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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #62125 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/62125)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Chambers's Journal of Popular Literature,
-Science, and Art, No. 738, February 16, 1, 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/license
-
-
-Title: Chambers's Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, No. 738, February 16, 1878
-
-Author: Various
-
-Editor: William Chambers
- Robert Chambers
-
-Release Date: May 16, 2020 [EBook #62125]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHAMBERS'S JOURNAL ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Susan Skinner and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration:
-
-CHAMBERS’S JOURNAL
-
-OF
-
-POPULAR
-
-LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART.
-
-Fourth Series
-
-CONDUCTED BY WILLIAM AND ROBERT CHAMBERS.
-
-NO. 738. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1878. PRICE 1½_d._]
-
-
-
-
-SOCIABLE AND UNSOCIABLE.
-
-
-The pleasures of social intercourse are amongst the best and truest
-enjoyments in which we can participate—the desire for the friendship
-of others is more or less inherent in human nature. There are
-nevertheless thousands upon thousands who are surrounded by every
-opportunity for realising these pleasures, and who yet fail to benefit
-by their influence, either for temporary and healthy pastime, or for
-permanent good. Most people have doubtless many amongst their circle
-of acquaintance who are easily distinguished from others by the term
-‘unsociable.’ It would, however, be both unfair and incorrect to
-estimate that a large proportion of a given number of people have a
-decided objection to and shun all society. The habitually unsociable
-people are frequently those who would readily confess to a liking for
-society, but who do not enter into it on account of the various and
-numerous obstacles which, they will tell you, are in the way. It is
-not so much on account of an innate and acknowledged indisposition
-for social intercourse that the saying, ‘Some folk are as unsociable
-as milestones,’ is proverbially correct, as that many barriers have
-been erected by the suspicious imaginations of those concerned. People
-are often heard to complain of the unsociability of others; but it is
-not unseldom that the very people who adopt this standpoint are those
-who, at the least approach from others, retire almost entirely within
-their insignificant individuality, and assume a reserve of manner and
-constrained mode of conversation, that of itself forbids any attempt to
-cultivate their acquaintance. Something like a hedgehog which, should
-you happen to catch sight of it, instead of making friends, rolls
-itself up into a ball, and shews off its bristles to the best advantage.
-
-Perhaps nothing constitutes so great a hindrance to what may be
-termed natural and unadulterated social intercourse as the unnatural
-appearance which many folk strive to put upon themselves and their
-belongings for the benefit of the objects of their acquaintance.
-For the entertainment of their visitors, some good folk will change,
-as far as they possibly can, the entire face and features of their
-houses and themselves—in short, for the time being they seem to be
-somebody else—they go to great pains to make things unreal. On such
-show-occasions a profusion of apologies is sometimes showered upon
-the unhappy and disappointed guests; they are begged to excuse the
-unceremonious and very ordinary preparation made for their reception
-and entertainment; whilst it is apparent that every available resource
-has been utilised to make an imposing appearance. It was, we think,
-John Wesley, who having been invited out to dine, was asked, soon
-after his arrival at the house of the host, to excuse the fact that no
-preparation had been made. ‘Then,’ replied he rather sharply, ‘there
-ought to have been;’ and without waiting to see whether there was
-reason for such an apology, left the house forthwith.
-
-Feelings of rivalry and jealousy, and the existence of an ultra spirit
-of caste, are responsible for much of the unsociability which prevails.
-Mr and Mrs Jones do not fraternise with Mr and Mrs Smith, who may live
-next door, because they, Mr and Mrs Jones, have concluded that they
-have ascended two or three more rounds of the ladder of social status.
-It is quite probable, moreover, that Mr and Mrs Smith may be duly
-impressed with precisely the same sense of superiority. Mr Jenkins does
-not wish to be patronised, and therefore cares not to cultivate the
-acquaintance of Mr Jones. Mr Jones having a paramount consciousness
-of his pre-eminence, would deem it undignified to be friendly with
-Mr Jenkins. Thus people sit in judgment upon themselves and other
-people, and form what they deem a sound opinion as to the disposition
-of others without ever having had the smallest opportunity of arriving
-at an accurate estimate. Imagination, hearsay, and the impressions
-derived from mere appearance at first sight, are often the sole
-materials employed in producing what is intended to pass as a detailed
-character-photograph. The estimates thus formed are frequently
-circulated as genuine and reliable in every particular; and yet there
-may be as much difference between such estimates and the truth, as
-between a genuine and a base coin of the realm. The estimate which may
-be given you by one man of another is only reliable in so far as he is
-capable and has had the opportunities of forming an _accurate_ judgment.
-
-As the tenor of a man’s life will to some extent be the reflection
-of his associations, it is essential that some discrimination be
-employed. But a man may be sociable and yet avoid careless promiscuous
-friendships. By the same rule that you cannot touch pitch without being
-defiled, neither can you have the friendship of sensible men and true,
-without profit. Nor need a sociable man eschew the duties and comforts
-of home-life. The association with friends, at home, may be made to
-take the place of association with mere acquaintances, sometimes of a
-questionable sort, abroad; and hence home may be made more homely.
-
-The plea is sometimes advanced, ‘Oh, we cannot afford to have company.’
-Here is where a great mistake is made. Surely we should not measure the
-value of our friendships on the basis of a knife-and-fork calculation!
-The friendship which is measured by the amount of money expended on
-it is surely worth little. It is not so much the good dinner society
-which we would advocate, as the propagation of simple and genuine
-friendships. Formal parties and dinings-out are by reason of modern
-usages acknowledged to be for the most part dreary affairs, both for
-the givers and the guests. Dinners got up for display, arranged with an
-object, invitations given for sundry reasons—to the man, for instance,
-whose only qualification a guest may be his ability to be a source of
-entertainment; or to the titled gentleman and lady whose style and
-title shall grace the list in the newspaper columns. This amongst the
-upper ten thousand may be perhaps regarded as a necessary evil. Such
-state ceremonies have become fashionable amongst what has come to be
-popularly designated the _élite_ of society.
-
-We especially refer, however, to the sociable traits of the great
-middle class, amongst whom a large dinner-party scheme is neither
-practicable nor desirable, but to whom the more frequent exchange
-of civilities with their neighbours would be a boon. But the way is
-frequently barred by the comparisons which are made. The ladies are
-generally desirous that the furniture of their houses should not
-compare unfavourably with that in the houses of those with whom they
-may be intimate. A source of the greatest concern is it if they have
-not Brussels carpet as good and as new as that of their neighbours.
-Then their furniture it may be is in green rep, that of their friends
-in crimson plush. Further anxieties are created as to plate, the size,
-style, and number of servants, and a dozen other considerations of a
-kindred sort. This everlasting contest to keep up appearances is at
-once the bane of our tempers and our pockets. It is the main thing on
-which the unreality of our time is fed, and upon which it thrives so
-well. Whatever may be the real impediment to sociability, we ourselves,
-while fostering the evil, uncharitably and inconsistently plead that
-the unsociable tendency exists more in others than ourselves!
-
-Were there an utter absence of opportunity for benefiting by
-the society of others, the fact would be deemed a hardship and a
-misfortune; and yet there are plenty of individuals who live in crowded
-cities but are the most lonely of beings. Not only are they never seen
-to speak to others, but apparently never even see them; the social
-faculties are thus rarely called into play, and are left to rust out.
-What do such men lose as the result of this isolation? Their knowledge
-of the best side of human nature is at a low ebb; while on the other
-hand the association with and knowledge of those around us teach us
-not only to misjudge others less, but to know ourselves better; and
-hence there comes a development and expansion of our sympathies. More
-freedom of intercourse must tend not only to increase our pleasures but
-to alleviate our troubles, for as we see that others have their ‘ups’
-and ‘downs,’ we learn to look upon our own as less burdensome. The man
-who neither sees, hears, nor participates in anything beyond his own
-immediate surroundings, can know little or nothing beyond the narrow
-boundary of his own individuality—a very circumscribed sphere to live
-and work in, certainly. People often need friends who, under given
-circumstances, will afford the benefit of their own experience. The
-person whose only acquaintance is himself, complains of the hardness
-of his lot, and whilst estimating what difference he imagines the
-cultivation of friendships would make to his pockets, fails to estimate
-what he would gain by the sympathy and good-will of others, and how his
-dreary path would be brightened by less isolation.
-
-There is, however, an inborn craving in most people for society of some
-kind, though occasionally it is sought for in directions which are
-not beneficial in their tendency; and this, we fear, is the result of
-the swarm of conventionalities which, for the most part, surround the
-social life of our day, some healthy counteraction of which—especially
-in the interests of the young—would be welcome.
-
-Happily the habits of isolation and unsociability are more prevalent
-in some places than in others. Those who have travelled most will
-readily admit that they have frequently found themselves amongst a
-circle of individuals whose freedom from conventionalities, and whose
-unconstrained and hearty mode of intercourse, made them forget for
-the time being that they were in the company of strangers. It is
-possible that some readers of these words may almost shudder at the
-idea of such freedom, such a want of decorum on the part of people
-who had never met before, and had not gone through the formality of
-a proper introduction. And yet there may be decorum without painful
-fastidiousness. Who has not met with unsociable railway travellers,
-some in whose company he has been for many weary hours, and with whom
-he may have succeeded, after supreme effort, in breaking the ice, only
-to receive a solitary monosyllable in response! Such an experience is
-certainly not the rule, for sometimes we meet with those, the incessant
-wag of whose tongue may be such as to compel us to leave unread both
-our newspaper and any favourite book that we may have promised ourself
-to get through. And yet it is well on such occasions to go on the
-principle of give and take. Anything rather than the company of an
-individual who looks suspiciously at you should you be venturesome
-enough to express to him an opinion on so commonplace a topic as the
-state of the weather.
-
-As a valuable element in connection with our social life, music does
-not occupy the position which it might and ought to do. The rapid
-growth during recent years of a knowledge of this charming solace is
-out of all proportion to the extent of its social enjoyment. It is
-unfortunately too often treated as a mere accomplishment. The friendly
-and informal musical parties such as were enjoyed years ago, do not
-receive much encouragement. It is of course indisputable that as a
-concert-giving power, rapid strides have been made in music; but what
-we contend for is the propagation of home harmony; the social glee, the
-favourite ballad, the instrumental quartette, with no objection to an
-occasional sonata for the pianoforte.
-
-It is no less amusing than disagreeable to see so many otherwise worthy
-people possessed of such a paramount sense of gentility and importance
-as to make themselves and their surroundings uncomfortable, and often
-miserable. The great desideratum is that people should appear more like
-themselves than somebody else. We hear and read a good many sermons
-on ‘Morality;’ but, excellent in their way as these are, a series of
-lectures on ‘Reality’ are quite as necessary.
-
-
-
-
-HELENA, LADY HARROGATE.
-
-CHAPTER IX.—SIR SYKES’S WARD.
-
-
-There may be pleasanter positions in life than that of a dependant,
-especially when the claim to make one of the household rests on
-conditions which it is impossible to define. The governess, who is so
-often held up by moralists as an object for our conventional pity,
-needs not, surely, to forfeit her self-respect, inasmuch as she earns
-her salary and its contingent benefits by honest labour. The companion
-too gives valuable consideration in the shape of a perpetual offering
-up of her own time, tastes, and wishes, for her pay and maintenance.
-There are others sometimes however, kindred strangers within the rich
-man’s gates, who have no ostensible tasks to perform, who cannot
-give monthly or quarterly notice and go away, and yet whose bread is
-sometimes made very bitter to them—white slaves who get no compassion
-from the world at large.
-
-Miss Willis at Carbery Chase was oddly situated. An orphan, she found
-herself domiciled amongst those who were allied to her neither by blood
-nor by the still more tenacious tie of common and early associations.
-She was exempt of course under that roof from many of the annoyances
-which fall to the lot of the motherless elsewhere. There was no
-domineering mistress of the house to resent every attention shewn to
-the interloper as something deducted from the rightful due of her
-own matchless girls; no niggard to grudge her every meal of which
-she partook at the stinted family table; or tyrant to pile upon her
-submissive shoulders the never-ending load of petty cares, which some
-genteel drudges perform unthanked.
-
-At Carbery there was plenty and to spare. Sir Sykes was a gentleman
-bland and courteous; the girls as kind good girls as could easily be
-met with; and the servants sufficiently well trained to take their cue
-from their employers, and to be civil to one who was smiled on by the
-higher powers. Yet a sensitive young lady in the position which Sir
-Sykes’s ward now occupied, might well have been excused if her heart
-at times was somewhat heavy. All her old habits of life had been in a
-moment uprooted. She had been suddenly transferred from familiar scenes
-and people whose ways she understood, to a country every feature of
-which must have been strange and new to her. Under the circumstances
-and in spite of the good-nature of those around her, it is not
-surprising if Ruth Willis at times looked sad and pensive.
-
-‘You cannot think how wonderful it seemed to me at first,’ she said
-one day to the younger Miss Denzil, ‘not to hear the drums beat tattoo
-at sundown, or how often I have started from my pillow in the early
-morning, fancying that I heard again the bugles sounding for the
-parade. Then the trumpeting of the elephants beside the tank, and the
-shrill voices of the dusky children at play beneath the peepul trees,
-and all the sights and sounds about my old home in India—I can’t forget
-them yet.’
-
-Blanche was sympathetic; but she felt rather than reasoned that the
-grief for a father’s loss, the regrets for friends abruptly quitted
-and a mode of life abandoned, could not be assuaged merely by a kiss
-and a kind word. Yet it was evident that Ruth was by no means disposed
-to play the part of a kill-joy in the house beneath whose roof she was
-now established, or to enact the martyr. Her manner was very soft and
-gentle, not obtrusively sad or unduly deferential, but that of one who
-sincerely wishes to please. She had a way of bending her will as it
-were to that of those with whom she now associated, which was really
-very pretty and graceful, and harmonised well with the modest drooping
-of her eyelids when she spoke. There were times (so her ill-wishers
-said, the latter being some of those vigilant critics who take our wage
-and wear our livery, or it may be caps and aprons and cotton prints
-such as we sanction, but who are not always too lenient censors of
-our conduct) when her whole face seemed to change its expression by
-the mere opening of the fine dark eyes fraught with a singular look,
-which the same critics averred to be that of ill-temper. But if Miss
-Willis had not, as Lucy and Blanche Denzil believed her to have, the
-temper of a lamb, it must be admitted that she was capable of very
-great self-restraint, since in general conversation she was only too
-ready to acquiesce with the opinions of others. Jasper had observed the
-singular brightening of Ruth’s eyes sometimes, when she turned them on
-Sir Sykes, but never towards himself; while his unsuspecting sisters
-saw no peculiarity in the bearing of the stranger whom they had learned
-to like.
-
-‘I could really believe,’ said Jasper to himself more than once, ‘that
-my father is afraid of that girl—and no wonder after all!’ he added,
-after a moment’s reflection. Certainly Sir Sykes did appear somewhat
-over-anxious that his ward should be happy and comfortable at Carbery,
-that her tastes should be studied, and her inclinations consulted. Yet
-he never seemed at ease in her company, and always escaped from her
-presence as early as politeness permitted; so that his own daughters
-set down his behaviour as merely prompted by an over-strained sense of
-hospitality.
-
-There was a fascination in the guest’s bearing and conversation, to
-which even Jasper, with all his predisposition to dislike her, could
-not but succumb. No great talker, Miss Willis had the power, somehow,
-of making what she did say more effective than what fell from other
-lips than hers. What this art or this gift might be, Jasper Denzil, who
-was no stranger to women and their ways, could not divine. The girl’s
-voice was rich though low, and admirably modulated, although of music,
-as she frankly confessed, she knew nothing whatever. And her eyes—the
-one redeeming feature of a plain pale face—could flash and glitter
-with wondrously changing play of light; eyes and voice and words all
-blending together to convey the expression which their owner desired
-that they should impart.
-
-There was one person to whom the baronet’s ward appeared in the light
-of an enigma, and this was Lord Harrogate, himself a frequent visitor
-at the home of the Denzils, between whose family and his own there was
-indeed some kind of connection. He had given up as preposterous the
-idea that he had ever seen Miss Willis before. _That_ was of course
-erroneous, and he must have been the dupe of a fancied resemblance.
-But he was sufficiently quick-sighted to perceive, what was apparent
-neither to his sisters nor to Jasper, nor to the Earl or Countess,
-that a strong sharply marked character was concealed behind the gentle
-half-bashful demeanour which it pleased Miss Willis to assume.
-
-‘I never saw the iron hand,’ he thought to himself, ‘so well hidden
-before by the velvet glove; but it’s there for all that. Yonder girl
-looks capable of turning the whole family round her finger.’
-
-Meanwhile Jasper at anyrate had other subjects for contemplation than
-were presented by a psychological study of the orphaned daughter of
-the late Major Willis, of the Honourable East India Company’s Service.
-Gentlemen who own and gentlemen who are going to ride horses intended
-to win a race which had so suddenly swelled into importance as the
-forthcoming one at Pebworth, have need of frequent communication
-with one another. Jasper during the next ten days was often in his
-principal’s company, sometimes at Pebworth, now and then at Exeter,
-when the routine of military duty held the other captain to his post.
-
-In the interim, Captain Denzil could tell by the language of the
-newspapers which were the accredited organs of the turf, how
-considerable was the excitement evoked by the selection of Pebworth as
-a place where might be matched against one another some of the finest
-weight-carriers chronicled in the Stud Book. The wildest rumours were
-afloat, and an April sky was not more changeable than were the odds,
-as reported from the headquarters of gambling, London and Liverpool.
-Sometimes the bookmakers were reported to be assured of triumph;
-sometimes it was hinted that the great betting firms would be severely
-hit, so unexpected would be the finish of the race.
-
-‘Why,’ indignantly demanded one influential paper, ‘should Pebworth be
-dragged into the daylight?’ Nor were the other organs of the sporting
-press slow to swell the chorus of complaint that a cramped and hitherto
-unheard-of course, situated in an obscure nook of the far west, should
-be the arena for a struggle such as was anticipated. And then followed
-dark innuendos and vague suggestions as to the motives of the noble
-lord who owned The Smasher, and the scarcely less illustrious commoner
-to whom Brother to Highflyer appertained. During the period preceding
-the race, the most contradictory rumours were incessantly published
-with reference to the rival favourites. They were ill; they were well;
-they had met with all the accidents slight or serious to which the
-equine genus is liable. One of these important animals had a cough.
-The other was not quite sound of limb. Both had been overtrained. No.
-Their training was insufficient, and any nameless outsider could reach
-the winning-post before them. Once again both horses were in the very
-perfection of bloom and beauty, and would compete fairly for the prize.
-
-Strange faces, some of which were not calculated to inspire confidence
-in those who had silver spoons in the pantry or linen drying on
-garden-hedge, began to appear at Pebworth and the parts adjacent.
-Lodgings were in such request that the meanest rooms were eagerly
-disputed at fancy prices, while inn and beershop drove a brisker trade
-than had been known since Pebworth had been disfranchised.
-
-‘Sad business, Denzil, this!’ exclaimed Jack Podgers as he dashed into
-the private parlour of the _De Vere Arms_. ‘Here’s a private telegram,
-and here a special edition of a sporting paper. Both agree as to the
-facts.’
-
-Jasper glanced at the telegram and at the paragraph. Yes. A most
-unfortunate accident, due to the carelessness of a porter, had occurred
-to Brother to Highflyer, just as that noble horse was being led from
-his box to the platform. Mr Splint, the eminent veterinary surgeon,
-summoned in hot haste, had examined the off fore-leg, and had expressed
-a positive opinion; in deference to which Mr John Knavesmire the
-trainer and Mr Wylie the owner had reluctantly decided to withdraw the
-name of Brother to Highflyer from the list.
-
-‘The race naturally must be won by the other favourite, The Smasher,’
-said Captain Prodgers with a grim smile.
-
-
-CHAPTER X.—WHAT HAPPENED AT PEBWORTH.
-
-From early morning the usually sleepy streets of quiet Pebworth had
-been disturbed by the shouts of bawling hoarse-voiced vendors of
-so-called ‘correct’ cards, purporting to furnish accurate information
-as to the names, weights, and colours of the riders, the nomenclature
-and ownership of the horses, and other particulars relating to the
-forthcoming race. Some of these itinerants were in faded red jackets
-that had felt the dust and the rain on every race-course in Great
-Britain; others were in tattered fustian, stained by the wet grass of
-the moorside, where the foot-sore wretches had been sleeping for a
-few hours after their weary tramp across country. It might have been
-opined that gold had been discovered in Dartmoor, and that diggers
-were hurrying up like so many eagles to the prey, so many were the
-uncouth groups that flocked in. Some of the pilgrims were the veriest
-human vermin that cumber the earth. There was the thimble-rigger, whose
-stock-in-trade consisted of the tiny board or slender table, which his
-unacknowledged associate is carrying now, with the peas and the thimble
-in his pocket. There were the proprietors of the roulette boards, and
-the manipulators of the ‘three card trick,’ so dangerous to unwary
-youth. There were gipsy fortune-tellers, dark-eyed, yellow-kerchiefed,
-and long-haired gipsy men, laden with sticks to be pelted at cocoa-nuts
-propped on an ash-wand, or at Aunt Sally with her time-honoured pipe.
-
-All the beggars, street-singers, and sellers of toys or gingerbread
-in the west of England seemed to have been drawn to Pebworth as
-steel filings are attracted to a magnet; and with them arrived many
-a scowling ruffian in baggy slop-suit, or slinking fellow in greasy
-garments of threadbare black, whose object could hardly have been the
-wish to witness a contest of strength and speed between two or more
-gallant horses. Probably the man in black was one of those miserable
-beings who bet with chance customers, and if they lose, pay in person
-if not in purse, braving kicks, ducking, and ill-usage, in hopes of
-five or ten ill-got sovereigns. As for the sturdier brute in nailed
-boots and velveteen, with the knotted bludgeon beneath his arm, it will
-go hard with him if some half-tipsy owner of a watch be not lightened
-of it before bedtime.
-
-In poured gigs and carts and carriages of every size and kind, some
-full of honest holiday-makers, others of thoughtful devotees of the
-Mammon that presides over the great green gaming-table that we know
-by the name of a race-course. Among the last-mentioned, who in turf
-phraseology are termed ‘bookmakers,’ were many, often of gentle birth
-and nurture, whose feverish life for ten months of the year was one
-of incessant locomotion, calculation, care, and toil. Some men,
-sufficiently well educated to see themselves as others see them, yet
-work harder at the dubious profession they have selected, than does
-a prosperous doctor or barrister of many briefs—ever on the railroad
-or in telegraph office, scrambling for make-shift lodgings, suing at
-the doors of crowded hotels—chilled by the rain of Newmarket, broiled
-by the sun of Chantilly—and incessantly on the wing to some new
-race-meeting, goaded on by the _ignis-fatuus_ of Hope.
