of the current theology weighed upon his sensitive spirit. Having
+obtained the consent of his guardian to prepare for college, he entered
+Brown University in 1816. His graduating oration was upon the
+progressive character of the human race,&mdash;a subject prophetic of his
+subsequent mission. A tutorship of the Latin and Greek languages gave
+the opportunity to perfect himself in classical culture. Afterwards he
+studied law, and in 1823 was admitted to the Norfolk bar. From this time
+his life was devoted to the welfare of the ignorant and unfortunate. As
+a leading member of the State Legislature, both in the House and
+afterwards as President of the Senate, Mr. Mann took an active part in
+forwarding measures relating to public charities and education. The
+establishment of the State Insane Hospital at Worcester was wholly due
+to his vigorous advocacy. In 1837 he retired from the distinguished
+professional and political career that was opening before him, and
+devoted his rare abilities to the service of common schools. As
+Secretary of the Massachusetts Board of Education, he effected a
+thorough reform in the school system of the State. Of the unexampled
+labor and self-denial of eleven successive years his Annual Reports and
+the "Common School Journal" are noble, though inadequate memorials. In
+1848 Mr. Mann was sent to Congress as successor to John Quincy Adams.
+Here his powers were at once concentrated in resisting the usurpations
+of Slavery. Two years later came his memorable collision with Mr.
+Webster. In opposing the doctrines of the famous 7th of March speech,
+and in his subsequent criticism of its author, Mr. Mann well knew the
+bitter judgments he would provoke and the social position he must
+sacrifice. He counted the cost and accepted the duty. Insight lent him
+the fire with which foresight kindled the prophets. He saw in the slave
+system those inner depths of cruelty and baseness which Andersonville
+and Port Hudson have lately revealed. At the ensuing election in
+November, Mr. Mann's renomination was defeated in the Whig Convention.
+Appealing to the people as an independent candidate, he was re-elected
+to Congress, and there served until he was offered the Presidency of
+Antioch College in 1852. The toil, the perseverance, the
+self-renunciation which associate Mr. Mann with Antioch are too great
+for conventional phrases of eulogy. Whether judged by the mighty things
+he accomplished, or by the harmonious development of the moral,
+intellectual, and affectional nature which he displayed, there are few
+human records which show an appreciation of duty so exhaustive united to
+a performance so heroic.</p>
+
+<p>The life of Horace Mann was full of severe work. Few men have had the
+grace to return so uncompromising an answer to the question whether
+their service was to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span> be rendered to God or Mammon. He had the gift of
+separating religion from its accidental trappings, and of recognizing in
+the simplest intuition of accountability for our neighbor's welfare the
+best working hypothesis. Like Theodore Parker, he excelled the common
+citizen, not in reach of skepticism, but in might of faith. His was
+never that gentlemanly sort of virtue which devotes unoccupied corners
+of the being, as it were in decorative fashion, to the interests of
+humanity. He would toil patiently at the humblest crank-work, content to
+move puppets who received whatever public credit was to be had. Mr. Mann
+abandoned a political career that was calculated to satisfy a generous
+ambition, to take the newly created office of Secretary of the Board of
+Education, unassociated with dignity or emolument. "If the position is
+not honorable now," he replied to the remonstrances of a friend, "then
+it is clearly for me to elevate it; and I would rather be creditor than
+debtor to the title." He combined in a rare degree the working powers of
+the enthusiast with the balance of the philosopher. He wrought at
+high-pressure, yet looked to no immediate or showy success. "If no seed
+were ever sown save that which would promise the requital of a full
+harvest, how soon would mankind revert to barbarism!" The exclamation
+was with him no disregarded truism.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Mann's views of the true ends to be sought in our systems of
+education receive daily confirmation. Burying the mind under a heap of
+ready-made generalizations may give a conceit of knowledge, amusing or
+dangerous as the case may be, but never gives the "power" promised in
+the aphorism. When Montaigne said that he would rather forge his mind
+than furnish it, he suggested the true principle of education. The
+problem is not to fill the mind from without, but to give the most
+efficient aid to its efforts to form itself from within. The energies
+that Mr. Mann put forth for the direction and government of Antioch
+College, his noble sacrifices far exceeding the requirements that could
+justly be demanded at his hands, not only show his lofty and resolute
