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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.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #65795 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/65795)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Chambers's Journal of Popular Literature,
-Science, and Art, Fifth Series, No. 24, Vol. I, June 14, 1884, by Various
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Chambers's Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art,
- Fifth Series, No. 24, Vol. I, June 14, 1884
-
-Editor: Various
-
-Release Date: July 8, 2021 [eBook #65795]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Susan Skinner, Eric Hutton and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by The Internet
- Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHAMBERS'S JOURNAL OF POPULAR
-LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART, FIFTH SERIES, NO. 24, VOL. I, JUNE 14,
-1884 ***
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration:
-
-CHAMBERS’S JOURNAL
-
-OF
-
-POPULAR
-
-LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART
-
-Fifth Series
-
-ESTABLISHED BY WILLIAM AND ROBERT CHAMBERS, 1832
-
-CONDUCTED BY R. CHAMBERS (SECUNDUS)
-
-NO. 24.—VOL. I. SATURDAY, JUNE 14, 1884. PRICE 1½_d._]
-
-
-
-
-ST MARGUERITE AND ST HONORÂT.
-
-THE HOLY ISLES OF THE MEDITERRANEAN.
-
-
-A melancholy interest is lent just now to the name of St Marguerite
-by the fact that the last public act of the lamented Duke of Albany
-was to sign a petition protesting against the sale of that island.
-The thrilling tale of ‘the man with the iron mask,’ which used to be
-a favourite in school-books, has since our childish days enveloped
-the little island for us in a halo of mystery and awe. St Marguerite
-and its companion island of St Honorât lie, like twin gems of ocean,
-in the Golfe de Frejus, and form a romantic point in the seaward view
-from Cannes; and among all the excursions which can be made from
-that delightful centre, none is more charming than a sail to the
-islands. Tradition tells us that they were first colonised by a noble
-young knight from the land of the Gauls, who in the early ages of
-Christianity embraced its tenets, and with a chosen band of friends,
-sought a retreat from the sinful world in this distant islet. He had
-one sister, the fair Marguerite, who loved him as her very life, and
-who was so inconsolable for his loss, that she followed him to his
-retreat in the southern sea. As Honorât and his brother-ascetics had
-vowed themselves to solitude, he could not allow his sister to take up
-her abode with him; but in compliance with her urgent desires, found
-a home for her in the neighbouring island, now known by her name of
-Marguerite. Yet this was only granted on the condition that he should
-never see her but when the almond tree should blossom. The time of
-waiting was very dreary to the lonely Marguerite, and with sighings and
-tears she assailed all the saints, till the almond tree miraculously
-blossomed once a month, and her poor heart was made glad by the sight
-of her beloved brother!
-
-A little coasting-steamer plies daily between Cannes and the islands;
-and passengers land at a little pier near the fortress, which is
-built on steep cliffs at the eastern extremity of the island. Like
-the old castles of Edinburgh and Stirling, it is in itself no very
-imposing building, and owes its strength and its romantic air solely
-to the rocky cliffs on which it is perched, and to the interesting
-associations which cluster around it.
-
-It was a lovely day in April, like one of our most delicious midsummer
-days, that we went with some French friends to visit the islands. The
-water of the Mediterranean is so limpid that we could look down through
-fathoms of it to the sand and see the shells and seaweed. It is of such
-a true sapphire blue, that surely Tennyson must have had memories of it
-and not of the gray North Sea when he spoke of the
-
- Shining, sapphire spangled marriage ring of the land.
-
-The view of the coast, looking backwards, as the boat nears St
-Marguerite, is splendid: Cannes basking in the sweet sunshine, lying in
-a white semicircle around the bay, and climbing up the hills behind,
-with the gray olive groves making a silvery haze to tone down the
-brilliant colours. In the distance, the dazzling white peaks of the
-Maritime Alps form a noble background; while the picture is bounded
-on the west by the sierra-like range of the Esterel Hills, painted
-against the skyline in vivid blues and purples. Landing at the little
-stone pier, we went up the causewayed road to the fort, which, with
-its whitewashed walls and red-tiled roof, is built around a wide stone
-court. Here we found the guide waiting, an old _cantinière_, very
-ugly, but proportionately loud and eloquent—a very different being
-from the pretty _vivandière_ of comic operas. She carried us along a
-narrow passage to the dungeon where the unhappy ‘Masque de fer’ spent
-fourteen long years of hopeless confinement. It is closed by double
-doors of iron; the walls are of great thickness; and four rows of
-grating protect the little window. From this cell the prisoner was
-sometimes permitted egress to walk along the narrow corridor, at the
-end of which is a niche in the wall, which in his time held a sacred
-image. The ‘Masque de fer’ was never seen without his iron veil, even
-by the governor of the prison; it was so curiously fitted as to permit
-of his eating with ease. He was treated with all the deference due
-to a royal personage; all the dishes and appurtenances of his table
-were of silver; the governor waited on him personally; but one day
-the prisoner succeeded in eluding his vigilance so far as to write an
-appeal for help on a silver plate and throw it over the precipice on
-which this part of the fortress stands. As the well-known story tells,
-a fisherman found it, and brought it at once to the governor, who
-turned pale and trembled on reading what was scratched thereon. ‘Can
-you read, my friend?’ he said. ‘No,’ answered the fisherman. ‘Thank God
-for that, for you should have paid for your knowledge with your life!’
-He dismissed him with the gift of a gold-piece, and the caution to
-preserve a prudent silence as to what had passed.
-
-When the governor communicated the attempt to headquarters in Paris,
-orders came for the prisoner to be removed to the Bastile. After some
-years of close confinement, he died there, and was buried in his mask;
-and the governor of the Bastile, who knew the secret of his august
-prisoner’s name, died without divulging it. And thus ended the tale in
-the old school-books: ‘The identity of the “Masque de fer” must remain
-for ever a mystery.’ But it was no mystery to our old _vivandière_, or
-indeed to any of the French people who were listening to the story of
-his woes; for, in surprise at our ignorance, they all exclaimed: ‘Don’t
-you know that he was the _frère aîné_ [elder brother] of Louis XIV.?’
-He was considered too weak in mind to govern France, and was therefore
-always kept in seclusion, till an attempt which was made to bring him
-forward was the cause of his being condemned to the life-long prison
-and the iron mask.
-
-A very queer old gilded seat like an old Roman curule chair is shown in
-the chapel as that used by the ‘Masque de fer.’
-
-To this fortress, also, Marshal Bazaine was sent as a prisoner, after
-what the French call his ‘betrayal of Metz.’ The places where he and
-his family—who were permitted to follow him to the island—used to sit
-in the tiny chapel were pointed out to us; also the terrace-walk where
-he was allowed to promenade, unguarded, in the evenings; and the rock
-down which he escaped, by means of a rope-ladder, to the little boat
-which his wife had arranged to be in waiting below. Of course, it is
-said that Macmahon connived at his escape, not wishing his old comrade
-to be tried by a court-martial, which he knew would inevitably condemn
-him. He sent him to a sham imprisonment in this pleasant island, till
-the first wild wrath of the people of France against him had cooled
-down. A Frenchman told us that he now lives at ease in Spain, having
-saved his fortune from the wreck, but _tout déshonoré_ in the eyes of
-France!
-
-From St Marguerite we crossed in less than half an hour to the smaller
-island of St Honorât, now the property of the Cistercian order of
-monks. The shore is fringed with the beautiful stone-pines which are so
-conspicuous on the Riviera and in some parts of Italy. The first object
-which strikes one on landing is a large new archway, made probably
-as the gateway for a future avenue; behind it, at some distance, lie
-the church and monastery. On a promontory at the western end of the
-island stands an old ruined monastery of the thirteenth century. It
-is very like the style of architecture of some of the old castles in
-Scotland. There is a fine triforium in it with Gothic arches. In the
-refectory we saw on a raised platform at the side the arch for the
-lectern, from which it was the duty of a monk to read to his brethren
-while at their meals. The view from the tower is magnificent: the deep
-blue sea stretches to the southern horizon; the snowy line of the Alpes
-Maritimes bounds the northern; on the right, the white waves break in
-feathery foam on the Cap d’Antibes; while the purple Esterels, with the
-jagged summit of Mont Vinaigrier, lie to the left; and Cannes, with
-its picturesque old town on the hill of Mont Chevalier, and its modern
-wings spreading far and wide, fills up the middle distance. Since the
-young St Honorât sought a retreat here from the world in the fifth
-century, this island has been usually held by monks, although it was
-often ravaged by the Saracens. The ruins of the oldest monastery are
-within the present cloisters. At a little booth outside the monastic
-walls we found an English monk, who was deputed to sell photographs
-of the island and the ruins, and to make himself agreeable to the
-visitors. He told us that he had been in the Grande Chartreuse, near
-Grenoble; but as his health was not strong enough to bear the keen
-air on those rocky heights, he had been sent to spend the winter in
-this convent of the sunny south. In his youth he had been stationed in
-Edinburgh, and was much interested in speaking of it and hearing of the
-changes which had taken place there.
-
-During the past century, St Honorât’s isle has passed through
-strange phases. First of all, a Parisian _comédienne_ bought it,
-meaning to build a summer villa there; then tiring of it, she sold
-it to a Protestant clergyman. When it came again into the market,
-the Cistercians bought it, built the new monastery, and settled a
-congregation of their order in it. The Cistercian rule is not so severe
-as that of the Trappists, but still, they are not allowed to speak
-except during the hours of recreation and on Sunday. The lay brother
-who showed us round told us he had a dispensation to speak, as he was
-told off to the post of cicerone for that day. He said it was a very
-happy life, as tranquil and blessed as in Paradise; and truly his
-face beamed with heavenly light and peace. One of our company was a
-gentleman from Grenoble, who came in the hope of seeing a young friend
-who had lately joined the order. He hoped even to get some of us
-invited to the ‘parloir’ to speak with him. Alas! the young monk would
-not even see his old friend, but sent him a tender greeting, and thanks
-for his kindness in coming. The English ‘father’ said he did this of
-his own accord, fearing to be disturbed by old associations from his
-hardly won tranquillity. However that might be, we had to bid adieu to
-St Honorât without seeing the young recluse.
-
-
-
-
-BY MEAD AND STREAM.
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIII.—HER PROBLEM.
-
-Madge in her own room; but it was evening and almost quite dark, so
-that it was not at all like the pretty chamber which it appeared to be
-in the bright sunshine of an autumn morning. Can there be any sympathy
-between the atmosphere and our feelings? There must be. A bright
-day helps us to meet sorrow bravely; a dull, dark day makes sorrow
-our master: we bow our heads and groan because nature seems to have
-entered into a conspiracy against us. The strong will may fling aside
-this atmospherical depression, but the effort is needed: whereas when
-the sun shines, even the weak can lift their heads and say without
-faltering: ‘Let me know the worst.’
-
-Madge held in her hand a letter—the same which Wrentham had seen on
-Beecham’s desk, and of which he made due report to Mr Hadleigh. She
-knew well where to find the matches and candle, and yet she stood in
-that deep gloom looking at the window, as if she were interested in the
-invisible prospect on which it opened.
-
-It is not instinct, but a telegraphic association of ideas which makes
-us hesitate to open particular letters. That was her case. And yet, if
-her face could have been seen in that gloom, no sign of fear would have
-been found upon it; only a wistful sadness—the expression of one who
-feels that some revelation of the inevitable is near.
-
-After the pause, she quietly lit the candle, and, without drawing
-down the blind, seated herself by the window. Then, as methodically
-as if it had been only one of Uncle Dick’s business letters, she cut
-the envelope and spread the paper on her lap. She was very pale just
-then, for there was no message from Beecham; only this inclosure of an
-old letter, which seemed to have been much handled, and of which the
-writing had become indistinct.
-
-There were only a few lines on the paper. She looked at the name at the
-foot of them, and raised it to her lips, reverently.
-
-‘Poor mother!’ was her sigh, and she laid the letter gently on her lap
-again, whilst she looked dreamily into the gloom outside.
-
-Should she read it? He had left her to answer that question for
-herself. Yes; she would read, for there were so few words, that there
-could be no breach of faith in scanning them. Moreover, the letter had
-been sent to her for that purpose by the man who had received it, and
-who, therefore, had the right to submit it to her.
-
-There was no need to raise any great question of conscience in the
-matter; the words were so simple that they might have been written by a
-mother to a child. No passion, no forced sentiment, no ‘make-believe’
-of any kind. Only this pathetic cry:
-
-‘Dear Austin, do not go away. I am filled with fear by what thou hast
-said to me about the vessel. I know it is wrong, since God is with us
-everywhere, and I am ashamed of this weakness. But thou art so dear,
-and—— I pray thee, Austin, do not go away.’
-
-Then followed in the middle of the page the simple name:
-
-‘LUCY.’
-
-This was what she might have written to Philip, and had not. It was
-all so simple and so like her own experience, with the difference that
-the lover had not gone away. Few daughters are allowed to know the
-history of their mothers’ love affairs, and there are fewer still who,
-when they hear them, can regard them as anything more than commonplace
-sketches of life, which they pass aside as they turn over the leaves of
-a portfolio.
-
-But to Madge!——
-
-What did all this mean? That, with the best intentions, she was
-entering into a conspiracy against the man she loved, and her mother
-was invoked as the inspiration of the conspiracy!
-
-Sitting there, the candle flickering in the strange draughts which came
-from nowhere, the gloom outside growing quite black, and the shadows in
-the little room growing huge and threatening, Madge was trying to read
-the riddle of her very awkward position.
-
-A sharp knock at the door, one of those knocks which impudent and
-inconsiderate females give when they have no particular message to
-convey, and resent the necessity of carrying it.
-
-‘A man in the oak parlour wants to see you, if you ben’t too busy.’
-
-Madge passed her fingers over the aching head. She could not guess
-who the man might be, but presumed that he was one of Uncle Dick’s
-customers.
-
-She found Mr Beecham in the oak parlour. This was the first time he had
-been under the roof of Willowmere. He and Madge were conscious of the
-singularity of the meeting-place.
-
-‘I trust, Miss Heathcote, you are not annoyed with me for coming here,’
-he said softly. ‘I did not mean to do so; but it occurred to me, after
-despatching that letter, you might require a few words of explanation.
-At first, my intention was to say nothing; but on consideration,
-it seemed to me unfair to leave you without help in answering the
-disagreeable questions which the situation suggests.’
-
-Madge still had the letter in her hand; the tears were still in her
-eyes. She tried to wipe them away, but still they would force their
-presence on the lids. That was the real Madge—tender, considerate to
-others beyond measure.
-
-‘Oh, if’——
-
-Here the superficial Madge claimed supremacy, and took the management
-of the whole interview in hand. Calm almost to coldness, clear in
-speech and vision almost to the degree of severity, she spoke:
-
-‘I have considered all that you have said to me, and I do not like the
-position in which you have placed me. I gave you my word that I should
-be silent, believing that no harm could follow, and believing that my
-mother would have wished me to obey you. You have satisfied me by this
-letter that I have not done wrong so far. Take it back.’
-
-She folded the letter, carefully replaced it in the envelope, and gave
-it to him.
-
-‘Thank you,’ he said, with the shadow of that sad smile which had so
-often crossed his face.
-
-‘You cannot tell how much that letter has affected me. You cannot know
-what thoughts and impulses it has aroused. But you can believe that in
-my mother’s blunder I read my own fate.... I know you are my friend: be
-the friend of those I love. Help _him_, for he needs help very much.’
-
-Mr Beecham had quietly taken the letter and placed it in a small
-pocket-case, to which it seemed to belong.
-
-‘I feared you would not understand me, and the desire to save you from
-uneasiness has brought me here. You have promised to be silent: I again
-beg you to keep that promise for a little while.’
-
-She bowed her head, but did not speak.
-
-‘In doing so,’ he added, anxious to reassure her, ‘you have my pledge
-that no harm will come to any one who does not seek it.’
-
-‘You cannot think,’ she said coldly, and yet with a touch of bitterness
-that she seemed unable to repress—‘you cannot think any one purposely
-seeks harm! It came to you and to my mother.’
-
-For an instant he was silent. He was thinking that no harm would have
-come to them if both had been faithful.
-
-‘That is a hard hit, and not easily answered,’ he said quietly. ‘Let me
-say, then, that even if there had been no other motive to influence me,
-I should be his friend on your account. But I am your friend above and
-before all. For your sake alone I came back to England. For your sake
-I am acting as I am doing, strange as it may seem. If he is honest and
-faithful to you’——
-
-‘There is no doubt of that,’ she interrupted, her face brightening with
-confidence.
-
-Beecham inclined his head, as if in worship. He smiled at her
-unhesitating assertion of faith, but the smile was one of respect and
-admiration touched with a shade of regret. What might his life have
-been if he had found a mate like her! The man she loved might prove
-false, and all the world might call him false: she would still believe
-him to be true.
-
-‘A man finds such faith rarely,’ he said in his gentlest tone; ‘I
-hope he will prove worthy of it. But let him take his own way for the
-present; and should trouble come to him, I shall do my best to help him
-out of it.’
-
-She made a quick movement, as if she would have clasped his hands in
-thankfulness, but checked herself.
-
-‘Then I am content.’
-
-‘I am glad you can say so, for it shows you have some confidence in me,
-and every proof of kindly thought towards me helps me.’
-
-He stopped, and seemed to be smiling at the weakness which had made his
-voice a little husky. Looking back, and realising in this girl an old
-dream, she had grown so dear to him, that he knew if she had persisted,
-his wisest judgment would have yielded to her wish.
-
-She wondered: why was this man so gentle and yet so cruel, as it
-seemed, in his doubts of Philip?
-
-‘Let me take your hand,’ he resumed. ‘Thanks. Have you any notion how
-much it cost me to allow this piece of paper’ (he touched the pocket in
-which her mother’s letter lay) ‘to be out of my possession even for a
-few hours? Only you could have won that from me. It was the last token
-of ... well, we shall say, of her caring about me that came direct from
-her own hand. She was deceived. We cannot help that, you know—accidents
-will happen, and so on’ (like a brave man, he was smiling at his own
-pain). ‘The message came to me too late. I think—no, I am sure, that
-if she had said this to me with her own lips, there would have been no
-parting ... and everything would have been so different to us!’
-
-Madge withdrew one hand from his and timidly placed it on his shoulder.
-
-‘I am sorry for your past, and should be glad if it were in my power to
-help you to a happy future.’
-
-His disengaged hand was placed upon her head lightly, as if he were
-giving her a paternal blessing.
-
-‘The only way in which you can help me, my child, is by finding a happy
-future for yourself. I am anxious about that—selfishly anxious, for it
-seems that my life can gain its real goal only by making you happy,
-since I missed the chance of making your mother so. I know that she was
-not happy; and my career, which has been one of strange good fortune,
-as men reckon fortune by the money you make, has been one of misery. Do
-you not think that droll?’
-
-‘You are not like other men, I think; others would have forgotten the
-past, and forgiven.’
-
-She was thinking of Philip’s wish that his father should be reconciled
-to Austin Shield.
-
-‘I can forgive,’ he said softly; ‘I cannot forget.—Now, let us look
-at the position quietly as it is. The only thing which has given me
-an interest in life is the hope that I may be useful to you. When my
-sorrow came upon me, it seemed as if the whole world had gone wrong.’
-(That was spoken with a kind of bitter sense of the humorous side
-of his sorrow.) ‘Doctors would have called it indigestion. You see,
-however, it does not matter much to the patient whether it is merely
-indigestion or organic disease, so long as he suffers from the pangs
-of whatever it may be. Well, I did not die, and the doctor is entitled
-to his credit. I live, eat my dinner, and am in fair health. But there
-is a difference: life lost its flavour when the blunder was made. When
-your mother believed the false report which reached her, the man who
-loved her was murdered.’
-
-‘She could not act otherwise than she did,’ said Madge bravely in
-defence.
-
-‘She should have trusted to me,’ he retorted, shaking his head sadly.
-‘But that is unkind, and I do not mean to say one word of her that
-could be called unkind. She would forgive it.’
-
-‘How she must have suffered!’ murmured Madge, her hand passing absently
-over the aching brow.
-
-‘Ay, she must have suffered as I did—poor lass, poor lass!’
-
-He turned abruptly to the hearth, as if he had become suddenly
-conscious of the ordinary duties of life, and aware that the fire
-required attention.
-
-‘I want you to try to understand me,’ he said as he stirred the
-embers, and the oak-log on the top of the coal started a bright flame.
-
-‘I wish to understand you—but that is not easy,’ she replied.
-
-He did not look round; he answered as if the subject were one of the
-most commonplace kind; but there was a certain emphasis in his tone as
-he seemed to take up her sentence and continue it.
-
-‘Because you stand on the sunny side of life, and know nothing of its
-shadows. Pity that they will force themselves upon you soon enough.’
-
-‘If you see them coming, why not give me warning?’
-
-He turned round suddenly, his hands clasped behind him so tightly that
-he seemed to be striving to subdue the outcry of some physical pain.
-
-‘It is not warning that I wish to give you, but protection,’ he said,
-and there was a harshness in his voice quite unusual to him.
-
-The change of tone was so remarkable, that she drew back. There were in
-it bitterness, hatred, and almost something that was like malignity.
-
-‘You must know it all—then judge for yourself,’ he said at length.
-
-
-
-
-CURIOSITIES OF THE MICROPHONE.
-
-
-It would be interesting to learn all the particulars relating to the
-birth of some great invention; to know the inventor’s frame of mind at
-the time the pregnant idea occurred to him, and the influences under
-which he lived and laboured. This is usually an unwritten chapter of
-biography; but sometimes we can learn a little about these things.
-It is not always necessity, or the need of help, that is the mother
-of invention. In the case of the microphone, it was the need of
-occupation. Professor Hughes was confined to his chamber by an attack
-of cold, and to beguile the tedium of the time, he began to experiment
-with the telephone. This was in the early winter of 1877; and at that
-time the transmitting and receiving parts of the Bell telephone system
-were identical. The result was that the received speech was very
-feeble; and Professor Hughes began to try whether he could not dispense
-with the transmitting telephone, and make the wire of the circuit speak
-of itself. Some experiments of Sir William Thomson had shown that the
-electric resistance of a wire varied when the wire was strained; and
-Professor Hughes thought that if he could get the vibrations of the
-voice to strain a wire, so as to vary its resistance in proportion
-to the vibrations, he might be able to make the wire itself act as a
-transmitter. He therefore connected a battery and telephone together
-by means of a fine wire, and pulled on a part of the wire in order to
-strain it, at the same time listening in the telephone. But he heard
-no sound at all until he strained the wire so much that it gave way.