-
-The carriages were drawn up three deep around the judge’s chair and
-the stand. Small as the race-course of Pebworth was, it presented
-a gay and animated appearance. There were the well-appointed drags
-of every regiment within reach of the little Devonshire town, while
-the equipages of the county aristocracy were there in unusual
-numbers. There were the Fulfords, the Carews, the Trelawneys, and
-the Tresyllians, the Courtenays, and the Penruddocks, all the rural
-dignitaries of the district. The Earl of Wolverhampton was there with
-two of his daughters, accompanied by Blanche Denzil, who was confident
-of her brother’s success. Lord Harrogate too was there on horseback.
-
-No carriage from Carbery was on the Pebworth course that day. Sir
-Sykes had heard with displeasure that his son was about to take a
-part in a steeplechase. Jasper’s promise, however, had been given.
-His name was in print as the rider of Norah Creina, and the baronet
-saw no help for it. He refused, however, to attend the race with the
-ladies of his family, and gave but a reluctant consent to his younger
-daughter’s petition to be allowed to accompany Lady Maud and Lady
-Gladys to the festive scene. The course itself presented a lively and
-not uncomely scene, the brilliant beauty of the day adding a witchery
-to the homeliest objects. The dancing sunbeams gilded the tinker’s
-squalid tent and the rags of the beggar-boys who ran, clamorous for
-halfpence, after the horsemen cantering by. It was possible to forget
-the gathering of bookmakers and betting-men, now hoarsely shouting out
-their offers of a wager, possible to ignore the sordid greed that had
-prompted the attendance of so many, and to imagine what the scene may
-have been two hundred years ago, when races were a novelty, a mere
-trial of merit between swift and strong horses, minus the thousand and
-one degrading ingredients which now compose the saturnalia.
-
-Jasper, his gay silken jacket concealed by the loose white overcoat
-which he wore, elbowed his way through the crowd towards the place
-where, hard by the weighing-stand, the nineteen horses which were the
-practical residuum of the sixty-seven entries were being led to and fro.
-
-‘Have a care there! Do mind his heels!’ exclaimed the reedy voice of
-an attenuated being in drab gaiters and striped waistcoat, one of the
-three body-servants in attendance on the magnificent Smasher, as that
-superb animal began to lash out furiously amongst the mob.
-
-‘Grand horse that!’ said Captain Prodgers, as with impartial admiration
-he surveyed the formidable favourite. ‘See! what muscles those are that
-swell beneath a skin as bright and supple as a lady’s satin! Does “My
-Lord” credit.’
-
-‘My Lord,’ a vacuous young gentleman in a suit of black and white
-checks and a soft hat, stood a little way off, sucking the gold head
-of a short whipstock, and contemplating society in general, through
-his eyeglass, with a serene stare. Nobody could ever be quite certain
-whether this aristocratic patron of the turf was unfathomably deep
-or absurdly shallow. His Lordship was a man of few words, and never
-committed himself in public to an opinion wise or foolish.
-
-That ‘My Lord’s’ stud had a knack of winning was notorious. But then
-the laurels, such as they were, may have been due to the florid,
-well-shaven, middle-aged trainer, with a flower in his buttonhole, who
-stood at his Lordship’s elbow.
-
-The Smasher was a splendid black horse, over sixteen hands high, and
-very powerful. His glossy coat shone like a looking-glass; but that
-his temper was none of the best was evident, not only by the frequent
-scattering of the crowd, to avoid his iron-shod heels, but by the
-sidelong glance of his wicked eye and the irritable lashing of his
-silken tail.
-
-‘Shews the whites of them eyes of his, he do, this morning,’ remarked
-one appreciative groom.
-
-‘Bless ye! the captain won’t care,’ was the phlegmatic reply.
-
-‘Rather the captain had the riding of him then nor me,’ returned the
-other.
-
-The captain in question was not Jasper Denzil. It was Captain Hanger,
-pale and unimpassioned as ever, who now pressed up to speak for a
-moment with the owner and trainer of the horse he was to ride. As he
-stood, tapping his bright boots with his heavy whip, his gaudy silk
-jacket peeping from beneath the loose overcoat, he was the object
-of an inquisitive admiration that might well have been spent upon a
-worthier object. In certain circles, now, your gentleman steeplechase
-rider receives an amount of adulation singularly disproportioned to his
-utility to the commonweal. Of the well-known Captain Hanger, once in
-the army, then beggared, and now living by the deliberate risk of neck
-and bones, it was popularly believed that he would die in the exercise
-of his profession.
-
-‘I don’t see the mare!’ said Jasper, looking around.
-
-‘We’re keeping her quiet till the last minute,’ whispered his friend.
-‘No use in letting her chafe here, teased by sun and flies. There,
-though, is the bell for saddling; and here she comes.’
-
-And as Captain Prodgers spoke, a Homeric burst of laughter from the
-mob, peal upon peal, announced that something had tickled the fancy
-of the populace. That something was soon seen to be no other than
-Norah Creina, looking even uglier, as she was led into the inclosure,
-than she had done in the stable; a lengthy, clumsy, ungainly creature
-to look upon, and wearing a bridle of a peculiar and cumbrous
-construction, fitted with a muzzle and blinkers, and somewhat similar
-to that employed in horse-taming by the late Professor Rarey.
-
-‘There’s a beauty for you!’ cried out, in the midst of ironical cheers
-and merriment, a scoffer in drab gaiters.
-
-‘Take care of her, gentlemen—she bites!’ bawled another voice; and
-there was tittering among the spectators in carriages and unrestrained
-guffaws amidst the populace.
-
-‘Do you mean, seriously, that the mare is to run in that
-hideous-looking contrivance?’ demanded Jasper sharply and with
-displeasure in his face, of his ally. ‘I’m not a mountebank, I suppose,
-that I should be made publicly ridiculous on the back of such a horse.
-A man might as well stand in the pillory as’——
-
-‘How many hundreds will be in your pocket, Denzil, and thousands in
-mine, what with bets and stakes, if Norah Creina comes in first?’
-interrupted Prodgers earnestly. ‘Let those laugh that win. They are
-waiting for us yonder in the weighing-stand.’
-
-Of all the candidates for success who, seated in their saddles, took
-one by one their turn at the scales, the only two who attracted much
-attention were Jasper Denzil and Captain Hanger; the latter because
-he was to ride the favourite, the former because he had consented to
-exhibit himself on so very extraordinary an animal as Norah Creina.
-
-‘I’ve known a dark horse to win a race,’ remarked one veteran, as he
-booked a trifling wager on the Irish mare.
-
-‘Not with a muzzle though, George!’ replied a contemporary, with
-twinkling eyes.
-
-The riders were all mounted now, and taking, some of them, the
-preliminary canter that is supposed to dissipate stiffness, and then
-the glistening line of gaily attired horsemen marshalled itself for
-the start. To the last moment Captain Prodgers, on foot, kept close to
-Jasper’s stirrup. ‘There’s the bell!’ cried Norah Creina’s owner at
-last. ‘Now bend your ear down, dear boy, and mark what I say.’
-
-And as Jasper stooped his head to listen, the other captain whispered
-to him cautiously but with emphasis. ‘Only if you’re hard pressed—but
-she may win without that,’ added Prodgers more loudly.
-
-Jasper’s suddenly compressed lips, arching brows, and dilated eyes told
-that the communication had taken even him by surprise.
-
-‘The curb-rein, eh?’ he said hoarsely.
-
-‘Yes; but only as a last expedient. Leave it slack as long as you
-can, and use the snaffle only; it’s as strong as a cable,’ called out
-Prodgers; and Jasper nodded, and cantered up to take his place among
-the rest.
-
-A waving to and fro of the many-coloured line, the dropping of a flag,
-a roar from the rabble, and they were off. It was like the effect
-produced by some gigantic rocket bursting into a galaxy of variously
-tinted spangles, pink, green, blue, and orange. Then most of these
-colours seemed to gather themselves together in a group, while Jasper’s
-yellow jacket and black cap, and Captain Hanger’s cherry colour and
-white, crept clear of the crowd.
-
-‘The Smasher’s third!’
-
-‘He’s second now. Green’s in front.’
-
-‘Ah! the captain’s a deal too wise to be first, so long as Green will
-make running for him.’
-
-‘Yes, but look at the ugly long-backed Irish mare! The Smasher can’t
-shake her off, straight as he goes.’
-
-The leading horses had got by this time over two-thirds of the
-course—the first round only—and already the competitors were reduced
-to seven. Gallant Green was yet in front, riding hard, but his horse
-was much distressed; and as the second circuit of the course began, The
-Smasher, skilfully handled by Captain Hanger, shot past him with no
-apparent effort, and was for the moment first.
-
-‘My Lord’s usual luck! The race is safe!’
-
-‘Cherry and white wins!’ shouted hundreds.
-
-But then uprose another roar of, ‘Yellow, Yellow for ever!’ as the
-Irish mare, which had hitherto kept the third place, taking fence,
-wall, brook, and rail with lamb-like docility, suddenly quickened her
-pace, racing neck to neck, head to head, with the redoubtable Smasher.
-
-‘A pretty race! A fine sight! A sheet would cover both of them!’ was
-the general cry. The ladies in the carriages and on the stand waved
-their handkerchiefs enthusiastically, and of the lookers-on there were
-scores who forgot that their money was at stake, in genuine enjoyment
-of the struggle. On the rivals went. Together they flew across the
-brook, together they crashed through the hedges and fences in their
-way. Then, thanks to his own skill or to the excellence of his horse,
-Captain Hanger gained ground, and was in front as he prepared to ride
-at a stiff line of rails, the last serious obstacle, save one, to be
-encountered in the circuit.
-
-Then it was that Jasper tightened the curb-rein that he had hitherto
-left untouched, and the disfiguring blinkers dropped as if by magic
-from before Nora Creina’s eyes! The result was startling. With a snort
-and a scream, the fierce mare caught sight of her opponent in the act
-of gathering himself together for the leap; and with a bound such as
-a tigress might have given, she hurled herself upon him, striving—but
-owing to the muzzle, ineffectually—to tear the other horse with her
-teeth. There was a crashing of splintered timber, an outcry, a heavy
-fall, and both horses and both men were down amidst the wreck of the
-fence.
-
-Jasper, bareheaded and dizzy, was the first to stagger to his feet and
-regain his saddle. A hundred yards in front was the stone wall with its
-double ditch, the so-called ‘sensation jump’ of the race, and which the
-Committee had taken it upon themselves to heighten for this exceptional
-contest. Beyond, there was the easy run home over smooth turf to the
-winning-post.
-
-‘Yellow! yellow! Yellow wins!’ shouted the crowd, as Jasper approached
-the wall; but then there was a quick thunder of hurrying hoofs upon
-the green-sward, and Captain Hanger swept past at whirlwind speed,
-while cries of ‘Cherry and white! The Smasher’s first!’ rent the air.
-Till that instant, the Irish mare had been going steadily; but now, on
-seeing her rival outstrip her rapid pace, her fiendish temper again
-kindled into flame, and with a shrill scream she darted forward. But
-Captain Hanger knew his art too well to be surprised for the second
-time. He had his own horse, sobered by the late fall, well in hand;
-whereas he saw that the savage animal which Jasper rode was completely
-freed from the control of her rider. By a quick and masterly motion of
-the rein, he wheeled off, eluding the shock that threatened him, and
-with a rare courage and coolness put The Smasher’s head straight for
-the wall. The gallant horse rose like a bird, topped the obstacle on
-which his hind-feet clattered, and recovering himself with an effort,
-galloped in, the winner, amid the deafening applause of thousands.
-
-Jasper was less fortunate. Panting, snorting with rage, in a lather
-of heat and foam, the furious mare he rode rose at the wall, struck
-it with her chest, breaking down the new masonry, and rolled over
-upon the turf beyond, bearing down beneath her weight the unfortunate
-rider. ‘A man killed!’ It needed but that cry to make the mob utterly
-ungovernable; and in spite of the efforts of the police, gentle and
-simple, and those who were neither the one nor the other, hurried
-pell-mell to the spot where lay, beneath the broken wall, the hapless
-form of Jasper Denzil. ‘He’s alive!’ cried fifty voices, with the
-oddest mingling of gratification and disappointment. ‘The rider’s
-living. It’s only the mare that’s dead,’ a verdict which turned out to
-be correct. Then a doctor, one out of the half-dozen of doctors on the
-course, jumped off the cob he rode and took possession of Jasper.
-
-‘He’ll get over it!’ cried the surgeon, feeling first the heart and
-then the wrist of the sufferer. ‘If we had but a carriage now, to get
-him quietly to the inn.’
-
-Sir Gruntley Pigbury, whose barouche stood near, willingly lent it for
-such a purpose; and in it Jasper Denzil, under the doctor’s escort, was
-duly removed to the shelter of the _De Vere Arms_.
-
-
-
-
-OUR PET RAT.
-
-
-An obliging correspondent writes to us as follows: An article in the
-September number of _Chambers’s Journal_ entitled ‘Poppet’s Pranks’
-having afforded much amusement to our young people, it has occurred
-to me that a short account of one of our numerous pets might not be
-unacceptable, especially as we have often said in our own circle, that
-‘Billy’s doings ought to be immortalised in print.’
-
-We have always considered it an important element in the education of
-children that they should be taught to regard the brute creation with
-kindly feelings, and in our own family we have fostered the love of
-animals by encouraging them to keep pets; so at various periods, dogs,
-cats, birds, rabbits, guinea-pigs, &c. have all in turn been domiciled
-with us; and I believe we also harboured for a time a hedgehog and a
-bat; but these last proving rather intractable, were soon restored to
-their native freedom.
-
-Those who have had experience in it, best know how interesting any
-living intelligence becomes, when one is brought closely in contact
-with it; and we elders, as well as the more juvenile members of our
-family, have found both pleasure and instruction in observing the
-habits and dispositions of the little creatures to whom we gave a
-kindly shelter. Among these, none ever excited more interest or stood
-higher in the family regards, than Billy our tame _rat_.
-
-It was in the winter of 1874–5 that a friend who was coming to spend
-Christmas with us, brought Billy as a new treasure for the children;
-and for some months he afforded us great amusement. He arrived in
-a cigar-box in which he usually slept, and on its being opened, he
-sprang instantly inside our friend’s waistcoat, from which safe retreat
-he ventured to peep out at the strange faces, which he seemed to
-regard with terror; and this habit he retained, for although he soon
-established friendly relations with us, he always darted behind the
-piano or sideboard on the entrance of a stranger; yet his little head
-with its bright bead-like eyes was sure to peep out presently, as if he
-wanted to satisfy his own curiosity without being himself observed.
-
-But here let me say, no one must suppose for an instant that Billy
-resembled the repulsive-looking rat of our farm-yards and ditches.
-He was of a much smaller size, not larger than a kitten of a month
-old, and very prettily spotted in brown and white; his eyes were very
-prominent, standing out like large black beads, and he was particularly
-nice in his toilet, washing just as a cat does, and keeping his coat
-always scrupulously clean.
-
-Yet I confess it was some time before I could regard him with
-equanimity: it was so hard to divest one’s self of the general
-prejudice against his race; and his receding under jaw gave an
-uncomfortable impression at first; so I used to shrink from him and
-gather up my skirts at his approach, although my son declared that
-if he had been introduced to me as a ‘rodent,’ I should have had no
-objection to him, and that it was merely the name of ‘rat’ which
-excited my aversion.
-
-However, be this as it may, Billy soon won his way to favour in spite
-of prejudice, and by his intelligence and good temper made himself
-a general favourite. He especially attached himself to my eldest
-daughter, and would come at the call of ‘Billy, Billy!’ from any of
-his hiding-places, except at night, when he seemed to be quite aware
-that he was wanted to go to bed (in the cigar-box before mentioned);
-and then it was often with great difficulty she could entice him from
-his lurking-place. Sometimes she would tempt him with a biscuit, and he
-would dart out, snatch it from her fingers, and dart again behind the
-sideboard before she could get hold of him.
-
-We did not usually see much of him in the morning, as he liked to
-conceal himself behind the heavy furniture. But at dinner-time he was
-sure to appear, and generally placed himself on my knee, where from
-time to time he was fed with small bits of bread and vegetables; and
-if I was not sufficiently attentive to his wants, he would pass over
-to one of the children’s plates, and watching his opportunity, would
-make a seizure, and dart with the stolen morsel to his storing-place;
-and this habit of storing was very curious, being evidently an instinct
-belonging to very different surroundings. In a room appropriated
-chiefly to the children there was an old sofa a good deal the worse
-for wear, as what sofa would not be that had been carriage, omnibus,
-or railway train to seven or eight youngsters successively? Under the
-pillow, the haircloth had given way, so Billy found a hole conveniently
-ready for him, and lost no time in appropriating it. Thither he carried
-many of his stores; and it was most amusing to watch him nibble a
-biscuit just like a squirrel, sitting back on his haunches and holding
-it neatly between his fore-paws; and then when he had had enough for
-immediate wants, he would spring with the remainder to this hole in the
-old sofa.
-
-But it was not only food he stored; he had a decided fancy for bright
-colours; and if bits of ribbon or coloured silk were left in his way,
-he would drag them along the floor, and then leap to the sofa with such
-celerity that it was almost impossible to deprive him of his booty.
-Once I looked up in time to see and seize one end of a blue necktie as
-Billy disappeared with the other behind the sofa pillow. He came up
-directly to see what detained it, and was very unwilling to give it
-up; so he pulled and I held, until finding that I was the stronger, he
-relinquished it, but with such impatient little squeaks! Yet neither
-then nor at any other time did he ever attempt to bite or shew any
-ill-temper towards any of us; though, like most pets, he had to bear a
-fair amount of well-meant teasing, which no kitten would have stood as
-well.
-
-I recollect one day watching him with much interest. He had found on
-the floor a large newspaper, which he seized by one corner and pulled
-towards the sofa, up which he made several vain attempts to leap
-with the paper in his mouth. He then dropped it, and jumped back and
-forwards several times, as if he was measuring his distance, or making
-calculations with an eye to future success. Then again catching hold of
-the paper, he tried to leap with it, but again he failed; so at last I
-took pity upon him, and tore one half of the paper away, when he was
-able to manage the remainder, and carry it off in triumph to his den.
-
-During the winter evenings, when the children were engaged with
-their lessons, Billy was usually to be found on the table rummaging
-among their books and catching at their pens; which latter amusement
-he enjoyed very much after the manner of a kitten running after a
-knitting-needle drawn quickly up and down the table; but as these
-amusements rather interfered with the studies, Billy would occasionally
-be dismissed to the kitchen, to which he had a great dislike. He never
-stayed there longer than he could help, but on the first chance would
-rush up the stairs and scratch, or rather I should say _gnaw_ for
-admittance. Speaking of this gnawing, leads me to observe that one
-objection I had to receiving him, was the fear that he would be very
-mischievous; but fortunately I never found him so. He had free access
-to a pantry where a variety of eatables, usually considered dear to a
-rat’s heart, were to be found; but I never knew him to injure anything
-or even to cut the paper covering of any parcel, no matter what it
-contained. No doubt it was partly owing to his being so well fed that
-he was not driven to theft by hunger. I generally scattered for him on
-the shelves some grains of rice or pickles of starch, and to these he
-helped himself when inclined. From soap or candles he turned away in
-disgust, being far too well-bred a rat to indulge in such low tastes;
-but he dearly loved a bit of plum-cake; and, shall I confess it? he
-was by no means a teetotaler. If ale was used at dinner, he would rush
-eagerly about the glasses until he was supplied with some in a spoon. I
-believe, before he came to us, he had been accustomed to even stronger
-potations, in which, however, we did not indulge him.
-
-I have said he was not mischievous, neither was he, as mischief among
-rats is generally understood; but there is no rule without exception,
-and Billy had a decided penchant for kid gloves. If any were left
-carelessly about, he was sure to get hold of them and have the fingers
-eaten off in a few minutes. I cannot tell how many gloves he destroyed,
-until repeated lessons of this sort enforced more tidy habits.
-
-I must not omit to mention his love of music; when he heard the piano,
-he would rush to the drawing-room and spring to the performer’s knee,
-where he would remain perfectly quiet, evidently listening with much
-pleasure. When he first came he was very restless, seeming to live in
-a state of perpetual motion; but he soon learned to come upon the knee
-to be caressed and have his head rubbed, which operation afforded him
-intense enjoyment. He would have lain in a state of supreme delight for
-an hour if any one would have rubbed his head for so long.
-
-Very various were the opinions entertained of Billy by our friends.
-Some of our young visitors would ask to see him when they called, and
-with them he soon became familiar, and would run over their shoulders
-and about their necks quite freely; but others had a perfect horror of
-him; and I remember once, on going down to receive two ladies, I found
-one of them standing on the piano-stool in dread of his attacking her;
-and no declarations as to his perfect harmlessness were of any avail.
-Another time an old lady and gentleman were spending the evening with
-us, and knowing the latter to be of a very nervous temperament, I had
-given strict orders that Billy should be kept down-stairs. But Billy
-had no idea of losing his tea, and managing to escape from the servant
-who had him in charge, in he rushed, as soon as the door was opened,
-and made straight across the room, as usual for my knee. I gave him a
-bit of cake to keep him quiet, and covered him up with my handkerchief.
-‘What’s that, what’s that?’ exclaimed the old gentleman anxiously. I
-replied as carelessly as I could: ‘Oh, it’s only a little pet of the
-children’s;’ and hoped no more notice would be taken; but presently our
-friend got up, and came round to where I sat just as Billy had finished
-his cake and put up his head for more. Never shall I forget his look
-of dismay as he exclaimed: ‘It’s a rat!’ while making hasty tracks for
-the door. However, we succeeded in allaying his fears; and Billy was
-allowed to run about freely, with only an occasional shudder from our
-friend if he approached him too closely.
-
-During the spring we had a lady staying with us who could not be
-reconciled to seeing a rat run about the house, and who repelled all
-friendly overtures on the part of our pet; so one morning, out of
-consideration for her, Billy was banished to another room whilst we
-were at breakfast; and lo! on going into the room afterwards, I found
-my friend’s ball of cotton cut into shreds, which were piled in a
-little heap on the floor. It really seemed as if he had done it from
-revenge, for though I had had knitting about repeatedly, he often
-rolled the balls on the carpet, but never injured them.
-
-While enough has been said, I think, to shew that Billy was a very
-interesting pet, candour compels me to admit that, like wiser and
-better folk, he had his faults; and I am sorry to say his besetting
-sin was jealousy. Although so thoroughly good-tempered with all the
-members of our family, he would not tolerate another pet in the house.
-He had not been long with us, when he killed a canary that had lighted
-on his back. At first, there were threats of summary vengeance; but
-on reflection, it was thought possible that he had been frightened by
-its sudden descent upon him, and had killed the bird in an impulse
-of self-defence; so it was decided to give him the benefit of this
-supposition, and he was forgiven and restored to favour.
-
-But when the midsummer holidays arrived, one of our boys brought home
-a handsome young retriever, whom it was evident from the first Billy
-regarded with no friendly eye. The children of course were much taken
-up with the fresh arrival; and I presume Billy felt himself neglected,
-and therefore lost no opportunity of revenging himself upon the new
-favourite. It was wonderful to see the courage of the little creature
-in venturing to attack an animal so much larger than himself. If the
-dog were lying quietly on the rug, he would spring on him, and then
-retreat so quickly that at first we did not know whether he had bitten
-him or not, as the dog would merely utter a low growl and retire.