+nature, but clearly exhibit the substantial <i>animus</i> of the scheme of
+instruction he had at heart. While fully recognizing the intimate
+connection between physical organization and mental phenomena, he never
+doubted our inherent ability to subdue the animal nature, and considered
+that a recognizable effort so to do should be an essential condition of
+intellectual culture. The great features of the institution for which he
+sacrificed his life were, an unsectarian basis, and instruction to woman
+as well as man. The touching narrative shows how broad and firm was the
+foundation upon which he built. The glory of Horace Mann the educator
+culminates in this: he proved that without dogma or formulary the tone
+of a large body of students might be unusually religious and their
+conduct unusually moral; and also, that the properly guarded intercourse
+of young men and young women engaged in the pursuit of knowledge might
+be elevating and beneficial to both.</p>
+
+<p>The present volume furnishes a just conception of Mr. Mann's remarkable
+character. We see a human life consistently governed by the highest
+human instincts. Yet if shortcomings there were, they may be found, or
+inferred, by those who will look for them. Mr. S. J. May thinks it not
+judicious to publish certain letters that Mr. Mann addressed to him,
+lest they should injure their author's fame with some good men. But the
+controlling sincerity of the biographer will not permit her to withhold
+them. In the never-ending battle between the theoretically right and
+what to mortal vision seems the practically expedient, Horace Mann for a
+moment inclines to the latter. He fears that Mr. May will peril his
+usefulness as Principal of the Lexington Normal School by an open
+connection with the Abolitionists. He urges the duty of considering the
+consequences of our acts: as if we could weigh, or in any manner
+estimate, the eternal consequences of the least of them; as if all
+history did not show us that the temporary loss of influence, of
+usefulness, the sacrifice of life itself, was necessary to the
+incorporation of a higher truth with the existing intelligence of men
+and the means of its final triumph in the world. But Mr. Mann's own
+brave career was never deflected by the sophistries of the timid. He
+never doubted that he best influenced the whole by fulfilling the
+highest law of his individual life. What other faith could sustain him,
+when his exhausting labors were not rewarded by a recognized success in
+any way commensurate with their desert? Yet no one ever saw him when the
+luminous quality of his spiritual nature was clouded, or the special
+stimulus to use his powers to the utmost was withdrawn.</p>
+
+<p>Few recipes for comfortable living are to be gathered from such a story.
+Vainly we ask for a little repose upon our pilgrimage<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span> along those
+sublime heights of holy exertion whither that example leads us. We
+examine the chronicle of labor and privation, if haply we may find some
+paragraph wherein the philanthropist dines out or goes to the theatre.
+But the solemn claims of humanity are always in his keeping, and we must
+get inured as we may to his rigorous stewardship. And it is by the grace
+of such exceptional men that our country is to become less the paradise
+of charlatanry, and better to deserve the title of Model Republic. They
+draw the poison from that current philosophy which maintains that the
+intellect of man has always led the way in social advancement, his moral
+nature being subordinate thereto. Not as the sum of past forces, but by
+his own inherent moral life, does Horace Mann fill these pages. It is a
+sterling biography, which no educated American can afford not to read.
+It is only partial praise to call the book deeply interesting. It
+vivifies and inspires.</p>
+
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p><i>The Gentle Life</i>. Essays in Aid of the Formation of
+Character. London: Sampson Low, Son, and Marston.</p></div>
+
+<p>The title of this book constitutes its chief, we had almost said its
+sole, claim to consideration. We open its pleasant-looking pages with
+pleasant memories of Charles Lamb and Leigh Hunt, and pleasant
+anticipations, not of brilliancy, indeed, nor trenchant truth, but of
+medicine for our weariness, a moment of quiet in the rush and whirl of
+things, a breath of repose from over the sea to cool and tranquillize
+these fervid days of ours. We are tranquillized, indeed! We find
+ourselves straightway in a desert, stuck full of flowers, it is true,
+from innumerable gardens, but a desert still: for the unhappy exotics
+have suffered so severely in the transportation as to be scarcely able
+to hold up their heads, and, where they still preserve their original
+beauty, only serve to throw into stronger relief the surrounding
+sterility. It is a medley of dismal platitudes; truths which have been
+truisms for at least a century, uttered with all the pomp and
+circumstance of newly discovered laws; quotations garbled, pointless, or