-At the instant of rupture he heard a peculiar grating sound in the
-telephone; and on placing the broken ends of the wire in delicate
-contact, he found that the slightest agitation of the ends in contact
-produced a distinct noise in the instrument.
-
-This experiment, then, was the germ of the microphone. For the metal
-ends of the wire in contact, he substituted carbon points, and
-obtained a much more sensitive arrangement. When one of the carbon
-pencils was lightly _pressed_ against the other in a stable position,
-he found that the joint was sensitive to the slightest jar, and could
-transmit the voice when spoken to direct. Pursuing his researches
-further, he found that a loose and somewhat crazy metal structure,
-such as a pile of gold-chain or a framework of French nails, acted in
-a similar way, though not so powerfully as carbon. This material was
-found so sensitive, that a fly walking on the board supporting the
-microphone could be distinctly heard in the telephone, and each tap of
-its trunk upon the wood was said by one observer to resemble the ‘tramp
-of an elephant.’
-
-The marvels of the microphone were published to the world in the early
-summer of the next year; and many useful applications followed. The
-most obvious was its use as a telephone transmitter; and as Professor
-Hughes had made a public gift of his invention, a great many telephone
-transmitters were based upon it. Edison, who had invented a carbon
-transmitter which bore some resemblance to the microphone, laid claim
-to having anticipated the invention; but the merit of the discovery
-remains with Professor Hughes.
-
-It is through the help of the microphone that telephony has become so
-practical and so extensively adopted. The Blake transmitter, the Ader,
-and many others by which music and speech are now conveyed so many
-miles, are all varieties of the carbon microphone. In some churches,
-microphone transmitters are now applied to the pulpit, so that the
-sermon can be transmitted by telephone to invalid members who cannot
-leave home. At the Electrical Exhibitions of Paris, Vienna, and the
-Crystal Palace, the music of an entire opera was transmitted from
-the stage by wire to other buildings where great numbers of persons
-sat and listened to it. The transport of music and other sounds in
-no way directly connected with the wire, is frequently effected by
-what is termed induction or leading-in. Over and over again, persons
-listening into telephones for the purpose of hearing what a friend
-is saying, have heard the strains of this music—aside, communicated
-by induction from some neighbouring line to theirs. Not long ago, a
-telegraph clerk in Chicago was listening in a telephone early one
-morning, and to his surprise heard the croaking of frogs and the
-whistling of birds. The explanation of the phenomenon is, that a loose
-joint in the telephone wire where it passed through a wood, acted as a
-microphone, and transmitted the woodland chorus to his ears. Messages
-in process of transmission are sometimes drowned by the rumbling noise
-of street-traffic induced by the wire.
-
-The microphone is not only useful as a transmitter of sounds, but also
-as a relay of sounds received on a telephone. Professors Houston and
-Thomson of America were perhaps the first to construct a telephonic
-relay. They mounted a carbon microphone on the vibrating plate of a
-telephone in such a way that the vibrations of the plate due to the
-received speech would react on the microphone, and be transmitted
-in this way over another line to another receiving telephone at a
-distance. Thus the speech would be relayed, just as a telegraph
-message is relayed, when it is weak, and sent further on its way.
-Curiously enough, the microphone acts as a relay to itself, if placed
-on the same table with the telephone with which it is in circuit. The
-jar of placing the microphone on the table causes the telephone to emit
-a sound; this sound in turn is transmitted by the microphone to the
-telephone, which again repeats it. The microphone re-transmits it as
-before, the telephone utters it, and so the process of repetition goes
-on _ad infinitum_.
-
-Since the microphone can, as it were, magnify small sounds, and in
-this respect has some resemblance to the microscope, which magnifies
-minute objects, it might be thought that it would prove useful for
-deaf persons. But though the microphone enables a person with good
-ears to hear mechanical vibrations which otherwise would be inaudible,
-the sounds that are heard are not in themselves very loud, and hence a
-dull aural nerve might fail to appreciate them. M. Bert, the well-known
-French physicist, constructed a microphone for deaf persons; but
-its success was doubtful. Professor Hughes, however, has succeeded
-in making deaf persons hear the ticking of a watch by means of the
-microphone. In this case the telephone was placed against the bones
-in the head, and the vibrations communicated in this way to the aural
-nerve. The ‘audiphone,’ a curved plate held between the teeth, and
-vibrated by the sound-waves, also acts in this way; and it is probable
-that we hear ourselves speak not through our ears, but through the
-bones of the head as set in vibration by the voice.
-
-Its power of interpreting small sounds has caused the microphone to
-be applied to many other purposes. Professor Rossi, for example, uses
-it to detect the earth-tremors preceding earthquakes and volcanic
-eruptions. It has been employed in Austria to detect the trickling of
-underground water; and its use has also been suggested for hearing the
-signal-taps of entombed miners and the noise of approaching torpedo
-boats. It is not, however, quite possible to realise all that has been
-claimed for it. Thus the _Danbury News_ jestingly remarks that ‘with
-a microphone a farmer can hear a potato-bug coming down the road a
-quarter of a mile away, and can go out with an axe and head it off.’
-
-In 1876, a year before the microphone was invented, a writer named
-Antoinette Brown Blackwell foretold the use of such an apparatus. ‘It
-remains,’ she said, ‘to invent some instrument which can so retard the
-too rapid vibrations of molecules as to bring them within the time
-adapted to human ears; then we might comfortably hear plant movements
-carrying on the many processes of growth, _and possibly we might catch
-the crystal music of atoms_ vibrating in unison with the sunbeam.’
-Without calling in question the writer’s theory, which does not apply
-to the microphone, we may mention that Professor Chandler Roberts
-attached a microphone to a thin porous septum, and on allowing hydrogen
-gas to diffuse through the latter, he heard a rushing sound, as of a
-wind, which became silent when the rapid diffusion ceased. The jar
-of the atoms on the pores of the septum was probably the source of
-this molecular sound. Again, Professor Graham Bell has found a metal
-microphone joint sensitive to the impact of a beam of intermittent
-light; and it is highly probable that a microphone with selenium
-contacts would be still more sensitive to the sound of light falling
-upon it.
-
-In medicine, the microphone has been usefully applied to enable a
-physician to read the pulse better and auscultate the heart.
-
-Numerous experiments have been made recently with the microphone
-by Messrs Stroh, Bidwell, and others. Not long after the original
-invention of the apparatus, Professor Blyth found that the microphone
-would act as a receiver as well as a transmitter of sounds in an
-electric circuit. Thus, with two boxes of coke cinders (hard carbon)
-connected together through a wire and battery, Professor Blyth found
-that if words were spoken into one of the boxes, he could faintly hear
-them by listening in the other. Mr Bidwell has constructed a receiving
-microphone, composed of a pile of carbon cylinders resting on a mica
-diaphragm, and this gives out distinct effects when a strong battery is
-employed. On speaking to the transmitting microphone in circuit, the
-words can be distinctly heard in the receiving one.
-
-By the use of the microscope, Mr Stroh has observed that the carbon
-points of the microphone which were supposed to be in contact, are not
-really so during the action of the instrument, but are separated by
-a minute distance. It would appear, then, that there is a repulsion
-between the points, and this repulsion accounts for the action of the
-microphone as a receiver. Metal microphones are also reversible in
-their action, and give out feeble sounds when used as receivers. The
-probability is that the contacts vibrate rapidly on each other, either
-in direct or very close contact, against a certain repulsive action of
-the current, which operates like a cushion or re-acting spring.
-
-Metal microphones are in some respects more interesting theoretically
-than those of carbon. For example, one has been constructed of two
-different metals, zinc and iron, which when heated by the flame of
-a spirit-lamp generates its own current by thermo-electric action.
-Iron is one of the most useful metals for forming microphones; and
-one of iron-wire gauze has been found to act with singular clearness
-when inclosed in a high vacuum, such as that given by an incandescent
-electric lamp.
-
-
-
-
-SILAS MONK.
-
-A TALE OF LONDON OLD CITY.
-
-
-IN FOUR CHAPTERS.—CHAPTER II.
-
-That day in the city seemed to Walter as if it would never end. This
-mystery about Silas Monk was now a matter to him of real interest.
-Hitherto, the eccentricities of the old man had given him little or no
-concern; for it had been so long the custom among the clerks to crack
-their jokes about ‘Silas,’ that nothing which he might do, however
-queer, could appear otherwise than perfectly consistent with his
-character. For so many years had Silas Monk been a clerk in the House,
-that his columns of pounds, shillings, and pence could be traced in the
-oldest ledgers, it was said, even when books more than a hundred years
-old were examined. There was no record extant which satisfactorily
-settled the date of his engagement as a clerk by Armytage and Company.
-The oldest partners and the oldest clerks, with this one exception of
-Silas, were dead and buried many years ago.
-
-It was a very old-looking place, this ancient counting-house; it seemed
-older even than the firm of Armytage, which had seen two centuries.
-There were railings in front, broken in places, but still presenting
-some iron spikes among them, standing up with an air of protection
-before the windows, like sentinels on guard. The stone steps leading
-up to the entrance were worn by the tread of busy men who had in their
-time hurried in and out in their race for wealth, and who were now
-doubtless lying in some old city churchyard hard by.
-
-Walter Tiltcroft having at last finished his ‘rounds,’ as he called
-his various errands, came back to the old counting-house. The clerks’
-office was on the ground-floor. It was a dark and dusty room, with men
-of various ages seated at long desks, all deeply engaged, with pens in
-hand and heads bent low, over the business of the firm. No one looked
-up when Walter entered; every one went on working, as though each
-individual clerk was a wheel in the great machine which had been going
-for nearly two hundred years.
-
-Within an inner room, smaller, darker, and more dusty, was seated alone
-at his desk Silas Monk. The old clerk had several large ledgers before
-him; he was turning over the leaves with energy, and making entries
-in these books with a rapidity which seemed surprising in one who had
-an appearance of such great age. With his white hair falling on his
-shoulders, his long lean trembling fingers playing among the fluttering
-pages, and his keen eyes darting among the columns of pounds,
-shillings, and pence, he seemed, even by daylight, like an embodied
-spirit appointed by the dead partners and clerks of Armytage and
-Company to audit the accounts of that old mercantile House in Crutched
-Friars. So at least thought Walter Tiltcroft as he sat at his own desk
-watching Silas Monk, and revolving in his mind how he could best solve
-the mystery which surrounded Rachel’s grandfather.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It was growing dusk when the old city clocks in the church towers began
-to strike six, and the clerks in the office of Armytage and Company
-began to show signs of dispersing. Silas Monk alone remained at his
-post. Wishing to say a few words to the old man before taking his
-leave, Walter Tiltcroft lingered behind; and when the last clerk had
-gone, he went to the door of the ‘strong-room,’ as Silas Monk’s office
-was called, and said in his usual cheerful tone: ‘Good-night, Mr Monk.
-You’ll see, I suppose, that everything is safe and sound, as usual?
-Won’t you?’
-
-‘Ay, ay! safe and sound, Walter.—Good-night.’
-
-But the young man lingered with his eyes curiously fixed on Silas. ‘The
-evenings are getting short,’ continued he. ‘Can you see to work by this
-light?’
-
-‘Why, no—not well,’ Silas owned, with his eyes raised towards the
-window; ‘and what makes it still more difficult is that scaffolding the
-workmen have put up outside—that’s what makes it so dark. Ay, ay!’ he
-added, ‘they’re repairing the old walls. Dear me, dear me!’
-
-The old walls outside, which surrounded a courtyard, were black with
-dust and age, and they had also in many parts a tumble-down aspect,
-which appeared to plainly indicate that repairs were needed badly. Upon
-the scaffolding, some half-dozen labourers were gathering together
-their tools and preparing to go home, as the clerks had done already.
-Silas was lighting an oil-lamp. ‘Give me a hand, Walter,’ said he, ‘to
-close these shutters and put up the iron bar.’
-
-‘All right, Mr Monk,’ said the young man, unfolding the old-fashioned
-shutters in the walls and clasping the iron bar across them with a loud
-clink. ‘All right and tight!—Shall you remain long at the office?’ he
-added, moving towards the door.
-
-‘Not long; half an hour, perhaps—not more.’
-
-Still the young man lingered. ‘Mr Monk,’ said he, walking a step back
-into the strong-room, ‘I saw your grand-daughter Miss Rachel this
-morning.’
-
-Silas, who had reseated himself at his desk before the large ledgers,
-looked round keenly at Walter, with the light from the shaded lamp
-thrown upon his wrinkled face. ‘You see my grand-daughter Rachel pretty
-often; don’t you, Walter?’
-
-‘Pretty often, Mr Monk, I confess.’
-
-Silas shook his long thin forefinger at the young man. ‘Walter,’ cried
-he, ‘that’s not business!’
-
-‘No; that’s true. But you see, Mr Monk, it’s not much out of my way.
-And,’ he added, ‘besides, I thought you would like to know that she’s
-well. You’re so busy here, that perhaps you don’t see so much of her as
-you would like, and so I thought that news of her at any time would be
-welcome.’
-
-‘So it is, Walter!’ said the old man, his voice trembling slightly
-as he spoke—‘so it is. She’s a good girl, and I love her dearly. But
-you don’t pass that way, Walter, simply to bring me a word about my
-grand-daughter. You’re not going to try and make me believe that,
-surely?’
-
-‘Not entirely, Mr Monk,’ said the young man, smiling. ‘I won’t deny
-that it’s a very great pleasure to me to see Rachel at any time;
-indeed, no one could admire her more than I do.’
-
-The old man held out his hand. ‘Come, come! That’s more candid,
-my boy,’ said he, as Walter took the hand in his and pressed it
-affectionately. ‘So you admire Rachel, do you?’
-
-‘Mr Monk,’ said the young clerk, ‘I more than admire her—I love her!’
-
-The deep lines in Silas Monk’s face grew deeper at these words. ‘Well,
-well,’ said the old man presently, with a heavy sigh; ‘it was to be.
-Better now, perhaps, than later—better now. But you won’t take her from
-me yet, Walter—not yet?’
-
-‘Why, no, Mr Monk; I’d no thought of taking her away from you.’
-
-‘That’s right!’ cried Silas—‘that’s right! You’re a good lad. Take care
-of her, Walter; take care of her when I am dead.’ As Silas pronounced
-the last word, the sound of footsteps, which seemed strangely near,
-changed the expression on his face. ‘What’s that?’ asked he in a tone
-of alarm.
-
-Walter listened. ‘Some one on the scaffolding above your window.’
-
-‘If it’s a workman,’ said the old man, ‘he’s rather late. Will you see
-that every one has left the premises; and then shut the front-door as
-you go out?’
-
-‘I’ll not forget.—Good-night!’
-
-It was just sufficiently light in the passage for Walter to find his
-way about the old house. Having promised Silas Monk to make sure that
-every one had left the premises, he ran up the dark oaken staircase
-to ascertain whether the partners, who occupied the floor above the
-office, had gone. He found the doors to their rooms locked. The young
-man threw a glance around him, and then descended the way he had come,
-walking out into the court, behind the clerks’ offices, where the
-scaffolding was erected. It was not a large court, and on every side
-were high brick walls. The scaffolding reached from the ground almost
-to the eaves.
-
-‘Any one there?’ Walter shouted.
-
-Not a sound came back except a muttering echo of his own voice.
-
-Walter Tiltcroft then turned to leave the house. But at this moment his
-conversation with Rachel occurred to him, and he thought that he might
-do something to clear up the mystery of her grandfather’s frequent
-absence from home at all hours of the night. ‘Why not,’ thought Walter,
-‘watch the old man’s movements? Some clue might be found to the strange
-affair.’ He formed his plan of action without further delay. No moment
-could have been more opportune. He closed the front-door with a slam
-which shook the old house; then he crept back along the passage softly,
-and, seating himself in a dark corner on the staircase, watched for the
-figure of Silas Monk.
-
-The first thing he heard, very shortly after he had taken up his
-position, was a step in the passage leading from the courtyard. He
-sprang up with a quick beating heart, and reached the foot of the
-stairs just in time to confront a tall, powerful man dressed like a
-mason, and carrying in his hand a large basket of tools.
-
-‘Why, Joe Grimrood,’ said Walter, ‘is that you?’
-
-The man, who had a hangdog, defiant air, answered gruffly, as he
-scratched a mangy-looking skin-cap, pulled down to his eyebrows:
-‘That’s me, sir; asking your pardon.’
-
-‘Are you the last, Joe?’
-
-‘There ain’t no more men on the scaffold, if that’s what you mean.’
-
-Walter nodded. ‘Didn’t you hear me call?’ he asked.
-
-‘Not me. When?’
-
-‘Not five minutes ago.’
-
-‘How could I? I was among the chimneys.’
-
-‘Repairing the roof, Joe?’
-
-‘Fixing the tiles,’ was the reply.
-
-Having thus accounted for his tardiness, Joe Grimrood again scratched
-his cap, in his manner of saluting, and moved along the hall, in the
-semi-darkness, towards the front-door. ‘I wish you a very good-night,’
-said the man, as Walter accompanied him to the entrance—‘a very
-good-night, sir; asking your pardon.’
-
-Walter Tiltcroft closed the door, when the workman had gone out, with
-as little noise as possible; for he feared that if any sound reached
-Silas Monk in the strong-room, his suspicions might be aroused, and the
-chance of solving this mystery might be lost.
-
-Again retiring to his retreat upon the staircase, Walter waited and
-watched; but nothing happened. The twilight faded; the night became so
-dark that the lad could not see his hand before him. The hours appeared
-long; at endless intervals he heard the city clocks striking in the
-dead silence. He filled up the time with thoughts containing a hundred
-conjectures. What could Silas Monk be doing all this while? A dozen
-times Walter descended to the door of the office to listen; but never
-a sound! A dozen times his fingers touched the handle to turn it; yet
-each time he drew back, fearing to destroy the object he had seriously
-in view—the solution of this strange affair.
-
-Ten o’clock had struck, and the young clerk was growing weary of
-waiting for the clocks to strike eleven. He began to imagine that
-something must have happened to Silas Monk. Had he fallen asleep? Was
-he dead, or—what?
-
-Presently, the notion entered his brain that perhaps a grain of
-reassurance might be had by regarding the window of the strong-room
-from the courtyard. Possibly, thought he, a ray of light might find
-its way there through the shutters. He stepped out silently, but with
-eagerness. When he reached the yard, there, sure enough, was a streak
-of light piercing through a small aperture. Walter was drawn towards
-it irresistibly. He mounted the scaffolding by the ladder at his feet,
-and crept along the boarding on his hands; for the darkness, except
-within the limits of this ray of light, was intense. He reached at
-length the spot immediately above the window. The ray of light fell
-below the scaffold, slanting to the ground. Grasping the board, upon
-which he lay full length, he bent his head until his eye was almost on
-a level with the hole in the shutter. To his surprise, the interior of
-the strong-room was distinctly revealed. But what he saw surprised him
-still more. Silas Monk was seated there at his desk, under the shaded
-lamp. But he was no longer examining the ledgers; these books were
-thrown aside; and, in their place, before his greedy eyes, was to be
-seen a heap of bright sovereigns.
-
-The change which had taken place in the face of Silas Monk since the
-young man had left him, was startling; and the manner in which he
-appeared to be feasting his eyes upon the coins was repulsive. He
-handled the sovereigns with his lean fingers caressingly; he counted
-them over and over again; then he arranged them in piles on one side,
-and began to empty other bags in their place. His look suggested a
-ravenous madman; his attitude resembled that of a beast of prey.
-
-Walter was so fascinated by this unexpected scene in the strong-room,
-that he found it impossible, for some minutes, to remove his gaze. The
-mystery about Silas Monk had been solved. Rachel’s grandfather was a
-wretched miser!
-
-Walter descended from the scaffolding, and went out quietly into
-Crutched Friars. His lodgings were in the Minories, hard by. But he
-could not have slept had he gone home without passing under Rachel’s
-window. He hurried along through the dark and silent streets. What
-he had witnessed, haunted him; he could not banish the scene of the
-old man and his bright sovereigns. When he entered the street, and
-was approaching Silas Monk’s house, he was astonished, though not
-displeased, to see Rachel standing on the door-step.
-
-‘Why, Walter,’ cried she, ‘is that you? I thought it was grandfather.’
-
-‘I wish, Rachel, for your sake that it was. But I’m afraid, late as it
-is, that he won’t be back quite yet.’
-
-The girl placed her hand quickly on Walter’s hand and looked up
-appealingly. ‘Has anything happened? You have a troubled face. Don’t
-hide it from me, if anything has happened to grandfather.’
-
-The young man hastened to reassure her. ‘Nothing has happened. Silas
-Monk is at the office still. I have just come away, Rachel. I left him
-there deeply occupied.’
-
-The girl threw a quick glance into Walter’s face. ‘Then grandfather
-does work for Armytage and Company after six o’clock?’
-
-‘I doubt that, Rachel, very much.’
-
-‘Then why does he stay so late at Crutched Friars?’
-
-‘To dabble in a little business of his own.’
-
-‘What business is that, Walter?’
-
-‘Well, something in the bullion line of business, to judge from
-appearances.’
-
-‘Explain yourself, Walter! I am puzzled.’
-
-‘I’m afraid I can’t; I’m puzzled too,’ said the young man. ‘This
-bullion business,’ he added thoughtfully, ‘is a strange affair.’
-
-Rachel clasped her hands with an impatient gesture. ‘Walter, tell me
-what you have seen!’
-
-‘I’ve seen,’ said the young man reluctantly—‘I’ve seen, through a hole
-in the shutter, an old man at a desk, under the light of a shaded
-lamp, seated over handfuls of gold. The desk was Silas Monk’s, in the
-counting-house of Armytage and Company. But the face of the man was not
-the face of your grandfather; or if it was his, it was greatly changed.’