-But one day at dinner, when our canine friend was being supplied
-with pieces which probably had formerly fallen to Billy’s share, our
-little pet was so enraged, that he rushed across the table and bit
-the dog on the mouth severely. From that time his doom was sealed; it
-was felt that either he or the dog must be dismissed, and the verdict
-was unanimous in favour of keeping the retriever; so Billy was tied
-up in his box and sent back to his former owner. Since then, we have
-occasionally heard of his welfare; and the last news concerning him
-was, that he had been taken into a garden, ‘but was evidently too much
-awed by the immensity of the universe to enjoy it.’
-
-
-
-
-THE HIGHLAND KEEPER.
-
-IN TWO PARTS.
-
-
-PART I.—INCHGARRY’S NARRATIVE.
-
-Some years ago, while upon a professional visit at the mansion of a
-well-known Highland gentleman, I was invited one morning by my host to
-inspect his famous kennel of staghounds. On that occasion, I remember
-well, my interest was curiously divided between the princely animals
-themselves and the magnificent specimen of humanity who acted as
-their custodian. Standing at least six feet, his finely proportioned,
-athletic figure was displayed to advantage by a well-made knickerbocker
-deer-stalking suit. His face was fair, full-bearded, and strikingly
-regular in its features. In the quick blue eyes gleamed the rapidly
-succeeding emotions of an intelligent, proud, sensitive nature. I
-observed that he usually addressed the chief by the name of the estate
-(a practice by no means uncommon in some parts of Scotland), and that
-the word ‘sir’ was somewhat infrequent in his speech. There was nothing
-decidedly disrespectful or assumptive in his manner, yet it was quite
-unlike that of modern inferiors towards superiors generally. I had been
-so struck during our inspection of the kennels with his appearance and
-bearing, that on our return to Inchgarry Hall, I put several questions
-to my worthy host respecting him. The result of these was, that after
-informing me that the young fellow’s name was Donald Stewart, and that
-he was a native of Badenoch, he entered upon the following curious and
-instructive narrative of his first settlement at Inchgarry, and of
-the tragedy in which it eventuated; pointing out as he did so, with
-great frankness, the evils a landlord may create among his people by
-delegating too largely to an inferior the personal supervision of his
-interests.
-
-James Forbes, the son of one of the chief’s humblest dependants, had
-been reared upon the estate. Industry, a certain versatility of talent,
-and above all, an uncompromising yet judicious sycophancy, had together
-stood him in such good stead that, beginning his career as stable-boy,
-he had passed rapidly to assistant-gardener, head-gardener, and manager
-of the home-farm; until, at the time the events we are about to record
-took place, he was his master’s factotum, holding the position and
-title of sub-factor to the property. Residing for three parts of the
-year in London or abroad, Inchgarry necessarily gave him large powers
-in matters affecting his tenantry and servants; so that—the factorship
-proper being then in the hands of an estimable but old and infirm
-lawyer, with whom the wily Forbes had ingratiated himself—the authority
-of the latter was almost boundless. Like all sycophants, he was also
-a tyrant. The tenantry, who held their farms on long leases, and were
-practically part and parcel of the soil, escaped the oppression to
-which, under other circumstances, they might have been subjected.
-Nevertheless, Forbes contrived in many ways to harass and annoy all who
-in any way offended him. As for the immediate servants of the Hall and
-home-farm, the foresters and keepers, the labourers and handicraftsmen
-on the estate, his was to them strictly a reign of terror. None but
-those who chose to do so by abject flattery and toadyism dared hope to
-escape molestation.
-
-Among those trucklers to whom Forbes extended his patronage, was one
-John Sutherland—or Ian Dhu, as he was invariably styled—the idlest
-and most worthless character in the district. It would be difficult
-to conceive what bond could exist between this semi-pariah, poacher,
-and vagabond, and the chief’s confidential agent, did we not remember
-that men of the sub-factor’s stamp invariably make a henchman of some
-unscrupulous master of their own weapon—sycophancy. Ian Dhu had not
-only the skill to step into the good-will of Forbes by his fawning,
-but to establish himself therein by acting as spy and reporter upon
-all that was said and done upon the estate. Following no recognised
-employment, though ostensibly odd-man about his patron’s private
-grounds, he perverted his leisure by haunting the garden, workshops,
-bothies, the keepers’ houses, and the kitchen of the Hall itself,
-picking up scraps of information for the jealous ear of the sub-factor.
-He was, in fact, a necessity of the pernicious system of control which
-reigned; and he was, at the time our story commences, in the full light
-of favouritism.
-
-Inchgarry, my host, was a just, large-hearted, and clear-headed man;
-of rather an indolent disposition no doubt, but, when roused to
-interest, both prompt and strong-willed, brooking neither argument nor
-persuasion. His brief occasional visits to the Hall were always marked
-by some change in, or reversal of, his agent’s arrangements, as well
-as by some considerate extension of privileges to his ‘people.’ In
-one instance his wrath had been awakened by the neglected condition
-of his garden and kennels; the latter perhaps his dearest subject
-of pride. He spoke sharply and conclusively about these matters to
-Forbes, whose minions both the head-gardener and chief-keeper were.
-Ten days thereafter he announced that he had engaged a man from the
-Lothians to superintend his garden-grounds, and a gamekeeper from
-Badenoch to supplant the inefficient favourite; adding, however, with
-characteristic kindness, that the superseded men might remain, if they
-chose, as second-hands until they could better themselves. Forbes
-received the news of these innovations with outward deference and
-submission, but inward chagrin and rage. It was the beginning of the
-end, as it proved.
-
-Archie Guthrie, the new gardener, arrived first on the scene to form a
-nine days’ subject of comment to the simple population of Inchgarry;
-and a few weeks later Donald Stewart took possession of the roomy and
-comfortable keeper’s cottage so picturesquely situated by the loch
-side. He was accompanied by his sister, a few years his junior, who
-undertook to act as his housekeeper, and by a powerful-looking young
-serving-lass. Effie was as unlike her brother as well could be. She
-was _petite_, of slight frame, with small delicate features. Lithe,
-active, elfish, her dark hair and pale face, together with the general
-grace and rapidity of her movements, soon acquired for her the pretty
-sobriquet of _sheach_ or fairy. Cheerful, even volatile, this singular
-creature had yet a depth of tenderness and sympathy so easily stirred,
-so sensitive and all-pervading, that nothing animate appeared to
-escape its influence. In character, then, as well as in appearance,
-she presented a marked contrast to her handsome, really good-hearted,
-but choleric and somewhat imperious brother. Yet never perhaps, the
-chief informed me, was brotherly and sisterly affection more complete
-and perfect than between these two. In a short time they had finished
-their new domestic arrangements, and passed through the usual ordeal of
-rustic criticism. Effie glided at once into the respect and confidence
-of every woman on the estate—a feat which the student of womankind will
-consider an all but impossible one. Her kind-heartedness and tact,
-doubtless, were the means towards such a result, aided as they were by
-the incessant and impartial distribution of favours, which her deft
-fingers and clever little head enabled her to do with an expenditure
-of nothing more than her redundant good-will and energy. The other sex
-became her slaves to a man. Every one within a radius of ten miles in
-that sparsely peopled district came under the spell of the _sheach_,
-and loved or admired her secretly or openly, platonically or otherwise,
-according to temperament or position. Inchgarry gave some most amusing
-instances of her sway: of stalwart Highlanders seized by the ear and
-marched off to perform some menial duty, or commanded to execute some
-commission for herself or neighbours. It was said that even Forbes
-himself, surly as he was, and imbittered from the first against her
-brother, could never disguise the pleasure which Effie’s presence gave
-him: probably the most harmless and respectable sentiment he ever
-entertained. He refused nothing _she_ asked for herself or others, and
-did not hesitate to proclaim his high opinion of her disposition and
-character. I record this with pleasure as the one bright spot redeeming
-a dark and contemptible nature.
-
-Forbes and Stewart instinctively regarded each other as enemies from
-the first. Frank and open to a fault, the new keeper chafed under the
-reticence and duplicity of the sub-factor; and to every unreasonable
-command he returned a hot and indignant refusal; to every malicious
-word an angry, contemptuous retort. Thoroughly acquainted with his
-own duties, he would brook no interference; and to Forbes’s utter
-confusion, on one occasion, when that worthy had attempted to meddle
-in some matter affecting the dogs, he boldly threatened, in presence
-of several underlings, to report him to Inchgarry for obstructing his
-work. Before two months had passed, it was war to the knife between
-them. As was natural, the majority of the natives secretly rejoiced
-to find that the young stranger meant to beard the tyrant; while the
-great man’s favourites and the constitutionally envious nursed a bitter
-enmity against him as an interloper. The despotism was now broken up
-into two struggling factions; and the contest was a protracted and
-unhappy one.
-
-But more fierce and implacable even than Forbes’s hatred of the keeper
-was that conceived by his henchman, Ian Dhu. To the keenness of
-partisanship he added a violent personal animosity, which only ended
-with the tragic event hereafter detailed. Ian had long been suspected
-of deer-poaching; but hitherto the friendship of the sub-factor had
-screened him from conviction if not from detection. At last Stewart
-caught him red-handed in the act of ‘gralloching’ a stag in one of
-the favourite ‘passes’ of the forest. He reported the fact at once to
-Inchgarry, who, if not exactly claiming his ancestral power of ‘pit
-and gallows,’ reserved to himself the right of deciding whether or not
-any of his ‘people’ should be handed over to the civil authorities.
-His decision was a most merciful one—merely requiring Sutherland to
-surrender his gun to the keeper. The sentence nevertheless rankled with
-deadly purpose in his heart; and but for one singular circumstance,
-would doubtless have earlier taken the form of the terrible revenge he
-ultimately sought.
-
-That circumstance was his love for Effie Stewart. He too had been
-smitten by the _sheach’s_ bewitching face and smile—smitten as only
-such dark, troublous natures can be smitten. His love was to him a
-terrible torture. The better thoughts which this new and powerful
-passion awakened, only goaded and stabbed, being too intermittent to
-subdue the darker passions which they illumined. From the moment he
-first saw Effie, a marked change came over him, or, more properly
-speaking, his idiosyncrasies became intensified. Always taciturn,
-he was now morose and brooding; his surliness became vehement
-irascibility, and his roving stealthy movements were now erratic and
-purposeless. He would hang for hours around the kennels, pass and
-repass the keeper’s cottage a dozen times a day, inventing trifling
-excuses for calling there, that he might look upon the girl whose
-unconscious influence had so strongly affected him. In her presence
-his misery was complete. He would crouch on a settle by the fireside,
-silent and burning with the unquenchable fire within him, his furtive
-impassioned glances following her every movement, as Effie flitted
-about the house. Whenever the little woman paused from her work, and
-with piquant, gracious vivacity addressed some pleasant remark to
-him, the heavy brows would unbend, and the dark eyes lift themselves
-to her face with a transient gleam of supreme pleasure, only to be
-averted again in increased gloom and depression. On those occasions
-when the young neighbours extemporised a merry-making at one or other
-of their houses, or, as was oftener the case, in the roomy cottage of
-the keeper, Ian Dhu’s torture was beyond description. There he was
-compelled to witness the object of his infatuation surrounded by a
-number of youths, many of whom he instinctively knew were fascinated
-by her. He listened entranced when she sung—but, then, other ears also
-drank in the sweet sounds; he watched the slight elfish figure move in
-the merry dance, but was she not observed with admiration by every one?
-First one and then another of the strapping young Highlanders became
-her partner, would hold her hands, clasp her waist, and whirl with her
-in the freedom of the old-fashioned reels; every incident adding a
-fresh torment to the jealous heart of Ian Dhu.
-
-Time went on, and Ian Dhu was thus fain to curb the rebellious desire
-for revenge upon Donald Stewart. The gratification of looking upon
-Effie was only possible under conditions which his revenge would
-entirely destroy. Like a hungry spaniel, he crouched and fawned when
-he would otherwise have snapped. He submitted to obey many overbearing
-behests of the haughty young keeper, to assist him about the croft or
-go on messages; and acted generally so as to gain Stewart’s tolerance,
-if not his confidence. These tactics were not unobserved by Forbes,
-who, however, satisfied of the genuineness of the hatred with which his
-henchman viewed Donald, for a time attributed them to crafty zeal in
-his own service.
-
-As for the sub-factor himself, time only increased his detestation of
-the keeper. Inchgarry was in London attending to his parliamentary
-duties; and Forbes did not neglect the opportunity of wreaking his
-malice in every possible way upon his proud-spirited subordinate. In
-his letters to the chief, the sub-factor conveyed many hints derogatory
-to Stewart, and succeeded to some extent in his unworthy purpose.
-
-The young man, who was not only conscious of his abilities, but
-enthusiastic in his desire to acquit himself creditably in all that
-concerned his craft, one morning received a cold sharp letter from
-Inchgarry, recounting a charge of permitting poaching in the forest,
-and commenting severely upon his negligence. The chief circumstantially
-stated that the interior portions of a deer had been found in a
-‘pass’ through a certain hill, where it had been ‘gralloched.’ The
-astonishment of Stewart was for the moment fully equal to his chagrin.
-He had had that very pass carefully watched by the under-keepers, and
-especially by his favourite and friend, a young sandy-haired blue-eyed
-lad from Lochaber, whose surname of Grant had been familiarised, in
-Highland fashion, into ‘Grantoch’ on account of his popularity. After
-the first burst of angry surprise, Stewart sought Grantoch, who in
-his laconic way repudiated the possibility of the thing, and after a
-deliberate study of the subject, as he leant upon his gun, quietly
-delivered himself of his opinion. About ten days previous, he said,
-while cutting open a hind, which in accordance with orders he had shot
-for the dogs, Ian Dhu had been present. Chancing to return to the same
-place about half an hour later in search of the knife which he had
-dropped, he was not a little surprised to find the refuse portions
-removed; and was completely puzzled when he observed, by the traces of
-blood amongst the heather, that they had evidently been carried up the
-forest. He was certain now that Sutherland had, with the connivance
-of Forbes, taken this method of throwing suspicion of negligence upon
-Stewart. The head-keeper’s quick intelligence grasped the whole affair
-before Grantoch had finished. He directed his assistant to state the
-facts as they were, in a letter to the chief; and wrote himself a
-respectful but firm repudiation of the charge. The effect was this:
-Forbes received a freezing order from Inchgarry to turn Ian Dhu out of
-his service. Nothing further was said; no reflection made as to his
-possible complicity in a design to injure the keeper’s character.
-
-But the incident had rendered the sub-factor’s desire for revenge
-incontrollable. He goaded on his discharged henchman to be the
-instrument of wreaking their common hatred on the keeper. To his
-surprise, Ian Dhu was sullenly intractable. Forbes was at first
-furious, but incidentally learning the obstacle which existed in
-Sutherland’s passion for Effie Stewart, he resolved to use this as
-the very means of bringing him round to his purpose. He had heard,
-amongst other gossip, that Archie Guthrie’s attentions to the girl
-were received with favour. Ian was now completely under his control,
-and accident unfortunately favoured the factor in working upon his
-jealousy. Returning home from a visit to the post-town one evening in
-his dog-cart, Forbes observed, on a part of the road near Stewart’s
-cottage, the lovers standing together arm-in-arm, in the moonlight,
-evidently transacting a lengthened and agreeable parting for the night.
-Ian, whom he still sheltered, was waiting his arrival and assisted
-him to alight. With a malignance worthy of the worst part of his evil
-nature, he immediately despatched the unsuspecting Sutherland upon a
-message which should take him past the spot where Archie and Effie
-were standing. The effect was terrible. Ian Dhu on reaching the place
-discovered the pair in the act of embracing; staggering for a moment
-as if shot, he fled from the spot and disappeared, to return, after
-several weeks, to consummate the tragedy which forms the sequel of the
-tale.
-
-
-PART II.—INCHGARRY’S NARRATIVE CONTINUED.
-
-Three weeks elapsed, during which no one in Inchgarry had set eyes on
-Ian Dhu. The story of his love for the _sheach_ was commonly known,
-and speculation was rife as to his proceedings since the night of
-his disappearance. This was set at rest one evening by his sudden
-appearance in the kitchen of the sub-factor’s house, lean and gaunt as
-a famished hound. His face was haggard and hunger-pinched, and a gleam
-very like insanity lit up the dark scowling eyes. His hair and beard
-were matted and tangled, and his clothes were soiled and rent. It was
-conjectured that he had spent the interval since his flight, in the
-fastnesses of the mountains—a prey to the throes of that passion which
-his powerful nature had conceived. What a picture might not imagination
-draw of the terrible human struggle enacted in those solitudes! Perhaps
-some such thought occurred to the frightened women-servants as Ian
-stood before them. At anyrate, they received him with silent sympathy,
-and invited him to take refreshment. It does seem strange that the
-revenge which succeeded his paroxysm of disappointed love should not
-first have been directed against the young gardener and his sweetheart.
-Various theories exist to account for this; one being that it really
-was his purpose to include them among his victims. My informant,
-however, held the very plausible opinion that Ian Dhu’s reason had
-given way under the great strain on his feelings, that his love was
-thereafter mercifully a blank to him, while the old grudge against
-Stewart had assumed unnatural proportions.
-
-Forbes had an interview that night in his own parlour with his quondam
-henchman as the investigation which afterwards took place proved; and
-it was late when Ian Dhu slunk from the house by the private door,
-carrying with him a gun, and was seen to disappear in the belt of
-firs that skirts the loch. It is mentioned, with that morbid zest for
-details which a tragedy never fails to excite, that only a few minutes
-previous to Ian’s plunging into the wood, Archie Guthrie and Effie
-Stewart (now formally betrothed) had passed the sub-factor’s house
-arm-in-arm. What would have been the consequences of a _rencontre_
-between the lovers and Black Sutherland is a favourite topic for
-surmise amongst the people of Inchgarry to this day.
-
-On the following morning, Grantoch, who had returned from his rounds,
-took his spy-glass from its case and directed it towards Bhein à
-B’huachaill. A fire in the heather on this hill had been reported
-earlier, and Stewart had gone to investigate the cause, telling
-Grantoch to follow him when his other duties should leave him at
-liberty. The burning of the heather in the month of July, and in the
-centre of the ‘forest’ ground, was a serious matter in the eyes of the
-keepers, driving the deer as it would, from a favourite haunt. Grantoch
-now desired to make out, if possible, in what direction Stewart had
-gone, that he might be able to join him by the shortest route. He
-brought the glass to bear on every part of the mountain, its wood-clad
-base, purple sides, gray scaurs, and shimmering water-courses—but
-without result; and was just about to close it, when his glance
-rested upon a human figure shewing on the near shoulder of Bhein à
-B’huachaill. His practised eye told him at once it was not Donald
-Stewart. He carefully scrutinised it for some minutes, until with
-startled surprise he recognised Ian Dhu creeping over the watershed,
-bearing a gun on his shoulder.
-
-Grantoch quietly shut his glass, returned it to its case, examined
-with professional caution the lock of his double-barrel to see that
-it was at half-cock, and started at a swinging trot for the foot of
-the hill. Its nearest point was only a mile and a half distant; but,
-convinced that Ian was on another poaching expedition, he resolved
-to get the assistance of a keeper whose cottage stood about a mile
-farther up the loch. Here he was agreeably surprised to find Stewart
-engaged in issuing some orders. The latter explained that he had come
-direct to the cottage to learn whether the under-keeper knew anything
-of the fire; and that he found he had visited the spot. It was merely
-a patch which had soon burned out of itself, and Stewart had therefore
-waited leisurely for his comrade’s appearance. He pricked up his
-ears, however, when Grantoch told him of Ian Dhu’s movements, at once
-suspecting him of having intentionally fired the heather. The thought
-brought his hasty temper to such a heat that he resolved at once to
-clear up the matter by giving chase to Ian Dhu.
-
-The trio took the route which Grantoch had seen Sutherland take, and
-their keen eyes kept them close on his track after it quitted the
-watershed. At length they came in full view of him as he now strode
-rapidly along the side of the hill. Their object was to detect him
-in the act of poaching, confident that Inchgarry would this time
-prosecute, and hopeful that the incendiarism would also be brought
-home to him. To avoid being observed in their turn, they now crouched
-along amongst the tall heather, till within a few hundred yards of
-where they had seen Ian Dhu last halt. Stewart then proposed to advance
-alone on all-fours to reconnoitre. As he thus cautiously approached
-the poacher, he observed that he had leapt into the dry channel of
-what is termed a winter stream, and was looking along the barrel of
-his weapon—a rifle—which he held resting on the bank at the opposite
-side of the channel to that on which Stewart now lay. Ian Dhu’s face
-was if possible more haggard and wild than ever, while the hand which
-grasped the rifle shook as if with ague or palsy. His glance was
-directed towards a spot some hundred yards distant, where the heather
-shewed blackened as if by recent fire. Now and again the maniac—for he
-had every appearance of being bereft of reason—would start up with an
-impatient cry and gesture, as though disappointed by the non-appearance
-of some object for which he waited. At last, in view of the puzzled and
-somewhat terrified keeper, he brought the rifle to his shoulder, and
-with steady deliberate aim, fired at an object unseen by the keeper.
-The echoes which the sharp report awakened were mingled with a piercing
-cry!
-
-Ian Dhu had not time to complete his attempted spring from the channel
-of the stream before his shoulder was seized in the strong grasp of
-Donald Stewart. He turned to face his captor; then with a scream of
-terror, which for the moment paralysed the stout-hearted keeper, tore
-himself free and dashed down the mountain like a hunted stag. Donald,
-with the two under-keepers, who had rapidly approached, watched
-him in silence as he sped from rock to rock. Pursuit was useless.
-Following him with their eyes as he disappeared and reappeared among
-the inequalities of the ground, they at last observed, with a thrill
-of horror, that he did not turn aside in his descent from a well-known
-point at which the hill sloped almost precipitously for several hundred
-feet. With blanched faces and upraised hands they saw Ian Dhu pause for
-a moment on the dangerous verge, and take the awful leap.
-
-The three keepers resolved at once to make a detour to the spot where
-he must have fallen, and for this purpose hastened down the shoulder of
-the hill. They had not proceeded far when Grantoch called the attention
-of the others to a groaning sound proceeding from some spot near them.
-Stewart believing it to be the dying moans of a wounded stag, answered
-his faithful comrade rather rudely and hurried on. His course happily
-took him to the very spot where the man, whom Ian Dhu’s last bullet
-had reached, lay bleeding and apparently dying. To the horror and
-amazement of all, it proved to be Forbes the sub-factor. Stewart, with
-a sensitiveness that did him credit, left the wounded man in the charge
-of Grantoch and their companion, and hurried off himself to procure
-assistance. With as much speed as the task would admit, he returned
-to the spot, leading a sure-footed pony, and on this, supported
-alternately by the keepers, Forbes was conveyed by easy stages to his
-own house.
-
-The wound proved mortal; but before his death he made a statement which
-threw light upon the mysterious events of that fatal morning. Along
-with Ian Dhu he had concocted a scheme for Stewart’s destruction. He
-it was who had instructed Sutherland to fire the heather, calculating
-shrewdly that the circumstance would unfailingly call the keeper to
-the spot, in all likelihood alone, his trusty assistant being fully
-employed at that early hour. Ian, lying in wait with Forbes’s rifle,
-was to have shot the head-keeper whenever he appeared on the scene.