+dipped in a feeble venom; shreds of learning pieced together, with or
+without adaptation, in a nondescript patchwork; the fragments of a
+thousand feasts huddled into one pot, simmered over a slow fire, and
+served up as a pretty dish to set before a king.</p>
+
+<p>The uniformity of the book is wonderful. It is always heavy. Its
+falsehood is insipid. Its very malice has no pungency. It is dull even
+where it hates. Now and then we stumble on a paragraph which starts up
+from the dead level around it, glowing with real fire; but at the end we
+are sure to find that it is translated from Victor Hugo or transferred
+from Emerson; and generally these borrowed plumes are so torn and
+bedraggled in their clumsy removal that the very bird they grew on would
+scarcely recognize them. There is no intentional, no malign
+maltreatment, to give us the relief of a real indignation; but we are
+kept in a state of constant irritation by a series of petty
+encroachments upon the integrities of literature. There is no law
+compelling a man to garnish his speech with floating verse; but if he
+choose to do so, he should make a point of presenting it in its true
+form. At the very least, if he must garble, let him garble rhythmically,
+and not add splay feet to spoiled force. One may not have a poetic taste
+or a musical ear; but if he has fingers and toes, he need not say,</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Yet I doubt not through ages one increasing purpose runs."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>It is utter demoralization to write "pride in his port and fire in his
+eye." Indeed, the singular fatality which attends these quotations has
+something of the sublime. If a sentiment <i>can</i> be reproduced with all
+its sparkle extinguished, our Gentle Man is the one to do it. Diffuse
+everywhere else, he is compact in erring, and crowds more mistakes into
+a paragraph than are often met on a page. He says incidentally, "Lord
+Byron wrote a very pretty song, conveying the idea in its refrain 'that
+the day of my destiny <i>is</i> over, the star of my hope has declined.' Now
+it is not a song, as he uses the word; the idea, if it is an idea, is
+not in the refrain; there is no refrain in the piece; and there is
+nothing said in the piece about the star of his hope. Lord Burleigh's
+fulsome she-fool is euphemized into an irksome female fool, and Lord
+Byron <i>jumped up</i> one morning and found himself famous. We are informed
+that nothing</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Can ennoble slaves, or fools, or cowards";<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>and that</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"My days are in the yellow leaf,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">The flowers and the fruit are gone";<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Burton was pleasing himself with <i>phantasies</i> sweet; Addison wedded
+<i>misery</i> in a noble<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span> wife; Wolsey had nothing more pathetic to say than
+"Had I served my God as I served my King, He would not now have deserted
+me"; and <i>King James</i>, contrary to all historic tradition and all the
+probabilities of the case, "never said a foolish thing and never did a
+wise one."</p>
+
+<p>Here is a bit of concentrated history:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"On one of the last Sundays in December, 1862, in the midst of a
+dispirited city, and with a perplexed Senate and a beaten army as that
+city's safeguards, Mr. Henry Ward Beecher asserted in the Puritan Church
+in New York, that 'Generals were of no use; that God fought against the
+North for upholding the slaves; that the time was come when wickedness
+was to be "rooted out"; and, finally, that it was not only the province
+of the preacher to condemn vice, but that he should "pluck it out by the
+root," should "slay" wickedness, and that slavery and alcohol should be
+put down by the arm of flesh and the sword of the preacher.'"</p>
+
+<p>Now, frankly confessing that we have no knowledge whatever of the facts
+in question and cannot therefore authoritatively deny a single
+statement, we are yet willing, on "circumstantial evidence," to risk
+both our intelligence and veracity by declaring our belief, first, that
+Mr. Beecher did not say this in the Puritan Church, but in the Plymouth
+Church; secondly, that it was not in New York, but in Brooklyn; and,
+thirdly, that he never said it at all. We leave out of view the haze
+which evidently beclouds this Gentle Brain regarding the location of the
+Senate, and its prevailing impression that the Potomac flows nine times
+around New York before it empties itself into Lake Pontchartrain.</p>
+
+<p>We do not claim to display any superior learning in pointing out these
+mistakes. We shall never set ourselves above our contemporaries for
+corrections which&mdash;we will not say every school-boy, but&mdash;every
+school-girl of ordinary literary aptitude is entirely competent to make.