-
-‘In what way changed, Walter?’
-
-‘It was a face expressing dreadful greed. It was the face of a miser,
-Rachel—nothing less!’
-
-The girl, standing under the dim street-lamp above the doorway, looked
-with wondering eyes into Walter’s face. ‘Does not all the money at the
-counting-house belong to the firm?’
-
-‘So I have always thought, Rachel.’
-
-‘Then grandfather was balancing the cash?’
-
-‘Not the hard cash of Armytage and Company. That is taken every day,
-before the closing hour, to the bank.’
-
-Looking still into the young man’s face, the girl said: ‘Then the money
-must be his own.’
-
-‘He certainly seemed to eye it, Rachel, as if every sovereign belonged
-to him.’
-
-The girl became pensive. ‘He must be rich,’ said she.
-
-‘Very rich, if all those sovereigns are his.’
-
-‘And he loves gold more than he loves his grand-daughter!’ Rachel
-complained, in a tone of deep disappointment, while tears started into
-her eyes.
-
-Not being able to deny that there appeared some truth in the girl’s
-words, Walter could answer nothing. He remained silent and thoughtful.
-Suddenly the clocks of the old city began striking midnight.
-
-‘Your grandfather will soon be coming now, Rachel,’ said the young
-man, ‘so I had better be off. It would never do to let him find me
-here at this late hour.’ Taking leave of the girl tenderly, he quickly
-disappeared into the darkness.
-
-Rachel re-entered the house, and threw herself into the old armchair,
-stricken with surprise and grief at what she had learned. Since she was
-a child, she had been taught to believe that she was struggling, beside
-her grandfather, against poverty. She had been happy in the thought
-that, although they were needy, nothing divided their affections. She
-believed that her grandfather was slaving day and night for their
-sake—slaving to keep the old house over their heads. But what was he
-slaving for, after all? For gold, it was true; but for gold which he
-hoarded up in secret places, hiding all from her, as though it were,
-like a crime, something of a nature to be shunned.
-
-Meanwhile the clocks are striking the small-hours. But Silas Monk
-does not come home. The candle on the table beside Rachel burns low.
-The girl grows alarmed, and listens for the footsteps of her old
-grandfather. She goes out and looks about into the dark night. No one
-is to be seen, no one is to be heard. Four o’clock—five. Still no
-footsteps—not even a shadow of the man.
-
-The dawn begins to break in a clear gray light above the sombre houses;
-the roar of traffic in the streets hard by falls upon the girl’s ear.
-Another busy day has commenced in the old city. ‘Is it possible,’
-thinks Rachel, ‘that her grandfather can still be at his desk, counting
-and recounting his gold?’
-
-
-
-
-FAMILIAR SKETCHES OF ENGLISH LAW.
-
-BY AN EXPERIENCED PRACTITIONER.
-
-
-II. PARENT AND CHILD.
-
-Children may be divided into two classes—legitimate and illegitimate;
-and the liability of a father in respect of his children is widely
-different in the case of the latter class from the ordinary duty and
-responsibility of a parent. In order to clear the ground, we will first
-dispose of the illegitimate class; and throughout this paper it must
-be understood that the words parent and child, when used without any
-qualifying terms, refer to those between whom that mutual relationship
-lawfully subsists.
-
-An illegitimate child, or bastard, is one who is born without its
-parents having been lawfully married; and in England, a bastard born is
-illegitimate to the end of his or her life; but in Scotland, such child
-may be rendered legitimate by the subsequent marriage of its parents,
-provided that at the date of its birth and of their marriage they were
-both free to marry. The father of an illegitimate child has no right to
-its custody; but he may be compelled to contribute to its support by
-means of an affiliation order. A bastard cannot inherit either real or
-personal estate from either of its parents, nor from any other person;
-neither can any person inherit from a bachelor or spinster who is
-illegitimate. If, however, such a person marries, the husband or wife
-and children have the same legal rights as if the stain of illegitimacy
-had not existed.
-
-A legitimate child—with the exception noted above—is the offspring
-of parents who were lawfully married before the time of its birth. A
-posthumous child, if born in due time after the husband’s death, is
-legitimate.
-
-The father has _primâ facie_ a right to the custody of his children
-while under the age of sixteen years; after that age, if they are able
-to maintain themselves, they may be emancipated from his control.
-But a mother can apply to the court for an order that she may have
-the exclusive care of her children while they are respectively under
-seven years of age; and after that age, for leave of access to them
-at reasonable times, in cases where husband and wife do not live
-together. In case of the divorce of the parents, the court will give
-directions as to the custody of the children of the marriage, taking
-into consideration the offence against morality of the guilty parent,
-but also what is best for the children’s education and upbringing and
-prospects in life.
-
-A parent is bound to maintain and educate his children according to his
-station; and if the father should neglect his duty in this respect,
-the mother—if living with her husband—may, as his agent, order what is
-necessary, and he would be responsible for the expense thus incurred,
-which must be strictly limited to what is reasonably necessary. If a
-child should become chargeable upon the poor-rates, both father and
-grandfather are responsible for repayment of the cost incurred; the
-former primarily, and the latter secondarily, in case of the absence
-or inability of the father. In like manner, a child may be compelled
-to repay to the poor-rates authorities the cost of maintenance of his
-parents, if he have the means of doing so.
-
-A child while under the age of twenty-one years cannot enter into a
-binding contract, even with the consent and concurrence of its parent,
-except for special purposes. One of these purposes is the acquisition
-of knowledge which will enable the child to earn its livelihood when it
-arrives at maturity. Thus apprentices and articled clerks may be bound
-in such a manner as to render it compulsory for them to serve until
-they respectively attain the age of twenty-one years; but the binding
-cannot be extended beyond that age. As soon as an apprentice attains
-his majority, he may elect to vacate his indenture, and be free from
-any further compulsory service. This is founded upon the well-known
-principle, that a minor can only be compelled to perform contracts
-entered into on his behalf during his minority; and that when he
-attains the age of twenty-one years, he is free to enter into contracts
-on his own behalf, which stand upon an entirely different footing, and
-are entirely inconsistent with the former contract. It may also be
-mentioned here that a minor, when he becomes of age, is free to elect
-whether he will perform any other contracts which he may have entered
-into during his minority. If any such contract be beneficial, he may
-allow it to stand; and if it be otherwise, he may cancel it; but the
-other party, if of full age, will be bound by his contract.
-
-In this connection we may notice the Infants Relief Act, 1874. Although
-primarily aimed at the protection of ‘infants’ from the consequences
-of their own imprudence, this statute, the operation of which extends
-to the whole of the United Kingdom, has been found very useful in
-relieving children against a cruel but not uncommon kind of pressure
-by impecunious parents, who in many cases induced their children to
-encumber their expectant property in order to assist them (the parents)
-when in difficulties. The manner was this: The son would while under
-age sign a promise to execute a valid charge, which would accordingly
-be executed the day after he attained his majority; and though the
-first promise was worthless, the deed was binding. But it was enacted
-that all contracts entered into by ‘infants’ for the repayment of money
-lent or to be lent, and all accounts stated with ‘infants,’ should be
-not merely voidable, but absolutely void; and further, the ratification
-when of full age of any such promise should be void also, and the
-ratified promise should be incapable of being enforced.
-
-A parent may lawfully maintain an action on behalf of his child,
-whether such child be an infant or of full age, without being liable
-to be prosecuted for the offence of maintenance or champerty. In
-like manner, a child if of full age may maintain an action on behalf
-of his parent, even though he may have no personal interest in the
-subject-matter of the action.
-
-A parent may also protect his child, or a child protect his parent,
-from violence or assault, in such circumstances as would expose a
-stranger to the charge of officiously intermeddling with strife which
-did not concern him.
-
-The power of an Englishman to dispose of his property by will being
-absolute, the consideration of a parent’s will as affecting his
-children need not detain us long. The principal peculiarity is this:
-In case of the death of a child or grandchild of a testator in the
-lifetime of the latter, leaving lawful issue, any devise or bequest in
-the will in favour of the deceased child or grandchild will take effect
-in favour of his issue in the same manner as if he had survived the
-testator and died immediately afterwards. In similar circumstances, a
-gift in favour of any other person who died in the testator’s lifetime
-would lapse, that is to say, it would altogether fail to take effect.
-
-But in Scotland, the power of a father to dispose of his property
-by will is much more restricted, being confined to what is called
-the ‘dead man’s’ part—namely, so much as remains after setting aside
-one-third of the personal property or movable goods for the widow; and
-one-third for the children of the testator. Or if there be no widow,
-then the share of the children is one-half, which is divisible among
-them equally. The rights of either widow or child may be renounced by
-an antenuptial marriage contract, or for some equivalent provision
-given in such a contract, or by will; and a child of full age may by
-deed discharge his claim for _legitim_, as the children’s share of the
-succession is called.
-
-In case of intestacy, the eldest son is by the common law his
-father’s heir-at-law, subject to his mother’s dower, if not barred
-or discharged. But in some localities, special customs exist, such
-as Borough English—prevalent at Maldon in Essex and elsewhere, by
-virtue of which the youngest son is the heir—and Gavelkind, which
-affects most of the land in Kent, where all the sons inherit in
-equal shares. Returning to the common-law rule, where there are both
-sons and daughters, the eldest son inherits to the exclusion of his
-younger brothers, and his sisters whether elder or younger. But if
-the intestate had no son, but several daughters, they would take
-as co-parceners in equal undivided shares. It will be understood
-that heirs and co-heiresses take freehold houses and land; but that
-leaseholds are personal property, and like money and goods, stocks and
-shares, are distributable, subject as hereinafter mentioned, among the
-widow (if any) and relatives of the deceased. Copyhold property is real
-estate, and the descent is in each case regulated by the custom of the
-manor of which the property is holden; Borough English and Gavelkind
-being much more common as affecting copyhold than freehold estates,
-though even in the case of copyholds the common-law rule is by far the
-most general.
-
-The personal property of an intestate is the primary fund for payment
-of funeral and other expenses, costs of administration, and debts.
-When these have been paid, the widow (if any) is entitled to one-third
-of what is left; and the other two-thirds are divisible among the
-children. If there be no widow, the children take all, the collateral
-relatives having no claim. If any of the testator’s children have died
-before him, leaving issue, such issue take in equal shares the portion
-which their parent would have taken if living.
-
-In England, the heir-at-law who takes his father’s freehold estates
-is not thereby deprived of his share, or any portion of his share, of
-the personalty. But in Scotland, the heir must bring into account or
-collate the value of what he has received in that capacity, before he
-can claim any part of the movables.
-
-If a son or daughter be possessed of real and personal estate, and
-die unmarried, or widowed without children, and without making a
-will, leaving a surviving father, he would take the real estate as
-heir-at-law, and the personal estate as sole next of kin. If he were
-dead, the mother would take a share of the personal estate with the
-surviving brothers and sisters, and the eldest brother would inherit
-the real estate as heir-at-law. If the mother were living, but no
-brothers or sisters, nephews or nieces, she would have the personal
-estate, but could not inherit the real estate so long as any heir could
-be found on the paternal side. The children of deceased brothers and
-sisters take equally amongst them the share of personal estate which
-their deceased parent would have taken if living.
-
-The law of Scotland is not so favourable to the father and mother of
-intestates. The father does not succeed to real or heritable estate
-if there be a brother or sister, and in the same event his right is
-limited to that of one-half the movable estate. When the father has
-predeceased, and the mother survives, she takes one-third of the
-movable succession, and the rest goes to brothers and sisters or other
-next of kin.
-
-Having thus considered the rights, duties, and liabilities of parents
-with respect to the persons, the necessities, and the property of their
-children, and the corresponding rights and obligations of children
-with regard to their parents, we must offer a few remarks on the
-authority of parents over their children, and the extent to which that
-authority may be delegated to others.
-
-A parent may control the actions of his children so long as they remain
-under his roof, and may insist upon his regulations being observed
-and his commands obeyed. While they are of tender years, he may
-inflict any reasonable punishment for disobedience or other offence,
-either by personal chastisement or otherwise; but he must not torture
-them, nor endanger their lives or health. He may also instruct his
-children himself; or he may send them to school; in the latter case,
-delegating to the schoolmaster so much as may be necessary of his power
-to restrain and correct the children so intrusted to his care. Since
-compulsory education became law, he _must_ use reasonable means to get
-them educated. If a child should prove incorrigible, the parent may
-apply to the justices of the peace to send him or her to an Industrial
-School; which they have power to do on being satisfied by evidence upon
-oath that the child is altogether beyond the power of its parent to
-manage or control; and an order may be made upon the parent to pay the
-expense of the child’s maintenance and education in such school, if his
-means are sufficient to enable him to do so.
-
-The liabilities imposed by marriage differ to some extent from the
-responsibilities of actual parentage. Thus, a man may be compelled to
-repay the expense incurred by the maintenance of his own father, but
-not of his wife’s father, in the workhouse. And though a married man is
-bound to keep his wife’s children, born before his marriage with her,
-until they are sixteen years of age respectively, if his wife live so
-long; yet, if she were to die while any of them were under that age,
-his responsibility would immediately cease. And if any of them were to
-become chargeable upon the poor-rates when more than sixteen years old,
-the stepfather could not be required to contribute towards the expense
-of their maintenance, even though their mother should be still living.
-
-
-
-
-IN A FURNITURE SALEROOM.
-
-A DAY-DREAM.
-
-
-I just missed by a neck, as they say in steeplechasing dialect—though
-on second thoughts I think it must have been liker a full
-horse-length—my lot being cast among second-hand furniture. I believe
-I was of too philosophic a nature to make a practical auctioneer and
-furniture-broker of. At least, such was something like the opinion held
-by my employer—the old gentleman was a bit of a wag—who told my father,
-when the latter went to see why this knight of the hammer had dispensed
-with his son’s services, that my mind, like the late lamented Prince
-of Denmark’s, was of too speculative a character ever to ‘mak’ saut
-to my kail’ at his profession, and advised him to bring me ‘out for a
-minister.’ I need not say that this advice was, for divers reasons,
-never acted upon.
-
-I suppose it must have been my twelve-months’ sojourn in this old
-worthy’s service which gives me to this day a certain meditative
-interest in brokers’ shops and old furniture salerooms. I am not at any
-time much of a stroller about the streets and gazer into shop-windows;
-but next to looking into the windows of book or print and picture
-shops, I have a weakness for sauntering into musty old salerooms, and
-staring idly at the miscellaneous articles of second-hand furniture
-huddled within their walls, and moralising on the mutability of human
-hopes and possessions. A spick-and-span new furniture and upholstery
-establishment has no more fascination for me than a black-and-white
-undertaker’s. But out of the bustle of the street and the broiling heat
-of the mid-day sun—which is my favourite time of indulgence—and in the
-dusty and shadowy corners, festooned with cobwebs, of a broker’s shop
-or old furniture saleroom, I forget how the time goes, as I join over
-again the sundered human relationships to the pieces of furniture at
-which I stand staring in half-reverie. I fancy it must have been this
-same dreamy tendency which, peeping forth in my boyish career, led
-my shrewd master to forecast my future with so much certainty to my
-parent. I care not about purchasing any of the articles that so absorb
-me. It is not the barren desire of possession which makes me haunt
-these dusty salerooms. When the place becomes crowded with people, and
-the auctioneer mounts his little pulpit, I gather my wandered wits
-together and ‘silently steal away.’
-
-I say I love to linger among the cobwebs and amid the silence of
-old furniture salerooms—as fruitful a source of meditation to me as
-loitering among tombs ever was to Harvey. That venerable eight-day
-clock standing against the wall, behind those slim walnut chairs and
-couch done up in the bright green repp, its mahogany almost as black
-as your Sunday hat with age, turns on my thinking faculty just as the
-‘auld Scots’ sangs’ moves my guidwife Peggy to tears. I think of all
-the pairs of eyes that have gazed up at the hands and figures on its
-olive-tinted face, and wonder how many of them have taken their last
-look of earth. My imagination transports it to some well-to-do Scottish
-cottage home, where I see, held up in fond arms, the marvelling
-youngsters, in striped cotton pinafores, with their wide-open eyes
-staring at the representatives of the four quarters of the globe,
-painted in bright dazzling colours on each corner of the dial-plate.
-Perhaps some of those same youngsters, to whose inquiring and wondering
-minds the pictures were an every-day exercise, are settled down, old
-men and women now, in one of these distant quarters of the globe, say
-America, and are sitting at this very moment in their log-hut in the
-backwoods, their minds’ eyes reverting to the familiar face of that old
-clock tick-ticking away in their childhood’s home.
-
-Over against where it stood in that same old home, between the
-room door and the end of the white scoured wooden dresser with its
-well-filled delf rack, I picture to myself the wasted face of a sick
-woman pillowed up in bed. What weary nights she has listened to its
-tick-tack, and counted the slow hours as they struck, waiting for the
-dawn! I know that her head aches no longer, and that she sleeps sound
-enough now, with the summer breeze stirring the green grass on her
-grave.
-
-Turning away from the venerable time-keeper, my eye falls on an
-old-fashioned low-set chest of drawers, with dingy folding brass
-handles, and little bits of the veneer chipped off here and there,
-and the ivory awanting in some of the keyholes. Where are now, I ask
-myself, the ashes of those bright household fires, which have winked in
-the shining depths of their mahogany in the darkening gloaming, before
-the blinds were drawn and the candles lit? What secrets and treasures
-have not these same drawers been the repositories of! I see a pensive
-female form, in striped shortgown and drugget petticoat, stop while
-she is sweeping the kitchen floor, and, with palpitating heart, pull
-out the centre small top drawer to take another look at the golden
-curl, wrapped in a precious letter, in the corner beside two or three
-well-worn toys. That bruised heart will throb no more with joy or pain;
-neither will her tears fall any more like scalding lead on the blurred
-parchment, as she lifts the bright curl to her lips before wrapping
-it away out of sight again—till, mayhap, the next day, when the old
-yearning returns, and she must needs go and unfold her treasure, the
-sight of which brings the little chubby face—over which the curl used
-to hang—once more before her brimming eyes.
-
-The little bookcase, with the diamond-shaped panes, on the top of the
-chest of drawers is an object to me of even nobler regard than the
-drawers themselves. My venerable uncle, who was an author too, had just
-such a little bookcase on the top of his drawers, about three-fourths
-filled with sombre-looking volumes. I remember I never looked up at it
-as a boy, and beheld the dim dusty books, like gray ghosts, sitting
-erect, or leaning against one another in the twilight shelves, but I
-associated it in my fancy with the inside of his own gray head. Already
-I see the titles on the backs of some of these children of dead brains
-looming out of the empty gloom through the diamond-shaped panes; and I
-can recognise many of my own favourites among them. The binding is more
-faded and worn on the backs of some than others, as if they had been
-more often in the hand and more dear to the heart of the reader. I am
-almost tempted to stretch forth my hand and renew their acquaintance.
-One in particular, in faded green-and-gold binding, looking out from
-amongst a motley company of fiction, _The House with the Seven Gables_,
-I have a covetous eye upon.
-
-How I should like to revisit the shadowy chambers of that old puritan
-mansion, especially that low-studded oak-panelled room with the
-portrait of the stern old Colonel looking down from the wall; and feel
-the smell of its decaying timbers, ‘oozy’ with the memories of whole
-generations of Pyncheons; to see poor perplexed old Hepzibah in the
-midst of her first day’s shopkeeping, with her wreck of a resurrected
-brother to care and provide for; and watch—not without reverence, even
-though we are constrained sometimes to laugh—the miraculously minute
-workings of her crazed old heart fighting—a kind of comic pathos, as
-well as rarest heroism in her mimic battling—those troublesome spectres
-of gentility which she has inherited with her Pyncheon blood.
-
-Alas for this most bewitching of romancers! Well might his friend
-Longfellow exclaim of him:
-
- Ah! who shall lift that wand of magic power,
- And the lost clue regain?
- The unfinished window in Aladdin’s tower
- Unfinished must remain!
-
-Sitting on the shelf beneath _The House with the Seven Gables_ is the
-king of all the magicians—the enchanter’s name printed in tarnished
-gold letters on a faded square of scarlet morocco on its calf
-back—‘Shakspeare.’
-
-On this hot July forenoon, with dusty smelling streets, when the united
-heart of our mighty Babylon is panting for the water-brooks, wouldn’t
-it be a treat just to step into the forest of Arden? You don’t require
-to change your clothes, or bolt a hurried luncheon, or run to catch
-a train, or take your place on the crowded deck of a snorting greasy
-steamboat under a vertical sun; but simply to open out the volume at
-that most delightful of all comedies, _As You Like It_, and at once
-fling yourself down ‘under the shade of melancholy boughs,’ and ‘lose
-and neglect the creeping hours of time’ listening to the moralising of
-a Jaques
-
- As he lay along
- Under an oak, whose antique root peeps out
- Upon the brook that brawls along this wood:
-
-or to an encounter of his wits with the sage fooleries of a Touchstone;
-or the love-sick ravings of an Orlando; or the nimble pleasantries and
-caustic humours of a Rosalind.
-
-But, to speak the truth, I don’t know whether I should not prefer at
-this moment—to a lounge in the forest of Arden—a meditative ramble and
-chat with the Wanderer in Wordsworth’s _Excursion_, which I spy leaning
-against my old friend _The Vicar of Wakefield_, there, on the other
-side of Shakspeare. How pleasant it would be, after toiling across the
-bare wide common, baked with the scorching heat, to join that venerable
-philosopher and retired packman just where the author himself meets
-him by appointment, reposing his limbs on the cottage bench beside the
-roofless hut of poor Margaret!
-
- His eyes as if in drowsiness half shut,
- The shadow of the breezy elms above
- Dappling his face.
-
-But the unceremonious porter is apparently unwilling to gratify me
-so far, having, in his preparations for the sale, pushed a tall
-half-tester bedstead right in front of my view of the chest of drawers
-and bookcase.