-The explanation of his own unfortunate presence was extremely simple.
-When he believed the dark deed accomplished, he had become anxious to
-recover the rifle from Ian Dhu, seeing that, in the event of capture,
-its possession would open up a suspicious inquiry respecting his own
-share in the dastardly business. This motive sealed his own fate. The
-impatient and vengeful Ian had not paused to reckon the chances of a
-mistake, but had pressed the trigger the moment he saw a human figure
-moving through the high heather towards the scene of the fire. Stewart,
-so happily deterred from his first purpose of visiting the burning
-hill, thus escaped the doom intended for him.
-
-‘And what were the fortunes of the other characters in your sad story?’
-I asked of the chief.
-
-‘Oh! You see that cottage over there with the sweet bit of garden in
-front, ornamented with rockeries and ferns? That is the home of Archie
-Guthrie and his wife, _née_ Effie Stewart. The fairy scarcely deserves
-the name now, having lost much of her elfish slenderness and activity,
-but is after all, perhaps, a prettier heroine as the gardener’s wife,
-and less dangerous to my young male subjects. A coquette she certainly
-never was; but discreet and prudent to a rare degree. I am at a loss to
-divine _what_ the source of her strange power was, but am thankful she
-is now Mrs Guthrie.’
-
-I laughed at the naïve remark.
-
-‘As for Stewart,’ continued Inchgarry, ‘he has married well—the
-daughter of one of my wealthiest tenants. Grantoch has got a chief
-charge on an estate in the West Highlands, taking with him the buxom
-servant whom Stewart brought from Badenoch. So you see they are all
-doing well. And for my own part, the revelations which were made at the
-time of the tragedy fully awakened me to the duty of weighing carefully
-the complaints of my “people,” and of charily guarding against too
-free an investiture of power over them to an ignorant, malicious,
-or interested servant. I spend more time here than formerly, and am
-gratified by the increased contentment and prosperity of those under my
-care. The story, you will now perceive, though sad, is not without its
-moral.’
-
-
-
-
-BALLOON-TRAVELLING.
-
-
-Aërial navigation, the faculty of locomotion through the air, the power
-of soaring bird-like into the azure fields of space, has always been
-tantalisingly seductive to the human imagination. So engrossing is the
-theme, that although the subject has already been discussed from a
-scientific point of view in these pages, a few additional words about
-its more popular aspects may not be found uninteresting to our readers.
-
-Great, and, as it has proved, baseless anticipations were evoked by the
-advent of the first balloon. Aërostation was to disclose the secrets
-of the atmospheric world, and by enabling men to predict rains and
-droughts, secure by the proper cultivation of the soil abundant and
-excellent harvests. The unmanageable nature of the new invention was
-not taken into account at all, nor the fact, that although you might
-ascend into the air from any point you chose, no one could predict
-where or how you would descend. This charming uncertainty still attends
-aërial voyages; no means have yet been discovered of guiding the
-balloon in a horizontal direction; and it is always so much at the
-mercy of currents of air, that the course it will follow is a matter of
-chance, and not an affair of the aëronaut’s will or choice.
-
-Attempts have been made to press this unmanageable machine into the
-service of science, and with some success, although what has yet been
-done is little more than a suggestion of discoveries which may at some
-future time be practicable by its aid.
-
-In 1862 Mr Glaisher, author of a history of _Travels in the Air_, made
-a series of ascents from Wolverhampton, in order to verify a number
-of scientific observations; the results of which are contained in the
-annals of the British Association. A new balloon was provided for him,
-which was not made of silk, but of American cloth, a stronger and more
-serviceable material, and in this aërial machine he encountered sundry
-mishaps and misadventures, on two occasions narrowly escaping with his
-life.
-
-Its very danger lends to balloon-travelling a sense of conscious
-adventure, of thrilling excitement, peculiarly its own. Added to
-this, the cloud-scenery through which the aëronaut glides is not only
-novel, but is often, especially at sunrise and sunset, most gorgeously
-beautiful; while the earth beneath, which seems to have motion
-transferred to it, presents as it hurries past, a charming and varied
-panorama. Woods and rivers, hamlets and towns, hills and valleys, and
-wide-spreading downs, succeed each other in rapid succession. From the
-immense height, all idea of the comparative altitude of objects is
-lost; great cities appear like small models of towns, and the biggest
-man-of-war looks like a boy’s toy ship. Morning up in cloudland is a
-gloriously radiant spectacle. The balloon floats out of darkness into
-a world of shadowy mountain ranges, colourless and unsubstantial at
-first, but borrowing from the rising sun the softest, tenderest hues of
-roseate pink and warmest crimson, glowing and blending and fading away
-at last into a mellow flood of amber gold.
-
-In France, for some time after their invention, balloons were quite the
-rage, the first made for scientific purposes being that of July 1803,
-and which was followed by several others having for their object the
-solution of many physical problems, not a few of which remain problems
-still. In 1850 two ascents were made for the purpose of investigating
-certain atmospheric phenomena. One especially of these aërial voyages
-was in the last degree unfortunate. Scarcely had the two philosophers
-MM. Barral and Bixio taken their seats, than they made the unpleasant
-discovery that their balloon was not in good working order; and while
-they were hesitating about what should be done in the circumstances, a
-violent gust of wind settled the question for them, and the balloon,
-blown from the earth, shot into the air with the velocity of an arrow.
-Becoming rapidly inflated, the machine then bulged out at top and
-bottom, covering the car like a hood, and enveloping the unfortunate
-aëronauts in total darkness. ‘Their position was most critical; and
-when one of them endeavoured to secure the valve-rope, a rent was made
-in the lower part of the balloon, and the hydrogen gas with which
-it was inflated escaping close to their faces suffocated both of
-them, causing a momentary exhaustion, followed by nausea and violent
-vomiting.’
-
-In this helpless condition they discovered that they were descending
-rapidly; and on groping about for the cause they found that the balloon
-was split open in the middle, and that there was a rent in it two
-yards long. This was a cruel predicament in which to find themselves
-thirty thousand feet up in the air, and very naturally they abandoned
-all hope of life, although, like wise men, they did all in their power
-to preserve it. To lessen the downward velocity of the balloon they
-threw overboard all their ballast, then article after article of their
-raiment even to their fur coats, preserving only their instruments,
-with which they at last descended in safety in a vineyard near Lagny.
-
-The motion in a balloon is scarcely perceptible. You are not conscious
-of rising; but the earth appears to recede from you, and to advance
-to meet you during a descent. In the higher regions of the air,
-the intense solitude of the cloud-scape has something in it awful
-and oppressive, as if the world were left behind for ever, and the
-aëronaut were about to launch chance-driven into the vast infinitude of
-shadowland. Amid these altitudes, if any sound is made by the aëronaut,
-it is echoed back in ghostly tones by the vast envelope of the balloon,
-which as it floats casts a shadow sometimes black and sometimes white;
-but which is usually surrounded by an aureole or halo more or less
-distinctly marked.
-
-In throwing out ballast or any small article from a balloon, a certain
-degree of caution is requisite, as a bottle or any similar object falls
-with such velocity that if it were to strike the roof of a cottage it
-would go right through it. We are told that Gay-Lussac, in an ascent
-in 1804, threw out a common deal chair from the height of 23,000 feet.
-It fell beside a country girl who was tending some sheep in a field,
-and as the balloon was invisible, she concluded—and so did wiser heads
-than hers—that the chair had fallen straight down from heaven, a gift
-of the Virgin to her faithful followers. No one was sceptical enough to
-deny it, for there was the chair, or rather its remains. The most the
-incredulous could venture to do was to criticise the coarse workmanship
-of the miraculous seat, and they were busy carping and fault-finding
-with the celestial upholstery, when an account of M. Gay-Lussac’s
-aërial voyage was published, and extinguished at once the discussion
-and the miracle.
-
-In 1868 M. Tissandier and a professional aëronaut made a voyage over
-the North Sea in a balloon called the Neptune. The machine made a
-splendid ascent, and was soon floating in mid air buoyant as a feather
-at the height of four thousand feet, bound, as the aëronauts fondly
-hoped, for the coast of England. But in this they soon found that they
-had counted without their host; the Neptune, impelled by the wind,
-was soaring away in the direction of the middle of the German Ocean.
-This most inauspicious goal struck terror for a few moments into their
-ardent souls; but they were soon reassured by observing that the wind
-in the atmospheric regions below them was setting towards the shore,
-and that by sinking into this lower current of air they could return
-whenever they chose. Thus yielding to the current of their fate, they
-allowed themselves to be carried out to sea, floating like gossamer
-into the very heart of cloudland. Gorgeous scenes, more splendid,
-more airy, more delicate than the most glowing visions of the Arabian
-Nights, rose around them. It was like the enchantment of a vivid
-dream. They took no note of time; every sense was absorbed in that
-of vision; they even forgot to be hungry, but gazed, and gazed, and
-gazed again upon the wide waste of waters that spread beneath them,
-glowing like one vast molten emerald; its glories half seen, half hid
-by the multitude of cloud mountains and valleys that rose fluctuating
-and fantastic on every side, fair with luminous half-lights,
-delicately lovely with pearly iridescence shading into silvery gray.
-Thus hovering miles above the world and its commonplace cares, they
-enjoyed an interval of transcendent delight, rudely broken in upon
-by the professional aëronaut, a creature of appetite, who pulled the
-valve-rope unbidden, thus causing them to descend from their cloudy
-paradise into the grosser atmosphere that immediately surrounds the
-earth, where they at length bethought themselves—of lunch. In spite of
-thick thronging poetic fancies and transcendental raptures, they made a
-very tolerable repast, M. Tissandier finishing his portion of the fowl
-by tossing a well-picked drumstick overboard. For this imprudence the
-professional was down upon him immediately. ‘Do you not know,’ quoth
-he, ‘that to throw out ballast without orders is a very serious crime
-in a balloon?’ M. Tissandier was at first inclined to argue the point;
-but on consulting the sensitive barometer he was fain to admit that
-in consequence of the disappearance of the chicken-bone, the Neptune
-had made an upward bound of between twenty and thirty yards. Very fine
-calculation—if true.
-
-Luncheon satisfactorily over, they again soared upward out of sight and
-sound of earth, and soon found themselves once more in their cloudy
-Elysium, but with a change; mist and fog hemmed them round instead
-of the breeze and sunshine, but did not make them less happy. The
-Neptune was to them a little Goshen, a lonely floating temple of peace,
-dedicated to contentment and ease. The serenity of their souls was
-depicted in their faces. Tranquil and easy, they took no thought of the
-morrow, no, nor of the next hour, when suddenly there broke upon their
-ears, like a faint far-distant murmur, a sound subdued, monotonous,
-and yet terrible. Was it the voices of the spheres? No, gentle reader;
-it was a strain more awful still—it was the voice of the sea. In a
-moment the listless ease, the sweet do-nothingness of those idlers in
-cloudland was gone, clean washed away by the swish and swell of that
-intrusive ocean, which stretched beneath them, painted by the sunset
-with a thousand glowing tints of beauty, which they had neither leisure
-nor tranquillity to admire. Fortunately the wind was setting inshore;
-and amid the fast falling shades of night, the anxious aëronauts were
-fortunate enough to descry a cape crowned with a lighthouse. Every
-nerve was strained to reach it; and after a few moments of intense
-anxiety and effort, the anchor was let go. It caught in a sandhill, and
-the Neptune once more moored to earth, rolled over on its side, and was
-after some difficulty secured.
-
-The spot where they landed was curiously enough only a few yards from
-the reef of rocks where the first aëronaut, Pilatre de Rosier, was
-dashed to pieces in 1785.
-
-Sometimes, like other bubbles, the balloon bursts; and when this
-little accident happens, say four thousand feet up in the air, it is
-of course attended with unpleasant and inconvenient consequences, as
-was the experience of MM. Fonvielle and Tissandier, who with a party
-of nine made an ascent in a veteran balloon called ‘the Giant.’ Merry
-as larks they soared into the air, keenly enjoying the beauty of the
-day, the novelty of the pastime, the sense of liberty, of entire
-freedom from all wonted conventionalisms or accustomed restraints.
-Then with what a keen school-boy edge of appetite they fell upon their
-chicken, which seems the appropriate food for balloons, eaten from
-newspapers, which served as plates, and washed down with soda-water
-and Bordeaux. Champagne was inadmissible; an unruly cork might have
-popped unawares through the silken tissues of the envelope, and thus
-hastened a catastrophe. But let us not anticipate. The banquet was
-over, the board, that is to say the newspapers were cleared, and
-‘the feast of reason and the flow of soul’ had begun. All was bright
-airy genial cordiality and mirth, when suddenly the attention of the
-travellers was attracted to a white smoke issuing from the sides of
-the balloon. Whence came this ominous mist, this preternatural cloud,
-that began to enshroud them? One reckless youth said: ‘It is the Giant
-smoking his pipe.’ And so it was with a vengeance! Then followed a few
-terrible moments, in which each after his own fashion bade the world
-farewell, and found it marvellous hard to do so. The clouds, the sky,
-the pleasant sunlight, was that their last look at each? It seemed so;
-but while they were still shivering dizzy and aghast upon that awful
-threshold, the balloon fell, and strange to relate, fell safely, and
-they were saved.
-
-A few days afterwards Monsieur Tissandier made another ascent in the
-Neptune with Monsieur de Fonvielle, and they were busily engaged
-conducting some scientific experiments when a sharp crack like a
-sudden quick peal of thunder fell upon their astounded ears, and the
-professional aëronaut exclaimed in a loud startled voice: ‘The balloon
-has burst!’ What followed, we give in Monsieur Tissandier’s own words:
-‘It was too true; the Neptune’s side was torn open and transformed
-suddenly into a bundle of shreds, flattening down upon the opposite
-half. Its appearance was now that of a disc surrounded with a fringe!
-We came to the ground immediately. The shock was awful. The aëronaut
-disappeared. I leaped into the hoop, which at that instant fell upon
-me, together with the remains of the balloon and all the contents of
-the car. All was darkness. I felt myself rolled along the ground, and
-wondered if I had lost my sight, or if we were buried in some hole or
-cavern. An instant of quiet ensued, and then the loud voice of the
-aëronaut was heard exclaiming: “Now come all of you from under there.”’
-And one after another they emerged unhurt into the sunshine, in time to
-bid farewell to a few fragments of the balloon which were floating away
-upon the rising wind.
-
-Such experiences must as a rule be trying to the nerves of most people,
-and we must be so plain as say that travelling by balloon is at best an
-act of extreme danger and temerity. In order to utilise balloons, it is
-evident that some sure means of guiding them must be invented; and this
-discovery or anything approaching to it has yet to be made. In fact,
-a balloon is still, after about a hundred years’ experience, little
-better than a toy.
-
-
-
-
-LIGHTNING-CONDUCTORS.
-
-
-Many of our readers may have wondered why tall buildings such as church
-steeples and factory chimneys are provided with thin rods of iron
-running down their sides; and may have been at a loss to understand
-their meaning. Their use is to conduct lightning harmlessly to the
-ground during thunder-storms. We have, however, had warnings enough
-that a bad lightning-conductor is worse, as regards the security of
-the building it is supposed to protect, than none at all. Unless the
-electrical connection with the earth be perfect, the conductor may
-invite the very danger which it ought to turn aside. Rusted chains,
-imperfect fittings, and the absence of a sufficient thickness of
-untarnished metal, are responsible for much mischief. Lightning,
-properly dealt with, is robbed of much of its terrific power; but
-when its natural path is blocked, and its swift circuit interrupted,
-it inevitably rends and tears and burns, scathing and scattering all
-substances before its resistless might.
-
-Franklin meant the lightning-conductors which he invented to consist
-of iron alone. Iron, however, has too strong an affinity for oxygen to
-allow of this. All moisture, and all heat, corrode it more or less;
-and thus grew up the custom of pointing the conductors with copper,
-and in some cases with costly platinum, soldered to the iron rod. But
-exposure to weather, and the weak galvanic currents which unavoidably
-set in where metal of one sort is in contact with metal of another
-sort, cause rapid decomposition at the joint, and encourage the rust to
-eat into the substance of the rod. A heavy flash will melt or cripple
-a conductor thus imperfect, and then woe to the structure! This defect
-can now be cured by coating the iron rod completely with nickel, a
-metal which defies rust, and which conducts electricity better than the
-pure iron does. Bars and rods of this nickelised iron have been kept
-under water for several days without tarnishing, and resist the effects
-of the most powerful battery of Leyden jars.
-
-It had been believed, until lately, that platinum was a metal with
-which no rogue, however dexterous, could tamper. The platinum coinage
-of the Russia of thirty years since was considered un-imitable by the
-manufacturers of false money; while the capsules, crucibles, and
-other apparatus required by scientific men were sold according to the
-high market value of what is really a precious metal. Unluckily, fraud
-has been found possible even in this case. The Director of the Royal
-Italian Observatory on Vesuvius, M. de Luca, surprised at finding first
-one and then another of the platinum points of his conductors melted by
-the effect of lightning, made a careful investigation, and discovered
-that the platinum had been adulterated with from ten to twelve per
-cent. of lead, and thus rendered fusible. Platinum thus mixed with an
-inferior metal can be identified by its lesser density, or more easily
-by the blowpipe, before which a tell-tale green flame will reveal
-the presence of the lead. Such a mixture would render the hitherto
-resisting platinum absolutely worthless in the laboratory.
-
-
-
-
-A SPRING BOUQUET.
-
-
- Rails the rude Wind-king through the surging sea
- Of swaying boughs, that bending to the blast
- Their countless arms, with murmurous rustling wave,
- In wood and forest; and the hedgerows burst
- Into the tender greenery of Spring.
-
- Now shew the clumps of golden crocuses
- Their crowns above the freshly scented mould;
- And quavering bells of snowdrops glimmer white,
- In roadside garden; purple violets
- Lurk mid their green leaves, heavy-eyed with dew,
- Their fragrant perfume scattering on the Dawn.
-
- The polyanthus in her velvet robe—
- Yellow and russet—nestles by the side
- Of proud auricula; the splendid stars
- Of periwinkle—palest lavender—
- Gleam from the ivied bank; ranunculus
- All-stately queens it o’er her satellites,
- The yellow daffodils; Narcissus scents,
- With his frankincense sweet, the keen March air,
- A flower of peerless beauty.
-
- Wall-flowers shew
- From bed and border, their brown-orange blooms;
- And under them lingereth a vestal pure,
- The last pale primrose. All the pear-trees bend
- Beneath their flower-snow; the almonds blush
- With roseate bloom; the young year’s minstrel sweet—
- The mellow thrush—his liquid carol pours
- From the old blackthorn.
-
- Nature is astir;
- She wakes rejoicing from her Winter sleep,
- And with a thousand voices welcomes Spring!
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Conductors of CHAMBERS’S JOURNAL beg to direct the attention of
-CONTRIBUTORS to the following notice:
-
-_1st._ All communications should be addressed to the ‘Editor, 339 High
- Street, Edinburgh.’
-
-_2d._ To insure the return of papers that may prove ineligible,
- postage-stamps should in every case accompany them.
-
-_3d._ MANUSCRIPTS should bear the author’s full _Christian_ name,
- surname, and address, legibly written.
-
-_4th._ MS. should be written on one side of the leaf only.
-
-_5th._ Poetical offerings should be accompanied by an envelope, stamped
- and directed.
-
-_Unless Contributors comply with the above rules, the Editor cannot
-undertake to return ineligible papers._
-
-
-Printed and Published by W. & R. CHAMBERS, 47 Paternoster Row, LONDON,
-and 339 High Street, EDINBURGH.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_All Rights Reserved._
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Chambers's Journal of Popular Literature,
-Science, and Art, No. 738, February 16, 1, 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/license
-
-
-Title: Chambers's Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, No. 738, February 16, 1878
-
-Author: Various
-
-Editor: William Chambers
- Robert Chambers
-
-Release Date: May 16, 2020 [EBook #62125]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHAMBERS'S JOURNAL ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Susan Skinner and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
-
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-
-</pre>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_97"></a>{97}</span></p>
-
-<h1>CHAMBERS’S JOURNAL<br />
-OF<br />
-POPULAR<br />
-LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART.</h1>
-
-
-<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
-
-<p class='center'>
-
-<!-- Autogenerated TOC. Modify or delete as required. -->
-
-<a href="#SOCIABLE_AND_UNSOCIABLE">SOCIABLE AND UNSOCIABLE.</a><br />
-<a href="#HELENA_LADY_HARROGATE">HELENA, LADY HARROGATE.</a><br />
-<a href="#OUR_PET_RAT">OUR PET RAT.</a><br />
-<a href="#THE_HIGHLAND_KEEPER">THE HIGHLAND KEEPER.</a><br />
-<a href="#BALLOON-TRAVELLING">BALLOON-TRAVELLING.</a><br />
-<a href="#LIGHTNING-CONDUCTORS">LIGHTNING-CONDUCTORS.</a><br />
-<a href="#A_SPRING_BOUQUET">A SPRING BOUQUET.</a><br />
-
-<!-- End Autogenerated TOC. -->
-
-</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/header.png" width="600" height="294" alt="Chambers’s Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art. Fourth Series. Conducted by William and Robert Chambers." />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-<div class="center">
-<div class="header">
-<p class="floatl"><span class="smcap">No. 738.</span></p>
-<p class="floatr"><span class="smcap">Price</span> 1½<em>d.</em></p>
-<p class="floatc">SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1878.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="SOCIABLE_AND_UNSOCIABLE">SOCIABLE AND UNSOCIABLE.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> pleasures of social intercourse are amongst
-the best and truest enjoyments in which we
-can participate—the desire for the friendship of
-others is more or less inherent in human nature.
-There are nevertheless thousands upon thousands
-who are surrounded by every opportunity for
-realising these pleasures, and who yet fail to benefit
-by their influence, either for temporary and
-healthy pastime, or for permanent good. Most
-people have doubtless many amongst their circle
-of acquaintance who are easily distinguished from
-others by the term ‘unsociable.’ It would, however,
-be both unfair and incorrect to estimate that a
-large proportion of a given number of people have
-a decided objection to and shun all society. The
-habitually unsociable people are frequently those
-who would readily confess to a liking for society,
-but who do not enter into it on account of the
-various and numerous obstacles which, they will
-tell you, are in the way. It is not so much on
-account of an innate and acknowledged indisposition
-for social intercourse that the saying,
-‘Some folk are as unsociable as milestones,’ is proverbially
-correct, as that many barriers have been
-erected by the suspicious imaginations of those
-concerned. People are often heard to complain
-of the unsociability of others; but it is not unseldom
-that the very people who adopt this standpoint
-are those who, at the least approach from
-others, retire almost entirely within their insignificant
-individuality, and assume a reserve of
-manner and constrained mode of conversation,
-that of itself forbids any attempt to cultivate
-their acquaintance. Something like a hedgehog
-which, should you happen to catch sight of it,
-instead of making friends, rolls itself up into
-a ball, and shews off its bristles to the best
-advantage.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps nothing constitutes so great a hindrance
-to what may be termed natural and unadulterated
-social intercourse as the unnatural appearance
-which many folk strive to put upon themselves
-and their belongings for the benefit of the objects
-of their acquaintance. For the entertainment of
-their visitors, some good folk will change, as far
-as they possibly can, the entire face and features
-of their houses and themselves—in short, for the
-time being they seem to be somebody else—they
-go to great pains to make things unreal. On such
-show-occasions a profusion of apologies is sometimes
-showered upon the unhappy and disappointed
-guests; they are begged to excuse the
-unceremonious and very ordinary preparation
-made for their reception and entertainment;
-whilst it is apparent that every available resource
-has been utilised to make an imposing appearance.