+There are many things which it is no credit to know, but a serious
+discredit not to know; and when a man presumes to write a book, we have
+at least a right to expect that he shall not stumble in the primer. The
+Gentle Man claims to have been a student of English literature. He has
+certainly been a very stupid or a very careless one. Indications are not
+wanting that his proper seat is on both horns of the dilemma.</p>
+
+<p>When he leaves other writers and has recourse to his own pen, matters
+are but indifferently mended. The slovenliness of his style is
+extraordinary. "Ought a gentleman," he quotes from Thackeray, "to be a
+loyal son, a true husband, an honest father? Ought his life to be
+decent, his bills to be paid, his tastes to be high and elegant, his
+aims in life to be noble?" "Yes," responds the astute essayist, "he
+should be all these, and somewhat more; and these all men can be, and
+women, too." What is the English of this gibberish? "In Miss Thackeray's
+excellent novel, the 'Story of Elizabeth,' there is a somewhat new point
+in such books." He tells us that General Bl&uuml;cher "had his
+disappointments, no doubt, but turned them, like the oyster does the
+speck of sand which annoys it, to a pearl,"&mdash;that in every state people
+may be cheerful; "the lambs skip, birds sing and fly <i>joyously</i>, puppies
+play, kittens are <i>full</i> of <i>joyance</i>, the whole air <i>full</i> of careering
+and <i>rejoicing</i> insects, <i>that every</i>where the good outbalances the bad,
+and <i>that every</i> evil <i>that there is</i> has its compensating balm." And in
+face of such slop-work he dares to speak of having "formed his style"!</p>
+
+<p>And, stranger still, a book which indulges in these pranks has gone to a
+third edition in the land of Addison and Macaulay! Moreover, our copy
+belongs to this veritable third edition, whose preface informs us that
+"the Essays have undergone a careful revision." What must have been the
+glories of the first edition?</p>
+
+<p>The style is not more hopelessly muddled than the sentiment. The man's
+skull seems to be undergoing a perpetual house-cleaning. His
+intellectual furniture is always at sixes and sevens. It would be very
+strange, if so wide a rover and so indefatigable a collector should
+never by any chance come back with some valuable specimens for his
+cabinet; but the few curiosities displayed as his own property have so
+very awkward an air in his wilderness of common pebbles, that we have a
+deep inward conviction that they are stolen, though the theft may be an
+unconscious one. Moreover, if he ever lights on a genuine gem, he cannot
+keep his hands off it, but paws it over and over till it is as
+lustreless as its companions. He seems to have an organic inaptitude for
+combination. He lays a fact down and straightway forgets where he put
+it, what it was for, or what manner of fact it was, and goes serenely on
+with his argument as if no such fact existed. Some of his facts are of
+such a nature that the pity is not that he occasionally forgets them,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span>
+but that he ever remembered them. To show that old truths are "now
+proved to have been lies," he quotes,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Doubt that the stars are fire,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Doubt that the sun doth move,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Doubt truth to be a liar,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">But never doubt I love,"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>and adds this comment,&mdash;"Well, we know now that the sun does not move,
+and that the stars are not fire; that the voices of the learned, who
+held up these things as immutable truths, were unconsciously lying after
+all." Yet any astronomical horn-book would have told our philosopher,
+that, if one scientific theory is firmly founded on truth, it is that
+the sun does move; and for the matter of the stars, it is as likely to
+be fire as anything else. "William Penn," he says elsewhere, "is now
+tainted, and Washington suspected." By whom? and of what?&mdash;will this new
+historian inform us? "Great artists think differently, as witness
+wondrous Giotto, the shepherd boy, and our own clever, but mediocre
+Opie." A man may mistake a mediocre painter for a great artist and only
+err in judgment, but that he should in the same breath proclaim him to
+be both is a marvel of stultification. "All men are not born equal," he
+says, presumptuously dabbling in politics and drawing his feeble bow
+against the Declaration of Independence,&mdash;"all men are not equally wise,
+gifted, clever, strong, handsome, or tall. The brains of one nation and
+the brains of one man are superior in weight, form, and activity to the
+brains of another nation or another man." "The framers of the celebrated
+American Declaration knew just as well as we do that they were preaching
+a doctrine of romantic falsehood." A moment or two after this fine
+philosophical distinction and this courteous and eminently Gentle
+assertion,&mdash;but quite long enough for him to have forgotten both,&mdash;he
+makes another affirmation, that equality exists "in the grave and in the
+church." How, then? Are men equally wise, gifted, clever, strong,
+handsome, or tall in church? "A hundred years after death we may weigh
+the dust of the greatest hero, and it is no more than that of the
+poorest beggar; and the name that remains is as light and useless as the
+dust." But if the great hero were very strong and tall and the poor
+beggar a feeble dwarf, the dust of the one would be appreciably more
+than that of the other, And what means this Daniel come to judgment by
+teaching that a hero's name is light and useless? We had supposed it was
+agreed among all civilized people that a nation's heroic memories are
+her most priceless possessions. We ask the question simply as a
+rhetorical one. We are perfectly aware that the author means nothing. He
+seldom does mean anything. And if he did, he is the last person to whom
+we should apply for any exact definition of his meaning. He uses words
+with very little comprehension of their ordinary meaning; of the
+delicacy or the force of language he has no sort of conception. He
+grasps at the skirts of any notion that flutters through his disorderly
+mind, fastens to it the word that comes first to hand, and sets it
+fluttering again. Juxtaposition is his all-sufficient substitute for
+connection, and "a moment's time, a point of space," between two
+statements is fatal to his arguments. "We all differ. <i>Therefore</i>," is
+his extraordinary inference, "every individual should live, not for
+himself, but to be valuable to others; <i>for</i>," and here we turn another
+of his inexplicable corners, "it would be sheer midsummer madness to
+preach up that all are equally valuable." Consequently we embark on his
+sentences, paragraphs, and chapters in entire ignorance of the point
+where they will land us. He takes Mr. Helps to task for bowing the knee
+to the Moloch of success in writing Mr. Stephenson's life, accuses Mr.