-
-This alteration has brought to light an old armchair among a crowd
-of odd window-poles and bed-bottoms, a kind of bewilderment and
-shyness in its wrinkled features, as if it hardly felt at home in this
-nineteenth-century saleroom, rubbing shoulders, so to speak, with
-pompous old sideboards, and gouty old sofas and stuff-bottomed chairs,
-and wishing it were back to the earthen cottage floor again. From its
-shape and the colour of its wood, it looks more than a hundred years
-old. My Aunt S——, who was a paralytic, had just such a chair, which she
-sat in for ten years before she died. It had belonged to her mother’s
-mother; and she took great pride in averring that Burns—who, her own
-mother told her, was a crony of her father’s—had many a time sat in
-it. I think I see herself sitting in it at this moment, with her great
-black piercing eyes, and hear her clever critical tongue wagging as of
-old.
-
-This ancient armchair, stuffed away amid the dust and lumber of the
-saleroom, touches my feelings more nearly than any other object joined
-together with hands. Its low, firm, but narrow seat, its solid curved
-arms, its straight sloping back with three spars in the centre, recall
-the tottering gait of silvery-haired grandfathers in knee-breeches and
-‘rig-an’-fur’ stockings, and hale old grandmothers with white bordered
-‘mutches’ or caps on their heads, and tartan napkins about their
-stooping shoulders; and old-fashioned Scotch kitchens with eight-day
-clocks, and wooden dressers, and clean-clayed roomy fireplaces with
-big-bellied pots hanging from the links on the ‘swee’ or crane.
-
-But what household god is this which is the subject of whispering
-criticism behind me? Turning round, I observe two women, evidently
-intending purchasers from their remarks, and not idle dreamers like
-myself, moving away from a large chest to inspect some dishes they have
-suddenly caught sight of on a side-table at the further end of the
-room. This chest I have seen before, especially about the term-time,
-mounted on the footboard of a cab beside the driver, while its ‘sonsie’
-proprietress—unaccustomed as she is to ride in carriages—sits on the
-edge of the cushioned seat inside, staring apologetically at the
-foot-passengers on the pavement. It is the same kind of thing thrifty
-housewives in the country used to keep their blankets in, before the
-trunks and tin boxes came so much into vogue. It is painted an oak
-colour, though to my mind it resembles more a musty gingerbread; and
-it has a black line forming a square on each of its plain panels.
-Instinctively I lift the lid and peep in. Its white wood is covered
-with a wall-paper pattern of moss-roses. It has a ‘shuttle’ too, with
-a little drawer underneath; the same as was in the chest I had when a
-bachelor. I used to keep all my valuables in that little drawer, such
-as love-letters. How those epistles accumulated! I remember I had to
-press them down before the drawer would shut, when I happened to be
-refreshing my memory with some of their pleasant sentiments. Peg’s
-portrait used to lie here in a corner of this same charmed sepulchre.
-If I were to tell my young readers how often I made an excuse to go
-into my chest for something or other, and never withdrew my head
-without taking a peep at Peg’s face, they would no doubt call me
-spooney, though they know quite well they do the same thing themselves.
-
-The bustling old porter, who kept hovering in my vicinity—a kind of
-astonished interest looking out of his not unkindly gray eyes—here cut
-short my amorous reminiscences by shutting down the lid of the chest,
-and, apparently with a view to economise space—for odd customers were
-beginning to drop in—lifting a cradle on to the top of it. The cradle
-is one of the old-fashioned wooden sort, with good solid rockers, which
-used to be seen in the houses of plain folks in my young days, and was
-usually of some antiquity, being considered an heirloom, and descending
-from parent to eldest son. I remember another cradle just like this
-one, in our old home. It was painted a bluish-green colour inside, and
-a loud mahogany colour outside, interspersed with numberless artificial
-black knots, more like figures in the hangings, or wall-paper, than
-the grains of wood. That cradle had rocked no end of generations of
-my progenitors; and when baby visitors gave over showing their chubby
-little red pudding faces at our house, my sister and I used to play at
-‘shop’ and ‘church’ in it on wet days. On these occasions, though I
-allowed her—as I no doubt thought became her good-for-nothing sex—the
-full management of the shop, yet I always insisted on being the
-clergyman, turning the cradle on its end, and preaching from under its
-hood, which served as a canopy.
-
-That oldest and ever newest tragedy which we must all, some time or
-other, be witnesses of, or chief performers in, has been enacted in
-this hollow little bed ere now. I see the worn and anxious mother
-seated on a stool bending over the little sufferer in the cradle. She
-has not had her clothes off for nearly a week, but she will not be
-persuaded to lie down. She could never forgive herself if those glazed
-little windows, so set-like now in their deep sockets, under the ashy
-pale brow, were to be darkened for ever, and she not see the final
-darkening. She wets continually the livid and senseless little lips,
-and sighs as if her heart would burst, as she watches, in her own
-words, ‘the sair, sair liftin’ o’ the wee breist, an’ the cauld, cauld
-dew on the little face!’ The struggle will not last long now, and the
-mother’s pent-up feelings will ere long get relief.
-
-Whether desirous of diverting my thoughts from this harrowing scene, or
-merely thinking it a pity that I should be exercising my mind over a
-lot of lifeless old sticks, the porter, with a delicacy of insight that
-I would hardly have credited him with, has brought two pictures, and
-without a word has put them up against the backs of two mahogany chairs
-in front of me. If that porter had been my friend the biggest half of
-his natural lifetime—which, judging from the furrows on his lean face
-and the whiteness of his scant locks, was already anything but a short
-one—he could not have selected two works of art more pat to my taste or
-my present mood; and I inwardly blessed him for his thoughtful trouble,
-though I had a vague suspicion that there might be a gentle touch of
-irony in his ministrations.
-
-The largest picture, ‘Crossing the Sands,’ is a gloaming or twilight
-subject, somewhere, I fancy, on the Ayrshire coast. Its features
-are as familiar to me as the streets and houses in my native town.
-It brings to mind the days of my childhood, when the old folks used
-to hire a garret at the seaside for a few brief—for us youngsters
-all too brief—days in the summer; and the lonely walks and talks of
-later years, when the sun had gone down, and the newly awakened winds
-blew all the stronger and fresher in our faces for their afternoon’s
-slumber, and our voices mingled with the rhythmic murmur of the waves
-as they broke at our feet.
-
-The artist, I suppose, has named his picture from the dim outline of a
-horse and cart, with two figures sitting in it, crossing the darkening
-sands. The tide is far out, and has left long zigzag shallow pools of
-water lying in the uneven places on the sands, into which the swift
-vanishing day, through a break in the dark saffron clouds, is casting
-wistful looks. The same pale reflection is glimmering faintly along
-the wave-broken verge of the distant sea; while the denser flood,
-where it stretches out to meet the gray skyline, wears something of a
-sad melancholy in its cold blue depth. In comfortable contrast with
-this lonesomeness, sitting among the deepening shadows on a dark clump
-of moorland, or bent, on the left-hand corner of the picture, is the
-dreamiest little hut, with the rarest blue smoke rising out of its
-crazy chimney, and floating like a spirit among the dark grays and
-purples sleeping on the hillsides.
-
-The smaller upright picture is a street in Dieppe—the time, evening,
-from the green tinge in the blue of the sky, and the roseate hue of
-the low-lying clouds. It is just such an old French street as one
-would delight in strolling through at that poetic hour, to feast one’s
-eyes on the bewitching mixture of sunlight and shadow, reclining side
-by side, or locked in loving embrace among the sombre reds, and rich
-browns, and warm ochres on the quaint roofs and gables and walls; and
-to note the leisurely figures of the picturesque women in white caps,
-blue shortgowns, and red petticoats, chatting in the mellow sunlight
-at the street corner, or moving along in the shadow under the eaves
-of the overhanging gables; or the slow cart in the middle of the
-street, its wheels resting on that streak of sunshine slanting from
-the old gable at the corner; or the decrepit vegetable-woman at her
-stand on the opposite side of that gutter, the fresh green colour of
-her vegetables—all the fresher and greener against the daub or two of
-bright red—wafting one’s thoughts away to cottage gardens and pleasant
-orchards.
-
-But I must not tarry any longer in this old French street, or, indeed,
-in this musty old saleroom, which has thrown off its pensive and
-meditative humour, and taken on a brisk, practical, and business-like
-air. Already the auctioneer and his spruce clerk have arrived, and
-the faces of the knots of people scattered up and down the floor are
-looking with expectancy towards the little pulpit. It is no longer a
-place for an idle dreamer like myself, and so I saunter out to the
-street. The sudden transition from the shadow of the saleroom to the
-bright white sunshine on the bustling city thoroughfare, together with
-the sight of the refreshing water-cart, with a group of barelegged,
-merry children prancing in its cooling spray, instantly dispel my
-illusions; and in another moment I am as completely in the midst of the
-living present as I was before in the dead past.
-
-
-
-
-SURGICAL SCRAPS.
-
-
-There is a curious instrument in the _armamentarium_ of the surgeon
-called a probang, employed for removing foreign bodies which have
-become fixed in the esophagus or gullet. It consists of a flexible
-stem, at one end of which is an arrangement of catgut fibres, and at
-the other end a small handle. By moving the handle slightly, these
-threads of catgut—which are stretched all round and parallel to the
-stem at its lower end—can be bent outwards in a radiating manner,
-which gives the instrument the appearance of a chimney-sweep’s broom
-in miniature. When a person is so unfortunate as to get a piece of
-bone stuck in his throat beyond the reach of the surgeon’s hand, the
-probang is sometimes found very useful. It can be passed down the
-gullet, in a closed condition, beyond the obstruction, then opened
-somewhat like an umbrella, and drawn upwards, carrying with it—if all
-goes well—the foreign body. The passing of such an instrument is far
-from being pleasant to the patient; but if it be done with ordinary
-care and judgment, it will not be attended with any harm. Every one who
-has known the misery attendant upon getting a good-sized piece of bone
-impacted in the food-passage, will understand that when the operation
-has proved successful, the patient is likely to consider the pleasure
-of seeing the offending fragment caught in the meshes of the probang
-cheaply purchased by the discomfort attendant upon the passage of the
-instrument.
-
-Another instrument employed for passing down the esophagus is used
-for a different purpose. When the gullet has been severely burned
-internally—as, for instance, from the accidental swallowing of
-corrosive acids—after the ulcer produced has healed, there is a great
-tendency to contraction in the scar, and consequent stricture of the
-esophagus. This may threaten life, by tending to close the passage
-altogether. To prevent this, instruments called bougies are passed
-through the constriction from time to time. These bougies are simply
-firm, smooth, slightly flexible rods with rounded ends, and are various
-in size as regards their diameters. An instance of the passing of these
-instruments being turned to account in a very curious way, occurred
-some years ago in one of the London hospitals. A patient was suffering
-from stricture of the esophagus, brought about in the manner above
-described; and the tendency to contraction was in this case so great,
-that it was only by the frequent passing of instruments that it could
-be prevented from becoming to the last degree dangerous. Now, it was
-impossible that the man could remain in the hospital permanently; it
-was therefore decided to teach him to pass the instrument for himself.
-He proved capable of this, after a certain amount of instruction;
-and it then occurred to some one about the hospital that the daily
-performance of this operation might be made the means by which the man
-could earn a livelihood. Accordingly, the patient was advised to get a
-bougie made as much as possible to resemble a sword. This he did; and
-for a long time afterwards was to be seen about the streets of London
-making money by what looked like the swallowing of a sword. In his
-case there was really ‘no deception’ as regards the passing of a long
-instrument down towards his stomach was concerned, the only deception
-being that the instrument was not the weapon it represented. His
-daily street performance thus served him in two ways—it supplied him
-with food, and also kept open the passage by which that food could be
-conveyed to his ‘inner man.’
-
-The contraction about which we have spoken as taking place in scars
-formed after burns of the gullet, and which is so dangerous there, also
-occurs in burns on the surface of the body, and often leads to a good
-deal of deformity. Burns, indeed, are a great source of trouble to
-the surgeon in many ways. For instance, if a burn is very extensive,
-there may be great difficulty in getting a cicatrice to form over the
-whole of it. Cicatrisation only begins in the immediate neighbourhood
-of living epidermis, and therefore a burn or ulcer must heal from the
-circumference to the centre. But the further that the cicatricial
-tissue extends from the margin of the burn, the more slowly and the
-more imperfectly is it formed; and indeed it may fail altogether
-to reach the centre. This difficulty has often been met by a small
-operation called skin-grafting. A piece of sound skin about the size
-of a split pea is pinched up—say, on the outside of the arm—and the
-epidermis snipped off with a pair of curved scissors, the scissors just
-going deep enough to cut slightly into the second layer of the skin
-and draw a little blood. A special kind of scissors has been invented
-for the purpose, that will only take up just the right amount of skin,
-so that the operation is thus made even simpler still; and if it is
-skilfully performed, it causes only very trifling pain. The little
-fragment of skin thus separated is then placed gently, with its raw
-surface downwards, on the unhealed surface of the burn. The same thing
-is repeated again and again, till there are many grafts, if the burn
-is a large one. Isinglass plaster, or some other similar material, is
-employed to keep the grafts in position and preserve them from injury.
-In about four days they should have taken root, and then the covering
-can be removed. There is now a number of foci from which cicatrisation
-can start; for, as before said, it will begin from where there is an
-epidermal covering, and thence alone. After a time, a number of little
-islands of scar tissue may be seen, which go on increasing until at
-length they coalesce with one another, and also join that extending
-from the margin of the burn. This is what happens if all goes well;
-but, unfortunately, there is a very great tendency for a cicatrice
-formed from grafts to break down and disappear, so that the result is
-not by any means always so satisfactory as it at first promises to be.
-
-Another trouble with burns is the great pain which they invariably
-cause; and numberless are the applications which have been recommended
-for its relief. The great essential in all such applications is
-that they should completely exclude the air; for the very slightest
-irritation to the surface of a burn will give rise to the most
-excruciating pain. To prevent irritation and to keep the parts at rest
-is indeed one of the surest ways of relieving pain, not only in the
-case of burns, but in the treatment of other forms of injury, and also
-in many kinds of disease. An instance of this is found in the method
-adopted to relieve the pain in certain joint diseases. Those who have
-visited the Children’s Hospital in Ormond Street, or indeed any other
-hospital for children, may remember having noticed that at the foot of
-many of the beds there was fixed a pulley, over which ran a cord with
-a weight attached to the end of it. This cord, it may further have
-been noticed, was fixed at the other end to a kind of stirrup which
-depended from the patient’s foot. Thus the weight—which consisted of
-a tin canister partly filled with shot—had the effect of keeping the
-child’s leg on the stretch continuously. In fact, the little patient
-looked very much as though he was lying on a kind of rack; and if the
-visitor could have heard the surgeon order more shot to be poured into
-the canister, saying that he thought the patient was able to bear more
-weight, the command would have sounded very like that of a torturer,
-rather than that of one whose object it was to relieve pain. But the
-truth is that this rack is a very humane one indeed. It is the rack of
-modern times, as distinguished from that of past ages; it is the rack
-of the surgeon, and not that of the inquisitor. The cases in which
-this apparatus is used are almost always instances of disease of the
-hip or knee joint. The object of this arrangement of pulley and weight
-is, by making traction on the foot and leg, to keep the lower of the
-bones, which go to form the diseased joint, away from the upper, and so
-avoid the excruciating pain caused by the carious or ulcerated surfaces
-touching one another.
-
-The benefit in such cases of having a weight drawing on the leg is
-most marked at night, when the patient wishes to get to sleep. With
-a good heavy weight, many a patient may sleep comfortably, who would
-otherwise be in a most pitiable condition through the long watches of
-the night. The position of such a person without any weight attached
-would be this. Knowing from past experience what too often followed
-on his dropping off to sleep, he would endeavour to keep himself from
-doing so. This, however, would of course be impossible for long, and
-at last the heavy eyelids would droop, the ward with its long rows of
-beds would grow dimmer and dimmer, the breathing of the neighbouring
-sleepers would sound fainter and yet more faint, until sight and
-hearing failed him, and his long watching ended in sleep. But now
-that he was no longer on his guard to keep his limb in a state of
-perfect rest, the irritation of the diseased part would give rise to
-spasmodic contraction of the neighbouring muscles. This contraction
-of the muscles would bring the lower bone of the joint, with more or
-less violence, against the upper; the two highly sensitive ulcerated
-surfaces would touch, and with a shriek of agony, the child would
-awake, quivering in every limb. And then, as the pain gradually grew
-less, again the same terrible drowsiness would begin to oppress him;
-and after another long spell of watching, he would fall asleep once
-more, to be once more awakened in the same horrible manner as before.
-But with a sufficient weight attached, the patient may go to sleep
-confident of comparative ease; for the weight is too much for the
-spasmodic action of the muscles to overcome, and the bony surfaces
-therefore remain separated. And not only does the surgeon’s rack thus
-save the patient from a terrible amount of pain, but, by allowing
-him to get good rest of a night, it must increase enormously the
-probability of ultimate recovery.
-
-
-
-
-IN THE RHINE WOODS.
-
-CUCKOO! CUCKOO!
-
-
- I hear it again!
- An echo of youth from its far sunny shore;
- Through the dim distant years it resoundeth once more.
- How mingled the feelings that rise with the strain—
- The joy and the pain!
-
- I hear it, but not
- In the home of my childhood, the glorious and grand,
- ’Mid the wild woody glens of my own native land.
- Ah! dear to me still is each far distant spot,
- And present in thought.
-
- I see them to-day!
- The glory of Spring-time on valley and hill,
- That struck to my heart with a rapturous thrill,
- And friends in the sunshine of life’s early ray,
- Young, happy, and gay.
-
- All vanished and gone!
- Could I see it indeed as in spirit I see,
- The home of my youth would be joyless to me;
- Like a bird’s empty nest when the tenant has flown,
- Deserted and lone.
-
- Soft, softly it rings!
- O shades of the buried Past, slumber in peace!
- O heart, bid thy sad, tender memories cease!
- And welcome the Present, with all that it brings
- Of beautiful things.
-
- How often in youth
- I have dreamed of this land of the oak and the vine,
- This green, lovely land on the banks of the Rhine,
- With longing prophetic, that one day in sooth
- The dream should be truth.
-
- Now gladly I rest
- ’Mid its scenes of enchantment with those that I love;
- Warm hearts are around me, blue skies are above;
- And though distant are some of the dearest and best,
- I am thankful, and blest.
-
- The years as they roll
- Rob the cheek of its glow and the eyes of their light,
- And much we have cherished is lost to the sight;
- But one thing remains that they cannot control—
- The youth of the Soul.
-
- I. A. S.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Printed and Published by W. & R. CHAMBERS, 47 Paternoster Row, LONDON,
-and 339 High Street, EDINBURGH.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_All Rights Reserved._
-
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-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Chambers's Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, Fifth Series, No. 24, Vol. I, June 14, 1884, by Various</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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 <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Chambers's Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, Fifth Series, No. 24, Vol. I, June 14, 1884</p>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Editor: Various</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: July 8, 2021 [eBook #65795]</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Susan Skinner, Eric Hutton and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHAMBERS'S JOURNAL OF POPULAR LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART, FIFTH SERIES, NO. 24, VOL. I, JUNE 14, 1884 ***</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_369">{369}</span></p>
-
-<h1>CHAMBERS’S JOURNAL<br />
-OF<br />
-POPULAR<br />
-LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART.</h1>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='center'>
-
-<!-- Autogenerated TOC. Modify or delete as required. -->
-
-<a href="#ST_MARGUERITE_AND_ST_HONORAT">ST MARGUERITE AND ST HONORÂT.</a><br />
-<a href="#BY_MEAD_AND_STREAM">BY MEAD AND STREAM.</a><br />
-<a href="#CURIOSITIES_OF_THE_MICROPHONE">CURIOSITIES OF THE MICROPHONE.</a><br />
-<a href="#SILAS_MONK">SILAS MONK.</a><br />
-<a href="#FAMILIAR_SKETCHES_OF_ENGLISH_LAW">FAMILIAR SKETCHES OF ENGLISH LAW.</a><br />
-<a href="#IN_A_FURNITURE_SALEROOM">IN A FURNITURE SALEROOM.</a><br />
-<a href="#SURGICAL_SCRAPS">SURGICAL SCRAPS.</a><br />
-<a href="#IN_THE_RHINE_WOODS">IN THE RHINE WOODS.</a><br />
-
-<!-- End Autogenerated TOC. -->
-
-</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="figcenter w100" id="header" style="max-width: 43.75em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/header.jpg" alt="Chambers’s Journal of Popular Literature, Science,
-and Art. Fifth Series. Established by William and Robert Chambers, 1832. Conducted by R. Chambers (Secundus)." />
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="full" />
-<div class="center">
-<div class="header">
-<p class="floatl"><span class="smcap">No. 24.—Vol. I.</span></p>
-<p class="floatr"><span class="smcap">Price</span> 1½<em>d.</em></p>
-<p class="floatc">SATURDAY, JUNE 14, 1884.</p>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="ST_MARGUERITE_AND_ST_HONORAT">ST MARGUERITE AND ST HONORÂT.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class="ph3">THE HOLY ISLES OF THE MEDITERRANEAN.</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">A melancholy</span> interest is lent just now to the
-name of St Marguerite by the fact that the last
-public act of the lamented Duke of Albany was
-to sign a petition protesting against the sale of
-that island. The thrilling tale of ‘the man with
-the iron mask,’ which used to be a favourite in
-school-books, has since our childish days enveloped
-the little island for us in a halo of mystery and
-awe. St Marguerite and its companion island
-of St Honorât lie, like twin gems of ocean, in
-the Golfe de Frejus, and form a romantic point
-in the seaward view from Cannes; and among all
-the excursions which can be made from that
-delightful centre, none is more charming than
-a sail to the islands. Tradition tells us that they
-were first colonised by a noble young knight
-from the land of the Gauls, who in the early
-ages of Christianity embraced its tenets, and
-with a chosen band of friends, sought a retreat
-from the sinful world in this distant islet. He
-had one sister, the fair Marguerite, who loved
-him as her very life, and who was so inconsolable
-for his loss, that she followed him to his retreat
-in the southern sea. As Honorât and his brother-ascetics
-had vowed themselves to solitude, he
-could not allow his sister to take up her abode
-with him; but in compliance with her urgent
-desires, found a home for her in the neighbouring
-island, now known by her name of Marguerite.