-It was, we think, John Wesley, who having been
-invited out to dine, was asked, soon after his
-arrival at the house of the host, to excuse the
-fact that no preparation had been made. ‘Then,’
-replied he rather sharply, ‘there ought to have
-been;’ and without waiting to see whether there
-was reason for such an apology, left the house
-forthwith.</p>
-
-<p>Feelings of rivalry and jealousy, and the existence
-of an ultra spirit of caste, are responsible for
-much of the unsociability which prevails. Mr
-and Mrs Jones do not fraternise with Mr and Mrs
-Smith, who may live next door, because they, Mr
-and Mrs Jones, have concluded that they have
-ascended two or three more rounds of the ladder
-of social status. It is quite probable, moreover,
-that Mr and Mrs Smith may be duly impressed
-with precisely the same sense of superiority. Mr
-Jenkins does not wish to be patronised, and therefore
-cares not to cultivate the acquaintance of Mr
-Jones. Mr Jones having a paramount consciousness
-of his pre-eminence, would deem it undignified
-to be friendly with Mr Jenkins. Thus
-people sit in judgment upon themselves and other
-people, and form what they deem a sound opinion
-as to the disposition of others without ever having
-had the smallest opportunity of arriving at an
-accurate estimate. Imagination, hearsay, and the
-impressions derived from mere appearance at first
-sight, are often the sole materials employed in
-producing what is intended to pass as a detailed
-character-photograph. The estimates thus formed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_98"></a>{98}</span>
-are frequently circulated as genuine and reliable
-in every particular; and yet there may be as much
-difference between such estimates and the truth, as
-between a genuine and a base coin of the realm.
-The estimate which may be given you by one man
-of another is only reliable in so far as he is capable
-and has had the opportunities of forming an <i>accurate</i>
-judgment.</p>
-
-<p>As the tenor of a man’s life will to some extent
-be the reflection of his associations, it is essential
-that some discrimination be employed. But a
-man may be sociable and yet avoid careless promiscuous
-friendships. By the same rule that you
-cannot touch pitch without being defiled, neither
-can you have the friendship of sensible men and
-true, without profit. Nor need a sociable man
-eschew the duties and comforts of home-life. The
-association with friends, at home, may be made to
-take the place of association with mere acquaintances,
-sometimes of a questionable sort, abroad; and
-hence home may be made more homely.</p>
-
-<p>The plea is sometimes advanced, ‘Oh, we cannot
-afford to have company.’ Here is where a great
-mistake is made. Surely we should not measure
-the value of our friendships on the basis of a knife-and-fork
-calculation! The friendship which is
-measured by the amount of money expended on it
-is surely worth little. It is not so much the good
-dinner society which we would advocate, as the
-propagation of simple and genuine friendships.
-Formal parties and dinings-out are by reason of
-modern usages acknowledged to be for the most
-part dreary affairs, both for the givers and the
-guests. Dinners got up for display, arranged with
-an object, invitations given for sundry reasons—to
-the man, for instance, whose only qualification a
-guest may be his ability to be a source of entertainment;
-or to the titled gentleman and lady
-whose style and title shall grace the list in the
-newspaper columns. This amongst the upper ten
-thousand may be perhaps regarded as a necessary
-evil. Such state ceremonies have become fashionable
-amongst what has come to be popularly
-designated the <i>élite</i> of society.</p>
-
-<p>We especially refer, however, to the sociable traits
-of the great middle class, amongst whom a large
-dinner-party scheme is neither practicable nor
-desirable, but to whom the more frequent exchange
-of civilities with their neighbours would be
-a boon. But the way is frequently barred by the
-comparisons which are made. The ladies are generally
-desirous that the furniture of their houses
-should not compare unfavourably with that in the
-houses of those with whom they may be intimate.
-A source of the greatest concern is it if they
-have not Brussels carpet as good and as new as
-that of their neighbours. Then their furniture it
-may be is in green rep, that of their friends in
-crimson plush. Further anxieties are created as
-to plate, the size, style, and number of servants,
-and a dozen other considerations of a kindred
-sort. This everlasting contest to keep up appearances
-is at once the bane of our tempers and our
-pockets. It is the main thing on which the
-unreality of our time is fed, and upon which it
-thrives so well. Whatever may be the real
-impediment to sociability, we ourselves, while
-fostering the evil, uncharitably and inconsistently
-plead that the unsociable tendency exists more in
-others than ourselves!</p>
-
-<p>Were there an utter absence of opportunity for
-benefiting by the society of others, the fact would
-be deemed a hardship and a misfortune; and yet
-there are plenty of individuals who live in crowded
-cities but are the most lonely of beings. Not only
-are they never seen to speak to others, but apparently
-never even see them; the social faculties
-are thus rarely called into play, and are left to rust
-out. What do such men lose as the result of this
-isolation? Their knowledge of the best side of
-human nature is at a low ebb; while on the other
-hand the association with and knowledge of those
-around us teach us not only to misjudge others
-less, but to know ourselves better; and hence there
-comes a development and expansion of our sympathies.
-More freedom of intercourse must tend not
-only to increase our pleasures but to alleviate our
-troubles, for as we see that others have their ‘ups’
-and ‘downs,’ we learn to look upon our own as
-less burdensome. The man who neither sees,
-hears, nor participates in anything beyond his
-own immediate surroundings, can know little or
-nothing beyond the narrow boundary of his own
-individuality—a very circumscribed sphere to
-live and work in, certainly. People often need
-friends who, under given circumstances, will afford
-the benefit of their own experience. The person
-whose only acquaintance is himself, complains of
-the hardness of his lot, and whilst estimating what
-difference he imagines the cultivation of friendships
-would make to his pockets, fails to estimate
-what he would gain by the sympathy and good-will
-of others, and how his dreary path would be
-brightened by less isolation.</p>
-
-<p>There is, however, an inborn craving in most
-people for society of some kind, though occasionally
-it is sought for in directions which are not
-beneficial in their tendency; and this, we fear, is
-the result of the swarm of conventionalities which,
-for the most part, surround the social life of our
-day, some healthy counteraction of which—especially
-in the interests of the young—would be
-welcome.</p>
-
-<p>Happily the habits of isolation and unsociability
-are more prevalent in some places than
-in others. Those who have travelled most will
-readily admit that they have frequently found
-themselves amongst a circle of individuals whose
-freedom from conventionalities, and whose unconstrained
-and hearty mode of intercourse, made
-them forget for the time being that they were
-in the company of strangers. It is possible that
-some readers of these words may almost shudder
-at the idea of such freedom, such a want of
-decorum on the part of people who had never met
-before, and had not gone through the formality
-of a proper introduction. And yet there may be
-decorum without painful fastidiousness. Who has
-not met with unsociable railway travellers, some
-in whose company he has been for many weary
-hours, and with whom he may have succeeded,
-after supreme effort, in breaking the ice, only to
-receive a solitary monosyllable in response! Such
-an experience is certainly not the rule, for sometimes
-we meet with those, the incessant wag of
-whose tongue may be such as to compel us to
-leave unread both our newspaper and any favourite
-book that we may have promised ourself to get
-through. And yet it is well on such occasions to
-go on the principle of give and take. Anything
-rather than the company of an individual who
-looks suspiciously at you should you be venturesome<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_99"></a>{99}</span>
-enough to express to him an opinion on so
-commonplace a topic as the state of the weather.</p>
-
-<p>As a valuable element in connection with our
-social life, music does not occupy the position
-which it might and ought to do. The rapid
-growth during recent years of a knowledge of
-this charming solace is out of all proportion to the
-extent of its social enjoyment. It is unfortunately
-too often treated as a mere accomplishment. The
-friendly and informal musical parties such as were
-enjoyed years ago, do not receive much encouragement.
-It is of course indisputable that as a concert-giving
-power, rapid strides have been made in
-music; but what we contend for is the propagation
-of home harmony; the social glee, the favourite
-ballad, the instrumental quartette, with no objection
-to an occasional sonata for the pianoforte.</p>
-
-<p>It is no less amusing than disagreeable to see
-so many otherwise worthy people possessed of such
-a paramount sense of gentility and importance as
-to make themselves and their surroundings uncomfortable,
-and often miserable. The great desideratum
-is that people should appear more like themselves
-than somebody else. We hear and read a
-good many sermons on ‘Morality;’ but, excellent
-in their way as these are, a series of lectures on
-‘Reality’ are quite as necessary.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="HELENA_LADY_HARROGATE">HELENA, LADY HARROGATE.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER IX.—SIR SYKES’S WARD.</h3>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">There</span> may be pleasanter positions in life than
-that of a dependant, especially when the claim
-to make one of the household rests on conditions
-which it is impossible to define. The governess,
-who is so often held up by moralists as an object
-for our conventional pity, needs not, surely, to
-forfeit her self-respect, inasmuch as she earns
-her salary and its contingent benefits by honest
-labour. The companion too gives valuable consideration
-in the shape of a perpetual offering up
-of her own time, tastes, and wishes, for her pay
-and maintenance. There are others sometimes
-however, kindred strangers within the rich man’s
-gates, who have no ostensible tasks to perform,
-who cannot give monthly or quarterly notice and
-go away, and yet whose bread is sometimes made
-very bitter to them—white slaves who get no
-compassion from the world at large.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Willis at Carbery Chase was oddly situated.
-An orphan, she found herself domiciled
-amongst those who were allied to her neither by
-blood nor by the still more tenacious tie of
-common and early associations. She was exempt
-of course under that roof from many of the
-annoyances which fall to the lot of the motherless
-elsewhere. There was no domineering mistress
-of the house to resent every attention shewn to
-the interloper as something deducted from the
-rightful due of her own matchless girls; no
-niggard to grudge her every meal of which she
-partook at the stinted family table; or tyrant to
-pile upon her submissive shoulders the never-ending
-load of petty cares, which some genteel
-drudges perform unthanked.</p>
-
-<p>At Carbery there was plenty and to spare. Sir
-Sykes was a gentleman bland and courteous; the
-girls as kind good girls as could easily be met
-with; and the servants sufficiently well trained to
-take their cue from their employers, and to be
-civil to one who was smiled on by the higher
-powers. Yet a sensitive young lady in the
-position which Sir Sykes’s ward now occupied,
-might well have been excused if her heart at times
-was somewhat heavy. All her old habits of life
-had been in a moment uprooted. She had been
-suddenly transferred from familiar scenes and
-people whose ways she understood, to a country
-every feature of which must have been strange
-and new to her. Under the circumstances and in
-spite of the good-nature of those around her, it is
-not surprising if Ruth Willis at times looked sad
-and pensive.</p>
-
-<p>‘You cannot think how wonderful it seemed to
-me at first,’ she said one day to the younger Miss
-Denzil, ‘not to hear the drums beat tattoo at sundown,
-or how often I have started from my pillow
-in the early morning, fancying that I heard again
-the bugles sounding for the parade. Then the
-trumpeting of the elephants beside the tank, and
-the shrill voices of the dusky children at play
-beneath the peepul trees, and all the sights and
-sounds about my old home in India—I can’t
-forget them yet.’</p>
-
-<p>Blanche was sympathetic; but she felt rather
-than reasoned that the grief for a father’s loss, the
-regrets for friends abruptly quitted and a mode of
-life abandoned, could not be assuaged merely by a
-kiss and a kind word. Yet it was evident that
-Ruth was by no means disposed to play the part of
-a kill-joy in the house beneath whose roof she
-was now established, or to enact the martyr. Her
-manner was very soft and gentle, not obtrusively
-sad or unduly deferential, but that of one who
-sincerely wishes to please. She had a way of
-bending her will as it were to that of those with
-whom she now associated, which was really very
-pretty and graceful, and harmonised well with
-the modest drooping of her eyelids when she spoke.
-There were times (so her ill-wishers said, the latter
-being some of those vigilant critics who take our
-wage and wear our livery, or it may be caps and
-aprons and cotton prints such as we sanction, but
-who are not always too lenient censors of our conduct)
-when her whole face seemed to change its
-expression by the mere opening of the fine dark
-eyes fraught with a singular look, which the same
-critics averred to be that of ill-temper. But if
-Miss Willis had not, as Lucy and Blanche Denzil
-believed her to have, the temper of a lamb, it
-must be admitted that she was capable of very
-great self-restraint, since in general conversation
-she was only too ready to acquiesce with the
-opinions of others. Jasper had observed the
-singular brightening of Ruth’s eyes sometimes,
-when she turned them on Sir Sykes, but never
-towards himself; while his unsuspecting sisters
-saw no peculiarity in the bearing of the stranger
-whom they had learned to like.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_100"></a>{100}</span></p>
-
-<p>‘I could really believe,’ said Jasper to himself
-more than once, ‘that my father is afraid of that
-girl—and no wonder after all!’ he added, after
-a moment’s reflection. Certainly Sir Sykes did
-appear somewhat over-anxious that his ward should
-be happy and comfortable at Carbery, that her
-tastes should be studied, and her inclinations consulted.
-Yet he never seemed at ease in her company,
-and always escaped from her presence as
-early as politeness permitted; so that his own
-daughters set down his behaviour as merely
-prompted by an over-strained sense of hospitality.</p>
-
-<p>There was a fascination in the guest’s bearing
-and conversation, to which even Jasper, with all
-his predisposition to dislike her, could not but
-succumb. No great talker, Miss Willis had the
-power, somehow, of making what she did say
-more effective than what fell from other lips than
-hers. What this art or this gift might be, Jasper
-Denzil, who was no stranger to women and their
-ways, could not divine. The girl’s voice was rich
-though low, and admirably modulated, although
-of music, as she frankly confessed, she knew
-nothing whatever. And her eyes—the one redeeming
-feature of a plain pale face—could flash and
-glitter with wondrously changing play of light;
-eyes and voice and words all blending together
-to convey the expression which their owner
-desired that they should impart.</p>
-
-<p>There was one person to whom the baronet’s
-ward appeared in the light of an enigma, and this
-was Lord Harrogate, himself a frequent visitor at
-the home of the Denzils, between whose family
-and his own there was indeed some kind of connection.
-He had given up as preposterous the
-idea that he had ever seen Miss Willis before.
-<i>That</i> was of course erroneous, and he must have
-been the dupe of a fancied resemblance. But he
-was sufficiently quick-sighted to perceive, what
-was apparent neither to his sisters nor to Jasper,
-nor to the Earl or Countess, that a strong sharply
-marked character was concealed behind the gentle
-half-bashful demeanour which it pleased Miss
-Willis to assume.</p>
-
-<p>‘I never saw the iron hand,’ he thought to himself,
-‘so well hidden before by the velvet glove;
-but it’s there for all that. Yonder girl looks capable
-of turning the whole family round her finger.’</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Jasper at anyrate had other subjects
-for contemplation than were presented by a
-psychological study of the orphaned daughter of
-the late Major Willis, of the Honourable East
-India Company’s Service. Gentlemen who own
-and gentlemen who are going to ride horses
-intended to win a race which had so suddenly
-swelled into importance as the forthcoming one at
-Pebworth, have need of frequent communication
-with one another. Jasper during the next ten
-days was often in his principal’s company, sometimes
-at Pebworth, now and then at Exeter, when
-the routine of military duty held the other
-captain to his post.</p>
-
-<p>In the interim, Captain Denzil could tell by
-the language of the newspapers which were the
-accredited organs of the turf, how considerable
-was the excitement evoked by the selection of
-Pebworth as a place where might be matched
-against one another some of the finest weight-carriers
-chronicled in the Stud Book. The wildest
-rumours were afloat, and an April sky was not
-more changeable than were the odds, as reported
-from the headquarters of gambling, London and
-Liverpool. Sometimes the bookmakers were reported
-to be assured of triumph; sometimes it
-was hinted that the great betting firms would be
-severely hit, so unexpected would be the finish of
-the race.</p>
-
-<p>‘Why,’ indignantly demanded one influential
-paper, ‘should Pebworth be dragged into the
-daylight?’ Nor were the other organs of the
-sporting press slow to swell the chorus of complaint
-that a cramped and hitherto unheard-of
-course, situated in an obscure nook of the far
-west, should be the arena for a struggle such as was
-anticipated. And then followed dark innuendos
-and vague suggestions as to the motives of the noble
-lord who owned The Smasher, and the scarcely
-less illustrious commoner to whom Brother to
-Highflyer appertained. During the period preceding
-the race, the most contradictory rumours
-were incessantly published with reference to the
-rival favourites. They were ill; they were well;
-they had met with all the accidents slight or
-serious to which the equine genus is liable. One
-of these important animals had a cough. The
-other was not quite sound of limb. Both had
-been overtrained. No. Their training was insufficient,
-and any nameless outsider could reach
-the winning-post before them. Once again both
-horses were in the very perfection of bloom and
-beauty, and would compete fairly for the prize.</p>
-
-<p>Strange faces, some of which were not calculated
-to inspire confidence in those who had silver
-spoons in the pantry or linen drying on garden-hedge,
-began to appear at Pebworth and the
-parts adjacent. Lodgings were in such request
-that the meanest rooms were eagerly disputed at
-fancy prices, while inn and beershop drove a
-brisker trade than had been known since Pebworth
-had been disfranchised.</p>
-
-<p>‘Sad business, Denzil, this!’ exclaimed Jack
-Podgers as he dashed into the private parlour of the
-<i>De Vere Arms</i>. ‘Here’s a private telegram, and
-here a special edition of a sporting paper. Both
-agree as to the facts.’</p>
-
-<p>Jasper glanced at the telegram and at the paragraph.
-Yes. A most unfortunate accident, due
-to the carelessness of a porter, had occurred to
-Brother to Highflyer, just as that noble horse
-was being led from his box to the platform. Mr
-Splint, the eminent veterinary surgeon, summoned
-in hot haste, had examined the off fore-leg, and had
-expressed a positive opinion; in deference to which
-Mr John Knavesmire the trainer and Mr Wylie
-the owner had reluctantly decided to withdraw
-the name of Brother to Highflyer from the list.</p>
-
-<p>‘The race naturally must be won by the other
-favourite, The Smasher,’ said Captain Prodgers
-with a grim smile.</p>
-
-
-<h3>CHAPTER X.—WHAT HAPPENED AT PEBWORTH.</h3>
-
-<p>From early morning the usually sleepy streets
-of quiet Pebworth had been disturbed by the
-shouts of bawling hoarse-voiced vendors of so-called
-‘correct’ cards, purporting to furnish accurate
-information as to the names, weights, and
-colours of the riders, the nomenclature and
-ownership of the horses, and other particulars
-relating to the forthcoming race. Some of these<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_101"></a>{101}</span>
-itinerants were in faded red jackets that had felt
-the dust and the rain on every race-course in
-Great Britain; others were in tattered fustian,
-stained by the wet grass of the moorside, where
-the foot-sore wretches had been sleeping for a few
-hours after their weary tramp across country.
-It might have been opined that gold had been
-discovered in Dartmoor, and that diggers were
-hurrying up like so many eagles to the prey,
-so many were the uncouth groups that flocked in.
-Some of the pilgrims were the veriest human
-vermin that cumber the earth. There was the
-thimble-rigger, whose stock-in-trade consisted of
-the tiny board or slender table, which his unacknowledged
-associate is carrying now, with the
-peas and the thimble in his pocket. There were
-the proprietors of the roulette boards, and the
-manipulators of the ‘three card trick,’ so dangerous
-to unwary youth. There were gipsy fortune-tellers,
-dark-eyed, yellow-kerchiefed, and long-haired
-gipsy men, laden with sticks to be pelted
-at cocoa-nuts propped on an ash-wand, or at Aunt
-Sally with her time-honoured pipe.</p>
-
-<p>All the beggars, street-singers, and sellers of
-toys or gingerbread in the west of England seemed
-to have been drawn to Pebworth as steel filings
-are attracted to a magnet; and with them arrived
-many a scowling ruffian in baggy slop-suit, or
-slinking fellow in greasy garments of threadbare
-black, whose object could hardly have been the
-wish to witness a contest of strength and speed
-between two or more gallant horses. Probably the
-man in black was one of those miserable beings
-who bet with chance customers, and if they lose,
-pay in person if not in purse, braving kicks,
-ducking, and ill-usage, in hopes of five or ten
-ill-got sovereigns. As for the sturdier brute in
-nailed boots and velveteen, with the knotted
-bludgeon beneath his arm, it will go hard with
-him if some half-tipsy owner of a watch be not
-lightened of it before bedtime.</p>
-
-<p>In poured gigs and carts and carriages of every
-size and kind, some full of honest holiday-makers,
-others of thoughtful devotees of the Mammon
-that presides over the great green gaming-table
-that we know by the name of a race-course.