+Stephenson of borrowing and purloining ideas, yet himself constantly
+holds him up to admiration as a hero. The putting down of the
+Slaveholders' Rebellion is to him a mere "blundering into slaughter";
+but the Crimean War "showed that heroism is not yet extinct in high
+life"; and in the Indian Mutinies, we, the English, "were attacked,
+undermined, betrayed," and that rebellion was quelled with "courage,
+skill in arms, anything you will, or all things combined, and God's
+blessing chief of all, which enabled us to preserve a mighty empire." Of
+these "high people" he advises us to "adopt the polish, suavity, and
+politeness, one towards another, which, with few exceptions, they all
+have," only two pages after he has illustrated "vulgar curiosity in high
+life" by telling us how, "at an entertainment given by the Prince and
+Princess of Wales, to which, of course, only the very cream of the cream
+of society was admitted, there was such a pushing and struggling to see
+the Princess ... that a bust of the Princess Royal was thrown from its
+pedestal and damaged, and the pedestal upset; the ladies, in their
+eagerness to view the Princess, coolly took<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span> advantage of the overthrown
+pillar by standing on it." In one place he testifies that "the majority
+of men's wives in the upper and middle classes fall far short of that
+which is required of a good wife. They are not made by love, but by the
+chance of a good match. They are the products of worldly prudence, not
+of a noble passion.... The consequence is, that after the first novelty
+has passed away, the chain begins to rub and the collar to gall." A
+little later in the same essay he gives an ideal wife, and says,&mdash;"It is
+not too much to say that the great majority of wives equal this ideal."
+"By far the larger portion of marriages are happy ones ... and ... of
+men's wives we still can write ... 'her voice is sweet music, her smiles
+his brightest day,' &amp;c., &amp;c." "Women," he says, "differ from men in this
+respect. They all, very properly, look forward to marriage." So, we
+suppose, men do not look forward to marriage; or if they do, it is
+improperly. "Nay, the great majority [of women], even in our factitious
+state of society, are utterly dependent upon it." That is, if society
+were not factitious, every woman, without exception, would be utterly
+dependent upon marriage for a living. "The majority of girls are looking
+forward to be married at an early age, and are in despair of being left
+old maids when they are twenty-one." As usual, he means the contrary of
+what he says,&mdash;not that girls hope to be old maids till they are
+twenty-one and then settle down into the certainty that they must become
+wives, but that they hope to be wives and are in despair at being old
+maids by the time they are twenty-one. The difficult task of evolving
+his meaning from his words is, to be sure, entirely a work of
+supererogation on our part, as the statement he means and the statement
+he makes are usually alike baseless. But we choose to free him from the
+meshes in which he has entangled himself and give him a chance to run
+for his life.</p>
+
+<p>The brilliancy and originality of his views on social questions appear
+in such startling announcements as "Woman should be true to herself."
+"Woman was created to be a wife and a mother." "The accomplished woman
+in these days of general education is, however, a grand mistake." "Why
+should lovely woman ever condescend to dabble in political economy? Can
+a gentleman be a gentleman when logic requires the truth? Will dry
+dissertation fill up the place of compliment and flowery talk? Will
+agricultural measures,&mdash;Mill on Liberty,&mdash;Buckle on Civilization,&mdash;High,
+Low, or Middle Church,&mdash;Pleiocene periods,&mdash;Hind's new comet, and the
+division of labor, suffer us to enjoy life as we used, and to amuse
+ourselves with the innocent prattle of ladies' tongues?" Rosy, posy,
+pinky, honey, pepper<i>mint</i>, and sugar-plummy! "One part of management in
+husbands lies in a judicious mixture of good-humor, attention, flattery,
+and compliments." Here, helping him to his meaning, which he flounders
+after in vain through a page of wish-wash, we may explain that he is not
+speaking, as would naturally be supposed, of the manner in which
+husbands manage wives, but, advancing in his usual crab-fashion, of the
+manner in which wives manage husbands; nor by flattery let it be
+imagined for a moment that he means flattery, but "an offered flower, a
+birthday gift, a song when we are weary, a smile when we are sad, a look
+which no eye but our own will see," in which, if truth is, as has been
+said, "a fixed central sun," our comet must be considered in its
+perihelion. And having thus set him on his feet again, let us see
+whether he can stand by himself a tottering moment or two.</p>
+
+<p>The preventive of these ill-assorted marriages (which for the greater
+part are never made) is, if the young men "only chose by sense <i>or</i>
+fancy, <i>or</i> because they saw some good quality in a girl,&mdash;if they were
+not all captivated by the face alone," (Query: What is being captivated
+by a face but choosing by fancy? and what is choosing by sense but
+choosing by some good quality?) "every Jill would have her Jack, and
+pair off happily, like the lovers in a comedy." At the same time he