-Yet this was only granted on the condition that
-he should never see her but when the almond
-tree should blossom. The time of waiting was
-very dreary to the lonely Marguerite, and with
-sighings and tears she assailed all the saints, till
-the almond tree miraculously blossomed once a
-month, and her poor heart was made glad by the
-sight of her beloved brother!</p>
-
-<p>A little coasting-steamer plies daily between
-Cannes and the islands; and passengers land at
-a little pier near the fortress, which is built on
-steep cliffs at the eastern extremity of the island.
-Like the old castles of Edinburgh and Stirling,
-it is in itself no very imposing building, and
-owes its strength and its romantic air solely to
-the rocky cliffs on which it is perched, and to
-the interesting associations which cluster around
-it.</p>
-
-<p>It was a lovely day in April, like one of our
-most delicious midsummer days, that we went
-with some French friends to visit the islands. The
-water of the Mediterranean is so limpid that we
-could look down through fathoms of it to the
-sand and see the shells and seaweed. It is of
-such a true sapphire blue, that surely Tennyson
-must have had memories of it and not of the
-gray North Sea when he spoke of the</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Shining, sapphire spangled marriage ring of the land.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The view of the coast, looking backwards, as the
-boat nears St Marguerite, is splendid: Cannes
-basking in the sweet sunshine, lying in a white
-semicircle around the bay, and climbing up the
-hills behind, with the gray olive groves making
-a silvery haze to tone down the brilliant colours.
-In the distance, the dazzling white peaks of the
-Maritime Alps form a noble background; while
-the picture is bounded on the west by the sierra-like
-range of the Esterel Hills, painted against the
-skyline in vivid blues and purples. Landing at
-the little stone pier, we went up the causewayed
-road to the fort, which, with its whitewashed
-walls and red-tiled roof, is built around a wide
-stone court. Here we found the guide waiting,
-an old <i>cantinière</i>, very ugly, but proportionately
-loud and eloquent—a very different being from
-the pretty <i>vivandière</i> of comic operas. She carried
-us along a narrow passage to the dungeon
-where the unhappy ‘Masque de fer’ spent fourteen
-long years of hopeless confinement. It is closed
-by double doors of iron; the walls are of great
-thickness; and four rows of grating protect the
-little window. From this cell the prisoner was
-sometimes permitted egress to walk along the
-narrow corridor, at the end of which is a niche
-in the wall, which in his time held a sacred
-image. The ‘Masque de fer’ was never seen<span class="pagenum" id="Page_370">{370}</span>
-without his iron veil, even by the governor of the
-prison; it was so curiously fitted as to permit
-of his eating with ease. He was treated with all
-the deference due to a royal personage; all the
-dishes and appurtenances of his table were of
-silver; the governor waited on him personally;
-but one day the prisoner succeeded in eluding
-his vigilance so far as to write an appeal for
-help on a silver plate and throw it over the precipice
-on which this part of the fortress stands.
-As the well-known story tells, a fisherman found
-it, and brought it at once to the governor, who
-turned pale and trembled on reading what was
-scratched thereon. ‘Can you read, my friend?’
-he said. ‘No,’ answered the fisherman. ‘Thank
-God for that, for you should have paid for your
-knowledge with your life!’ He dismissed him
-with the gift of a gold-piece, and the caution
-to preserve a prudent silence as to what had
-passed.</p>
-
-<p>When the governor communicated the attempt
-to headquarters in Paris, orders came for the
-prisoner to be removed to the Bastile. After
-some years of close confinement, he died there,
-and was buried in his mask; and the governor
-of the Bastile, who knew the secret of his august
-prisoner’s name, died without divulging it. And
-thus ended the tale in the old school-books: ‘The
-identity of the “Masque de fer” must remain for
-ever a mystery.’ But it was no mystery to our
-old <i>vivandière</i>, or indeed to any of the French
-people who were listening to the story of his
-woes; for, in surprise at our ignorance, they
-all exclaimed: ‘Don’t you know that he was the
-<i>frère aîné</i> [elder brother] of Louis XIV.?’ He
-was considered too weak in mind to govern
-France, and was therefore always kept in seclusion,
-till an attempt which was made to bring
-him forward was the cause of his being condemned
-to the life-long prison and the iron
-mask.</p>
-
-<p>A very queer old gilded seat like an old Roman
-curule chair is shown in the chapel as that used
-by the ‘Masque de fer.’</p>
-
-<p>To this fortress, also, Marshal Bazaine was sent
-as a prisoner, after what the French call his
-‘betrayal of Metz.’ The places where he and
-his family—who were permitted to follow him
-to the island—used to sit in the tiny chapel were
-pointed out to us; also the terrace-walk where
-he was allowed to promenade, unguarded, in the
-evenings; and the rock down which he escaped,
-by means of a rope-ladder, to the little boat which
-his wife had arranged to be in waiting below.
-Of course, it is said that Macmahon connived at
-his escape, not wishing his old comrade to be
-tried by a court-martial, which he knew would
-inevitably condemn him. He sent him to a sham
-imprisonment in this pleasant island, till the first
-wild wrath of the people of France against him
-had cooled down. A Frenchman told us that he
-now lives at ease in Spain, having saved his
-fortune from the wreck, but <i>tout déshonoré</i> in the
-eyes of France!</p>
-
-<p>From St Marguerite we crossed in less than
-half an hour to the smaller island of St Honorât,
-now the property of the Cistercian order of monks.
-The shore is fringed with the beautiful stone-pines
-which are so conspicuous on the Riviera
-and in some parts of Italy. The first object
-which strikes one on landing is a large new
-archway, made probably as the gateway for a
-future avenue; behind it, at some distance, lie
-the church and monastery. On a promontory
-at the western end of the island stands an old
-ruined monastery of the thirteenth century. It
-is very like the style of architecture of some of
-the old castles in Scotland. There is a fine
-triforium in it with Gothic arches. In the
-refectory we saw on a raised platform at the
-side the arch for the lectern, from which it
-was the duty of a monk to read to his brethren
-while at their meals. The view from the tower
-is magnificent: the deep blue sea stretches to the
-southern horizon; the snowy line of the Alpes
-Maritimes bounds the northern; on the right,
-the white waves break in feathery foam on the
-Cap d’Antibes; while the purple Esterels, with
-the jagged summit of Mont Vinaigrier, lie to the
-left; and Cannes, with its picturesque old town
-on the hill of Mont Chevalier, and its modern
-wings spreading far and wide, fills up the middle
-distance. Since the young St Honorât sought a
-retreat here from the world in the fifth century,
-this island has been usually held by monks,
-although it was often ravaged by the Saracens.
-The ruins of the oldest monastery are within the
-present cloisters. At a little booth outside the
-monastic walls we found an English monk, who
-was deputed to sell photographs of the island and
-the ruins, and to make himself agreeable to the
-visitors. He told us that he had been in the
-Grande Chartreuse, near Grenoble; but as his
-health was not strong enough to bear the keen
-air on those rocky heights, he had been sent to
-spend the winter in this convent of the sunny
-south. In his youth he had been stationed in
-Edinburgh, and was much interested in speaking
-of it and hearing of the changes which had taken
-place there.</p>
-
-<p>During the past century, St Honorât’s isle has
-passed through strange phases. First of all, a
-Parisian <i>comédienne</i> bought it, meaning to build
-a summer villa there; then tiring of it, she sold
-it to a Protestant clergyman. When it came
-again into the market, the Cistercians bought it,
-built the new monastery, and settled a congregation
-of their order in it. The Cistercian rule is
-not so severe as that of the Trappists, but still,
-they are not allowed to speak except during the
-hours of recreation and on Sunday. The lay
-brother who showed us round told us he had a
-dispensation to speak, as he was told off to the
-post of cicerone for that day. He said it was a
-very happy life, as tranquil and blessed as in
-Paradise; and truly his face beamed with heavenly
-light and peace. One of our company was a
-gentleman from Grenoble, who came in the hope
-of seeing a young friend who had lately joined
-the order. He hoped even to get some of us
-invited to the ‘parloir’ to speak with him. Alas!
-the young monk would not even see his old
-friend, but sent him a tender greeting, and thanks
-for his kindness in coming. The English ‘father’
-said he did this of his own accord, fearing to be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_371">{371}</span>
-disturbed by old associations from his hardly
-won tranquillity. However that might be, we
-had to bid adieu to St Honorât without seeing
-the young recluse.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak x-ebookmaker-important" id="BY_MEAD_AND_STREAM">BY MEAD AND STREAM.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XXXIII.—HER PROBLEM.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Madge</span> in her own room; but it was evening
-and almost quite dark, so that it was not at all
-like the pretty chamber which it appeared to be
-in the bright sunshine of an autumn morning.
-Can there be any sympathy between the atmosphere
-and our feelings? There must be. A
-bright day helps us to meet sorrow bravely; a
-dull, dark day makes sorrow our master: we
-bow our heads and groan because nature seems
-to have entered into a conspiracy against us. The
-strong will may fling aside this atmospherical
-depression, but the effort is needed: whereas
-when the sun shines, even the weak can lift their
-heads and say without faltering: ‘Let me know
-the worst.’</p>
-
-<p>Madge held in her hand a letter—the same
-which Wrentham had seen on Beecham’s desk,
-and of which he made due report to Mr Hadleigh.
-She knew well where to find the matches and
-candle, and yet she stood in that deep gloom
-looking at the window, as if she were interested
-in the invisible prospect on which it opened.</p>
-
-<p>It is not instinct, but a telegraphic association
-of ideas which makes us hesitate to open particular
-letters. That was her case. And yet, if
-her face could have been seen in that gloom, no
-sign of fear would have been found upon it; only
-a wistful sadness—the expression of one who
-feels that some revelation of the inevitable is
-near.</p>
-
-<p>After the pause, she quietly lit the candle, and,
-without drawing down the blind, seated herself by
-the window. Then, as methodically as if it had
-been only one of Uncle Dick’s business letters,
-she cut the envelope and spread the paper on
-her lap. She was very pale just then, for there
-was no message from Beecham; only this
-inclosure of an old letter, which seemed to have
-been much handled, and of which the writing had
-become indistinct.</p>
-
-<p>There were only a few lines on the paper. She
-looked at the name at the foot of them, and raised
-it to her lips, reverently.</p>
-
-<p>‘Poor mother!’ was her sigh, and she laid the
-letter gently on her lap again, whilst she looked
-dreamily into the gloom outside.</p>
-
-<p>Should she read it? He had left her to answer
-that question for herself. Yes; she would read,
-for there were so few words, that there could be
-no breach of faith in scanning them. Moreover,
-the letter had been sent to her for that purpose
-by the man who had received it, and who, therefore,
-had the right to submit it to her.</p>
-
-<p>There was no need to raise any great question
-of conscience in the matter; the words were so
-simple that they might have been written by a
-mother to a child. No passion, no forced
-sentiment, no ‘make-believe’ of any kind. Only
-this pathetic cry:</p>
-
-<p>‘Dear Austin, do not go away. I am filled
-with fear by what thou hast said to me about
-the vessel. I know it is wrong, since God is with
-us everywhere, and I am ashamed of this weakness.
-But thou art so dear, and—— I pray
-thee, Austin, do not go away.’</p>
-
-<p>Then followed in the middle of the page the
-simple name:</p>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">Lucy.</span>’</p>
-
-<p>This was what she might have written to
-Philip, and had not. It was all so simple and
-so like her own experience, with the difference
-that the lover had not gone away. Few daughters
-are allowed to know the history of their mothers’
-love affairs, and there are fewer still who, when
-they hear them, can regard them as anything
-more than commonplace sketches of life, which
-they pass aside as they turn over the leaves of a
-portfolio.</p>
-
-<p>But to Madge!——</p>
-
-<p>What did all this mean? That, with the best
-intentions, she was entering into a conspiracy
-against the man she loved, and her mother was
-invoked as the inspiration of the conspiracy!</p>
-
-<p>Sitting there, the candle flickering in the
-strange draughts which came from nowhere, the
-gloom outside growing quite black, and the
-shadows in the little room growing huge and
-threatening, Madge was trying to read the riddle
-of her very awkward position.</p>
-
-<p>A sharp knock at the door, one of those knocks
-which impudent and inconsiderate females give
-when they have no particular message to convey,
-and resent the necessity of carrying it.</p>
-
-<p>‘A man in the oak parlour wants to see you,
-if you ben’t too busy.’</p>
-
-<p>Madge passed her fingers over the aching head.
-She could not guess who the man might be, but
-presumed that he was one of Uncle Dick’s
-customers.</p>
-
-<p>She found Mr Beecham in the oak parlour.
-This was the first time he had been under
-the roof of Willowmere. He and Madge were
-conscious of the singularity of the meeting-place.</p>
-
-<p>‘I trust, Miss Heathcote, you are not annoyed
-with me for coming here,’ he said softly. ‘I did
-not mean to do so; but it occurred to me, after
-despatching that letter, you might require a few
-words of explanation. At first, my intention was
-to say nothing; but on consideration, it seemed
-to me unfair to leave you without help in
-answering the disagreeable questions which the
-situation suggests.’</p>
-
-<p>Madge still had the letter in her hand; the
-tears were still in her eyes. She tried to wipe
-them away, but still they would force their
-presence on the lids. That was the real Madge—tender,
-considerate to others beyond measure.</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, if’——</p>
-
-<p>Here the superficial Madge claimed supremacy,
-and took the management of the whole interview
-in hand. Calm almost to coldness, clear in speech
-and vision almost to the degree of severity, she
-spoke:</p>
-
-<p>‘I have considered all that you have said to
-me, and I do not like the position in which you
-have placed me. I gave you my word that I
-should be silent, believing that no harm could
-follow, and believing that my mother would have
-wished me to obey you. You have satisfied me
-by this letter that I have not done wrong so far.
-Take it back.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_372">{372}</span></p>
-
-<p>She folded the letter, carefully replaced it in
-the envelope, and gave it to him.</p>
-
-<p>‘Thank you,’ he said, with the shadow of
-that sad smile which had so often crossed his
-face.</p>
-
-<p>‘You cannot tell how much that letter has
-affected me. You cannot know what thoughts
-and impulses it has aroused. But you can believe
-that in my mother’s blunder I read my own fate....
-I know you are my friend: be the friend
-of those I love. Help <i>him</i>, for he needs help very
-much.’</p>
-
-<p>Mr Beecham had quietly taken the letter and
-placed it in a small pocket-case, to which it
-seemed to belong.</p>
-
-<p>‘I feared you would not understand me, and
-the desire to save you from uneasiness has brought
-me here. You have promised to be silent: I
-again beg you to keep that promise for a little
-while.’</p>
-
-<p>She bowed her head, but did not speak.</p>
-
-<p>‘In doing so,’ he added, anxious to reassure
-her, ‘you have my pledge that no harm will come
-to any one who does not seek it.’</p>
-
-<p>‘You cannot think,’ she said coldly, and yet
-with a touch of bitterness that she seemed unable
-to repress—‘you cannot think any one purposely
-seeks harm! It came to you and to my mother.’</p>
-
-<p>For an instant he was silent. He was thinking
-that no harm would have come to them if both
-had been faithful.</p>
-
-<p>‘That is a hard hit, and not easily answered,’
-he said quietly. ‘Let me say, then, that even if
-there had been no other motive to influence me,
-I should be his friend on your account. But I
-am your friend above and before all. For your
-sake alone I came back to England. For your
-sake I am acting as I am doing, strange as it
-may seem. If he is honest and faithful to
-you’——</p>
-
-<p>‘There is no doubt of that,’ she interrupted, her
-face brightening with confidence.</p>
-
-<p>Beecham inclined his head, as if in worship.
-He smiled at her unhesitating assertion of faith,
-but the smile was one of respect and admiration
-touched with a shade of regret. What might his
-life have been if he had found a mate like her!
-The man she loved might prove false, and all the
-world might call him false: she would still
-believe him to be true.</p>
-
-<p>‘A man finds such faith rarely,’ he said in his
-gentlest tone; ‘I hope he will prove worthy of
-it. But let him take his own way for the present;
-and should trouble come to him, I shall do my
-best to help him out of it.’</p>
-
-<p>She made a quick movement, as if she would
-have clasped his hands in thankfulness, but checked
-herself.</p>
-
-<p>‘Then I am content.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I am glad you can say so, for it shows you have
-some confidence in me, and every proof of kindly
-thought towards me helps me.’</p>
-
-<p>He stopped, and seemed to be smiling at the
-weakness which had made his voice a little husky.
-Looking back, and realising in this girl an old
-dream, she had grown so dear to him, that he knew
-if she had persisted, his wisest judgment would
-have yielded to her wish.</p>
-
-<p>She wondered: why was this man so gentle and
-yet so cruel, as it seemed, in his doubts of
-Philip?</p>
-
-<p>‘Let me take your hand,’ he resumed. ‘Thanks.
-Have you any notion how much it cost me to
-allow this piece of paper’ (he touched the pocket
-in which her mother’s letter lay) ‘to be out of my
-possession even for a few hours? Only you could
-have won that from me. It was the last token
-of ... well, we shall say, of her caring about
-me that came direct from her own hand. She
-was deceived. We cannot help that, you know—accidents
-will happen, and so on’ (like a brave
-man, he was smiling at his own pain). ‘The
-message came to me too late. I think—no, I am
-sure, that if she had said this to me with her own
-lips, there would have been no parting ... and
-everything would have been so different to
-us!’</p>
-
-<p>Madge withdrew one hand from his and timidly
-placed it on his shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>‘I am sorry for your past, and should be glad if
-it were in my power to help you to a happy
-future.’</p>
-
-<p>His disengaged hand was placed upon her head
-lightly, as if he were giving her a paternal
-blessing.</p>
-
-<p>‘The only way in which you can help me, my
-child, is by finding a happy future for yourself.
-I am anxious about that—selfishly anxious, for
-it seems that my life can gain its real goal only by
-making you happy, since I missed the chance of
-making your mother so. I know that she was
-not happy; and my career, which has been one of
-strange good fortune, as men reckon fortune by
-the money you make, has been one of misery.
-Do you not think that droll?’</p>
-
-<p>‘You are not like other men, I think; others
-would have forgotten the past, and forgiven.’</p>
-
-<p>She was thinking of Philip’s wish that his
-father should be reconciled to Austin Shield.</p>
-
-<p>‘I can forgive,’ he said softly; ‘I cannot forget.—Now,
-let us look at the position quietly as it is.
-The only thing which has given me an interest
-in life is the hope that I may be useful to you.
-When my sorrow came upon me, it seemed as if
-the whole world had gone wrong.’ (That was
-spoken with a kind of bitter sense of the humorous
-side of his sorrow.) ‘Doctors would have called it
-indigestion. You see, however, it does not matter
-much to the patient whether it is merely indigestion
-or organic disease, so long as he suffers from
-the pangs of whatever it may be. Well, I did not
-die, and the doctor is entitled to his credit. I
-live, eat my dinner, and am in fair health. But
-there is a difference: life lost its flavour when the
-blunder was made. When your mother believed
-the false report which reached her, the man who
-loved her was murdered.’</p>
-
-<p>‘She could not act otherwise than she did,’ said
-Madge bravely in defence.</p>
-
-<p>‘She should have trusted to me,’ he retorted,
-shaking his head sadly. ‘But that is unkind, and
-I do not mean to say one word of her that could
-be called unkind. She would forgive it.’</p>
-
-<p>‘How she must have suffered!’ murmured Madge,
-her hand passing absently over the aching brow.</p>
-
-<p>‘Ay, she must have suffered as I did—poor lass,
-poor lass!’</p>
-
-<p>He turned abruptly to the hearth, as if he had
-become suddenly conscious of the ordinary duties
-of life, and aware that the fire required attention.</p>
-
-<p>‘I want you to try to understand me,’ he said<span class="pagenum" id="Page_373">{373}</span>
-as he stirred the embers, and the oak-log on the
-top of the coal started a bright flame.</p>
-
-<p>‘I wish to understand you—but that is not easy,’
-she replied.</p>
-
-<p>He did not look round; he answered as if the
-subject were one of the most commonplace kind;
-but there was a certain emphasis in his tone as
-he seemed to take up her sentence and continue
-it.</p>
-
-<p>‘Because you stand on the sunny side of life,
-and know nothing of its shadows. Pity that they
-will force themselves upon you soon enough.’</p>
-
-<p>‘If you see them coming, why not give me
-warning?’</p>
-
-<p>He turned round suddenly, his hands clasped
-behind him so tightly that he seemed to be striving
-to subdue the outcry of some physical
-pain.</p>
-
-<p>‘It is not warning that I wish to give you, but
-protection,’ he said, and there was a harshness in
-his voice quite unusual to him.</p>
-
-<p>The change of tone was so remarkable, that she
-drew back. There were in it bitterness, hatred,
-and almost something that was like malignity.</p>
-
-<p>‘You must know it all—then judge for yourself,’
-he said at length.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CURIOSITIES_OF_THE_MICROPHONE">CURIOSITIES OF THE MICROPHONE.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> would be interesting to learn all the particulars
-relating to the birth of some great invention; to
-know the inventor’s frame of mind at the time
-the pregnant idea occurred to him, and the influences
-under which he lived and laboured. This
-is usually an unwritten chapter of biography;
-but sometimes we can learn a little about these
-things. It is not always necessity, or the need
-of help, that is the mother of invention. In
-the case of the microphone, it was the need
-of occupation. Professor Hughes was confined
-to his chamber by an attack of cold, and to
-beguile the tedium of the time, he began to
-experiment with the telephone. This was in
-the early winter of 1877; and at that time the
-transmitting and receiving parts of the Bell
-telephone system were identical. The result was
-that the received speech was very feeble; and
-Professor Hughes began to try whether he could
-not dispense with the transmitting telephone, and
-make the wire of the circuit speak of itself.
-Some experiments of Sir William Thomson had
-shown that the electric resistance of a wire varied
-when the wire was strained; and Professor
-Hughes thought that if he could get the vibrations
-of the voice to strain a wire, so as to vary
-its resistance in proportion to the vibrations, he
-might be able to make the wire itself act as a
-transmitter. He therefore connected a battery
-and telephone together by means of a fine wire,
-and pulled on a part of the wire in order to strain
-it, at the same time listening in the telephone.