-Among the last-mentioned, who in turf phraseology
-are termed ‘bookmakers,’ were many, often of
-gentle birth and nurture, whose feverish life for
-ten months of the year was one of incessant locomotion,
-calculation, care, and toil. Some men,
-sufficiently well educated to see themselves as
-others see them, yet work harder at the dubious
-profession they have selected, than does a prosperous
-doctor or barrister of many briefs—ever
-on the railroad or in telegraph office, scrambling for
-make-shift lodgings, suing at the doors of crowded
-hotels—chilled by the rain of Newmarket, broiled
-by the sun of Chantilly—and incessantly on the
-wing to some new race-meeting, goaded on by the
-<i>ignis-fatuus</i> of Hope.</p>
-
-<p>The carriages were drawn up three deep around
-the judge’s chair and the stand. Small as the
-race-course of Pebworth was, it presented a gay
-and animated appearance. There were the well-appointed
-drags of every regiment within reach
-of the little Devonshire town, while the equipages
-of the county aristocracy were there in unusual
-numbers. There were the Fulfords, the Carews,
-the Trelawneys, and the Tresyllians, the Courtenays,
-and the Penruddocks, all the rural dignitaries
-of the district. The Earl of Wolverhampton
-was there with two of his daughters, accompanied
-by Blanche Denzil, who was confident of her
-brother’s success. Lord Harrogate too was there
-on horseback.</p>
-
-<p>No carriage from Carbery was on the Pebworth
-course that day. Sir Sykes had heard with displeasure
-that his son was about to take a part
-in a steeplechase. Jasper’s promise, however, had
-been given. His name was in print as the
-rider of Norah Creina, and the baronet saw no
-help for it. He refused, however, to attend the
-race with the ladies of his family, and gave but
-a reluctant consent to his younger daughter’s petition
-to be allowed to accompany Lady Maud and
-Lady Gladys to the festive scene. The course
-itself presented a lively and not uncomely scene,
-the brilliant beauty of the day adding a witchery
-to the homeliest objects. The dancing sunbeams
-gilded the tinker’s squalid tent and the rags of
-the beggar-boys who ran, clamorous for halfpence,
-after the horsemen cantering by. It was possible
-to forget the gathering of bookmakers and betting-men,
-now hoarsely shouting out their offers of a
-wager, possible to ignore the sordid greed that
-had prompted the attendance of so many, and to
-imagine what the scene may have been two hundred
-years ago, when races were a novelty, a mere
-trial of merit between swift and strong horses,
-minus the thousand and one degrading ingredients
-which now compose the saturnalia.</p>
-
-<p>Jasper, his gay silken jacket concealed by the
-loose white overcoat which he wore, elbowed his
-way through the crowd towards the place where,
-hard by the weighing-stand, the nineteen horses
-which were the practical residuum of the sixty-seven
-entries were being led to and fro.</p>
-
-<p>‘Have a care there! Do mind his heels!’ exclaimed
-the reedy voice of an attenuated being in
-drab gaiters and striped waistcoat, one of the three
-body-servants in attendance on the magnificent
-Smasher, as that superb animal began to lash out
-furiously amongst the mob.</p>
-
-<p>‘Grand horse that!’ said Captain Prodgers, as
-with impartial admiration he surveyed the formidable
-favourite. ‘See! what muscles those are
-that swell beneath a skin as bright and supple as
-a lady’s satin! Does “My Lord” credit.’</p>
-
-<p>‘My Lord,’ a vacuous young gentleman in a suit
-of black and white checks and a soft hat, stood a
-little way off, sucking the gold head of a short
-whipstock, and contemplating society in general,
-through his eyeglass, with a serene stare. Nobody
-could ever be quite certain whether this aristocratic
-patron of the turf was unfathomably deep or
-absurdly shallow. His Lordship was a man of few
-words, and never committed himself in public to
-an opinion wise or foolish.</p>
-
-<p>That ‘My Lord’s’ stud had a knack of winning
-was notorious. But then the laurels, such as they
-were, may have been due to the florid, well-shaven,
-middle-aged trainer, with a flower in his buttonhole,
-who stood at his Lordship’s elbow.</p>
-
-<p>The Smasher was a splendid black horse, over
-sixteen hands high, and very powerful. His glossy
-coat shone like a looking-glass; but that his
-temper was none of the best was evident, not only
-by the frequent scattering of the crowd, to avoid
-his iron-shod heels, but by the sidelong glance of
-his wicked eye and the irritable lashing of his
-silken tail.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_102"></a>{102}</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Shews the whites of them eyes of his, he do,
-this morning,’ remarked one appreciative groom.</p>
-
-<p>‘Bless ye! the captain won’t care,’ was the
-phlegmatic reply.</p>
-
-<p>‘Rather the captain had the riding of him then
-nor me,’ returned the other.</p>
-
-<p>The captain in question was not Jasper Denzil.
-It was Captain Hanger, pale and unimpassioned as
-ever, who now pressed up to speak for a moment
-with the owner and trainer of the horse he was to
-ride. As he stood, tapping his bright boots with
-his heavy whip, his gaudy silk jacket peeping from
-beneath the loose overcoat, he was the object of an
-inquisitive admiration that might well have been
-spent upon a worthier object. In certain circles,
-now, your gentleman steeplechase rider receives
-an amount of adulation singularly disproportioned
-to his utility to the commonweal. Of the well-known
-Captain Hanger, once in the army, then
-beggared, and now living by the deliberate risk of
-neck and bones, it was popularly believed that he
-would die in the exercise of his profession.</p>
-
-<p>‘I don’t see the mare!’ said Jasper, looking
-around.</p>
-
-<p>‘We’re keeping her quiet till the last minute,’
-whispered his friend. ‘No use in letting her chafe
-here, teased by sun and flies. There, though,
-is the bell for saddling; and here she comes.’</p>
-
-<p>And as Captain Prodgers spoke, a Homeric
-burst of laughter from the mob, peal upon peal,
-announced that something had tickled the fancy
-of the populace. That something was soon seen
-to be no other than Norah Creina, looking even
-uglier, as she was led into the inclosure, than she
-had done in the stable; a lengthy, clumsy, ungainly
-creature to look upon, and wearing a bridle of a
-peculiar and cumbrous construction, fitted with a
-muzzle and blinkers, and somewhat similar to that
-employed in horse-taming by the late Professor
-Rarey.</p>
-
-<p>‘There’s a beauty for you!’ cried out, in the
-midst of ironical cheers and merriment, a scoffer
-in drab gaiters.</p>
-
-<p>‘Take care of her, gentlemen—she bites!’
-bawled another voice; and there was tittering
-among the spectators in carriages and unrestrained
-guffaws amidst the populace.</p>
-
-<p>‘Do you mean, seriously, that the mare is to
-run in that hideous-looking contrivance?’ demanded
-Jasper sharply and with displeasure in
-his face, of his ally. ‘I’m not a mountebank, I
-suppose, that I should be made publicly ridiculous
-on the back of such a horse. A man might as
-well stand in the pillory as’——</p>
-
-<p>‘How many hundreds will be in your pocket,
-Denzil, and thousands in mine, what with bets
-and stakes, if Norah Creina comes in first?’ interrupted
-Prodgers earnestly. ‘Let those laugh that
-win. They are waiting for us yonder in the
-weighing-stand.’</p>
-
-<p>Of all the candidates for success who, seated in
-their saddles, took one by one their turn at the
-scales, the only two who attracted much attention
-were Jasper Denzil and Captain Hanger; the
-latter because he was to ride the favourite, the
-former because he had consented to exhibit himself
-on so very extraordinary an animal as Norah
-Creina.</p>
-
-<p>‘I’ve known a dark horse to win a race,’
-remarked one veteran, as he booked a trifling
-wager on the Irish mare.</p>
-
-<p>‘Not with a muzzle though, George!’ replied a
-contemporary, with twinkling eyes.</p>
-
-<p>The riders were all mounted now, and taking,
-some of them, the preliminary canter that is
-supposed to dissipate stiffness, and then the
-glistening line of gaily attired horsemen marshalled
-itself for the start. To the last moment
-Captain Prodgers, on foot, kept close to Jasper’s
-stirrup. ‘There’s the bell!’ cried Norah Creina’s
-owner at last. ‘Now bend your ear down, dear
-boy, and mark what I say.’</p>
-
-<p>And as Jasper stooped his head to listen, the
-other captain whispered to him cautiously but
-with emphasis. ‘Only if you’re hard pressed—but
-she may win without that,’ added Prodgers
-more loudly.</p>
-
-<p>Jasper’s suddenly compressed lips, arching
-brows, and dilated eyes told that the communication
-had taken even him by surprise.</p>
-
-<p>‘The curb-rein, eh?’ he said hoarsely.</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes; but only as a last expedient. Leave it
-slack as long as you can, and use the snaffle only;
-it’s as strong as a cable,’ called out Prodgers; and
-Jasper nodded, and cantered up to take his place
-among the rest.</p>
-
-<p>A waving to and fro of the many-coloured line,
-the dropping of a flag, a roar from the rabble,
-and they were off. It was like the effect produced
-by some gigantic rocket bursting into a galaxy of
-variously tinted spangles, pink, green, blue, and
-orange. Then most of these colours seemed to
-gather themselves together in a group, while
-Jasper’s yellow jacket and black cap, and Captain
-Hanger’s cherry colour and white, crept clear of
-the crowd.</p>
-
-<p>‘The Smasher’s third!’</p>
-
-<p>‘He’s second now. Green’s in front.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Ah! the captain’s a deal too wise to be first,
-so long as Green will make running for him.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, but look at the ugly long-backed Irish
-mare! The Smasher can’t shake her off, straight
-as he goes.’</p>
-
-<p>The leading horses had got by this time over
-two-thirds of the course—the first round only—and
-already the competitors were reduced to seven.
-Gallant Green was yet in front, riding hard, but
-his horse was much distressed; and as the second
-circuit of the course began, The Smasher, skilfully
-handled by Captain Hanger, shot past him
-with no apparent effort, and was for the moment
-first.</p>
-
-<p>‘My Lord’s usual luck! The race is safe!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Cherry and white wins!’ shouted hundreds.</p>
-
-<p>But then uprose another roar of, ‘Yellow,
-Yellow for ever!’ as the Irish mare, which had
-hitherto kept the third place, taking fence, wall,
-brook, and rail with lamb-like docility, suddenly
-quickened her pace, racing neck to neck, head to
-head, with the redoubtable Smasher.</p>
-
-<p>‘A pretty race! A fine sight! A sheet would
-cover both of them!’ was the general cry. The
-ladies in the carriages and on the stand waved
-their handkerchiefs enthusiastically, and of the
-lookers-on there were scores who forgot that their
-money was at stake, in genuine enjoyment of the
-struggle. On the rivals went. Together they
-flew across the brook, together they crashed
-through the hedges and fences in their way.
-Then, thanks to his own skill or to the excellence
-of his horse, Captain Hanger gained ground, and
-was in front as he prepared to ride at a stiff line<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_103"></a>{103}</span>
-of rails, the last serious obstacle, save one, to be
-encountered in the circuit.</p>
-
-<p>Then it was that Jasper tightened the curb-rein
-that he had hitherto left untouched, and the disfiguring
-blinkers dropped as if by magic from
-before Nora Creina’s eyes! The result was startling.
-With a snort and a scream, the fierce mare
-caught sight of her opponent in the act of gathering
-himself together for the leap; and with a
-bound such as a tigress might have given, she
-hurled herself upon him, striving—but owing to
-the muzzle, ineffectually—to tear the other horse
-with her teeth. There was a crashing of splintered
-timber, an outcry, a heavy fall, and both horses
-and both men were down amidst the wreck of the
-fence.</p>
-
-<p>Jasper, bareheaded and dizzy, was the first to
-stagger to his feet and regain his saddle. A
-hundred yards in front was the stone wall with
-its double ditch, the so-called ‘sensation jump’
-of the race, and which the Committee had taken
-it upon themselves to heighten for this exceptional
-contest. Beyond, there was the easy run home
-over smooth turf to the winning-post.</p>
-
-<p>‘Yellow! yellow! Yellow wins!’ shouted the
-crowd, as Jasper approached the wall; but then
-there was a quick thunder of hurrying hoofs upon
-the green-sward, and Captain Hanger swept past
-at whirlwind speed, while cries of ‘Cherry and
-white! The Smasher’s first!’ rent the air. Till
-that instant, the Irish mare had been going
-steadily; but now, on seeing her rival outstrip
-her rapid pace, her fiendish temper again kindled
-into flame, and with a shrill scream she darted
-forward. But Captain Hanger knew his art too
-well to be surprised for the second time. He had
-his own horse, sobered by the late fall, well in
-hand; whereas he saw that the savage animal
-which Jasper rode was completely freed from the
-control of her rider. By a quick and masterly
-motion of the rein, he wheeled off, eluding the
-shock that threatened him, and with a rare
-courage and coolness put The Smasher’s head
-straight for the wall. The gallant horse rose like
-a bird, topped the obstacle on which his hind-feet
-clattered, and recovering himself with an effort,
-galloped in, the winner, amid the deafening
-applause of thousands.</p>
-
-<p>Jasper was less fortunate. Panting, snorting
-with rage, in a lather of heat and foam, the furious
-mare he rode rose at the wall, struck it with her
-chest, breaking down the new masonry, and rolled
-over upon the turf beyond, bearing down beneath
-her weight the unfortunate rider. ‘A man killed!’
-It needed but that cry to make the mob utterly
-ungovernable; and in spite of the efforts of the
-police, gentle and simple, and those who were
-neither the one nor the other, hurried pell-mell
-to the spot where lay, beneath the broken wall,
-the hapless form of Jasper Denzil. ‘He’s alive!’
-cried fifty voices, with the oddest mingling of
-gratification and disappointment. ‘The rider’s
-living. It’s only the mare that’s dead,’ a verdict
-which turned out to be correct. Then a doctor,
-one out of the half-dozen of doctors on the course,
-jumped off the cob he rode and took possession
-of Jasper.</p>
-
-<p>‘He’ll get over it!’ cried the surgeon, feeling
-first the heart and then the wrist of the sufferer.
-‘If we had but a carriage now, to get him quietly
-to the inn.’</p>
-
-<p>Sir Gruntley Pigbury, whose barouche stood
-near, willingly lent it for such a purpose; and in
-it Jasper Denzil, under the doctor’s escort, was
-duly removed to the shelter of the <i>De Vere Arms</i>.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="OUR_PET_RAT">OUR PET RAT.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">An</span> obliging correspondent writes to us as follows:
-An article in the September number of <i>Chambers’s
-Journal</i> entitled ‘Poppet’s Pranks’ having afforded
-much amusement to our young people, it has
-occurred to me that a short account of one of our
-numerous pets might not be unacceptable, especially
-as we have often said in our own circle, that
-‘Billy’s doings ought to be immortalised in print.’</p>
-
-<p>We have always considered it an important
-element in the education of children that they
-should be taught to regard the brute creation with
-kindly feelings, and in our own family we have
-fostered the love of animals by encouraging them
-to keep pets; so at various periods, dogs, cats,
-birds, rabbits, guinea-pigs, &amp;c. have all in turn
-been domiciled with us; and I believe we also
-harboured for a time a hedgehog and a bat; but
-these last proving rather intractable, were soon
-restored to their native freedom.</p>
-
-<p>Those who have had experience in it, best
-know how interesting any living intelligence
-becomes, when one is brought closely in contact
-with it; and we elders, as well as the more
-juvenile members of our family, have found both
-pleasure and instruction in observing the habits
-and dispositions of the little creatures to whom
-we gave a kindly shelter. Among these, none
-ever excited more interest or stood higher in the
-family regards, than Billy our tame <i>rat</i>.</p>
-
-<p>It was in the winter of 1874–5 that a friend who
-was coming to spend Christmas with us, brought
-Billy as a new treasure for the children; and for
-some months he afforded us great amusement. He
-arrived in a cigar-box in which he usually slept,
-and on its being opened, he sprang instantly inside
-our friend’s waistcoat, from which safe retreat he
-ventured to peep out at the strange faces, which
-he seemed to regard with terror; and this habit he
-retained, for although he soon established friendly
-relations with us, he always darted behind the
-piano or sideboard on the entrance of a stranger;
-yet his little head with its bright bead-like eyes
-was sure to peep out presently, as if he wanted to
-satisfy his own curiosity without being himself
-observed.</p>
-
-<p>But here let me say, no one must suppose for an
-instant that Billy resembled the repulsive-looking
-rat of our farm-yards and ditches. He was of a
-much smaller size, not larger than a kitten of a
-month old, and very prettily spotted in brown and
-white; his eyes were very prominent, standing out
-like large black beads, and he was particularly
-nice in his toilet, washing just as a cat does, and
-keeping his coat always scrupulously clean.</p>
-
-<p>Yet I confess it was some time before I could
-regard him with equanimity: it was so hard to
-divest one’s self of the general prejudice against his
-race; and his receding under jaw gave an uncomfortable
-impression at first; so I used to shrink
-from him and gather up my skirts at his approach,
-although my son declared that if he had been
-introduced to me as a ‘rodent,’ I should have
-had no objection to him, and that it was merely
-the name of ‘rat’ which excited my aversion.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_104"></a>{104}</span></p>
-
-<p>However, be this as it may, Billy soon won his
-way to favour in spite of prejudice, and by his
-intelligence and good temper made himself a
-general favourite. He especially attached himself
-to my eldest daughter, and would come at the
-call of ‘Billy, Billy!’ from any of his hiding-places,
-except at night, when he seemed to be quite aware
-that he was wanted to go to bed (in the cigar-box
-before mentioned); and then it was often with
-great difficulty she could entice him from his
-lurking-place. Sometimes she would tempt him
-with a biscuit, and he would dart out, snatch it
-from her fingers, and dart again behind the sideboard
-before she could get hold of him.</p>
-
-<p>We did not usually see much of him in the
-morning, as he liked to conceal himself behind the
-heavy furniture. But at dinner-time he was sure
-to appear, and generally placed himself on my
-knee, where from time to time he was fed with
-small bits of bread and vegetables; and if I was not
-sufficiently attentive to his wants, he would pass
-over to one of the children’s plates, and watching
-his opportunity, would make a seizure, and dart
-with the stolen morsel to his storing-place; and
-this habit of storing was very curious, being
-evidently an instinct belonging to very different
-surroundings. In a room appropriated chiefly to
-the children there was an old sofa a good deal
-the worse for wear, as what sofa would not be
-that had been carriage, omnibus, or railway train
-to seven or eight youngsters successively? Under
-the pillow, the haircloth had given way, so Billy
-found a hole conveniently ready for him, and lost
-no time in appropriating it. Thither he carried
-many of his stores; and it was most amusing to
-watch him nibble a biscuit just like a squirrel,
-sitting back on his haunches and holding it neatly
-between his fore-paws; and then when he had had
-enough for immediate wants, he would spring with
-the remainder to this hole in the old sofa.</p>
-
-<p>But it was not only food he stored; he had a
-decided fancy for bright colours; and if bits of
-ribbon or coloured silk were left in his way, he
-would drag them along the floor, and then leap to
-the sofa with such celerity that it was almost
-impossible to deprive him of his booty. Once I
-looked up in time to see and seize one end of
-a blue necktie as Billy disappeared with the
-other behind the sofa pillow. He came up
-directly to see what detained it, and was very
-unwilling to give it up; so he pulled and I
-held, until finding that I was the stronger, he
-relinquished it, but with such impatient little
-squeaks! Yet neither then nor at any other time
-did he ever attempt to bite or shew any ill-temper
-towards any of us; though, like most pets, he had
-to bear a fair amount of well-meant teasing, which
-no kitten would have stood as well.</p>
-
-<p>I recollect one day watching him with much
-interest. He had found on the floor a large newspaper,
-which he seized by one corner and pulled
-towards the sofa, up which he made several vain
-attempts to leap with the paper in his mouth. He
-then dropped it, and jumped back and forwards
-several times, as if he was measuring his distance,
-or making calculations with an eye to future success.
-Then again catching hold of the paper, he
-tried to leap with it, but again he failed; so at last
-I took pity upon him, and tore one half of the
-paper away, when he was able to manage the
-remainder, and carry it off in triumph to his den.</p>
-
-<p>During the winter evenings, when the children
-were engaged with their lessons, Billy was usually
-to be found on the table rummaging among their
-books and catching at their pens; which latter
-amusement he enjoyed very much after the
-manner of a kitten running after a knitting-needle
-drawn quickly up and down the table; but
-as these amusements rather interfered with the
-studies, Billy would occasionally be dismissed to
-the kitchen, to which he had a great dislike. He
-never stayed there longer than he could help,
-but on the first chance would rush up the stairs
-and scratch, or rather I should say <i>gnaw</i> for
-admittance. Speaking of this gnawing, leads me
-to observe that one objection I had to receiving
-him, was the fear that he would be very mischievous;
-but fortunately I never found him so.
-He had free access to a pantry where a variety
-of eatables, usually considered dear to a rat’s
-heart, were to be found; but I never knew him to
-injure anything or even to cut the paper covering
-of any parcel, no matter what it contained. No
-doubt it was partly owing to his being so well
-fed that he was not driven to theft by hunger.
-I generally scattered for him on the shelves some
-grains of rice or pickles of starch, and to these
-he helped himself when inclined. From soap
-or candles he turned away in disgust, being far
-too well-bred a rat to indulge in such low tastes;
-but he dearly loved a bit of plum-cake; and, shall
-I confess it? he was by no means a teetotaler.
-If ale was used at dinner, he would rush eagerly
-about the glasses until he was supplied with some
-in a spoon. I believe, before he came to us,
-he had been accustomed to even stronger potations,
-in which, however, we did not indulge him.</p>
-
-<p>I have said he was not mischievous, neither was
-he, as mischief among rats is generally understood;
-but there is no rule without exception, and Billy
-had a decided penchant for kid gloves. If any
-were left carelessly about, he was sure to get hold
-of them and have the fingers eaten off in a few
-minutes. I cannot tell how many gloves he destroyed,
-until repeated lessons of this sort enforced
-more tidy habits.</p>
-
-<p>I must not omit to mention his love of music;
-when he heard the piano, he would rush to the
-drawing-room and spring to the performer’s knee,
-where he would remain perfectly quiet, evidently
-listening with much pleasure. When he first
-came he was very restless, seeming to live in a
-state of perpetual motion; but he soon learned
-to come upon the knee to be caressed and have his
-head rubbed, which operation afforded him
-intense enjoyment. He would have lain in a
-state of supreme delight for an hour if any one
-would have rubbed his head for so long.</p>
-
-<p>Very various were the opinions entertained of
-Billy by our friends. Some of our young visitors
-would ask to see him when they called, and with
-them he soon became familiar, and would run
-over their shoulders and about their necks quite
-freely; but others had a perfect horror of him;
-and I remember once, on going down to receive
-two ladies, I found one of them standing on the
-piano-stool in dread of his attacking her; and
-no declarations as to his perfect harmlessness were
-of any avail. Another time an old lady and gentleman
-were spending the evening with us, and
-knowing the latter to be of a very nervous temperament,
-I had given strict orders that Billy<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_105"></a>{105}</span>
-should be kept down-stairs. But Billy had no
-idea of losing his tea, and managing to escape from
-the servant who had him in charge, in he rushed,
-as soon as the door was opened, and made straight
-across the room, as usual for my knee. I gave him
-a bit of cake to keep him quiet, and covered him
-up with my handkerchief. ‘What’s that, what’s
-that?’ exclaimed the old gentleman anxiously.
-I replied as carelessly as I could: ‘Oh, it’s only
-a little pet of the children’s;’ and hoped no more
-notice would be taken; but presently our friend
-got up, and came round to where I sat just as
-Billy had finished his cake and put up his head
-for more. Never shall I forget his look of dismay
-as he exclaimed: ‘It’s a rat!’ while making
-hasty tracks for the door. However, we succeeded
-in allaying his fears; and Billy was allowed to
-run about freely, with only an occasional shudder
-from our friend if he approached him too closely.</p>
-
-<p>During the spring we had a lady staying with
-us who could not be reconciled to seeing a rat run
-about the house, and who repelled all friendly
-overtures on the part of our pet; so one morning,
-out of consideration for her, Billy was banished to
-another room whilst we were at breakfast; and lo!
-on going into the room afterwards, I found my
-friend’s ball of cotton cut into shreds, which were
-piled in a little heap on the floor. It really
-seemed as if he had done it from revenge, for
-though I had had knitting about repeatedly, he
-often rolled the balls on the carpet, but never
-injured them.</p>
-
-<p>While enough has been said, I think, to shew
-that Billy was a very interesting pet, candour compels
-me to admit that, like wiser and better folk,
-he had his faults; and I am sorry to say his besetting
-sin was jealousy. Although so thoroughly
-good-tempered with all the members of our family,
-he would not tolerate another pet in the house.