+agrees with Swift that the reason why so many marriages are unhappy is
+because young ladies spend their "time in making nets and not in making
+cages."</p>
+
+<p>We have said that the Gentle Man is dull even when he hates. It is true,
+so far as he has anything to do with expressing his hatred; yet the time
+for the publication of his dulness is so inaptly&mdash;or perhaps we should
+rather say so aptly&mdash;chosen, that the incongruity awakens our sense of
+the ridiculous, while a certain childlike confidingness with which he
+credits any statement that makes against the objects of his dislike
+comes nearer to amusing us than anything else in the book. America is
+his <i>b&ecirc;te noir</i>. It points the moral of every sad tale. "Vulgarity,
+hoydenishness, coarseness, and the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span> contempt which accompanies these
+qualities, are the effects of bad manner and manners. It may pervade a
+whole nation, as it has done the Americans." What the particular "it" is
+which pervades us, we cannot, and the Gentle Man, also, "true to
+himself," cannot say; but there it is. A nation is exhorted to
+politeness; for, "sitting with their legs over the chair-back of
+another, carrying bowie-knives, cutting the furniture, and spitting in a
+circle around them, are not only national faults, but absolutely sins
+amongst Americans." Call a spade a spade, and speak not as in "America,
+where they talk of the 'stands' of the tables, not daring to say 'legs';
+and a young lady will be highly offended, if you dare to ask her to take
+a leg of a fowl or a breast of a turkey. There the latter is called
+'bosom'; and a mock modesty, which to us seems highly improper, has
+altered some round dozen of good, sound English words, which our best
+and purest girls use without so much as thinking upon them." Avoid
+exaggeration, for in America "it produces a general decay of truth and a
+boastful habit of exaggeration, for which the nation has grown famous,
+and at which its best friends are truly grieved." (Oh!) ... "They have
+asserted so long that they are the finest and best nation in the world,
+and they have come out so poorly under trial, that, what with a
+remembrance of the old story and the presence of the new, the English
+thinker is completely puzzled.... So general was the falsification, that
+the best men in the Northern States no longer credited a Government
+despatch or a general's 'order';... and the sad state into which the
+great nation has fallen has arisen from the spread of that vile disease,
+a love of exaggeration." His profound political penetration is evinced
+by the sagacious remark, that "America, the disciple of Lafayette (!)
+and French doctrines, determined to propagate liberty by enslaving six
+millions of brothers." His opinion of the character and career of our
+late beloved President&mdash;a name almost too pure and now too sacred to be
+mentioned here&mdash;is for once succinctly given,&mdash;"A cunning attorney sits
+upon a chair he cannot fill, and is leading a party and country to
+destruction." "With all his undoubted conceit and endurance, with his
+keenness for praise and for being talked about, we doubt whether there
+are many more miserable men in the world than President Abraham Lincoln.
+The bitter, bitter tears which Louis XVI. ... shed because of his own
+unfitness have been chronicled; but he, knowing his incompetence, was
+born to the estate of king; the American President wriggled himself
+forward into notoriety." "To an American, all the world seemed bound up
+in his Boston or Philadelphia.... He could whip John Bull, and John Bull
+could whip all the world. As, since that, he has been 'whipped into a
+cocked hat' by his own relations, we hope some of the conceit has been
+taken out of him." Yes, unhappy that we are, the secret is at last
+revealed. We carry bowie-knives in our breast-pockets (venturing to
+discard for once, under the protection of our Transatlantic Mentor, the
+usual term of <i>bosom-pocket</i>). We dine off the stands of fowl. We have
+come out poorly under trial, our finances are deranged, our country
+bankrupt, our confidence in Government lost, and we have no loyalty,
+because there is nothing to be loyal to. We are tossing on a sea of
+anarchy, we are rushing on to ruin, we have been braggart in peace and
+cowardly in war, and are at this moment whipped by our own relations
+into such a cocked hat as was never before seen. We do not credit the
+order to stop recruiting, and we have no belief in the evacuation of
+Richmond. We are confident that Sherman is gasping in the last ditch,
+that Jefferson Davis is dictator at Washington, and that General Grant
+is flying in his wife's gown before the victorious legions of Lee.</p>
+
+<p>In his preface, the writer of this book repels the charge of being like
+Thackeray and Dickens. We can assure him, that, with an American public,
+he may spare himself that trouble. He is not in the smallest danger of
+being mistaken for either of those eminent writers. He is so entirely
+unlike them that we do not for a moment suspect him of having attempted
+to imitate them. We do not even reckon him their disciple, nor Bacon's,
+nor Montaigne's, nor Steele's, nor any other's whose plan he professes
+himself to have adopted; for a disciple is a learner, which the Gentle
+Man seems never capable of becoming. Good and bad alike, he is a feeble
+and confused echo of all men's notions, but the steadfast adherent of