-But he heard no sound at all until he strained the
-wire so much that it gave way. At the instant
-of rupture he heard a peculiar grating sound in
-the telephone; and on placing the broken ends
-of the wire in delicate contact, he found that the
-slightest agitation of the ends in contact produced
-a distinct noise in the instrument.</p>
-
-<p>This experiment, then, was the germ of the
-microphone. For the metal ends of the wire in
-contact, he substituted carbon points, and obtained
-a much more sensitive arrangement. When one
-of the carbon pencils was lightly <i>pressed</i> against
-the other in a stable position, he found that the
-joint was sensitive to the slightest jar, and could
-transmit the voice when spoken to direct. Pursuing
-his researches further, he found that a loose
-and somewhat crazy metal structure, such as a
-pile of gold-chain or a framework of French nails,
-acted in a similar way, though not so powerfully
-as carbon. This material was found so sensitive,
-that a fly walking on the board supporting the
-microphone could be distinctly heard in the telephone,
-and each tap of its trunk upon the wood
-was said by one observer to resemble the ‘tramp
-of an elephant.’</p>
-
-<p>The marvels of the microphone were published
-to the world in the early summer of the next
-year; and many useful applications followed.
-The most obvious was its use as a telephone
-transmitter; and as Professor Hughes had made
-a public gift of his invention, a great many telephone
-transmitters were based upon it. Edison,
-who had invented a carbon transmitter which
-bore some resemblance to the microphone, laid
-claim to having anticipated the invention; but
-the merit of the discovery remains with Professor
-Hughes.</p>
-
-<p>It is through the help of the microphone that
-telephony has become so practical and so extensively
-adopted. The Blake transmitter, the Ader,
-and many others by which music and speech are
-now conveyed so many miles, are all varieties of
-the carbon microphone. In some churches, microphone
-transmitters are now applied to the pulpit,
-so that the sermon can be transmitted by telephone
-to invalid members who cannot leave home.
-At the Electrical Exhibitions of Paris, Vienna,
-and the Crystal Palace, the music of an entire
-opera was transmitted from the stage by wire
-to other buildings where great numbers of
-persons sat and listened to it. The transport
-of music and other sounds in no way directly
-connected with the wire, is frequently effected
-by what is termed induction or leading-in.
-Over and over again, persons listening into
-telephones for the purpose of hearing what
-a friend is saying, have heard the strains of
-this music—aside, communicated by induction
-from some neighbouring line to theirs. Not long
-ago, a telegraph clerk in Chicago was listening
-in a telephone early one morning, and to his
-surprise heard the croaking of frogs and the
-whistling of birds. The explanation of the
-phenomenon is, that a loose joint in the telephone
-wire where it passed through a wood,
-acted as a microphone, and transmitted the woodland
-chorus to his ears. Messages in process of
-transmission are sometimes drowned by the
-rumbling noise of street-traffic induced by the
-wire.</p>
-
-<p>The microphone is not only useful as a transmitter
-of sounds, but also as a relay of sounds
-received on a telephone. Professors Houston and
-Thomson of America were perhaps the first to
-construct a telephonic relay. They mounted a
-carbon microphone on the vibrating plate of a
-telephone in such a way that the vibrations of
-the plate due to the received speech would react
-on the microphone, and be transmitted in this
-way over another line to another receiving telephone
-at a distance. Thus the speech would be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_374">{374}</span>
-relayed, just as a telegraph message is relayed,
-when it is weak, and sent further on its way.
-Curiously enough, the microphone acts as a relay
-to itself, if placed on the same table with the
-telephone with which it is in circuit. The jar of
-placing the microphone on the table causes the
-telephone to emit a sound; this sound in turn is
-transmitted by the microphone to the telephone,
-which again repeats it. The microphone re-transmits
-it as before, the telephone utters it, and
-so the process of repetition goes on <i>ad infinitum</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Since the microphone can, as it were, magnify
-small sounds, and in this respect has some resemblance
-to the microscope, which magnifies minute
-objects, it might be thought that it would prove
-useful for deaf persons. But though the microphone
-enables a person with good ears to hear
-mechanical vibrations which otherwise would be
-inaudible, the sounds that are heard are not
-in themselves very loud, and hence a dull aural
-nerve might fail to appreciate them. M. Bert,
-the well-known French physicist, constructed a
-microphone for deaf persons; but its success was
-doubtful. Professor Hughes, however, has succeeded
-in making deaf persons hear the ticking
-of a watch by means of the microphone. In this
-case the telephone was placed against the bones
-in the head, and the vibrations communicated in
-this way to the aural nerve. The ‘audiphone,’
-a curved plate held between the teeth, and
-vibrated by the sound-waves, also acts in this
-way; and it is probable that we hear ourselves
-speak not through our ears, but through the
-bones of the head as set in vibration by the
-voice.</p>
-
-<p>Its power of interpreting small sounds has
-caused the microphone to be applied to many
-other purposes. Professor Rossi, for example,
-uses it to detect the earth-tremors preceding earthquakes
-and volcanic eruptions. It has been
-employed in Austria to detect the trickling of
-underground water; and its use has also been
-suggested for hearing the signal-taps of entombed
-miners and the noise of approaching torpedo boats.
-It is not, however, quite possible to realise all
-that has been claimed for it. Thus the <i>Danbury
-News</i> jestingly remarks that ‘with a microphone
-a farmer can hear a potato-bug coming down the
-road a quarter of a mile away, and can go out
-with an axe and head it off.’</p>
-
-<p>In 1876, a year before the microphone was
-invented, a writer named Antoinette Brown
-Blackwell foretold the use of such an apparatus.
-‘It remains,’ she said, ‘to invent some instrument
-which can so retard the too rapid vibrations of
-molecules as to bring them within the time adapted
-to human ears; then we might comfortably hear
-plant movements carrying on the many processes
-of growth, <i>and possibly we might catch the crystal
-music of atoms</i> vibrating in unison with the sunbeam.’
-Without calling in question the writer’s
-theory, which does not apply to the microphone,
-we may mention that Professor Chandler Roberts
-attached a microphone to a thin porous septum,
-and on allowing hydrogen gas to diffuse through
-the latter, he heard a rushing sound, as of a wind,
-which became silent when the rapid diffusion
-ceased. The jar of the atoms on the pores of the
-septum was probably the source of this molecular
-sound. Again, Professor Graham Bell has found
-a metal microphone joint sensitive to the impact
-of a beam of intermittent light; and it is highly
-probable that a microphone with selenium contacts
-would be still more sensitive to the sound
-of light falling upon it.</p>
-
-<p>In medicine, the microphone has been usefully
-applied to enable a physician to read the pulse
-better and auscultate the heart.</p>
-
-<p>Numerous experiments have been made recently
-with the microphone by Messrs Stroh, Bidwell,
-and others. Not long after the original invention
-of the apparatus, Professor Blyth found that the
-microphone would act as a receiver as well as a
-transmitter of sounds in an electric circuit. Thus,
-with two boxes of coke cinders (hard carbon)
-connected together through a wire and battery,
-Professor Blyth found that if words were spoken
-into one of the boxes, he could faintly hear them
-by listening in the other. Mr Bidwell has constructed
-a receiving microphone, composed of a
-pile of carbon cylinders resting on a mica diaphragm,
-and this gives out distinct effects when
-a strong battery is employed. On speaking to
-the transmitting microphone in circuit, the words
-can be distinctly heard in the receiving one.</p>
-
-<p>By the use of the microscope, Mr Stroh has
-observed that the carbon points of the microphone
-which were supposed to be in contact, are
-not really so during the action of the instrument,
-but are separated by a minute distance. It would
-appear, then, that there is a repulsion between
-the points, and this repulsion accounts for the
-action of the microphone as a receiver. Metal
-microphones are also reversible in their action,
-and give out feeble sounds when used as receivers.
-The probability is that the contacts vibrate rapidly
-on each other, either in direct or very close contact,
-against a certain repulsive action of the
-current, which operates like a cushion or re-acting
-spring.</p>
-
-<p>Metal microphones are in some respects more
-interesting theoretically than those of carbon.
-For example, one has been constructed of two
-different metals, zinc and iron, which when heated
-by the flame of a spirit-lamp generates its own
-current by thermo-electric action. Iron is one
-of the most useful metals for forming microphones;
-and one of iron-wire gauze has been
-found to act with singular clearness when inclosed
-in a high vacuum, such as that given by an
-incandescent electric lamp.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="SILAS_MONK">SILAS MONK.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class="ph3">A TALE OF LONDON OLD CITY.</p>
-
-
-<h3 title="CHAPTER II.">IN FOUR CHAPTERS.—CHAPTER II.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">That</span> day in the city seemed to Walter as if
-it would never end. This mystery about Silas
-Monk was now a matter to him of real interest.
-Hitherto, the eccentricities of the old man
-had given him little or no concern; for it had
-been so long the custom among the clerks to
-crack their jokes about ‘Silas,’ that nothing which
-he might do, however queer, could appear otherwise
-than perfectly consistent with his character.
-For so many years had Silas Monk been a clerk
-in the House, that his columns of pounds, shillings,
-and pence could be traced in the oldest ledgers,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_375">{375}</span>
-it was said, even when books more than a
-hundred years old were examined. There was
-no record extant which satisfactorily settled the
-date of his engagement as a clerk by Armytage
-and Company. The oldest partners and the oldest
-clerks, with this one exception of Silas, were dead
-and buried many years ago.</p>
-
-<p>It was a very old-looking place, this ancient
-counting-house; it seemed older even than the
-firm of Armytage, which had seen two centuries.
-There were railings in front, broken in places,
-but still presenting some iron spikes among them,
-standing up with an air of protection before the
-windows, like sentinels on guard. The stone
-steps leading up to the entrance were worn by
-the tread of busy men who had in their time
-hurried in and out in their race for wealth, and
-who were now doubtless lying in some old city
-churchyard hard by.</p>
-
-<p>Walter Tiltcroft having at last finished his
-‘rounds,’ as he called his various errands, came
-back to the old counting-house. The clerks’ office
-was on the ground-floor. It was a dark and
-dusty room, with men of various ages seated at
-long desks, all deeply engaged, with pens in hand
-and heads bent low, over the business of the firm.
-No one looked up when Walter entered; every
-one went on working, as though each individual
-clerk was a wheel in the great machine which
-had been going for nearly two hundred years.</p>
-
-<p>Within an inner room, smaller, darker, and
-more dusty, was seated alone at his desk Silas
-Monk. The old clerk had several large ledgers
-before him; he was turning over the leaves with
-energy, and making entries in these books with a
-rapidity which seemed surprising in one who had
-an appearance of such great age. With his white
-hair falling on his shoulders, his long lean
-trembling fingers playing among the fluttering
-pages, and his keen eyes darting among the
-columns of pounds, shillings, and pence, he
-seemed, even by daylight, like an embodied spirit
-appointed by the dead partners and clerks of
-Armytage and Company to audit the accounts of
-that old mercantile House in Crutched Friars.
-So at least thought Walter Tiltcroft as he sat at
-his own desk watching Silas Monk, and revolving
-in his mind how he could best solve the mystery
-which surrounded Rachel’s grandfather.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It was growing dusk when the old city clocks
-in the church towers began to strike six, and the
-clerks in the office of Armytage and Company
-began to show signs of dispersing. Silas Monk
-alone remained at his post. Wishing to say a
-few words to the old man before taking his leave,
-Walter Tiltcroft lingered behind; and when the
-last clerk had gone, he went to the door of the
-‘strong-room,’ as Silas Monk’s office was called,
-and said in his usual cheerful tone: ‘Good-night,
-Mr Monk. You’ll see, I suppose, that everything
-is safe and sound, as usual? Won’t you?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Ay, ay! safe and sound, Walter.—Good-night.’</p>
-
-<p>But the young man lingered with his eyes
-curiously fixed on Silas. ‘The evenings are
-getting short,’ continued he. ‘Can you see to
-work by this light?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Why, no—not well,’ Silas owned, with his
-eyes raised towards the window; ‘and what
-makes it still more difficult is that scaffolding the
-workmen have put up outside—that’s what makes
-it so dark. Ay, ay!’ he added, ‘they’re repairing
-the old walls. Dear me, dear me!’</p>
-
-<p>The old walls outside, which surrounded a
-courtyard, were black with dust and age, and
-they had also in many parts a tumble-down aspect,
-which appeared to plainly indicate that repairs
-were needed badly. Upon the scaffolding, some
-half-dozen labourers were gathering together their
-tools and preparing to go home, as the clerks had
-done already. Silas was lighting an oil-lamp.
-‘Give me a hand, Walter,’ said he, ‘to close these
-shutters and put up the iron bar.’</p>
-
-<p>‘All right, Mr Monk,’ said the young man,
-unfolding the old-fashioned shutters in the walls
-and clasping the iron bar across them with a
-loud clink. ‘All right and tight!—Shall you
-remain long at the office?’ he added, moving
-towards the door.</p>
-
-<p>‘Not long; half an hour, perhaps—not more.’</p>
-
-<p>Still the young man lingered. ‘Mr Monk,’
-said he, walking a step back into the strong-room,
-‘I saw your grand-daughter Miss Rachel this
-morning.’</p>
-
-<p>Silas, who had reseated himself at his desk
-before the large ledgers, looked round keenly at
-Walter, with the light from the shaded lamp
-thrown upon his wrinkled face. ‘You see my
-grand-daughter Rachel pretty often; don’t you,
-Walter?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Pretty often, Mr Monk, I confess.’</p>
-
-<p>Silas shook his long thin forefinger at the
-young man. ‘Walter,’ cried he, ‘that’s not
-business!’</p>
-
-<p>‘No; that’s true. But you see, Mr Monk, it’s
-not much out of my way. And,’ he added,
-‘besides, I thought you would like to know that
-she’s well. You’re so busy here, that perhaps
-you don’t see so much of her as you would like,
-and so I thought that news of her at any time
-would be welcome.’</p>
-
-<p>‘So it is, Walter!’ said the old man, his voice
-trembling slightly as he spoke—‘so it is. She’s
-a good girl, and I love her dearly. But you don’t
-pass that way, Walter, simply to bring me a
-word about my grand-daughter. You’re not
-going to try and make me believe that, surely?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Not entirely, Mr Monk,’ said the young man,
-smiling. ‘I won’t deny that it’s a very great
-pleasure to me to see Rachel at any time; indeed,
-no one could admire her more than I do.’</p>
-
-<p>The old man held out his hand. ‘Come, come!
-That’s more candid, my boy,’ said he, as Walter
-took the hand in his and pressed it affectionately.
-‘So you admire Rachel, do you?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Mr Monk,’ said the young clerk, ‘I more than
-admire her—I love her!’</p>
-
-<p>The deep lines in Silas Monk’s face grew deeper
-at these words. ‘Well, well,’ said the old man
-presently, with a heavy sigh; ‘it was to be.
-Better now, perhaps, than later—better now.
-But you won’t take her from me yet, Walter—not
-yet?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Why, no, Mr Monk; I’d no thought of taking
-her away from you.’</p>
-
-<p>‘That’s right!’ cried Silas—‘that’s right!
-You’re a good lad. Take care of her, Walter;
-take care of her when I am dead.’ As Silas
-pronounced the last word, the sound of footsteps,
-which seemed strangely near, changed the expression
-on his face. ‘What’s that?’ asked he in a
-tone of alarm.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_376">{376}</span></p>
-
-<p>Walter listened. ‘Some one on the scaffolding
-above your window.’</p>
-
-<p>‘If it’s a workman,’ said the old man, ‘he’s
-rather late. Will you see that every one has
-left the premises; and then shut the front-door
-as you go out?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I’ll not forget.—Good-night!’</p>
-
-<p>It was just sufficiently light in the passage
-for Walter to find his way about the old house.
-Having promised Silas Monk to make sure that
-every one had left the premises, he ran up the
-dark oaken staircase to ascertain whether the
-partners, who occupied the floor above the office,
-had gone. He found the doors to their rooms
-locked. The young man threw a glance around
-him, and then descended the way he had come,
-walking out into the court, behind the clerks’
-offices, where the scaffolding was erected. It was
-not a large court, and on every side were high
-brick walls. The scaffolding reached from the
-ground almost to the eaves.</p>
-
-<p>‘Any one there?’ Walter shouted.</p>
-
-<p>Not a sound came back except a muttering
-echo of his own voice.</p>
-
-<p>Walter Tiltcroft then turned to leave the house.
-But at this moment his conversation with Rachel
-occurred to him, and he thought that he might
-do something to clear up the mystery of her
-grandfather’s frequent absence from home at all
-hours of the night. ‘Why not,’ thought Walter,
-‘watch the old man’s movements? Some clue
-might be found to the strange affair.’ He formed
-his plan of action without further delay. No
-moment could have been more opportune. He
-closed the front-door with a slam which shook
-the old house; then he crept back along the
-passage softly, and, seating himself in a dark
-corner on the staircase, watched for the figure
-of Silas Monk.</p>
-
-<p>The first thing he heard, very shortly after he
-had taken up his position, was a step in the
-passage leading from the courtyard. He sprang
-up with a quick beating heart, and reached the
-foot of the stairs just in time to confront a tall,
-powerful man dressed like a mason, and carrying
-in his hand a large basket of tools.</p>
-
-<p>‘Why, Joe Grimrood,’ said Walter, ‘is that
-you?’</p>
-
-<p>The man, who had a hangdog, defiant air,
-answered gruffly, as he scratched a mangy-looking
-skin-cap, pulled down to his eyebrows: ‘That’s
-me, sir; asking your pardon.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Are you the last, Joe?’</p>
-
-<p>‘There ain’t no more men on the scaffold, if
-that’s what you mean.’</p>
-
-<p>Walter nodded. ‘Didn’t you hear me call?’
-he asked.</p>
-
-<p>‘Not me. When?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Not five minutes ago.’</p>
-
-<p>‘How could I? I was among the chimneys.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Repairing the roof, Joe?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Fixing the tiles,’ was the reply.</p>
-
-<p>Having thus accounted for his tardiness, Joe
-Grimrood again scratched his cap, in his manner
-of saluting, and moved along the hall, in the
-semi-darkness, towards the front-door. ‘I wish
-you a very good-night,’ said the man, as Walter
-accompanied him to the entrance—‘a very good-night,
-sir; asking your pardon.’</p>
-
-<p>Walter Tiltcroft closed the door, when the
-workman had gone out, with as little noise as
-possible; for he feared that if any sound reached
-Silas Monk in the strong-room, his suspicions
-might be aroused, and the chance of solving this
-mystery might be lost.</p>
-
-<p>Again retiring to his retreat upon the staircase,
-Walter waited and watched; but nothing
-happened. The twilight faded; the night became
-so dark that the lad could not see his hand
-before him. The hours appeared long; at endless
-intervals he heard the city clocks striking in the
-dead silence. He filled up the time with thoughts
-containing a hundred conjectures. What could
-Silas Monk be doing all this while? A dozen
-times Walter descended to the door of the office
-to listen; but never a sound! A dozen times
-his fingers touched the handle to turn it; yet
-each time he drew back, fearing to destroy the
-object he had seriously in view—the solution of
-this strange affair.</p>
-
-<p>Ten o’clock had struck, and the young clerk
-was growing weary of waiting for the clocks to
-strike eleven. He began to imagine that something
-must have happened to Silas Monk. Had
-he fallen asleep? Was he dead, or—what?</p>
-
-<p>Presently, the notion entered his brain that
-perhaps a grain of reassurance might be had by
-regarding the window of the strong-room from the
-courtyard. Possibly, thought he, a ray of light
-might find its way there through the shutters.
-He stepped out silently, but with eagerness.
-When he reached the yard, there, sure enough,
-was a streak of light piercing through a small
-aperture. Walter was drawn towards it irresistibly.
-He mounted the scaffolding by the
-ladder at his feet, and crept along the boarding
-on his hands; for the darkness, except within
-the limits of this ray of light, was intense. He
-reached at length the spot immediately above
-the window. The ray of light fell below the
-scaffold, slanting to the ground. Grasping the
-board, upon which he lay full length, he bent
-his head until his eye was almost on a level
-with the hole in the shutter. To his surprise,
-the interior of the strong-room was distinctly
-revealed. But what he saw surprised him still
-more. Silas Monk was seated there at his
-desk, under the shaded lamp. But he was
-no longer examining the ledgers; these books
-were thrown aside; and, in their place, before
-his greedy eyes, was to be seen a heap of bright
-sovereigns.</p>
-
-<p>The change which had taken place in the face
-of Silas Monk since the young man had left him,
-was startling; and the manner in which he
-appeared to be feasting his eyes upon the coins
-was repulsive. He handled the sovereigns with
-his lean fingers caressingly; he counted them
-over and over again; then he arranged them in
-piles on one side, and began to empty other bags
-in their place. His look suggested a ravenous
-madman; his attitude resembled that of a beast
-of prey.</p>
-
-<p>Walter was so fascinated by this unexpected
-scene in the strong-room, that he found it impossible,
-for some minutes, to remove his gaze.
-The mystery about Silas Monk had been solved.
-Rachel’s grandfather was a wretched miser!</p>
-
-<p>Walter descended from the scaffolding, and
-went out quietly into Crutched Friars. His
-lodgings were in the Minories, hard by. But
-he could not have slept had he gone home<span class="pagenum" id="Page_377">{377}</span>
-without passing under Rachel’s window. He
-hurried along through the dark and silent streets.
-What he had witnessed, haunted him; he could
-not banish the scene of the old man and his
-bright sovereigns. When he entered the street,
-and was approaching Silas Monk’s house, he was
-astonished, though not displeased, to see Rachel
-standing on the door-step.</p>
-
-<p>‘Why, Walter,’ cried she, ‘is that you? I
-thought it was grandfather.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I wish, Rachel, for your sake that it was. But
-I’m afraid, late as it is, that he won’t be back
-quite yet.’</p>
-
-<p>The girl placed her hand quickly on Walter’s
-hand and looked up appealingly. ‘Has anything
-happened? You have a troubled face. Don’t
-hide it from me, if anything has happened to
-grandfather.’</p>
-
-<p>The young man hastened to reassure her.
-‘Nothing has happened. Silas Monk is at the
-office still. I have just come away, Rachel. I left
-him there deeply occupied.’</p>
-
-<p>The girl threw a quick glance into Walter’s face.