-He had not been long with us, when he killed a
-canary that had lighted on his back. At first,
-there were threats of summary vengeance; but on
-reflection, it was thought possible that he had been
-frightened by its sudden descent upon him, and had
-killed the bird in an impulse of self-defence; so
-it was decided to give him the benefit of this supposition,
-and he was forgiven and restored to
-favour.</p>
-
-<p>But when the midsummer holidays arrived, one
-of our boys brought home a handsome young
-retriever, whom it was evident from the first Billy
-regarded with no friendly eye. The children of
-course were much taken up with the fresh arrival;
-and I presume Billy felt himself neglected, and
-therefore lost no opportunity of revenging himself
-upon the new favourite. It was wonderful to see
-the courage of the little creature in venturing to
-attack an animal so much larger than himself. If
-the dog were lying quietly on the rug, he would
-spring on him, and then retreat so quickly that at
-first we did not know whether he had bitten him
-or not, as the dog would merely utter a low growl
-and retire. But one day at dinner, when our
-canine friend was being supplied with pieces
-which probably had formerly fallen to Billy’s
-share, our little pet was so enraged, that he rushed
-across the table and bit the dog on the mouth
-severely. From that time his doom was sealed;
-it was felt that either he or the dog must be
-dismissed, and the verdict was unanimous in
-favour of keeping the retriever; so Billy was tied
-up in his box and sent back to his former owner.
-Since then, we have occasionally heard of his
-welfare; and the last news concerning him was,
-that he had been taken into a garden, ‘but was
-evidently too much awed by the immensity of the
-universe to enjoy it.’</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_HIGHLAND_KEEPER">THE HIGHLAND KEEPER.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph3">IN TWO PARTS.</p>
-
-
-<h3>PART I.—INCHGARRY’S NARRATIVE.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Some</span> years ago, while upon a professional visit
-at the mansion of a well-known Highland gentleman,
-I was invited one morning by my host to
-inspect his famous kennel of staghounds. On
-that occasion, I remember well, my interest was
-curiously divided between the princely animals
-themselves and the magnificent specimen of humanity
-who acted as their custodian. Standing
-at least six feet, his finely proportioned, athletic
-figure was displayed to advantage by a well-made
-knickerbocker deer-stalking suit. His face was
-fair, full-bearded, and strikingly regular in its
-features. In the quick blue eyes gleamed the
-rapidly succeeding emotions of an intelligent,
-proud, sensitive nature. I observed that he
-usually addressed the chief by the name of the
-estate (a practice by no means uncommon in
-some parts of Scotland), and that the word
-‘sir’ was somewhat infrequent in his speech.
-There was nothing decidedly disrespectful or
-assumptive in his manner, yet it was quite
-unlike that of modern inferiors towards superiors
-generally. I had been so struck during our
-inspection of the kennels with his appearance and
-bearing, that on our return to Inchgarry Hall,
-I put several questions to my worthy host respecting
-him. The result of these was, that after
-informing me that the young fellow’s name was
-Donald Stewart, and that he was a native of
-Badenoch, he entered upon the following curious
-and instructive narrative of his first settlement
-at Inchgarry, and of the tragedy in which it
-eventuated; pointing out as he did so, with great
-frankness, the evils a landlord may create among
-his people by delegating too largely to an inferior
-the personal supervision of his interests.</p>
-
-<p>James Forbes, the son of one of the chief’s
-humblest dependants, had been reared upon the
-estate. Industry, a certain versatility of talent,
-and above all, an uncompromising yet judicious
-sycophancy, had together stood him in such good
-stead that, beginning his career as stable-boy,
-he had passed rapidly to assistant-gardener, head-gardener,
-and manager of the home-farm; until,
-at the time the events we are about to record took
-place, he was his master’s factotum, holding the
-position and title of sub-factor to the property.
-Residing for three parts of the year in London or
-abroad, Inchgarry necessarily gave him large
-powers in matters affecting his tenantry and
-servants; so that—the factorship proper being
-then in the hands of an estimable but old and
-infirm lawyer, with whom the wily Forbes had
-ingratiated himself—the authority of the latter
-was almost boundless. Like all sycophants, he
-was also a tyrant. The tenantry, who held their
-farms on long leases, and were practically part
-and parcel of the soil, escaped the oppression
-to which, under other circumstances, they might<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_106"></a>{106}</span>
-have been subjected. Nevertheless, Forbes contrived
-in many ways to harass and annoy all who
-in any way offended him. As for the immediate
-servants of the Hall and home-farm, the foresters
-and keepers, the labourers and handicraftsmen on
-the estate, his was to them strictly a reign of
-terror. None but those who chose to do so by
-abject flattery and toadyism dared hope to escape
-molestation.</p>
-
-<p>Among those trucklers to whom Forbes extended
-his patronage, was one John Sutherland—or Ian Dhu,
-as he was invariably styled—the
-idlest and most worthless character in the
-district. It would be difficult to conceive what
-bond could exist between this semi-pariah, poacher,
-and vagabond, and the chief’s confidential agent,
-did we not remember that men of the sub-factor’s
-stamp invariably make a henchman of
-some unscrupulous master of their own weapon—sycophancy.
-Ian Dhu had not only the skill to
-step into the good-will of Forbes by his fawning,
-but to establish himself therein by acting as spy
-and reporter upon all that was said and done upon
-the estate. Following no recognised employment,
-though ostensibly odd-man about his patron’s
-private grounds, he perverted his leisure by
-haunting the garden, workshops, bothies, the
-keepers’ houses, and the kitchen of the Hall itself,
-picking up scraps of information for the jealous
-ear of the sub-factor. He was, in fact, a necessity
-of the pernicious system of control which reigned;
-and he was, at the time our story commences, in
-the full light of favouritism.</p>
-
-<p>Inchgarry, my host, was a just, large-hearted, and
-clear-headed man; of rather an indolent disposition
-no doubt, but, when roused to interest, both
-prompt and strong-willed, brooking neither argument
-nor persuasion. His brief occasional visits to
-the Hall were always marked by some change in,
-or reversal of, his agent’s arrangements, as well
-as by some considerate extension of privileges
-to his ‘people.’ In one instance his wrath had
-been awakened by the neglected condition of his
-garden and kennels; the latter perhaps his dearest
-subject of pride. He spoke sharply and conclusively
-about these matters to Forbes, whose
-minions both the head-gardener and chief-keeper
-were. Ten days thereafter he announced that he
-had engaged a man from the Lothians to superintend
-his garden-grounds, and a gamekeeper from
-Badenoch to supplant the inefficient favourite;
-adding, however, with characteristic kindness, that
-the superseded men might remain, if they chose,
-as second-hands until they could better themselves.
-Forbes received the news of these innovations with
-outward deference and submission, but inward
-chagrin and rage. It was the beginning of the
-end, as it proved.</p>
-
-<p>Archie Guthrie, the new gardener, arrived first
-on the scene to form a nine days’ subject of comment
-to the simple population of Inchgarry; and a few
-weeks later Donald Stewart took possession of the
-roomy and comfortable keeper’s cottage so picturesquely
-situated by the loch side. He was accompanied
-by his sister, a few years his junior, who
-undertook to act as his housekeeper, and by a
-powerful-looking young serving-lass. Effie was as
-unlike her brother as well could be. She was
-<i>petite</i>, of slight frame, with small delicate features.
-Lithe, active, elfish, her dark hair and pale face,
-together with the general grace and rapidity of her
-movements, soon acquired for her the pretty
-sobriquet of <i>sheach</i> or fairy. Cheerful, even
-volatile, this singular creature had yet a depth of
-tenderness and sympathy so easily stirred, so
-sensitive and all-pervading, that nothing animate
-appeared to escape its influence. In character, then,
-as well as in appearance, she presented a marked
-contrast to her handsome, really good-hearted, but
-choleric and somewhat imperious brother. Yet
-never perhaps, the chief informed me, was brotherly
-and sisterly affection more complete and perfect
-than between these two. In a short time they
-had finished their new domestic arrangements, and
-passed through the usual ordeal of rustic criticism.
-Effie glided at once into the respect and confidence
-of every woman on the estate—a feat which the
-student of womankind will consider an all but
-impossible one. Her kind-heartedness and tact,
-doubtless, were the means towards such a result,
-aided as they were by the incessant and impartial
-distribution of favours, which her deft fingers and
-clever little head enabled her to do with an expenditure
-of nothing more than her redundant good-will
-and energy. The other sex became her slaves
-to a man. Every one within a radius of ten miles
-in that sparsely peopled district came under the
-spell of the <i>sheach</i>, and loved or admired her
-secretly or openly, platonically or otherwise, according
-to temperament or position. Inchgarry
-gave some most amusing instances of her sway:
-of stalwart Highlanders seized by the ear and
-marched off to perform some menial duty, or commanded
-to execute some commission for herself or
-neighbours. It was said that even Forbes himself,
-surly as he was, and imbittered from the
-first against her brother, could never disguise the
-pleasure which Effie’s presence gave him: probably
-the most harmless and respectable sentiment
-he ever entertained. He refused nothing
-<i>she</i> asked for herself or others, and did not hesitate
-to proclaim his high opinion of her disposition
-and character. I record this with pleasure as the
-one bright spot redeeming a dark and contemptible
-nature.</p>
-
-<p>Forbes and Stewart instinctively regarded each
-other as enemies from the first. Frank and open
-to a fault, the new keeper chafed under the reticence
-and duplicity of the sub-factor; and to every
-unreasonable command he returned a hot and indignant
-refusal; to every malicious word an angry,
-contemptuous retort. Thoroughly acquainted with
-his own duties, he would brook no interference;
-and to Forbes’s utter confusion, on one occasion,
-when that worthy had attempted to meddle in
-some matter affecting the dogs, he boldly threatened,
-in presence of several underlings, to report
-him to Inchgarry for obstructing his work. Before
-two months had passed, it was war to the knife
-between them. As was natural, the majority of
-the natives secretly rejoiced to find that the young
-stranger meant to beard the tyrant; while the great
-man’s favourites and the constitutionally envious
-nursed a bitter enmity against him as an interloper.
-The despotism was now broken up into two
-struggling factions; and the contest was a protracted
-and unhappy one.</p>
-
-<p>But more fierce and implacable even than Forbes’s
-hatred of the keeper was that conceived by his
-henchman, Ian Dhu. To the keenness of partisanship
-he added a violent personal animosity, which
-only ended with the tragic event hereafter detailed.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_107"></a>{107}</span>
-Ian had long been suspected of deer-poaching;
-but hitherto the friendship of the sub-factor had
-screened him from conviction if not from detection.
-At last Stewart caught him red-handed in
-the act of ‘gralloching’ a stag in one of the favourite
-‘passes’ of the forest. He reported the fact at
-once to Inchgarry, who, if not exactly claiming his
-ancestral power of ‘pit and gallows,’ reserved to
-himself the right of deciding whether or not any
-of his ‘people’ should be handed over to the civil
-authorities. His decision was a most merciful one—merely
-requiring Sutherland to surrender his
-gun to the keeper. The sentence nevertheless
-rankled with deadly purpose in his heart; and
-but for one singular circumstance, would doubtless
-have earlier taken the form of the terrible revenge
-he ultimately sought.</p>
-
-<p>That circumstance was his love for Effie
-Stewart. He too had been smitten by the
-<i>sheach’s</i> bewitching face and smile—smitten as
-only such dark, troublous natures can be smitten.
-His love was to him a terrible torture. The
-better thoughts which this new and powerful
-passion awakened, only goaded and stabbed, being
-too intermittent to subdue the darker passions
-which they illumined. From the moment he first
-saw Effie, a marked change came over him, or,
-more properly speaking, his idiosyncrasies became
-intensified. Always taciturn, he was now morose
-and brooding; his surliness became vehement
-irascibility, and his roving stealthy movements
-were now erratic and purposeless. He would hang
-for hours around the kennels, pass and repass the
-keeper’s cottage a dozen times a day, inventing
-trifling excuses for calling there, that he might
-look upon the girl whose unconscious influence
-had so strongly affected him. In her presence his
-misery was complete. He would crouch on a
-settle by the fireside, silent and burning with the
-unquenchable fire within him, his furtive impassioned
-glances following her every movement, as
-Effie flitted about the house. Whenever the little
-woman paused from her work, and with piquant,
-gracious vivacity addressed some pleasant remark
-to him, the heavy brows would unbend, and the
-dark eyes lift themselves to her face with a
-transient gleam of supreme pleasure, only to be
-averted again in increased gloom and depression.
-On those occasions when the young neighbours
-extemporised a merry-making at one or other of
-their houses, or, as was oftener the case, in the
-roomy cottage of the keeper, Ian Dhu’s torture
-was beyond description. There he was compelled
-to witness the object of his infatuation surrounded
-by a number of youths, many of whom he instinctively
-knew were fascinated by her. He listened
-entranced when she sung—but, then, other ears
-also drank in the sweet sounds; he watched the
-slight elfish figure move in the merry dance, but
-was she not observed with admiration by every
-one? First one and then another of the strapping
-young Highlanders became her partner, would
-hold her hands, clasp her waist, and whirl with her
-in the freedom of the old-fashioned reels; every
-incident adding a fresh torment to the jealous
-heart of Ian Dhu.</p>
-
-<p>Time went on, and Ian Dhu was thus fain to
-curb the rebellious desire for revenge upon
-Donald Stewart. The gratification of looking
-upon Effie was only possible under conditions
-which his revenge would entirely destroy. Like
-a hungry spaniel, he crouched and fawned when
-he would otherwise have snapped. He submitted
-to obey many overbearing behests of the
-haughty young keeper, to assist him about the
-croft or go on messages; and acted generally so as
-to gain Stewart’s tolerance, if not his confidence.
-These tactics were not unobserved by Forbes, who,
-however, satisfied of the genuineness of the hatred
-with which his henchman viewed Donald, for a
-time attributed them to crafty zeal in his own
-service.</p>
-
-<p>As for the sub-factor himself, time only increased
-his detestation of the keeper. Inchgarry was in
-London attending to his parliamentary duties;
-and Forbes did not neglect the opportunity of
-wreaking his malice in every possible way upon
-his proud-spirited subordinate. In his letters
-to the chief, the sub-factor conveyed many hints
-derogatory to Stewart, and succeeded to some
-extent in his unworthy purpose.</p>
-
-<p>The young man, who was not only conscious of
-his abilities, but enthusiastic in his desire to acquit
-himself creditably in all that concerned his craft,
-one morning received a cold sharp letter from
-Inchgarry, recounting a charge of permitting
-poaching in the forest, and commenting severely
-upon his negligence. The chief circumstantially
-stated that the interior portions of a deer had been
-found in a ‘pass’ through a certain hill, where
-it had been ‘gralloched.’ The astonishment of
-Stewart was for the moment fully equal to his
-chagrin. He had had that very pass carefully
-watched by the under-keepers, and especially by
-his favourite and friend, a young sandy-haired
-blue-eyed lad from Lochaber, whose surname of
-Grant had been familiarised, in Highland fashion,
-into ‘Grantoch’ on account of his popularity.
-After the first burst of angry surprise, Stewart
-sought Grantoch, who in his laconic way repudiated
-the possibility of the thing, and after a deliberate
-study of the subject, as he leant upon his gun,
-quietly delivered himself of his opinion. About
-ten days previous, he said, while cutting open
-a hind, which in accordance with orders he had
-shot for the dogs, Ian Dhu had been present.
-Chancing to return to the same place about half
-an hour later in search of the knife which he
-had dropped, he was not a little surprised to
-find the refuse portions removed; and was completely
-puzzled when he observed, by the traces
-of blood amongst the heather, that they had evidently
-been carried up the forest. He was certain
-now that Sutherland had, with the connivance of
-Forbes, taken this method of throwing suspicion
-of negligence upon Stewart. The head-keeper’s
-quick intelligence grasped the whole affair before
-Grantoch had finished. He directed his assistant
-to state the facts as they were, in a letter to the
-chief; and wrote himself a respectful but firm
-repudiation of the charge. The effect was this:
-Forbes received a freezing order from Inchgarry
-to turn Ian Dhu out of his service. Nothing
-further was said; no reflection made as to his
-possible complicity in a design to injure the
-keeper’s character.</p>
-
-<p>But the incident had rendered the sub-factor’s
-desire for revenge incontrollable. He goaded on
-his discharged henchman to be the instrument of
-wreaking their common hatred on the keeper.
-To his surprise, Ian Dhu was sullenly intractable.
-Forbes was at first furious, but incidentally learning<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_108"></a>{108}</span>
-the obstacle which existed in Sutherland’s
-passion for Effie Stewart, he resolved to use this
-as the very means of bringing him round to his
-purpose. He had heard, amongst other gossip,
-that Archie Guthrie’s attentions to the girl
-were received with favour. Ian was now completely
-under his control, and accident unfortunately
-favoured the factor in working upon his
-jealousy. Returning home from a visit to the
-post-town one evening in his dog-cart, Forbes
-observed, on a part of the road near Stewart’s
-cottage, the lovers standing together arm-in-arm,
-in the moonlight, evidently transacting a
-lengthened and agreeable parting for the night.
-Ian, whom he still sheltered, was waiting his arrival
-and assisted him to alight. With a malignance
-worthy of the worst part of his evil nature, he
-immediately despatched the unsuspecting Sutherland
-upon a message which should take him past
-the spot where Archie and Effie were standing.
-The effect was terrible. Ian Dhu on reaching the
-place discovered the pair in the act of embracing;
-staggering for a moment as if shot, he fled from
-the spot and disappeared, to return, after several
-weeks, to consummate the tragedy which forms
-the sequel of the tale.</p>
-
-
-<h3>PART II.—INCHGARRY’S NARRATIVE CONTINUED.</h3>
-
-<p>Three weeks elapsed, during which no one in
-Inchgarry had set eyes on Ian Dhu. The story of
-his love for the <i>sheach</i> was commonly known, and
-speculation was rife as to his proceedings since
-the night of his disappearance. This was set at
-rest one evening by his sudden appearance in the
-kitchen of the sub-factor’s house, lean and gaunt
-as a famished hound. His face was haggard and
-hunger-pinched, and a gleam very like insanity
-lit up the dark scowling eyes. His hair and
-beard were matted and tangled, and his clothes
-were soiled and rent. It was conjectured that
-he had spent the interval since his flight, in the
-fastnesses of the mountains—a prey to the throes
-of that passion which his powerful nature had
-conceived. What a picture might not imagination
-draw of the terrible human struggle
-enacted in those solitudes! Perhaps some such
-thought occurred to the frightened women-servants
-as Ian stood before them. At anyrate,
-they received him with silent sympathy, and
-invited him to take refreshment. It does seem
-strange that the revenge which succeeded his
-paroxysm of disappointed love should not first
-have been directed against the young gardener and
-his sweetheart. Various theories exist to account
-for this; one being that it really was his purpose
-to include them among his victims. My informant,
-however, held the very plausible opinion that Ian
-Dhu’s reason had given way under the great strain
-on his feelings, that his love was thereafter mercifully
-a blank to him, while the old grudge against
-Stewart had assumed unnatural proportions.</p>
-
-<p>Forbes had an interview that night in his own
-parlour with his quondam henchman as the
-investigation which afterwards took place proved;
-and it was late when Ian Dhu slunk from the
-house by the private door, carrying with him a
-gun, and was seen to disappear in the belt of firs
-that skirts the loch. It is mentioned, with that
-morbid zest for details which a tragedy never
-fails to excite, that only a few minutes previous
-to Ian’s plunging into the wood, Archie Guthrie
-and Effie Stewart (now formally betrothed) had
-passed the sub-factor’s house arm-in-arm. What
-would have been the consequences of a <i>rencontre</i>
-between the lovers and Black Sutherland is a
-favourite topic for surmise amongst the people of
-Inchgarry to this day.</p>
-
-<p>On the following morning, Grantoch, who had
-returned from his rounds, took his spy-glass from
-its case and directed it towards Bhein à B’huachaill.
-A fire in the heather on this hill had been reported
-earlier, and Stewart had gone to investigate the
-cause, telling Grantoch to follow him when his
-other duties should leave him at liberty. The burning
-of the heather in the month of July, and in the
-centre of the ‘forest’ ground, was a serious matter
-in the eyes of the keepers, driving the deer as it
-would, from a favourite haunt. Grantoch now
-desired to make out, if possible, in what direction
-Stewart had gone, that he might be able to join
-him by the shortest route. He brought the glass
-to bear on every part of the mountain, its wood-clad
-base, purple sides, gray scaurs, and shimmering
-water-courses—but without result; and was
-just about to close it, when his glance rested upon
-a human figure shewing on the near shoulder of
-Bhein à B’huachaill. His practised eye told him
-at once it was not Donald Stewart. He carefully
-scrutinised it for some minutes, until with startled
-surprise he recognised Ian Dhu creeping over the
-watershed, bearing a gun on his shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>Grantoch quietly shut his glass, returned it to
-its case, examined with professional caution the
-lock of his double-barrel to see that it was at half-cock,
-and started at a swinging trot for the foot of
-the hill. Its nearest point was only a mile and
-a half distant; but, convinced that Ian was on
-another poaching expedition, he resolved to get
-the assistance of a keeper whose cottage stood
-about a mile farther up the loch. Here he was
-agreeably surprised to find Stewart engaged in
-issuing some orders. The latter explained that he
-had come direct to the cottage to learn whether
-the under-keeper knew anything of the fire; and
-that he found he had visited the spot. It was
-merely a patch which had soon burned out of itself,
-and Stewart had therefore waited leisurely for
-his comrade’s appearance. He pricked up his ears,
-however, when Grantoch told him of Ian Dhu’s
-movements, at once suspecting him of having
-intentionally fired the heather. The thought
-brought his hasty temper to such a heat that he
-resolved at once to clear up the matter by giving
-chase to Ian Dhu.</p>
-
-<p>The trio took the route which Grantoch had seen
-Sutherland take, and their keen eyes kept them
-close on his track after it quitted the watershed.
-At length they came in full view of him as he
-now strode rapidly along the side of the hill.
-Their object was to detect him in the act of
-poaching, confident that Inchgarry would this
-time prosecute, and hopeful that the incendiarism
-would also be brought home to him. To avoid
-being observed in their turn, they now crouched
-along amongst the tall heather, till within a
-few hundred yards of where they had seen Ian
-Dhu last halt. Stewart then proposed to advance
-alone on all-fours to reconnoitre. As he thus
-cautiously approached the poacher, he observed
-that he had leapt into the dry channel of what is
-termed a winter stream, and was looking along<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_109"></a>{109}</span>
-the barrel of his weapon—a rifle—which he held
-resting on the bank at the opposite side of the
-channel to that on which Stewart now lay. Ian
-Dhu’s face was if possible more haggard and wild
-than ever, while the hand which grasped the rifle
-shook as if with ague or palsy. His glance was
-directed towards a spot some hundred yards distant,
-where the heather shewed blackened as if by
-recent fire. Now and again the maniac—for he
-had every appearance of being bereft of reason—would
-start up with an impatient cry and gesture,
-as though disappointed by the non-appearance of
-some object for which he waited. At last, in view
-of the puzzled and somewhat terrified keeper, he
-brought the rifle to his shoulder, and with steady
-deliberate aim, fired at an object unseen by the
-keeper. The echoes which the sharp report
-awakened were mingled with a piercing cry!</p>
-
-<p>Ian Dhu had not time to complete his attempted
-spring from the channel of the stream before
-his shoulder was seized in the strong grasp of
-Donald Stewart. He turned to face his captor;
-then with a scream of terror, which for the moment
-paralysed the stout-hearted keeper, tore himself
-free and dashed down the mountain like a hunted
-stag. Donald, with the two under-keepers, who
-had rapidly approached, watched him in silence as
-he sped from rock to rock. Pursuit was useless.