+none. The snob's soul within him bows down to the authority of great
+men, yet he produces their great thoughts in disjointed and distorted
+shape. He does not scruple to sneer where sneers are safe, blind to the
+glaring fact that sneers are never safe for him. Bold behind his Tory
+bulwarks, he warns<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span> boys against adopting Mr. Bright's opinions, and so
+becoming "selfish, calculating, cold; as careless of true nobility of
+purpose and of soul and as worshipful of material success as Mr. Bright
+himself;" and he has his little fling at Tupper, in common with many
+another literary drummer-boy who would earn a cheap reputation for valor
+by attacking what his superiors have already demolished. We should scorn
+to parry the puny thrust of this Liliputian at the noble name which
+America delights to honor, or to repel the charge of coldness against
+that great heart whose burst of anguish over the grave of his friend,
+and our friend, and humanity's, awoke an answering sob in a thousand
+homes of this Western World; but we beg to assure this fine old English
+Gentle Man and scholar, that, reading these essays, we are ready to
+pronounce Mr. Tupper a master of style and his philosophy a striking and
+valuable treatise.</p>
+
+<p>We really beg pardon of our readers for covering so much space with this
+flummery. We intended to despatch it with a thrust or two; but when our
+pen was once caught in the flimsy stuff, it was difficult to withdraw it
+again without bringing away considerable portions of the tangle.
+Moreover, a book of so much pretension is not to be as lightly passed by
+as its humbler brethren. A book that comes to us in fair type and fine
+paper, bearing the imprint of a well-known and highly respected
+publishing house,&mdash;a book that invokes the first names in literature and
+meddles with the higher laws of life, that takes on the airs of a censor
+and pushes forward into the guild of genius, that by the assumption of
+its tone and the broadcast scatteration&mdash;depend upon it, that is the
+word&mdash;of its odds and ends of learning, or by what hocus-pocus we know
+not, has attained to a third edition in a country proud of the accuracy
+and elegance of its scholarship, and that now brings its brazen face to
+our doors, seeking a welcome at the hearthstones which it has insulted,
+is not to be dismissed with a simple "Not at home." We have chosen
+rather to pillory the pretender, pelting him only with such missiles as
+his own pockets furnished. We now discharge him from custody, bidding
+him and all his kind bear in mind the assurance, that, while for English
+genius, English wisdom, English truth, and English love, we have only
+admiration and gratitude, the time has gone by for English charlatanry
+to expect from our hands anything but the scourging it deserves.</p>
+
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p><i>Essays in Criticism</i>. By <span class="smcap">Matthew Arnold</span>. Boston: Ticknor &amp;
+Fields.</p></div>
+
+<p>A more satisfactory volume of English prose than this has not come into
+our hands since the first appearance of the famous "Essays and Reviews."
+Differing widely from that collection in kind and scope, it yet belongs
+in the main to the same school of liberal thought in which England has
+made of late such rapid strides.</p>
+
+<p>As a poet, Matthew Arnold had been known among us for a decade or more
+of years, and, though not celebrated with the wide popularity of
+Tennyson, had been as cordially cherished as the Laureate himself by all
+who valued in poetry the indications of profound intellectual experience
+as well as the singer's native gift. Those who are most familiar with
+the verses of the Oxford Professor will be least surprised with the
+critical insight and judicial wisdom of these Essays. For, independently
+of any question of natural affinity or natural incompatibility between
+the functions of bard and critic, there is that in Mr. Arnold's poetry
+which makes the fortune of the essayist,&mdash;an intense subjectiveness
+united to an analytic subtilty, which would mar the beauty of his verse,
+as it certainly does that of Mr. Browning, were it not compensated by a
+depth and truth of poetic feeling, in which Arnold far excels Browning,
+and has no superior among recent English poets. Some of his poems are
+critical essays, without losing the distinctive character of poetry; and
+some of his best criticisms are done in verse. What better, for example,
+than the sentence on Byron in "Memorial Verses"?</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"He taught us little: but our soul<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Had felt him like the thunder's roll.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With shivering heart the strife we saw<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of Passion with Eternal Law;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And yet with reverential awe<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">We watched the fount of fiery life<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Which served for that Titanic strife."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Or that on Goethe in "Obermann"?</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"For he pursued a lonely road,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">His eye on Nature's plan,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Neither made man too much a God,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Nor God too much a man."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Of living Englishmen, it seems to us that Matthew Arnold combines in the