-‘Then grandfather does work for Armytage and
-Company after six o’clock?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I doubt that, Rachel, very much.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Then why does he stay so late at Crutched
-Friars?’</p>
-
-<p>‘To dabble in a little business of his own.’</p>
-
-<p>‘What business is that, Walter?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, something in the bullion line of business,
-to judge from appearances.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Explain yourself, Walter! I am puzzled.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I’m afraid I can’t; I’m puzzled too,’ said the
-young man. ‘This bullion business,’ he added
-thoughtfully, ‘is a strange affair.’</p>
-
-<p>Rachel clasped her hands with an impatient
-gesture. ‘Walter, tell me what you have seen!’</p>
-
-<p>‘I’ve seen,’ said the young man reluctantly—‘I’ve
-seen, through a hole in the shutter, an old
-man at a desk, under the light of a shaded lamp,
-seated over handfuls of gold. The desk was Silas
-Monk’s, in the counting-house of Armytage and
-Company. But the face of the man was not the
-face of your grandfather; or if it was his, it was
-greatly changed.’</p>
-
-<p>‘In what way changed, Walter?’</p>
-
-<p>‘It was a face expressing dreadful greed. It
-was the face of a miser, Rachel—nothing less!’</p>
-
-<p>The girl, standing under the dim street-lamp
-above the doorway, looked with wondering eyes
-into Walter’s face. ‘Does not all the money at
-the counting-house belong to the firm?’</p>
-
-<p>‘So I have always thought, Rachel.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Then grandfather was balancing the cash?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Not the hard cash of Armytage and Company.
-That is taken every day, before the closing hour,
-to the bank.’</p>
-
-<p>Looking still into the young man’s face, the girl
-said: ‘Then the money must be his own.’</p>
-
-<p>‘He certainly seemed to eye it, Rachel, as if
-every sovereign belonged to him.’</p>
-
-<p>The girl became pensive. ‘He must be rich,’
-said she.</p>
-
-<p>‘Very rich, if all those sovereigns are his.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And he loves gold more than he loves his
-grand-daughter!’ Rachel complained, in a tone of
-deep disappointment, while tears started into her
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Not being able to deny that there appeared
-some truth in the girl’s words, Walter could
-answer nothing. He remained silent and thoughtful.
-Suddenly the clocks of the old city began
-striking midnight.</p>
-
-<p>‘Your grandfather will soon be coming now,
-Rachel,’ said the young man, ‘so I had better be
-off. It would never do to let him find me here
-at this late hour.’ Taking leave of the girl
-tenderly, he quickly disappeared into the darkness.</p>
-
-<p>Rachel re-entered the house, and threw herself
-into the old armchair, stricken with surprise and
-grief at what she had learned. Since she was a
-child, she had been taught to believe that she
-was struggling, beside her grandfather, against
-poverty. She had been happy in the thought
-that, although they were needy, nothing divided
-their affections. She believed that her grandfather
-was slaving day and night for their sake—slaving
-to keep the old house over their heads.
-But what was he slaving for, after all? For gold,
-it was true; but for gold which he hoarded up
-in secret places, hiding all from her, as though it
-were, like a crime, something of a nature to be
-shunned.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the clocks are striking the small-hours.
-But Silas Monk does not come home.
-The candle on the table beside Rachel burns low.
-The girl grows alarmed, and listens for the footsteps
-of her old grandfather. She goes out and
-looks about into the dark night. No one is to
-be seen, no one is to be heard. Four o’clock—five.
-Still no footsteps—not even a shadow of
-the man.</p>
-
-<p>The dawn begins to break in a clear gray light
-above the sombre houses; the roar of traffic in
-the streets hard by falls upon the girl’s ear.
-Another busy day has commenced in the old city.
-‘Is it possible,’ thinks Rachel, ‘that her grandfather
-can still be at his desk, counting and recounting
-his gold?’</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="FAMILIAR_SKETCHES_OF_ENGLISH_LAW">FAMILIAR SKETCHES OF ENGLISH LAW.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class="ph3">BY AN EXPERIENCED PRACTITIONER.</p>
-
-
-<h3>II. PARENT AND CHILD.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Children</span> may be divided into two classes—legitimate
-and illegitimate; and the liability of
-a father in respect of his children is widely
-different in the case of the latter class from the
-ordinary duty and responsibility of a parent.
-In order to clear the ground, we will first dispose
-of the illegitimate class; and throughout this
-paper it must be understood that the words parent
-and child, when used without any qualifying
-terms, refer to those between whom that mutual
-relationship lawfully subsists.</p>
-
-<p>An illegitimate child, or bastard, is one who
-is born without its parents having been lawfully
-married; and in England, a bastard born is
-illegitimate to the end of his or her life; but in
-Scotland, such child may be rendered legitimate
-by the subsequent marriage of its parents, provided
-that at the date of its birth and of their
-marriage they were both free to marry. The
-father of an illegitimate child has no right to its
-custody; but he may be compelled to contribute
-to its support by means of an affiliation order.
-A bastard cannot inherit either real or personal
-estate from either of its parents, nor from any
-other person; neither can any person inherit from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_378">{378}</span>
-a bachelor or spinster who is illegitimate. If,
-however, such a person marries, the husband or
-wife and children have the same legal rights as
-if the stain of illegitimacy had not existed.</p>
-
-<p>A legitimate child—with the exception noted
-above—is the offspring of parents who were lawfully
-married before the time of its birth. A
-posthumous child, if born in due time after the
-husband’s death, is legitimate.</p>
-
-<p>The father has <i>primâ facie</i> a right to the
-custody of his children while under the age of
-sixteen years; after that age, if they are able to
-maintain themselves, they may be emancipated
-from his control. But a mother can apply to
-the court for an order that she may have the
-exclusive care of her children while they are
-respectively under seven years of age; and after
-that age, for leave of access to them at reasonable
-times, in cases where husband and wife do not
-live together. In case of the divorce of the
-parents, the court will give directions as to the
-custody of the children of the marriage, taking
-into consideration the offence against morality of
-the guilty parent, but also what is best for the
-children’s education and upbringing and prospects
-in life.</p>
-
-<p>A parent is bound to maintain and educate his
-children according to his station; and if the father
-should neglect his duty in this respect, the mother—if
-living with her husband—may, as his agent,
-order what is necessary, and he would be responsible
-for the expense thus incurred, which must
-be strictly limited to what is reasonably necessary.
-If a child should become chargeable upon the
-poor-rates, both father and grandfather are responsible
-for repayment of the cost incurred; the
-former primarily, and the latter secondarily, in
-case of the absence or inability of the father.
-In like manner, a child may be compelled to
-repay to the poor-rates authorities the cost of maintenance
-of his parents, if he have the means of
-doing so.</p>
-
-<p>A child while under the age of twenty-one
-years cannot enter into a binding contract, even
-with the consent and concurrence of its parent,
-except for special purposes. One of these purposes
-is the acquisition of knowledge which will
-enable the child to earn its livelihood when it
-arrives at maturity. Thus apprentices and articled
-clerks may be bound in such a manner as to render
-it compulsory for them to serve until they respectively
-attain the age of twenty-one years; but
-the binding cannot be extended beyond that age.
-As soon as an apprentice attains his majority,
-he may elect to vacate his indenture, and be free
-from any further compulsory service. This is
-founded upon the well-known principle, that a
-minor can only be compelled to perform contracts
-entered into on his behalf during his minority;
-and that when he attains the age of twenty-one
-years, he is free to enter into contracts on his own
-behalf, which stand upon an entirely different
-footing, and are entirely inconsistent with the
-former contract. It may also be mentioned here
-that a minor, when he becomes of age, is free to
-elect whether he will perform any other contracts
-which he may have entered into during his
-minority. If any such contract be beneficial,
-he may allow it to stand; and if it be otherwise,
-he may cancel it; but the other party, if of full
-age, will be bound by his contract.</p>
-
-<p>In this connection we may notice the Infants
-Relief Act, 1874. Although primarily aimed at
-the protection of ‘infants’ from the consequences
-of their own imprudence, this statute, the operation
-of which extends to the whole of the United
-Kingdom, has been found very useful in relieving
-children against a cruel but not uncommon kind
-of pressure by impecunious parents, who in many
-cases induced their children to encumber their
-expectant property in order to assist them (the
-parents) when in difficulties. The manner was
-this: The son would while under age sign a
-promise to execute a valid charge, which would
-accordingly be executed the day after he attained
-his majority; and though the first promise was
-worthless, the deed was binding. But it was
-enacted that all contracts entered into by ‘infants’
-for the repayment of money lent or to be lent,
-and all accounts stated with ‘infants,’ should be
-not merely voidable, but absolutely void; and
-further, the ratification when of full age of any
-such promise should be void also, and the ratified
-promise should be incapable of being enforced.</p>
-
-<p>A parent may lawfully maintain an action on
-behalf of his child, whether such child be an
-infant or of full age, without being liable to be
-prosecuted for the offence of maintenance or
-champerty. In like manner, a child if of full
-age may maintain an action on behalf of his
-parent, even though he may have no personal
-interest in the subject-matter of the action.</p>
-
-<p>A parent may also protect his child, or a child
-protect his parent, from violence or assault, in
-such circumstances as would expose a stranger
-to the charge of officiously intermeddling with
-strife which did not concern him.</p>
-
-<p>The power of an Englishman to dispose of his
-property by will being absolute, the consideration
-of a parent’s will as affecting his children need
-not detain us long. The principal peculiarity is
-this: In case of the death of a child or grandchild
-of a testator in the lifetime of the latter,
-leaving lawful issue, any devise or bequest in
-the will in favour of the deceased child or grandchild
-will take effect in favour of his issue in
-the same manner as if he had survived the testator
-and died immediately afterwards. In similar
-circumstances, a gift in favour of any other person
-who died in the testator’s lifetime would lapse,
-that is to say, it would altogether fail to take
-effect.</p>
-
-<p>But in Scotland, the power of a father to dispose
-of his property by will is much more restricted,
-being confined to what is called the ‘dead man’s’
-part—namely, so much as remains after setting
-aside one-third of the personal property or movable
-goods for the widow; and one-third for the
-children of the testator. Or if there be no widow,
-then the share of the children is one-half, which
-is divisible among them equally. The rights of
-either widow or child may be renounced by an
-antenuptial marriage contract, or for some equivalent
-provision given in such a contract, or by will;
-and a child of full age may by deed discharge his
-claim for <i>legitim</i>, as the children’s share of the
-succession is called.</p>
-
-<p>In case of intestacy, the eldest son is by the
-common law his father’s heir-at-law, subject to
-his mother’s dower, if not barred or discharged.
-But in some localities, special customs exist,
-such as Borough English—prevalent at Maldon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_379">{379}</span>
-in Essex and elsewhere, by virtue of which
-the youngest son is the heir—and Gavelkind,
-which affects most of the land in Kent, where
-all the sons inherit in equal shares. Returning
-to the common-law rule, where there are both
-sons and daughters, the eldest son inherits to
-the exclusion of his younger brothers, and his
-sisters whether elder or younger. But if the
-intestate had no son, but several daughters, they
-would take as co-parceners in equal undivided
-shares. It will be understood that heirs and
-co-heiresses take freehold houses and land; but
-that leaseholds are personal property, and like
-money and goods, stocks and shares, are distributable,
-subject as hereinafter mentioned, among the
-widow (if any) and relatives of the deceased.
-Copyhold property is real estate, and the descent
-is in each case regulated by the custom of the
-manor of which the property is holden; Borough
-English and Gavelkind being much more common
-as affecting copyhold than freehold estates, though
-even in the case of copyholds the common-law
-rule is by far the most general.</p>
-
-<p>The personal property of an intestate is the
-primary fund for payment of funeral and other
-expenses, costs of administration, and debts. When
-these have been paid, the widow (if any) is
-entitled to one-third of what is left; and the
-other two-thirds are divisible among the children.
-If there be no widow, the children take all, the
-collateral relatives having no claim. If any of
-the testator’s children have died before him, leaving
-issue, such issue take in equal shares the
-portion which their parent would have taken
-if living.</p>
-
-<p>In England, the heir-at-law who takes his
-father’s freehold estates is not thereby deprived
-of his share, or any portion of his share, of the
-personalty. But in Scotland, the heir must
-bring into account or collate the value of what
-he has received in that capacity, before he can
-claim any part of the movables.</p>
-
-<p>If a son or daughter be possessed of real and
-personal estate, and die unmarried, or widowed
-without children, and without making a will,
-leaving a surviving father, he would take the
-real estate as heir-at-law, and the personal estate
-as sole next of kin. If he were dead, the mother
-would take a share of the personal estate with
-the surviving brothers and sisters, and the eldest
-brother would inherit the real estate as heir-at-law.
-If the mother were living, but no brothers
-or sisters, nephews or nieces, she would have the
-personal estate, but could not inherit the real
-estate so long as any heir could be found on the
-paternal side. The children of deceased brothers
-and sisters take equally amongst them the share
-of personal estate which their deceased parent
-would have taken if living.</p>
-
-<p>The law of Scotland is not so favourable to the
-father and mother of intestates. The father does
-not succeed to real or heritable estate if there be
-a brother or sister, and in the same event his
-right is limited to that of one-half the movable
-estate. When the father has predeceased, and
-the mother survives, she takes one-third of the
-movable succession, and the rest goes to brothers
-and sisters or other next of kin.</p>
-
-<p>Having thus considered the rights, duties, and
-liabilities of parents with respect to the persons,
-the necessities, and the property of their children,
-and the corresponding rights and obligations of
-children with regard to their parents, we must
-offer a few remarks on the authority of parents
-over their children, and the extent to which that
-authority may be delegated to others.</p>
-
-<p>A parent may control the actions of his children
-so long as they remain under his roof, and may
-insist upon his regulations being observed and
-his commands obeyed. While they are of tender
-years, he may inflict any reasonable punishment
-for disobedience or other offence, either by personal
-chastisement or otherwise; but he must
-not torture them, nor endanger their lives or
-health. He may also instruct his children himself;
-or he may send them to school; in the
-latter case, delegating to the schoolmaster so much
-as may be necessary of his power to restrain and
-correct the children so intrusted to his care.
-Since compulsory education became law, he <i>must</i>
-use reasonable means to get them educated. If
-a child should prove incorrigible, the parent may
-apply to the justices of the peace to send him
-or her to an Industrial School; which they have
-power to do on being satisfied by evidence upon
-oath that the child is altogether beyond the
-power of its parent to manage or control; and
-an order may be made upon the parent to pay
-the expense of the child’s maintenance and education
-in such school, if his means are sufficient to
-enable him to do so.</p>
-
-<p>The liabilities imposed by marriage differ to
-some extent from the responsibilities of actual
-parentage. Thus, a man may be compelled to
-repay the expense incurred by the maintenance
-of his own father, but not of his wife’s father,
-in the workhouse. And though a married man
-is bound to keep his wife’s children, born before
-his marriage with her, until they are sixteen
-years of age respectively, if his wife live so
-long; yet, if she were to die while any of
-them were under that age, his responsibility
-would immediately cease. And if any of them
-were to become chargeable upon the poor-rates
-when more than sixteen years old, the stepfather
-could not be required to contribute towards the
-expense of their maintenance, even though their
-mother should be still living.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="IN_A_FURNITURE_SALEROOM">IN A FURNITURE SALEROOM.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class="ph3">A DAY-DREAM.</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">I just</span> missed by a neck, as they say in steeplechasing
-dialect—though on second thoughts I
-think it must have been liker a full horse-length—my
-lot being cast among second-hand furniture.
-I believe I was of too philosophic a nature to
-make a practical auctioneer and furniture-broker
-of. At least, such was something like the opinion
-held by my employer—the old gentleman was a
-bit of a wag—who told my father, when the latter
-went to see why this knight of the hammer had
-dispensed with his son’s services, that my mind,
-like the late lamented Prince of Denmark’s, was
-of too speculative a character ever to ‘mak’ saut to
-my kail’ at his profession, and advised him to
-bring me ‘out for a minister.’ I need not say
-that this advice was, for divers reasons, never
-acted upon.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_380">{380}</span></p>
-
-<p>I suppose it must have been my twelve-months’
-sojourn in this old worthy’s service which gives
-me to this day a certain meditative interest in
-brokers’ shops and old furniture salerooms. I
-am not at any time much of a stroller about the
-streets and gazer into shop-windows; but next
-to looking into the windows of book or print and
-picture shops, I have a weakness for sauntering
-into musty old salerooms, and staring idly at the
-miscellaneous articles of second-hand furniture
-huddled within their walls, and moralising on
-the mutability of human hopes and possessions.
-A spick-and-span new furniture and upholstery
-establishment has no more fascination for me than
-a black-and-white undertaker’s. But out of the
-bustle of the street and the broiling heat of the
-mid-day sun—which is my favourite time of indulgence—and
-in the dusty and shadowy corners,
-festooned with cobwebs, of a broker’s shop or
-old furniture saleroom, I forget how the time
-goes, as I join over again the sundered human
-relationships to the pieces of furniture at which
-I stand staring in half-reverie. I fancy it must
-have been this same dreamy tendency which,
-peeping forth in my boyish career, led my shrewd
-master to forecast my future with so much
-certainty to my parent. I care not about purchasing
-any of the articles that so absorb me.
-It is not the barren desire of possession which
-makes me haunt these dusty salerooms. When
-the place becomes crowded with people, and the
-auctioneer mounts his little pulpit, I gather
-my wandered wits together and ‘silently steal
-away.’</p>
-
-<p>I say I love to linger among the cobwebs and
-amid the silence of old furniture salerooms—as
-fruitful a source of meditation to me as loitering
-among tombs ever was to Harvey. That venerable
-eight-day clock standing against the wall,
-behind those slim walnut chairs and couch done
-up in the bright green repp, its mahogany almost
-as black as your Sunday hat with age, turns on
-my thinking faculty just as the ‘auld Scots’
-sangs’ moves my guidwife Peggy to tears. I
-think of all the pairs of eyes that have gazed
-up at the hands and figures on its olive-tinted
-face, and wonder how many of them have taken
-their last look of earth. My imagination transports
-it to some well-to-do Scottish cottage home, where
-I see, held up in fond arms, the marvelling
-youngsters, in striped cotton pinafores, with their
-wide-open eyes staring at the representatives of
-the four quarters of the globe, painted in bright
-dazzling colours on each corner of the dial-plate.
-Perhaps some of those same youngsters, to whose
-inquiring and wondering minds the pictures were
-an every-day exercise, are settled down, old men
-and women now, in one of these distant quarters
-of the globe, say America, and are sitting at this
-very moment in their log-hut in the backwoods,
-their minds’ eyes reverting to the familiar face
-of that old clock tick-ticking away in their
-childhood’s home.</p>
-
-<p>Over against where it stood in that same old
-home, between the room door and the end of the
-white scoured wooden dresser with its well-filled
-delf rack, I picture to myself the wasted face of
-a sick woman pillowed up in bed. What weary
-nights she has listened to its tick-tack, and counted
-the slow hours as they struck, waiting for the
-dawn! I know that her head aches no longer,
-and that she sleeps sound enough now, with the
-summer breeze stirring the green grass on her
-grave.</p>
-
-<p>Turning away from the venerable time-keeper,
-my eye falls on an old-fashioned low-set chest
-of drawers, with dingy folding brass handles,
-and little bits of the veneer chipped off here
-and there, and the ivory awanting in some of
-the keyholes. Where are now, I ask myself,
-the ashes of those bright household fires, which
-have winked in the shining depths of their
-mahogany in the darkening gloaming, before
-the blinds were drawn and the candles lit?
-What secrets and treasures have not these same
-drawers been the repositories of! I see a pensive
-female form, in striped shortgown and drugget
-petticoat, stop while she is sweeping the kitchen
-floor, and, with palpitating heart, pull out the
-centre small top drawer to take another look at
-the golden curl, wrapped in a precious letter, in
-the corner beside two or three well-worn toys.
-That bruised heart will throb no more with joy
-or pain; neither will her tears fall any more
-like scalding lead on the blurred parchment,
-as she lifts the bright curl to her lips before
-wrapping it away out of sight again—till, mayhap,
-the next day, when the old yearning returns, and
-she must needs go and unfold her treasure, the
-sight of which brings the little chubby face—over
-which the curl used to hang—once more before
-her brimming eyes.</p>
-
-<p>The little bookcase, with the diamond-shaped
-panes, on the top of the chest of drawers is an
-object to me of even nobler regard than the
-drawers themselves. My venerable uncle, who
-was an author too, had just such a little bookcase
-on the top of his drawers, about three-fourths
-filled with sombre-looking volumes. I
-remember I never looked up at it as a boy,
-and beheld the dim dusty books, like gray
-ghosts, sitting erect, or leaning against one
-another in the twilight shelves, but I associated
-it in my fancy with the inside of his own
-gray head. Already I see the titles on the
-backs of some of these children of dead brains
-looming out of the empty gloom through the
-diamond-shaped panes; and I can recognise many
-of my own favourites among them. The binding
-is more faded and worn on the backs of some
-than others, as if they had been more often in
-the hand and more dear to the heart of the reader.
-I am almost tempted to stretch forth my hand
-and renew their acquaintance. One in particular,
-in faded green-and-gold binding, looking out from
-amongst a motley company of fiction, <i>The House
-with the Seven Gables</i>, I have a covetous eye
-upon.</p>
-
-<p>How I should like to revisit the shadowy
-chambers of that old puritan mansion, especially<span class="pagenum" id="Page_381">{381}</span>
-that low-studded oak-panelled room with the
-portrait of the stern old Colonel looking down
-from the wall; and feel the smell of its decaying
-timbers, ‘oozy’ with the memories of whole generations
-of Pyncheons; to see poor perplexed old
-Hepzibah in the midst of her first day’s shopkeeping,
-with her wreck of a resurrected brother
-to care and provide for; and watch—not without
-reverence, even though we are constrained sometimes
-to laugh—the miraculously minute workings
-of her crazed old heart fighting—a kind of comic
-pathos, as well as rarest heroism in her mimic
-battling—those troublesome spectres of gentility
-which she has inherited with her Pyncheon
-blood.</p>
-
-<p>Alas for this most bewitching of romancers!