-Following him with their eyes as he disappeared
-and reappeared among the inequalities of the
-ground, they at last observed, with a thrill of
-horror, that he did not turn aside in his descent
-from a well-known point at which the hill sloped
-almost precipitously for several hundred feet.
-With blanched faces and upraised hands they saw
-Ian Dhu pause for a moment on the dangerous
-verge, and take the awful leap.</p>
-
-<p>The three keepers resolved at once to make a
-detour to the spot where he must have fallen,
-and for this purpose hastened down the shoulder
-of the hill. They had not proceeded far when
-Grantoch called the attention of the others to
-a groaning sound proceeding from some spot
-near them. Stewart believing it to be the dying
-moans of a wounded stag, answered his faithful
-comrade rather rudely and hurried on. His course
-happily took him to the very spot where the man,
-whom Ian Dhu’s last bullet had reached, lay bleeding
-and apparently dying. To the horror and
-amazement of all, it proved to be Forbes the sub-factor.
-Stewart, with a sensitiveness that did him
-credit, left the wounded man in the charge of
-Grantoch and their companion, and hurried off
-himself to procure assistance. With as much speed
-as the task would admit, he returned to the spot,
-leading a sure-footed pony, and on this, supported
-alternately by the keepers, Forbes was conveyed
-by easy stages to his own house.</p>
-
-<p>The wound proved mortal; but before his death
-he made a statement which threw light upon
-the mysterious events of that fatal morning.
-Along with Ian Dhu he had concocted a scheme
-for Stewart’s destruction. He it was who had
-instructed Sutherland to fire the heather, calculating
-shrewdly that the circumstance would
-unfailingly call the keeper to the spot, in all
-likelihood alone, his trusty assistant being fully
-employed at that early hour. Ian, lying in wait
-with Forbes’s rifle, was to have shot the head-keeper
-whenever he appeared on the scene. The
-explanation of his own unfortunate presence was
-extremely simple. When he believed the dark
-deed accomplished, he had become anxious to
-recover the rifle from Ian Dhu, seeing that, in
-the event of capture, its possession would open
-up a suspicious inquiry respecting his own share
-in the dastardly business. This motive sealed his
-own fate. The impatient and vengeful Ian
-had not paused to reckon the chances of a mistake,
-but had pressed the trigger the moment
-he saw a human figure moving through the high
-heather towards the scene of the fire. Stewart, so
-happily deterred from his first purpose of visiting
-the burning hill, thus escaped the doom intended
-for him.</p>
-
-<p>‘And what were the fortunes of the other characters
-in your sad story?’ I asked of the chief.</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh! You see that cottage over there with the
-sweet bit of garden in front, ornamented with
-rockeries and ferns? That is the home of Archie
-Guthrie and his wife, <i>née</i> Effie Stewart. The fairy
-scarcely deserves the name now, having lost much
-of her elfish slenderness and activity, but is after
-all, perhaps, a prettier heroine as the gardener’s
-wife, and less dangerous to my young male subjects.
-A coquette she certainly never was; but
-discreet and prudent to a rare degree. I am
-at a loss to divine <i>what</i> the source of her strange
-power was, but am thankful she is now Mrs
-Guthrie.’</p>
-
-<p>I laughed at the naïve remark.</p>
-
-<p>‘As for Stewart,’ continued Inchgarry, ‘he has
-married well—the daughter of one of my wealthiest
-tenants. Grantoch has got a chief charge on an
-estate in the West Highlands, taking with him
-the buxom servant whom Stewart brought from
-Badenoch. So you see they are all doing well.
-And for my own part, the revelations which were
-made at the time of the tragedy fully awakened
-me to the duty of weighing carefully the complaints
-of my “people,” and of charily guarding
-against too free an investiture of power over them
-to an ignorant, malicious, or interested servant. I
-spend more time here than formerly, and am
-gratified by the increased contentment and prosperity
-of those under my care. The story, you
-will now perceive, though sad, is not without its
-moral.’</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="BALLOON-TRAVELLING">BALLOON-TRAVELLING.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Aërial</span> navigation, the faculty of locomotion
-through the air, the power of soaring bird-like into
-the azure fields of space, has always been tantalisingly
-seductive to the human imagination. So
-engrossing is the theme, that although the subject
-has already been discussed from a scientific point
-of view in these pages, a few additional words
-about its more popular aspects may not be found
-uninteresting to our readers.</p>
-
-<p>Great, and, as it has proved, baseless anticipations
-were evoked by the advent of the first
-balloon. Aërostation was to disclose the secrets
-of the atmospheric world, and by enabling men to
-predict rains and droughts, secure by the proper
-cultivation of the soil abundant and excellent
-harvests. The unmanageable nature of the new
-invention was not taken into account at all, nor the
-fact, that although you might ascend into the air
-from any point you chose, no one could predict<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_110"></a>{110}</span>
-where or how you would descend. This charming
-uncertainty still attends aërial voyages; no means
-have yet been discovered of guiding the balloon in
-a horizontal direction; and it is always so much at
-the mercy of currents of air, that the course it will
-follow is a matter of chance, and not an affair of
-the aëronaut’s will or choice.</p>
-
-<p>Attempts have been made to press this unmanageable
-machine into the service of science,
-and with some success, although what has yet been
-done is little more than a suggestion of discoveries
-which may at some future time be practicable by
-its aid.</p>
-
-<p>In 1862 Mr Glaisher, author of a history of
-<i>Travels in the Air</i>, made a series of ascents from
-Wolverhampton, in order to verify a number of
-scientific observations; the results of which are
-contained in the annals of the British Association.
-A new balloon was provided for him, which was
-not made of silk, but of American cloth, a stronger
-and more serviceable material, and in this aërial
-machine he encountered sundry mishaps and misadventures,
-on two occasions narrowly escaping
-with his life.</p>
-
-<p>Its very danger lends to balloon-travelling a
-sense of conscious adventure, of thrilling excitement,
-peculiarly its own. Added to this, the cloud-scenery
-through which the aëronaut glides is not
-only novel, but is often, especially at sunrise and
-sunset, most gorgeously beautiful; while the earth
-beneath, which seems to have motion transferred
-to it, presents as it hurries past, a charming
-and varied panorama. Woods and rivers, hamlets
-and towns, hills and valleys, and wide-spreading
-downs, succeed each other in rapid succession.
-From the immense height, all idea of the comparative
-altitude of objects is lost; great cities
-appear like small models of towns, and the biggest
-man-of-war looks like a boy’s toy ship. Morning
-up in cloudland is a gloriously radiant spectacle.
-The balloon floats out of darkness into
-a world of shadowy mountain ranges, colourless
-and unsubstantial at first, but borrowing from the
-rising sun the softest, tenderest hues of roseate pink
-and warmest crimson, glowing and blending and
-fading away at last into a mellow flood of amber
-gold.</p>
-
-<p>In France, for some time after their invention,
-balloons were quite the rage, the first made for
-scientific purposes being that of July 1803, and
-which was followed by several others having
-for their object the solution of many physical
-problems, not a few of which remain problems
-still. In 1850 two ascents were made for the
-purpose of investigating certain atmospheric phenomena.
-One especially of these aërial voyages
-was in the last degree unfortunate. Scarcely had
-the two philosophers MM. Barral and Bixio taken
-their seats, than they made the unpleasant discovery
-that their balloon was not in good working
-order; and while they were hesitating about what
-should be done in the circumstances, a violent gust
-of wind settled the question for them, and the
-balloon, blown from the earth, shot into the air
-with the velocity of an arrow. Becoming rapidly
-inflated, the machine then bulged out at top and
-bottom, covering the car like a hood, and enveloping
-the unfortunate aëronauts in total darkness.
-‘Their position was most critical; and when one of
-them endeavoured to secure the valve-rope, a rent
-was made in the lower part of the balloon, and the
-hydrogen gas with which it was inflated escaping
-close to their faces suffocated both of them, causing
-a momentary exhaustion, followed by nausea and
-violent vomiting.’</p>
-
-<p>In this helpless condition they discovered that
-they were descending rapidly; and on groping
-about for the cause they found that the balloon
-was split open in the middle, and that there was a
-rent in it two yards long. This was a cruel predicament
-in which to find themselves thirty thousand
-feet up in the air, and very naturally they
-abandoned all hope of life, although, like wise
-men, they did all in their power to preserve it.
-To lessen the downward velocity of the balloon
-they threw overboard all their ballast, then article
-after article of their raiment even to their fur
-coats, preserving only their instruments, with
-which they at last descended in safety in a vineyard
-near Lagny.</p>
-
-<p>The motion in a balloon is scarcely perceptible.
-You are not conscious of rising; but the earth
-appears to recede from you, and to advance to
-meet you during a descent. In the higher regions
-of the air, the intense solitude of the cloud-scape
-has something in it awful and oppressive, as if
-the world were left behind for ever, and the aëronaut
-were about to launch chance-driven into the
-vast infinitude of shadowland. Amid these altitudes,
-if any sound is made by the aëronaut, it is
-echoed back in ghostly tones by the vast envelope
-of the balloon, which as it floats casts a shadow
-sometimes black and sometimes white; but which
-is usually surrounded by an aureole or halo more
-or less distinctly marked.</p>
-
-<p>In throwing out ballast or any small article
-from a balloon, a certain degree of caution is
-requisite, as a bottle or any similar object falls
-with such velocity that if it were to strike the roof
-of a cottage it would go right through it. We
-are told that Gay-Lussac, in an ascent in 1804,
-threw out a common deal chair from the height of
-23,000 feet. It fell beside a country girl who was
-tending some sheep in a field, and as the balloon
-was invisible, she concluded—and so did wiser
-heads than hers—that the chair had fallen straight
-down from heaven, a gift of the Virgin to her
-faithful followers. No one was sceptical enough
-to deny it, for there was the chair, or rather its
-remains. The most the incredulous could venture
-to do was to criticise the coarse workmanship of
-the miraculous seat, and they were busy carping
-and fault-finding with the celestial upholstery,
-when an account of M. Gay-Lussac’s aërial voyage
-was published, and extinguished at once the discussion
-and the miracle.</p>
-
-<p>In 1868 M. Tissandier and a professional
-aëronaut made a voyage over the North Sea in a
-balloon called the Neptune. The machine made<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_111"></a>{111}</span>
-a splendid ascent, and was soon floating in mid air
-buoyant as a feather at the height of four thousand
-feet, bound, as the aëronauts fondly hoped,
-for the coast of England. But in this they soon
-found that they had counted without their host;
-the Neptune, impelled by the wind, was soaring
-away in the direction of the middle of the German
-Ocean. This most inauspicious goal struck terror
-for a few moments into their ardent souls; but
-they were soon reassured by observing that the
-wind in the atmospheric regions below them was
-setting towards the shore, and that by sinking into
-this lower current of air they could return whenever
-they chose. Thus yielding to the current of
-their fate, they allowed themselves to be carried
-out to sea, floating like gossamer into the very
-heart of cloudland. Gorgeous scenes, more splendid,
-more airy, more delicate than the most glowing
-visions of the Arabian Nights, rose around them.
-It was like the enchantment of a vivid dream.
-They took no note of time; every sense was
-absorbed in that of vision; they even forgot to be
-hungry, but gazed, and gazed, and gazed again
-upon the wide waste of waters that spread beneath
-them, glowing like one vast molten emerald;
-its glories half seen, half hid by the multitude of
-cloud mountains and valleys that rose fluctuating
-and fantastic on every side, fair with luminous
-half-lights, delicately lovely with pearly iridescence
-shading into silvery gray. Thus hovering miles
-above the world and its commonplace cares, they
-enjoyed an interval of transcendent delight, rudely
-broken in upon by the professional aëronaut, a
-creature of appetite, who pulled the valve-rope
-unbidden, thus causing them to descend from
-their cloudy paradise into the grosser atmosphere
-that immediately surrounds the earth, where
-they at length bethought themselves—of lunch.
-In spite of thick thronging poetic fancies and
-transcendental raptures, they made a very tolerable
-repast, M. Tissandier finishing his portion
-of the fowl by tossing a well-picked drumstick
-overboard. For this imprudence the professional
-was down upon him immediately. ‘Do
-you not know,’ quoth he, ‘that to throw out
-ballast without orders is a very serious crime in a
-balloon?’ M. Tissandier was at first inclined to
-argue the point; but on consulting the sensitive
-barometer he was fain to admit that in consequence
-of the disappearance of the chicken-bone, the
-Neptune had made an upward bound of between
-twenty and thirty yards. Very fine calculation—if
-true.</p>
-
-<p>Luncheon satisfactorily over, they again soared
-upward out of sight and sound of earth, and soon
-found themselves once more in their cloudy
-Elysium, but with a change; mist and fog hemmed
-them round instead of the breeze and sunshine,
-but did not make them less happy. The Neptune
-was to them a little Goshen, a lonely floating
-temple of peace, dedicated to contentment and
-ease. The serenity of their souls was depicted in
-their faces. Tranquil and easy, they took no
-thought of the morrow, no, nor of the next hour,
-when suddenly there broke upon their ears, like a
-faint far-distant murmur, a sound subdued, monotonous,
-and yet terrible. Was it the voices of the
-spheres? No, gentle reader; it was a strain more
-awful still—it was the voice of the sea. In a
-moment the listless ease, the sweet do-nothingness
-of those idlers in cloudland was gone, clean washed
-away by the swish and swell of that intrusive
-ocean, which stretched beneath them, painted by
-the sunset with a thousand glowing tints of
-beauty, which they had neither leisure nor tranquillity
-to admire. Fortunately the wind was
-setting inshore; and amid the fast falling shades of
-night, the anxious aëronauts were fortunate enough
-to descry a cape crowned with a lighthouse. Every
-nerve was strained to reach it; and after a few
-moments of intense anxiety and effort, the anchor
-was let go. It caught in a sandhill, and the
-Neptune once more moored to earth, rolled over on
-its side, and was after some difficulty secured.</p>
-
-<p>The spot where they landed was curiously
-enough only a few yards from the reef of rocks
-where the first aëronaut, Pilatre de Rosier, was
-dashed to pieces in 1785.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes, like other bubbles, the balloon
-bursts; and when this little accident happens, say
-four thousand feet up in the air, it is of course
-attended with unpleasant and inconvenient consequences,
-as was the experience of MM. Fonvielle
-and Tissandier, who with a party of nine made
-an ascent in a veteran balloon called ‘the Giant.’
-Merry as larks they soared into the air, keenly
-enjoying the beauty of the day, the novelty of the
-pastime, the sense of liberty, of entire freedom
-from all wonted conventionalisms or accustomed
-restraints. Then with what a keen school-boy
-edge of appetite they fell upon their chicken,
-which seems the appropriate food for balloons,
-eaten from newspapers, which served as plates,
-and washed down with soda-water and Bordeaux.
-Champagne was inadmissible; an unruly cork
-might have popped unawares through the silken
-tissues of the envelope, and thus hastened
-a catastrophe. But let us not anticipate. The
-banquet was over, the board, that is to say the
-newspapers were cleared, and ‘the feast of reason
-and the flow of soul’ had begun. All was bright
-airy genial cordiality and mirth, when suddenly
-the attention of the travellers was attracted to a
-white smoke issuing from the sides of the balloon.
-Whence came this ominous mist, this preternatural
-cloud, that began to enshroud them? One reckless
-youth said: ‘It is the Giant smoking his pipe.’
-And so it was with a vengeance! Then followed
-a few terrible moments, in which each after his
-own fashion bade the world farewell, and found it
-marvellous hard to do so. The clouds, the sky, the
-pleasant sunlight, was that their last look at each?
-It seemed so; but while they were still shivering
-dizzy and aghast upon that awful threshold, the
-balloon fell, and strange to relate, fell safely, and
-they were saved.</p>
-
-<p>A few days afterwards Monsieur Tissandier made
-another ascent in the Neptune with Monsieur de
-Fonvielle, and they were busily engaged conducting
-some scientific experiments when a sharp crack
-like a sudden quick peal of thunder fell upon their
-astounded ears, and the professional aëronaut
-exclaimed in a loud startled voice: ‘The balloon
-has burst!’ What followed, we give in Monsieur
-Tissandier’s own words: ‘It was too true; the
-Neptune’s side was torn open and transformed
-suddenly into a bundle of shreds, flattening down
-upon the opposite half. Its appearance was now
-that of a disc surrounded with a fringe! We
-came to the ground immediately. The shock was
-awful. The aëronaut disappeared. I leaped into
-the hoop, which at that instant fell upon me,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_112"></a>{112}</span>
-together with the remains of the balloon and all
-the contents of the car. All was darkness. I felt
-myself rolled along the ground, and wondered if I
-had lost my sight, or if we were buried in some
-hole or cavern. An instant of quiet ensued, and
-then the loud voice of the aëronaut was heard
-exclaiming: “Now come all of you from under
-there.”’ And one after another they emerged
-unhurt into the sunshine, in time to bid farewell
-to a few fragments of the balloon which were
-floating away upon the rising wind.</p>
-
-<p>Such experiences must as a rule be trying to the
-nerves of most people, and we must be so plain as
-say that travelling by balloon is at best an act of
-extreme danger and temerity. In order to utilise
-balloons, it is evident that some sure means of
-guiding them must be invented; and this discovery
-or anything approaching to it has yet to
-be made. In fact, a balloon is still, after about a
-hundred years’ experience, little better than a toy.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="LIGHTNING-CONDUCTORS">LIGHTNING-CONDUCTORS.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Many</span> of our readers may have wondered why tall
-buildings such as church steeples and factory
-chimneys are provided with thin rods of iron
-running down their sides; and may have been at
-a loss to understand their meaning. Their use is
-to conduct lightning harmlessly to the ground
-during thunder-storms. We have, however, had
-warnings enough that a bad lightning-conductor
-is worse, as regards the security of the building
-it is supposed to protect, than none at all. Unless
-the electrical connection with the earth be perfect,
-the conductor may invite the very danger which it
-ought to turn aside. Rusted chains, imperfect
-fittings, and the absence of a sufficient thickness
-of untarnished metal, are responsible for much
-mischief. Lightning, properly dealt with, is
-robbed of much of its terrific power; but when
-its natural path is blocked, and its swift circuit
-interrupted, it inevitably rends and tears and
-burns, scathing and scattering all substances before
-its resistless might.</p>
-
-<p>Franklin meant the lightning-conductors which
-he invented to consist of iron alone. Iron, however,
-has too strong an affinity for oxygen to allow
-of this. All moisture, and all heat, corrode it
-more or less; and thus grew up the custom of
-pointing the conductors with copper, and in some
-cases with costly platinum, soldered to the iron
-rod. But exposure to weather, and the weak
-galvanic currents which unavoidably set in where
-metal of one sort is in contact with metal
-of another sort, cause rapid decomposition at the
-joint, and encourage the rust to eat into the substance
-of the rod. A heavy flash will melt or
-cripple a conductor thus imperfect, and then woe
-to the structure! This defect can now be cured
-by coating the iron rod completely with nickel,
-a metal which defies rust, and which conducts
-electricity better than the pure iron does. Bars
-and rods of this nickelised iron have been kept
-under water for several days without tarnishing,
-and resist the effects of the most powerful battery
-of Leyden jars.</p>
-
-<p>It had been believed, until lately, that platinum
-was a metal with which no rogue, however
-dexterous, could tamper. The platinum coinage of
-the Russia of thirty years since was considered
-un-imitable by the manufacturers of false money;
-while the capsules, crucibles, and other apparatus
-required by scientific men were sold according to
-the high market value of what is really a precious
-metal. Unluckily, fraud has been found possible
-even in this case. The Director of the Royal
-Italian Observatory on Vesuvius, M. de Luca, surprised
-at finding first one and then another of
-the platinum points of his conductors melted by
-the effect of lightning, made a careful investigation,
-and discovered that the platinum had been
-adulterated with from ten to twelve per cent. of
-lead, and thus rendered fusible. Platinum thus
-mixed with an inferior metal can be identified by
-its lesser density, or more easily by the blowpipe,
-before which a tell-tale green flame will reveal
-the presence of the lead. Such a mixture would
-render the hitherto resisting platinum absolutely
-worthless in the laboratory.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="A_SPRING_BOUQUET">A SPRING BOUQUET.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0"><span class="smcap">Rails</span> the rude Wind-king through the surging sea</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Of swaying boughs, that bending to the blast</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Their countless arms, with murmurous rustling wave,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">In wood and forest; and the hedgerows burst</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Into the tender greenery of Spring.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Now shew the clumps of golden crocuses</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Their crowns above the freshly scented mould;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And quavering bells of snowdrops glimmer white,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">In roadside garden; purple violets</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Lurk mid their green leaves, heavy-eyed with dew,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Their fragrant perfume scattering on the Dawn.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">The polyanthus in her velvet robe—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Yellow and russet—nestles by the side</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Of proud auricula; the splendid stars</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Of periwinkle—palest lavender—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Gleam from the ivied bank; ranunculus</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">All-stately queens it o’er her satellites,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The yellow daffodils; Narcissus scents,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">With his frankincense sweet, the keen March air,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">A flower of peerless beauty.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent30">Wall-flowers shew</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">From bed and border, their brown-orange blooms;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And under them lingereth a vestal pure,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The last pale primrose. All the pear-trees bend</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Beneath their flower-snow; the almonds blush</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">With roseate bloom; the young year’s minstrel sweet—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The mellow thrush—his liquid carol pours</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">From the old blackthorn.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent26">Nature is astir;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">She wakes rejoicing from her Winter sleep,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And with a thousand voices welcomes Spring!</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p>The Conductors of <span class="smcap">Chambers’s Journal</span> beg to direct
-the attention of <span class="smcap">Contributors</span> to the following notice:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>1st.</i> All communications should be addressed to the
-‘Editor, 339 High Street, Edinburgh.’</p>
-
-<p><i>2d.</i> To insure the return of papers that may prove
-ineligible, postage-stamps should in every case accompany
-them.</p>
-
-<p><i>3d.</i> <span class="smcap">Manuscripts</span> should bear the author’s full <i>Christian</i>
-name, surname, and address, legibly written.</p>
-
-<p><i>4th.</i> MS. should be written on one side of the leaf only.</p>
-
-<p><i>5th.</i> Poetical offerings should be accompanied by an
-envelope, stamped and directed.</p></div>
-
-<p><i>Unless Contributors comply with the above rules, the
-Editor cannot undertake to return ineligible papers.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center">Printed and Published by <span class="smcap">W. &amp; R. Chambers</span>, 47 Paternoster
-Row, <span class="smcap">London</span>, and 339 High Street, <span class="smcap">Edinburgh</span>.</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center"><i>All Rights Reserved.</i></p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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