+highest degree great wealth of literary culture with the deepest
+thoughtfulness. This makes the charm of the present volume. Also, to his
+honor be it said,&mdash;and let due commendation be given to that trait,&mdash;he
+is of modern English essayists the least dogmatic. With<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span> fixed
+principles of art and very decided views of his own he combines a
+tolerance and a flexibility of mind which are very un-English. He is the
+least insular of his countrymen. It cannot be said of him, as he himself
+has said of Carlyle, that, with all his genius, he "has for the
+functions of the critic a little too much of the self-will and
+eccentricities of a genuine son of Great Britain." And yet, un-British
+as he is in these respects, Arnold, in one thing, is more national far
+than Carlyle,&mdash;in the manner, namely, in which he chooses to express his
+thought. Though deeply conversant with German literature, (as he is with
+French,) he has not suffered himself to be bitten with the Teutomania
+which infects so unpleasantly the diction of his self-willed
+countryman,&mdash;making his sentences seem like translations from Jean Paul,
+rather than utterances conceived in an English mind. He unites
+cosmopolitan liberality with English self-possession.</p>
+
+<p>As a stylist, he is singularly inartificial. Would that our American
+writers might take a lesson from Arnold's prose, and correct their
+ambitious rhetoric, affected quaintness, and other varieties of fine
+writing, by this pure, simple, honest English. The peculiarity of his
+style, we should say, is its freedom from peculiarity. It is the style
+of a cultivated, thoughtful man, without the pedantry and mannerism
+which thoughtful and cultivated men so often contract. Easy, almost
+careless in its movement, but far from careless in its choice of words,
+it is neither bookish nor vulgarly colloquial, but maintains a just mean
+between elaborateness and rudeness. In our young days Macaulay was
+considered the model writer, and Ruskin has been thought to occupy that
+place in these latter years; but Macaulay is tumid, and even Ruskin
+stilted and stiff, in comparison with Matthew Arnold.</p>
+
+<p>For the matter, here are fourteen essays, including the three lectures,
+"On translating Homer," and the "Last Words," not ponderously and
+oppressively learned, and not abstrusely and obtrusively philosophical,
+but as full of wisdom and intellectual stimulus and graceful humor as
+any we know, and more tolerant and liberal than most,&mdash;together with a
+preface as entertaining as any of the essays. So healthy and nourishing
+a book, in the way of literary essays, has not for a long while appeared
+among us. We are far from assenting to all of Professor Arnold's
+positions. We altogether repudiate the statement, that "on Heine, of all
+German authors who have survived Goethe, incomparably the largest
+portion of Goethe's mantle fell"; nor can we adopt all his criticisms
+and views on the Homeric question; nevertheless, we can with the utmost
+confidence recommend this volume to the literary men of America to whom
+the author is yet unknown, or known only by name.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="RECENT_AMERICAN_PUBLICATIONS" id="RECENT_AMERICAN_PUBLICATIONS"></a>RECENT AMERICAN PUBLICATIONS.</h2>
+
+
+<p>A Dictionary of Medical Science; containing a Concise Explanation of the
+Various Subjects and Terms of Anatomy, Physiology, Pathology, Hygiene,
+Therapeutics, Pharmacology, Pharmacy, Surgery, Obstetrics, Medical
+Jurisprudence, and Dentistry; Notices of Climate, and of Mineral Waters;
+Formul&aelig; for Officinal, Empirical, and Dietetic Preparations; with the
+Accentuation and Etymology of the Terms, and the French and other
+Synonymes, so as to constitute a French as well as English Medical
+Lexicon. By Robley Dunglison, M.D., LL. D., Professor of the Institutes
+of Medicine, etc., in the Jefferson Medical College of Philadelphia.
+Thoroughly revised, and very greatly modified and augmented.
+Philadelphia. Blanchard and Lea. 8vo, pp. 1047. $6.75.</p>
+
+<p>The Handbook of Dining; or, Corpulency and Leanness Scientifically
+Considered. Comprising the Art of Dining on Correct Principles,
+Consistent with Easy Digestion, the Avoidance of Corpulency and Cure of
+Leanness; together with Special Remarks on these Subjects. By Brillat
+Savarin, Author of the "Physiologic du Go&ucirc;t." Translated by L. F.
+Simpson. New York. D. Appleton &amp; Co. pp. 200. $1.25.</p>
+
+<p>Remarks on the Sonnets of Shakspeare; with the Sonnets. Showing that
+they belong to the Hermetic Class of Writings, and explaining their
+General Meaning and Purpose. By the Author of "Swedenborg an Hermetic
+Philosopher," etc. New York. James Miller. 8vo. pp. 258. $2.00.</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 16, No.
+94, August, 1865, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ATLANTIC MONTHLY, AUGUST, 1865 ***
+
+***** This file should be named 32232-h.htm or 32232-h.zip *****
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+</pre>
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