-Well might his friend Longfellow exclaim of
-him:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Ah! who shall lift that wand of magic power,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And the lost clue regain?</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The unfinished window in Aladdin’s tower</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Unfinished must remain!</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Sitting on the shelf beneath <i>The House with the
-Seven Gables</i> is the king of all the magicians—the
-enchanter’s name printed in tarnished gold letters
-on a faded square of scarlet morocco on its calf
-back—‘Shakspeare.’</p>
-
-<p>On this hot July forenoon, with dusty smelling
-streets, when the united heart of our mighty
-Babylon is panting for the water-brooks, wouldn’t
-it be a treat just to step into the forest of Arden?
-You don’t require to change your clothes, or
-bolt a hurried luncheon, or run to catch a train,
-or take your place on the crowded deck of a
-snorting greasy steamboat under a vertical sun;
-but simply to open out the volume at that most
-delightful of all comedies, <i>As You Like It</i>, and
-at once fling yourself down ‘under the shade of
-melancholy boughs,’ and ‘lose and neglect the
-creeping hours of time’ listening to the moralising
-of a Jaques</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent10">As he lay along</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Under an oak, whose antique root peeps out</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Upon the brook that brawls along this wood:</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>or to an encounter of his wits with the sage fooleries
-of a Touchstone; or the love-sick ravings of an
-Orlando; or the nimble pleasantries and caustic
-humours of a Rosalind.</p>
-
-<p>But, to speak the truth, I don’t know whether
-I should not prefer at this moment—to a lounge in
-the forest of Arden—a meditative ramble and chat
-with the Wanderer in Wordsworth’s <i>Excursion</i>,
-which I spy leaning against my old friend <i>The
-Vicar of Wakefield</i>, there, on the other side of
-Shakspeare. How pleasant it would be, after
-toiling across the bare wide common, baked with
-the scorching heat, to join that venerable philosopher
-and retired packman just where the author
-himself meets him by appointment, reposing his
-limbs on the cottage bench beside the roofless hut
-of poor Margaret!</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">His eyes as if in drowsiness half shut,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The shadow of the breezy elms above</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Dappling his face.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>But the unceremonious porter is apparently
-unwilling to gratify me so far, having, in his
-preparations for the sale, pushed a tall half-tester
-bedstead right in front of my view of the chest
-of drawers and bookcase.</p>
-
-<p>This alteration has brought to light an old
-armchair among a crowd of odd window-poles
-and bed-bottoms, a kind of bewilderment and
-shyness in its wrinkled features, as if it hardly
-felt at home in this nineteenth-century saleroom,
-rubbing shoulders, so to speak, with pompous
-old sideboards, and gouty old sofas and stuff-bottomed
-chairs, and wishing it were back to
-the earthen cottage floor again. From its
-shape and the colour of its wood, it looks more
-than a hundred years old. My Aunt S——, who
-was a paralytic, had just such a chair, which
-she sat in for ten years before she died. It
-had belonged to her mother’s mother; and she
-took great pride in averring that Burns—who,
-her own mother told her, was a crony of her
-father’s—had many a time sat in it. I think I
-see herself sitting in it at this moment, with her
-great black piercing eyes, and hear her clever
-critical tongue wagging as of old.</p>
-
-<p>This ancient armchair, stuffed away amid the
-dust and lumber of the saleroom, touches my feelings
-more nearly than any other object joined
-together with hands. Its low, firm, but narrow
-seat, its solid curved arms, its straight sloping
-back with three spars in the centre, recall the
-tottering gait of silvery-haired grandfathers in
-knee-breeches and ‘rig-an’-fur’ stockings, and hale
-old grandmothers with white bordered ‘mutches’
-or caps on their heads, and tartan napkins about
-their stooping shoulders; and old-fashioned Scotch
-kitchens with eight-day clocks, and wooden dressers,
-and clean-clayed roomy fireplaces with big-bellied
-pots hanging from the links on the ‘swee’ or
-crane.</p>
-
-<p>But what household god is this which is the
-subject of whispering criticism behind me?
-Turning round, I observe two women, evidently
-intending purchasers from their remarks, and
-not idle dreamers like myself, moving away
-from a large chest to inspect some dishes they
-have suddenly caught sight of on a side-table
-at the further end of the room. This chest
-I have seen before, especially about the term-time,
-mounted on the footboard of a cab beside
-the driver, while its ‘sonsie’ proprietress—unaccustomed
-as she is to ride in carriages—sits
-on the edge of the cushioned seat inside,
-staring apologetically at the foot-passengers on
-the pavement. It is the same kind of thing
-thrifty housewives in the country used to keep
-their blankets in, before the trunks and tin boxes
-came so much into vogue. It is painted an oak
-colour, though to my mind it resembles more
-a musty gingerbread; and it has a black line
-forming a square on each of its plain panels.
-Instinctively I lift the lid and peep in. Its
-white wood is covered with a wall-paper pattern
-of moss-roses. It has a ‘shuttle’ too, with a little
-drawer underneath; the same as was in the
-chest I had when a bachelor. I used to keep
-all my valuables in that little drawer, such as
-love-letters. How those epistles accumulated! I
-remember I had to press them down before the
-drawer would shut, when I happened to be
-refreshing my memory with some of their pleasant
-sentiments. Peg’s portrait used to lie here in
-a corner of this same charmed sepulchre. If I
-were to tell my young readers how often I made
-an excuse to go into my chest for something or
-other, and never withdrew my head without<span class="pagenum" id="Page_382">{382}</span>
-taking a peep at Peg’s face, they would no doubt
-call me spooney, though they know quite well
-they do the same thing themselves.</p>
-
-<p>The bustling old porter, who kept hovering in
-my vicinity—a kind of astonished interest looking
-out of his not unkindly gray eyes—here cut short
-my amorous reminiscences by shutting down
-the lid of the chest, and, apparently with a view
-to economise space—for odd customers were
-beginning to drop in—lifting a cradle on to the
-top of it. The cradle is one of the old-fashioned
-wooden sort, with good solid rockers, which used
-to be seen in the houses of plain folks in my
-young days, and was usually of some antiquity,
-being considered an heirloom, and descending
-from parent to eldest son. I remember another
-cradle just like this one, in our old home. It
-was painted a bluish-green colour inside, and a
-loud mahogany colour outside, interspersed with
-numberless artificial black knots, more like figures
-in the hangings, or wall-paper, than the grains
-of wood. That cradle had rocked no end of
-generations of my progenitors; and when baby
-visitors gave over showing their chubby little
-red pudding faces at our house, my sister and
-I used to play at ‘shop’ and ‘church’ in it on
-wet days. On these occasions, though I allowed
-her—as I no doubt thought became her good-for-nothing
-sex—the full management of the shop,
-yet I always insisted on being the clergyman,
-turning the cradle on its end, and preaching from
-under its hood, which served as a canopy.</p>
-
-<p>That oldest and ever newest tragedy which
-we must all, some time or other, be witnesses
-of, or chief performers in, has been enacted in
-this hollow little bed ere now. I see the worn
-and anxious mother seated on a stool bending
-over the little sufferer in the cradle. She has
-not had her clothes off for nearly a week, but
-she will not be persuaded to lie down. She
-could never forgive herself if those glazed little
-windows, so set-like now in their deep sockets,
-under the ashy pale brow, were to be darkened
-for ever, and she not see the final darkening.
-She wets continually the livid and senseless little
-lips, and sighs as if her heart would burst, as
-she watches, in her own words, ‘the sair, sair
-liftin’ o’ the wee breist, an’ the cauld, cauld
-dew on the little face!’ The struggle will not
-last long now, and the mother’s pent-up feelings
-will ere long get relief.</p>
-
-<p>Whether desirous of diverting my thoughts
-from this harrowing scene, or merely thinking
-it a pity that I should be exercising my mind
-over a lot of lifeless old sticks, the porter, with
-a delicacy of insight that I would hardly have
-credited him with, has brought two pictures, and
-without a word has put them up against the
-backs of two mahogany chairs in front of me.
-If that porter had been my friend the biggest half
-of his natural lifetime—which, judging from the
-furrows on his lean face and the whiteness of
-his scant locks, was already anything but a short
-one—he could not have selected two works of
-art more pat to my taste or my present mood;
-and I inwardly blessed him for his thoughtful
-trouble, though I had a vague suspicion that
-there might be a gentle touch of irony in his
-ministrations.</p>
-
-<p>The largest picture, ‘Crossing the Sands,’ is
-a gloaming or twilight subject, somewhere, I
-fancy, on the Ayrshire coast. Its features are
-as familiar to me as the streets and houses in
-my native town. It brings to mind the days of
-my childhood, when the old folks used to hire a
-garret at the seaside for a few brief—for us
-youngsters all too brief—days in the summer; and
-the lonely walks and talks of later years, when
-the sun had gone down, and the newly awakened
-winds blew all the stronger and fresher in our
-faces for their afternoon’s slumber, and our voices
-mingled with the rhythmic murmur of the waves
-as they broke at our feet.</p>
-
-<p>The artist, I suppose, has named his picture
-from the dim outline of a horse and cart, with
-two figures sitting in it, crossing the darkening
-sands. The tide is far out, and has left long
-zigzag shallow pools of water lying in the uneven
-places on the sands, into which the swift vanishing
-day, through a break in the dark saffron
-clouds, is casting wistful looks. The same pale
-reflection is glimmering faintly along the wave-broken
-verge of the distant sea; while the denser
-flood, where it stretches out to meet the gray skyline,
-wears something of a sad melancholy in its
-cold blue depth. In comfortable contrast with
-this lonesomeness, sitting among the deepening
-shadows on a dark clump of moorland, or bent,
-on the left-hand corner of the picture, is the
-dreamiest little hut, with the rarest blue smoke
-rising out of its crazy chimney, and floating like
-a spirit among the dark grays and purples sleeping
-on the hillsides.</p>
-
-<p>The smaller upright picture is a street in Dieppe—the
-time, evening, from the green tinge in the
-blue of the sky, and the roseate hue of the low-lying
-clouds. It is just such an old French street
-as one would delight in strolling through at that
-poetic hour, to feast one’s eyes on the bewitching
-mixture of sunlight and shadow, reclining
-side by side, or locked in loving embrace among
-the sombre reds, and rich browns, and warm
-ochres on the quaint roofs and gables and walls;
-and to note the leisurely figures of the picturesque
-women in white caps, blue shortgowns, and red
-petticoats, chatting in the mellow sunlight at the
-street corner, or moving along in the shadow
-under the eaves of the overhanging gables; or
-the slow cart in the middle of the street, its
-wheels resting on that streak of sunshine slanting
-from the old gable at the corner; or the decrepit
-vegetable-woman at her stand on the opposite
-side of that gutter, the fresh green colour of her
-vegetables—all the fresher and greener against
-the daub or two of bright red—wafting one’s
-thoughts away to cottage gardens and pleasant
-orchards.</p>
-
-<p>But I must not tarry any longer in this old
-French street, or, indeed, in this musty old saleroom,
-which has thrown off its pensive and
-meditative humour, and taken on a brisk, practical,
-and business-like air. Already the auctioneer
-and his spruce clerk have arrived, and the faces
-of the knots of people scattered up and down
-the floor are looking with expectancy towards the
-little pulpit. It is no longer a place for an
-idle dreamer like myself, and so I saunter out
-to the street. The sudden transition from the
-shadow of the saleroom to the bright white sunshine
-on the bustling city thoroughfare, together
-with the sight of the refreshing water-cart, with
-a group of barelegged, merry children prancing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_383">{383}</span>
-in its cooling spray, instantly dispel my illusions;
-and in another moment I am as completely in the
-midst of the living present as I was before in the
-dead past.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="SURGICAL_SCRAPS">SURGICAL SCRAPS.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">There</span> is a curious instrument in the <i>armamentarium</i>
-of the surgeon called a probang, employed
-for removing foreign bodies which have become
-fixed in the esophagus or gullet. It consists of
-a flexible stem, at one end of which is an arrangement
-of catgut fibres, and at the other end a
-small handle. By moving the handle slightly,
-these threads of catgut—which are stretched all
-round and parallel to the stem at its lower end—can
-be bent outwards in a radiating manner,
-which gives the instrument the appearance of a
-chimney-sweep’s broom in miniature. When a
-person is so unfortunate as to get a piece of bone
-stuck in his throat beyond the reach of the
-surgeon’s hand, the probang is sometimes found
-very useful. It can be passed down the gullet,
-in a closed condition, beyond the obstruction, then
-opened somewhat like an umbrella, and drawn
-upwards, carrying with it—if all goes well—the
-foreign body. The passing of such an instrument
-is far from being pleasant to the patient; but if
-it be done with ordinary care and judgment, it
-will not be attended with any harm. Every one
-who has known the misery attendant upon getting
-a good-sized piece of bone impacted in the food-passage,
-will understand that when the operation
-has proved successful, the patient is likely to
-consider the pleasure of seeing the offending
-fragment caught in the meshes of the probang
-cheaply purchased by the discomfort attendant
-upon the passage of the instrument.</p>
-
-<p>Another instrument employed for passing down
-the esophagus is used for a different purpose.
-When the gullet has been severely burned internally—as,
-for instance, from the accidental
-swallowing of corrosive acids—after the ulcer
-produced has healed, there is a great tendency
-to contraction in the scar, and consequent stricture
-of the esophagus. This may threaten life, by
-tending to close the passage altogether. To
-prevent this, instruments called bougies are passed
-through the constriction from time to time. These
-bougies are simply firm, smooth, slightly flexible
-rods with rounded ends, and are various in size
-as regards their diameters. An instance of the
-passing of these instruments being turned to
-account in a very curious way, occurred some years
-ago in one of the London hospitals. A patient
-was suffering from stricture of the esophagus,
-brought about in the manner above described;
-and the tendency to contraction was in this
-case so great, that it was only by the frequent
-passing of instruments that it could be prevented
-from becoming to the last degree dangerous.
-Now, it was impossible that the man could remain
-in the hospital permanently; it was therefore
-decided to teach him to pass the instrument for
-himself. He proved capable of this, after a certain
-amount of instruction; and it then occurred to
-some one about the hospital that the daily
-performance of this operation might be made the
-means by which the man could earn a livelihood.
-Accordingly, the patient was advised to get a
-bougie made as much as possible to resemble
-a sword. This he did; and for a long time
-afterwards was to be seen about the streets of
-London making money by what looked like the
-swallowing of a sword. In his case there was
-really ‘no deception’ as regards the passing of
-a long instrument down towards his stomach
-was concerned, the only deception being that the
-instrument was not the weapon it represented.
-His daily street performance thus served him in
-two ways—it supplied him with food, and also
-kept open the passage by which that food could
-be conveyed to his ‘inner man.’</p>
-
-<p>The contraction about which we have spoken
-as taking place in scars formed after burns of the
-gullet, and which is so dangerous there, also occurs
-in burns on the surface of the body, and often
-leads to a good deal of deformity. Burns, indeed,
-are a great source of trouble to the surgeon in
-many ways. For instance, if a burn is very
-extensive, there may be great difficulty in getting
-a cicatrice to form over the whole of it. Cicatrisation
-only begins in the immediate neighbourhood
-of living epidermis, and therefore a burn or
-ulcer must heal from the circumference to the
-centre. But the further that the cicatricial tissue
-extends from the margin of the burn, the more
-slowly and the more imperfectly is it formed;
-and indeed it may fail altogether to reach the
-centre. This difficulty has often been met by a
-small operation called skin-grafting. A piece of
-sound skin about the size of a split pea is pinched
-up—say, on the outside of the arm—and the
-epidermis snipped off with a pair of curved
-scissors, the scissors just going deep enough to cut
-slightly into the second layer of the skin and
-draw a little blood. A special kind of scissors
-has been invented for the purpose, that will only
-take up just the right amount of skin, so that the
-operation is thus made even simpler still; and
-if it is skilfully performed, it causes only very
-trifling pain. The little fragment of skin thus
-separated is then placed gently, with its raw
-surface downwards, on the unhealed surface of
-the burn. The same thing is repeated again and
-again, till there are many grafts, if the burn is
-a large one. Isinglass plaster, or some other
-similar material, is employed to keep the grafts
-in position and preserve them from injury. In
-about four days they should have taken root, and
-then the covering can be removed. There is now
-a number of foci from which cicatrisation can
-start; for, as before said, it will begin from where
-there is an epidermal covering, and thence alone.
-After a time, a number of little islands of scar
-tissue may be seen, which go on increasing until
-at length they coalesce with one another, and
-also join that extending from the margin of the
-burn. This is what happens if all goes well; but,
-unfortunately, there is a very great tendency for
-a cicatrice formed from grafts to break down and
-disappear, so that the result is not by any means
-always so satisfactory as it at first promises
-to be.</p>
-
-<p>Another trouble with burns is the great pain
-which they invariably cause; and numberless are
-the applications which have been recommended
-for its relief. The great essential in all such
-applications is that they should completely
-exclude the air; for the very slightest irritation to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_384">{384}</span>
-the surface of a burn will give rise to the most
-excruciating pain. To prevent irritation and to
-keep the parts at rest is indeed one of the surest
-ways of relieving pain, not only in the case of
-burns, but in the treatment of other forms of
-injury, and also in many kinds of disease. An
-instance of this is found in the method adopted
-to relieve the pain in certain joint diseases.
-Those who have visited the Children’s Hospital
-in Ormond Street, or indeed any other hospital
-for children, may remember having noticed that
-at the foot of many of the beds there was fixed
-a pulley, over which ran a cord with a weight
-attached to the end of it. This cord, it may
-further have been noticed, was fixed at the other
-end to a kind of stirrup which depended from
-the patient’s foot. Thus the weight—which consisted
-of a tin canister partly filled with shot—had
-the effect of keeping the child’s leg on the
-stretch continuously. In fact, the little patient
-looked very much as though he was lying on a
-kind of rack; and if the visitor could have heard
-the surgeon order more shot to be poured into the
-canister, saying that he thought the patient was
-able to bear more weight, the command would
-have sounded very like that of a torturer, rather
-than that of one whose object it was to relieve
-pain. But the truth is that this rack is a very
-humane one indeed. It is the rack of modern
-times, as distinguished from that of past ages; it
-is the rack of the surgeon, and not that of the
-inquisitor. The cases in which this apparatus is
-used are almost always instances of disease of the
-hip or knee joint. The object of this arrangement
-of pulley and weight is, by making traction on
-the foot and leg, to keep the lower of the bones,
-which go to form the diseased joint, away from
-the upper, and so avoid the excruciating pain
-caused by the carious or ulcerated surfaces
-touching one another.</p>
-
-<p>The benefit in such cases of having a weight
-drawing on the leg is most marked at night,
-when the patient wishes to get to sleep. With
-a good heavy weight, many a patient may
-sleep comfortably, who would otherwise be in a
-most pitiable condition through the long watches
-of the night. The position of such a person
-without any weight attached would be this.
-Knowing from past experience what too often
-followed on his dropping off to sleep, he would
-endeavour to keep himself from doing so. This,
-however, would of course be impossible for long,
-and at last the heavy eyelids would droop, the
-ward with its long rows of beds would grow
-dimmer and dimmer, the breathing of the neighbouring
-sleepers would sound fainter and yet
-more faint, until sight and hearing failed him,
-and his long watching ended in sleep. But now
-that he was no longer on his guard to keep his
-limb in a state of perfect rest, the irritation of
-the diseased part would give rise to spasmodic
-contraction of the neighbouring muscles. This
-contraction of the muscles would bring the lower
-bone of the joint, with more or less violence,
-against the upper; the two highly sensitive
-ulcerated surfaces would touch, and with a shriek
-of agony, the child would awake, quivering in
-every limb. And then, as the pain gradually
-grew less, again the same terrible drowsiness
-would begin to oppress him; and after another
-long spell of watching, he would fall asleep once
-more, to be once more awakened in the same
-horrible manner as before. But with a sufficient
-weight attached, the patient may go to sleep
-confident of comparative ease; for the weight is
-too much for the spasmodic action of the muscles
-to overcome, and the bony surfaces therefore
-remain separated. And not only does the
-surgeon’s rack thus save the patient from a
-terrible amount of pain, but, by allowing him to
-get good rest of a night, it must increase enormously
-the probability of ultimate recovery.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="IN_THE_RHINE_WOODS">IN THE RHINE WOODS.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class="ph3">CUCKOO! CUCKOO!</p>
-
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent6"><span class="smcap">I hear</span> it again!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">An echo of youth from its far sunny shore;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Through the dim distant years it resoundeth once more.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">How mingled the feelings that rise with the strain—</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">The joy and the pain!</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent6">I hear it, but not</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">In the home of my childhood, the glorious and grand,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">’Mid the wild woody glens of my own native land.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Ah! dear to me still is each far distant spot,</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">And present in thought.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent6">I see them to-day!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The glory of Spring-time on valley and hill,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That struck to my heart with a rapturous thrill,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And friends in the sunshine of life’s early ray,</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Young, happy, and gay.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent6">All vanished and gone!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Could I see it indeed as in spirit I see,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The home of my youth would be joyless to me;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Like a bird’s empty nest when the tenant has flown,</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Deserted and lone.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent6">Soft, softly it rings!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">O shades of the buried Past, slumber in peace!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">O heart, bid thy sad, tender memories cease!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And welcome the Present, with all that it brings</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Of beautiful things.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent6">How often in youth</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">I have dreamed of this land of the oak and the vine,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">This green, lovely land on the banks of the Rhine,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">With longing prophetic, that one day in sooth</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">The dream should be truth.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent6">Now gladly I rest</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">’Mid its scenes of enchantment with those that I love;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Warm hearts are around me, blue skies are above;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And though distant are some of the dearest and best,</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">I am thankful, and blest.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent6">The years as they roll</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Rob the cheek of its glow and the eyes of their light,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And much we have cherished is lost to the sight;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But one thing remains that they cannot control—</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">The youth of the Soul.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right">I. A. S.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<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>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHAMBERS'S JOURNAL OF POPULAR LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART, FIFTH SERIES, NO. 24, VOL. I, JUNE 14, 1884 ***</div>
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